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"Scuba-diving" lizards use bubble attached to snout to breathe underwater

 E-Mail Credit: Lindsey Swierk Semi-aquatic anoles live along neotropical streams and frequently dive for refuge, remaining underwater for up to 16 minutes. Lindsey Swierk, assistant research professor of biological sciences at Binghamton University, documented this behavior in a Costa Rican anole species in 2019. She had been shocked to see an anole submerge itself for such long periods and used a GoPro underwater to document the behavior. It s easy to imagine the advantage that these small, slow anoles gain by hiding from their predators underwater - they re really hard to spot! says Swierk. But the real question is how they re managing to stay underwater for so long.

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'Scuba-diving' lizards use bubble attached to snout to breathe underwater

A team of evolutionary biologists including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York have shown that some Anolis lizards, or anoles,

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Nature's scuba tanks? Researchers discover how Anolis lizard breathes underwater – India Education | Latest Education News India | Global Educational News

The researchers measured the oxygen content of the air in the bubbles and found that it decreased over time, confirming that rebreathed air is involved in respiration. Rebreathing likely evolved because the ability to stay submerged longer increases the lizard’s chances of eluding predators, the authors say. The authors studied six species of semi-aquatic anoles and found that all possessed the rebreathing trait, despite most species being distantly related. While rebreathing has been studied extensively in aquatic arthropods like water beetles, it was not expected in lizards because of physiological differences between arthropods and vertebrates. “Rebreathing had never been considered as a potential natural mechanism for underwater respiration in vertebrates,” says 

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Evolutionary biologists discover mechanism that enables lizards to breathe underwater

University of Toronto A team of evolutionary biologists from the University of Toronto has shown that Anolis lizards, or anoles, are able to breathe underwater with the aid of a bubble clinging to their snouts. Anoles are a diverse group of lizards found throughout the tropical Americas. Some anoles are stream specialists, and these semi-aquatic species frequently dive underwater to avoid predators, where they can remain submerged for as long as 18 minutes. “We found that semi-aquatic anoles exhale air into a bubble that clings to their skin,” says Chris Boccia, a recent Master of Science graduate from the Faculty of Arts & Science’s Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology (EEB). Boccia is lead author of a paper describing the finding published this week in Current Biology.

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These lizards can breathe underwater thanks to air bubbles trapped on their skin

These lizards can breathe underwater thanks to air bubbles trapped on their skin The bubbles simultaneously act as a scuba tank and gills to extend time under water. An anol with rebreathing bubbles on its snout. Credit: Lindsey Swierk. Anolis lizards are semi-aquatic creatures spanning the islands of the Caribbean, as well as Central and northern South America. They’re sometimes called chameleons by locals for their ability to change color from green to brown and vice versa. However, that’s not their most impressive feature. Anoles can stay submerged underwater for as long as 18 minutes, during their frequent dives in order to escape predators. A new study has now uncovered the biological mechanism that enables this remarkable ability.

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