It draws water into its mantle cavity by expanding its muscles. The mantle stretches like a rubber band, then contracts and forcibly pushes the water out through the funnel. The squid shoots backward, tail first.
The squid sucks up water a tube called the siphon, then shoots it out to provide locomotion by jet propulsion.
Squid do not have "legs", but they do have appendages that act in a way for locomotion. They have ten total appendages, 8 arms and 2 tentacles.
Siphons can be used as a form of locomotion. Water goes into the siphon and shoots out and acts as a form of jet propulsion, directing the squid in the way it wants to go.
Squid move by jet propulsion, using its lips to suck water in then squirts it out its bottom.
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Squid use a kind of jet power. Water is squirted at great pressure out of a nozzle on the squid's body. At times the squid can swim so fast that it may pop out of the water and glide through the air at 25 to 40 miles per hour. A squid may fly for 100 feet or more before it splashes back into the water.
There are several sentences that the word locomotion can be used in. One sentence is; The steam locomotion was late to the depot.
Chinese alligator locomotion
There is no such thing as a locomotion platypus.
describe the locomotion in protozoa
Trevor does the locomotion to support the homeostasis
which is locomotion for whitetail deer?