No, in that case they would have greater worries than energy. It's about swimming upstream with current faster than they can swim.
No, in that case they would have greater worries than energy. It's about swimming upstream with current faster than they can swim.
they would have greater worries
Maybe.
You do see animals give up if their stuck in mud or in the jaws of a lion. When fishing, and you've got one hooked, they may "give up" for a while, then fight again. I assumed they were tired. Seems as though it could be the same mechanism.
> they would have greater worries
Maybe.
You do see animals give up if their stuck in mud or in the jaws of a lion. When fishing, and you've got one hooked, they
may "give up" for a while, then fight again. I assumed they were tired. Seems as though it could be the same mechanism.
they may "give up" for a while, then fight again. I assumed they were tired. Seems as though it could be the same mechanism.
Looks like it. They give up for the moment and try again after they recover.
> they may "give up" for a while, then fight again. I assumed they were tired. Seems as though it could be the same mechanism.
Looks like it. They give up for the moment and try again after they recover.
Would a real world example of this be something like when a fish is already in the stomach of another fish?