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IFLScience on MSNBecome Mesmerized By A Hunting Cuttlefish Display, One Downward Stripe At A TimeMany animals must sneak up on their prey to ensure that they can manage to catch a good meal. Whether it's a big cat slinking through the grass or a stealthy slider, predators often go to extreme ...
In this study published today in Science Advances, the team uncovered a novel form of motion camouflage, whereby the broadclub cuttlefish pass dark stripes downwards across their head and arms to ...
Marine ecologists led by Matteo Santon documented the Broadclub cuttlefish's remarkable hunting strategies in the wild, including imitating corals and leaves to deceive crabs. The study ...
By placing cameras at a crab’s eye level, researchers at the University of Bristol discovered broadclub cuttlefish can disguise hunting manoeuvres that prey recognise. They do this by shimmering ...
In this study, "Stealth and deception: adaptive motion camouflage in hunting broadclub cuttlefish" published in Science Advances, the team uncovered a novel form of motion camouflage, whereby the ...
In this study published today in Science Advances, the team uncovered a novel form of motion camouflage, whereby the broadclub cuttlefish pass dark stripes downwards across their head and arms to ...
In this study published today in Science Advances, the team uncovered a novel form of motion camouflage, whereby the broadclub cuttlefish pass dark stripes downwards across their head and arms to ...
In this study published today in Science Advances, the team uncovered a novel form of motion camouflage, whereby the broadclub cuttlefish pass dark stripes downwards across their head and arms to ...
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