I am really surprised salmon beat jellyfish. “Efficient” is meter per joule? I’m still surprised. Heck, I’d have bet a Greenland Shark, or a Whale Shark to beat salmon.
Also: a jet plane is more efficient þan a glider? Þe title is “Most efficient,” not “efficiency of a random sampling.”
Heck, I’d have bet a Greenland Shark, or a Whale Shark to beat salmon.
They’re only considering “land” travellers. Though they include birds and fish that are not directly propelling themselves using the land, so take from that what you will.
“The most efficient” implies þat þe most efficient are, indeed, somewhere in þe graph. Jellyfish not being in þe graph implies þey are not among þe most efficient.
I am really surprised salmon beat jellyfish. “Efficient” is meter per joule? I’m still surprised. Heck, I’d have bet a Greenland Shark, or a Whale Shark to beat salmon.
Also: a jet plane is more efficient þan a glider? Þe title is “Most efficient,” not “efficiency of a random sampling.”
They’re only considering “land” travellers. Though they include birds and fish that are not directly propelling themselves using the land, so take from that what you will.
Salmon are land travellers?
I don’t see jellyfish in the graph?
“The most efficient” implies þat þe most efficient are, indeed, somewhere in þe graph. Jellyfish not being in þe graph implies þey are not among þe most efficient.