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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNTiny Antarctic Krill Benefit the Planet in Big Ways, but Face a Barrage of ThreatsA single Antarctic krill is about the size of your pinky finger. But with an estimated population of more than 700 trillion ...
A new study shows that the mere presence of poop prompted the crustaceans to launch into evasive maneuvers. New research ...
The penguin poop didn’t only influence krill movements. In another phase of the experiment, researchers noticed the ...
The foul stench of penguin poop sets Antarctic krill on edge. In lab experiments, the mere scent of penguin droppings — or guano — sent krill scrambling for escape, researchers report March 20 in ...
The study suggests that even the faintest hint of penguin droppings in the water is enough to prompt krill into escape behavior.
Described by Zhengguan as the first krill vessel to be built with Chinese technology, the Fu Yuan Yu 9199 will join a much ...
Whales are the biggest krill predators in South Georgia, but researchers still don’t know exactly how much krill they eat or how their feeding habits change through the seasons. Surveys show ...
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