Imagine digging in your garden and seeing an unusual-looking worm near the surface. You reach out to move it … and suddenly it thrashes violently and flies through the air! It sounds crazy, but that’s ...
All the Latest Game Footage and Images from Worm Bounce: Worms Jump King Embark on an epic journey with our fearless bouncy worms heroes as they bounce and escape the treacherous underground, ...
“Rope worms” may simply be shed pieces of intestinal mucus. Mucus can be more common with certain health conditions, including inflammatory bowel disease and colon cancer. While some people believe ...
NEW YORK — As you tend to your garden this summer, there's a creepy, crawly creature to be on the lookout for: an invasive worm that moves like a snake, thrashes around, jumps into the air and will ...
The invasive jumping worm will thrash and snap its body when touched. University of Wisconsin-Madison Arboretum The highly invasive jumping worm, a genus introduced from eastern Asia, now writhes ...
In nature, smaller animals often attach themselves to larger ones to 'hitch a ride' and save energy migrating large distances. Researchers show how microscopic Caenorhabditis elegans worms can use ...
Asian jumping worms destroy gardens and landscaping. They're also called Alabama jumpers, Jersey wrigglers, and crazy snake worms. They hatch in time to cause havoc each summer, also damaging forests ...
Rope worms are long structures that sometimes occur in the intestines. They are likely a buildup of intestinal mucus and debris and may pass in a person’s stool during an enema or other clearing ...
Hey everybody, good news! You can stop holding your breath now: “Worms,” the strategy game involving heavily armed members of the Phylum Annelida, is finally good enough to be unleashed upon the world ...
In nature, smaller animals often attach themselves to larger ones to “hitch a ride” and save energy migrating large distances. In paper published on June 21 in the journal Current Biology, researchers ...