because a mouse have an average heart rate of 500 beats per minute (bpm), the smaller the animal (or insect) the faster the heart rate so multiply the ant's weight by 107 from the mouse's weight (based on dorman's theory equation on heart rates for animals) the average heart rate would equal to an average between 750-1000 bpm.
Ants do not have a heart. They have a dorsal aorta that functions like a heart.
The blood leaves the heart from the left ventricle, which leads into the aorta. The aorta pumps out about 70 mL per minute, and it usually beats 70 beats per minute- that's basically 5 liters.
The number of heart beats 300 beats per minute.
A hamsters heart beats close to 450 beats per minute.
A giraffe's heart rate is around 65 beats per minute.
Ants do not have a heart. They have a dorsal aorta that functions like a heart.
The blood leaves the heart from the left ventricle, which leads into the aorta. The aorta pumps out about 70 mL per minute, and it usually beats 70 beats per minute- that's basically 5 liters.
it doesn't... there's no proof that it does :)
The aorta
the number of heart beats is 300 beats per minute
A cat's heart beats twice as fast as a human heart, at 110 to 140 beats per minute.
The number of heart beats 300 beats per minute.
To distribute blood from the heart to other organs of the fish body
A hamsters heart beats close to 450 beats per minute.
Shrews live a short, but busy, life, the heart rate can be 1000 beats/minute. Few live longer than 1.5 year.
Heart rate is the number of times the heart beats per minute. It is usually recorded as bpm, which stands for "beats per minute".
A giraffe's heart rate is around 65 beats per minute.