Animals have the ability to withhold good water
Gazelle, Gazelle, Gazelle are three of the animals that are most likely to live in dry environments, almost without water.
Some shallow turtles in the Mojave Desert and Sonoran in North America have large bladder to store large amounts of urine, according to Popular Science. Turtles can absorb water directly from the urine to survive in dry conditions for a year or more without drinking water. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Two-legged mice, who live in drylands in the western United States, never drink water. They get water from the nuts they eat every day. Mice with bipedal limbs can also save water by reducing their metabolism by themselves, thereby reducing the speed of escape of water through the skin or through respiration. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Scientists at the University of Western Australia (UWA) in one study found that one of the main ways to drink water-borne lizards was to bury the body in moist sand, following a study published in the journal Experimental Biology in November 2016. It sucks the water in the sand by capillary tubes on the skin and pushes it towards the mouth. (Photo: Flickr).
In hot dry seasons, water-holding frogs in Australia produce a water-repellent mucus to keep the body moist. They hibernate under the ground and wait for the rainy season. This frog can survive for two years or longer thanks to the fluid stored in the bladder. (Photo: IP Factly)
Camels do not contain water in hump, so they have to save water. At night, cold air in the desert cools the camel's nose cavity. The mist is in the condensed breath inside the nose and is absorbed again. Long, curved camel cavity, which saves 60% of the exhale. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Gazelle living in the Arabian desert can reduce the oxygen requirement of organs in the body if the weather is drought. By reducing the size of the heart and liver by 20 to 45%, they will breathe less and reduce the amount of water that is released through the respiratory tract. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Two-legged mice, who live in drylands in the western United States, never drink water. They get water from the nuts they eat every day. Mice with bipedal limbs can also save water by reducing their metabolism by themselves, thereby reducing the speed of escape of water through the skin or through respiration. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Scientists at the University of Western Australia (UWA) in one study found that one of the main ways to drink water-borne lizards was to bury the body in moist sand, following a study published in the journal Experimental Biology in November 2016. It sucks the water in the sand by capillary tubes on the skin and pushes it towards the mouth. (Photo: Flickr).
In hot dry seasons, water-holding frogs in Australia produce a water-repellent mucus to keep the body moist. They hibernate under the ground and wait for the rainy season. This frog can survive for two years or longer thanks to the fluid stored in the bladder. (Photo: IP Factly)
Camels do not contain water in hump, so they have to save water. At night, cold air in the desert cools the camel's nose cavity. The mist is in the condensed breath inside the nose and is absorbed again. Long, curved camel cavity, which saves 60% of the exhale. (Photo: Wikipedia).
Gazelle living in the Arabian desert can reduce the oxygen requirement of organs in the body if the weather is drought. By reducing the size of the heart and liver by 20 to 45%, they will breathe less and reduce the amount of water that is released through the respiratory tract. (Photo: Wikipedia).
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