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Scientists Caught Suckerfish Diving Into Manta Rays' Rear Ends

Remoras are pretty weird fish, but a new study shows they really have no boundaries when it comes to mooching off their manta ray hosts.

Raccontata daeu.usatoday.comsciencealert.com

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2 prospettive sulla stessa storia
AI · summaries
sciencealert.comStai leggendo1 mesi fa

Scientists Caught Suckerfish Diving Into Manta Rays' Rear Ends

Remoras are pretty weird fish, but a new study shows they really have no boundaries when it comes to mooching off their manta ray hosts.

originale
eu.usatoday.com1 mesi fa

Suckerfish discovered diving into unwelcome place of manta rays

A study found remoras, known as suckerfish, were using a less-than-comfortable place to hitch a ride: the rear ends of manta rays.

Leggi questa versione → originale

Timeline cronologica

  1. giovedì 14 maggio 2026·eu.usatoday.com

    Suckerfish discovered diving into unwelcome place of manta rays

    A study found remoras, known as suckerfish, were using a less-than-comfortable place to hitch a ride: the rear ends of manta rays.

  2. venerdì 15 maggio 2026·sciencealert.com

    Scientists Caught Suckerfish Diving Into Manta Rays' Rear Ends

    Remoras are pretty weird fish, but a new study shows they really have no boundaries when it comes to mooching off their manta ray hosts.