yes their body can bend far enough to move though tight areas.
Hamsters can squeeze through small spaces because they suck in their bodies as much as they can and get through lots of stuff if they tried hard enough they could get through mice holes, and vents but if your hamster got through a vent or mouse hole you're never getting it back! :(
Yes, a rat can fit under a door if there is enough of a gap between the bottom of the door and the floor. Rats are agile and can squeeze through small spaces, so it's important to seal any gaps to prevent their entry into your home.
Yes. A small enough rabbit CAN jump right through the mesh in a standard sized yard fence. I know this, because last night I had the little guy (... no not a baby) cornered and poof - he jumped right through the fence and bounded off into the brush. I was stunned for a minute - he sure didn't LOOK like he would have fit through there - but sure enough, he most certainly did. So, not seeing any rabbit holes? No tunnels under your fence? (mine is a 5' chain link) He's probably just jumping right through it. Obviously, there comes a point that a larger rabbit will not get through, but this 3-5 pound rabbit did it without even breaking stride, and a 3-5 pound rabbit is plenty big to tear up your garden. I'm moving my operation to level 2...trapping. If trapping doesn't work, I'll break out my air rifle. Good luck!
Large constrictor snakes like pythons and boas are capable of squeezing a person with enough force to suffocate them. It's important to remember that these snakes typically only do this in a defensive or predatory response, and not all snakes are capable of squeezing with enough force to harm a person.
There are two methods: You can either use a weight tape, or a scale. For show cattle, the former is a handy tool, however for cattle that you can't get near enough or settled enough to get a tape around--or even are too big for a weigh tape--a weigh scale specially made for weighing cattle on is ideal. A weigh scale can be put in with the handling facility right near the squeeze chute so you can weigh cattle before they go in to get their vaccinations. The way the weigh scale works is that it is essentially a pen with two gates--one at each end--for one animal to be held in for a few seconds and is attached to the race or working alley of a handling facility. The animal is moved into this little enclosure, the gate shut behind it, then the producer waits for a few seconds to get a reading on the scale. Once the reading is taken, the gate at the animal's head is opened to allow it through and continue on either out to pasture or to the squeeze chute.
Hamsters can squeeze through small spaces because they suck in their bodies as much as they can and get through lots of stuff if they tried hard enough they could get through mice holes, and vents but if your hamster got through a vent or mouse hole you're never getting it back! :(
No. There is no way she could squeeze that hard.
Paramecium needs oxygen for cellular respiration to produce energy. This energy is essential for carrying out various metabolic processes that help the paramecium survive and carry out its functions, such as movement and reproduction. Without oxygen, the paramecium would not be able to generate enough energy to sustain its biological activities.
If your flexible enough, yes.
A cat's whiskers let him know if the space he's trying to squeeze himself through is too tight for him. A cat's whiskers are approximately the same width as his body, so if he tries to squeeze in behind the radiator, for example, and the space isn't wide enough for his whiskers, he knows it's also not wide enough for his body. Yet somehow, they still get stuck sometimes.
looking under the firewall, follow the hoses and wires that go through the firewall. One will have enough room to squeeze the wires through. Make sure that you can reach the wires on the other side of the firewall as well.
Stretch every day, you can not do the splits if you are not flexible enough. So, as i said just stretch and don't be impatient.
Yes and no. Sometimes if the girls skin is thin enough the sperm will squeeze through it and eventually make to the vagina. You should know if she's pregnant in the next few days.
It allows the transmission to provide force to the drive wheel, and remain flexible enough for the drive wheel to move through a range of motions, that would otherwise be impossible.
No, it's not flexible enough.
Paramecium feed on microorganisms like bacteria, algae, and yeasts. In order to gather its food the paramecium uses its cilia to sweep the food along with some water into the cell mouth after it falls into the oral groove. The food goes through the cell mouth into the gullet, which is like the stomach. When there is enough food in it so that it has reached a certain size it breaks away and forms a food vacuole. The food vacuole travels through the cell, through the back end first. As it moves along enzymes from the cytoplasm enter the vacuole and digest it. The digested food then goes into the cytoplasm and the vacuole gets smaller and smaller. When the vacuole reaches the anal pore the remaining undigested waste is removed.
no not really but if you not flexing cause of your weight then yes