Scientists have discovered that mudskippers – fish that breathe air – probably blink for the same reasons as humans

By Stuart Blackman

Published: Thursday, 25 May 2023 at 12:00 am


Most fish would perform pretty well in a staring competition. But not, perhaps, the mudskipper. Because unlike most fish, mudskippers can blink. And new research into how they do it provides clues to its origin in land animals such as ourselves.

Soft tissues such as eyelids and muscles are not preserved in the fossil record. Which is why biologists have turned to mudskippers for clues to how early terrestrial vertebrates evolved the ability to keep their eyeballs moist on land.

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