In this Generation Anthropocene podcast, social animals show scientists how to trace our evolution and improve interactions
The popular belief that boas and other constricting snakes deal death by suffocation seems to be a flawed assumption
Researchers at Duke University have enhanced the mind power of monkeys and rats by linking their brains together
Insects that are already carrying one strain are more likely to pick up a second infection and harbor higher numbers of parasites
Paleontologists are gathering evidence that may help crack the 148-million-year-old mystery, including signs of poisoned predators
Teaming up with botanical gardens, researchers at the Natural History Museum are digging deep into garden plant genomics
Across North America and Europe, the insects are just not keeping up with shifting temperatures
Engineers show that the animals' prism-like tails are mechanically superior to cylindrical ones
These new shots show the otherworldly magic created by a carnivorous fungus gnat
In honor of the first ever International Polychaete Day, learn about the bristly worms that are everywhere in the ocean
Texas scientists tricked mosquitoes into skipping a blood meal by modifying the way bacteria talk to each other
Mexico's elegant terns have begun nesting farther north in years when their traditional food is scarce
The 240-million-year-old "grandfather turtle" may be part of the evolutionary bridge between lizards and shelled reptiles
A new generation of young practitioners is leading a resurgence in this centuries-old craft
The fight against poaching and trafficking came to a head in Times Square last week with the destruction of a one-ton cache of illegal ivory
Two new data-driven approaches help identify key hotspots for poaching and trafficking
The discovery strengthens the case that upright posture drove the evolution of dominant hands in humans
Peter Marra and Michael Hallworth of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center test a groundbreaking device that tracks birds' migrations
The insects’ night vision appears to be finely tuned to the movement of their flower food sources
When the omnivorous cat-size mammals take aim, the malodorous spray can hit with pin-point accuracy up to 20 feet away
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