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The property of water allowing some insects and other animals to walk on its surface is called "surface tension".
Certain insects (ones with a very light weight) are able to walk on water as their weight does not break the surface tension of the water. Water has a very high surface tension, therefore easily breaking and not supporting weight above a certain limit.
Insects are able to walk across bodies of water without sinking because of their weight. Insects weigh literally nothing.
they don't walk they flot
the water is cohesion to the insects
There some insects that walk backwards which is part of their unique features. The doodle bug is one of the various types of insects that walk backwards.
Insects that are able to walk across the surface of water are called water striders. Water striders make use of the high surface tension of water together with their long, hydrophobic legs to stay above water.
most insects can not float on water, but it depends. A bee will drown if it gets its wings in the water (along with most, if not all, winged insects), but some insects are specifically made to stand on water and catch gnats that are around.
Because of their light weight.
The oil on their feet is strong enough to repel the water and there weight is spread out enough that when their feet touch the water, the oil and the water repel each other like when you pour oil on water the oil floats on the top... same principle
Insects that have the ability to walk on water have feet that are spread very far apart. This allows their weight to be distributed over a larger area and stops them from breaking the surface tension of water molecules sticking together.
Surface tension helps organisms in the sense that it allows for a wide variety of biological phenomena. For instance, some water insects are able to walk on water due to surface tension.