The aptly named __ has both gills and lungs, used to breathe in and out of water. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Average amount of air (in gallons) inhaled by a human in 24 hours | 5,000 |
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| | Number of alveoli, aka tiny air sacs, found in human lungs | 300-500 million |
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| Breaths a cheetah takes per minute while running at top speeds | 150 |
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| | Minutes actress Kate Winslet held her breath underwater while filming "Avatar: The Way of Water" | 7:15 |
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| Scientists have found parasites that don't need oxygen. |
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Breathing is a requirement for most living creatures on Earth, except one: a parasitic, water-dwelling blob called the Henneguya salminicola. In 2020, a group of scientists from Israel, France, and the U.S. announced they had discovered that the parasite — which is microscopic and typically infects salmon — doesn't appear to breathe. In fact, it could be the only known non-breathing animal on the planet. H. salminicola belongs to the same family as jellyfish, which do breathe by absorbing the oxygen in water directly through their skin; however, H. salminicola lacks mitochondrial DNA, a part of the DNA sequence that turns oxygen into fuel to power the body's cells. Earth is home to many simple, single-celled organisms (like yeast and bacteria) that don't need to breathe, but H. salminicola stands out because it's the first known multicellular animal that's not dependent on oxygen — and researchers aren't sure why. One theory is that the parasite could get the power it needs to survive by stealing protein from its fish hosts. | |
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You might also like | 6 Myths About the Human Body | Do you really need to drink eight glasses of water a day or wait to swim after you eat? Here are a few common myths about the human body that you might be surprised aren't true. | |
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