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  • This pond is the only home this fish has ever known.

  • But lately, it's gotten crowded and food is scarce.

  • Luckily, it has an option many don't:

  • as a walking catfish, it can dance its way out of the water

  • and onto bigger and better things.

  • However, it faces many challenges on its terrestrial journey:

  • it's now in danger of suffocating, drying up,

  • suffering physical damage from rough terrain,

  • and being hunted by land predators.

  • We think of fish as completely aquatic animals.

  • But the walking catfish is just one of hundreds of fish species

  • that are actually amphibious,

  • meaning that they possess adaptations that enable them to survive on land.

  • Fish amphibiousness is a spectrum.

  • At one end are species like the mosquitofish

  • that'll only move on land when forced.

  • And at the other end are species like mudskippers

  • that nonchalantly hop around mudflats for days at a time.

  • But why do fish make the exodus from water to land?

  • And how do they cope with this drastic transition?

  • If temperatures get too high for the mangrove rivulus

  • in the shallow tropical pools it inhabits,

  • it'll flip itself onto a bank and cool off in the shade.

  • During the dry period,

  • it can survive for two months out of the water

  • by staying in moist environments.

  • Meanwhile, the eel catfish makes its onshore voyage

  • to satisfy its hearty craving for beetles.

  • And for others, the terrestrial draw is more ritualistic.

  • Every year under the cover of night,

  • masses of California grunion flop their way onto sandy beaches,

  • where females deposit thousands of eggs into the sand

  • before re-entering the ocean.

  • Underwater, fish breathe with gills,

  • which are feathery organs packed with blood vessels

  • that absorb dissolved oxygen from the water.

  • But in the open air, their gills collapse and are rendered useless,

  • so amphibious fishes need other ways to breathe.

  • The armored catfish's stomach is packed with blood vessels,

  • so it can gulp down air and breathe through its stomach lining.

  • And lungfish, being related to the ancestors of all tetrapods,

  • or four-limbed vertebrates, are equipped with true lungs.

  • They'll actually drown if they're kept underwater too long.

  • Fish have thin, permeable skin that allows for essential compounds

  • to diffuse into and out of their bodies while they're underwater.

  • But this works against them on land as their bodily moisture

  • diffuses into the air.

  • To dodge dehydration, mudskippers roll in the mud like puppies.

  • But the lungfish takes the cake:

  • the rivers it inhabits disappear during dry seasons,

  • so it buries itself in the earth and coats its body in a mucus cocoon.

  • It can survive like this for years until being resuscitated

  • by the next big rainstorm.

  • Amphibious fishes use powerful fins to move on land

  • and clever tools to navigate as they go.

  • The Nopoli rock-climbing goby, no bigger than a few centimeters,

  • scales hundred-meter-tall Hawaiian waterfalls,

  • inching its way up by alternately attaching the suction cups

  • on its mouth and pelvic fins.

  • To find water while on land, the mummichog,

  • like most amphibious fishes, is on the lookout for reflective surfaces.

  • Other species, like mosquitofish,

  • exercise their inner ear to determine where they're oriented on a slope,

  • relying on the probability that they'll find water by moving downhill.

  • Our walking catfish, meanwhile,

  • uses the taste buds that coat its body for navigation.

  • These taste buds are concentrated in its whiskers,

  • which whip through the air,

  • sensing compounds that signal the proximity and quality

  • of nearby waterand prey.

  • The walking catfish will shimmy towards attractive volatile amino acids

  • while steering clear of foul waters emanating hydrogen sulfide.

  • While amphibious fishes face a multitude of new challenges upon leaving the water,

  • they've evolved ingenious ways to overcome them.

  • They're resilient in the face of droughts and floods

  • and have access to new prey as well as a plan B

  • if they need to escape competitive, polluted, or unhealthy environments.

  • While being a “fish out of wateris generally regarded as a bad thing,

  • for these species, it offers an undisputed edge.

This pond is the only home this fish has ever known.

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