Wildlife

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Trailing the Big Cats

For a walk on the wild side, follow the tracks of a tiger or look at a lion close up at the National Zoo

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When Monkeys Move to Town

Loitering on sidewalks and begging at shops, macaques are familiar, but not always welcome, sights in cities across Asia

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Let's Root for the Coot

This feisty waterbird is very common. That's part of the problem

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The Enemy Within

Termites are covert destroyers. You don't hear them or see them until they come swarming out of the woodwork on their spectacular mating flight

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Steaming into the Future

An ungainly monster, the steam traction engine helped turn the buffalo's pasture into America's breadbasket

manta rays

Dance With the Devilfish

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New Breeds Down on the Pharm

Plain old barnyard animals — with genes from other species added — are producing medicines that keep people alive

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The Horse Whisperer

Legendary trainer Buck Brannaman relies on trust, not terror

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Fly Away Home

Winging south, Operation Migration embarks on a remarkable odyssey

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Making Room for Prairie Dogs

These rodents are cute— if you're not a suburban homeowner watching your grass disappear. Millions live on the prairies, yet the rascals are in trouble

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The Joys of Rehabbing

Rehabilitating injured or abandoned wildlife fulfills the longing of many animal lovers to know other bloods

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To Reproduce, Mussels Go Fishing

The evolution of this freshwater pearl-maker reaches its apex in our Southeastern rivers

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The Belled Viper

Even hunters of timber rattlers now admit that these snakes are shy, placid — and very fragile

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Mustangs on the Move

Without free-roaming bands of wild horses, the American West just wouldn't be the same

Lobsters in a tank at a fish market

Claws

In Down East Maine, the lobster means more than seafood

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Here, Birds Are Unafraid

Galápagos seabirds tolerate human spectators, and crabs in Panama ignore cars (but hide from trucks)

Ants tunneling through a formicarium

An Ant's Life is No Picnic

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For Rescue Dogs "Nothing's Better Than a Live Find"

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Nature's Own Pooper-Scoopers Keep Earth Livable for All of Us

If it were not for dung beetles, members of the scarab family, every terrestrial organism would be up to its eyeballs in you know what

Condors: Back From the Brink

Hopes for the endangered vultures' survival soared recently after six captive birds were released on a clifftop in the Arizona wilds

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