
Why River Otters Have Bones… In Their Hearts
Interactive Video
•
Science, Health Sciences, Biology
•
11th Grade - University
•
Hard
Wayground Content
FREE Resource
The video explores the presence of bone tissue in the hearts of river otters and other animals, contrasting it with the human cardiac skeleton, which is made of connective tissue. While bone in human hearts is a sign of disease, in animals like otters, it may be an adaptation to stress. Otters have large hearts relative to their body size, aiding their active aquatic lifestyle. The formation of bone tissue in their hearts is thought to be a response to physical stress, providing structural support. This adaptation highlights the body's ability to evolve new anatomical features in response to environmental demands.
Read more
1 questions
Show all answers
1.
OPEN ENDED QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
What new insight or understanding did you gain from this video?
Evaluate responses using AI:
OFF
Access all questions and much more by creating a free account
Create resources
Host any resource
Get auto-graded reports

Continue with Google

Continue with Email

Continue with Classlink

Continue with Clever
or continue with

Microsoft
%20(1).png)
Apple
Others
Already have an account?