Heavily Trafficked Songbirds Have a Path Back to Resiliency
Researchers see promise in recruiting red siskin pet traders as conservation partners
Deep-Sea Squids Glow to Communicate in the Dark
Researchers suggest that the Humboldt squid uses bioluminescent backlighting for visual cues in the dark deep sea
Meet the Bee With a Body That’s Half Male, Half Female
So-called gynandromorphs are rare, but they can teach us a lot about development and evolution
National Zoo Mourns Death of Asian Elephant
The 72-year-old animal was the third oldest in the North American population
How Scientists Are Keeping Irreplaceable Research Going During the COVID-19 Pandemic
The outbreak, and the travel bans and fears that come with it, have endangered long-running research projects
Researchers Are Learning How Asian Elephants Think—in Order to Save Them
As the pachyderms increasingly clash with farmers and villagers over disappearing land, scientists study the way the animals’ minds work
How Africa’s Mountain Gorillas Staged a Comeback
Long victimized by poaching and deforestation, the primate species is in the midst of a surprising rebound that is sparking new hopes of recovery
When Illness Strikes, Vampire Bat Moms Will Still Socialize With Their Kids
Studying how bats behave when they’re feeling ill could help researchers better understand how pathogens move through close-knit populations
Sea Turtles Might Be Eating Old Plastic Because It Smells Like Shrimp
Over time, trash that has been floating in the ocean gets covered in algae and other micro-organisms
215-Million-Year-Old, Sharp-Nosed Sea Creature Was Among the Last of Its Kind
Researchers gave the marine reptile the genus name Gunakadeit in honor of a sea monster from Tlingit oral history
An artist’s 3-D recreation of the immense mammal probes the paradox of efforts to bring such animals back in the lab
Swamp Wallabies Can Get Pregnant While Pregnant
These marsupials can conceive during the final days of an ongoing pregnancy, creating a “backup” embryo ready to take its predecessor’s place
Hawai‘i’s Last Dunes Are Home to Species Found Nowhere Else on the Planet
A nature preserve on Moloka‘i reveals rare life forms—some ancient and others just newly established
In a First, Cheetah Cubs Born Through Surrogacy at the Columbus Zoo
Zookeepers and Smithsonian scientists successfully transferred cheetah embryos, marking a major conservation milestone for the vulnerable species
Why Wolverines Are the Arctic Animal We Love to Hate
Scientists brave the deep snows and frigid cold of Arctic Alaska to study one of its most furtive and ferocious denizens
Despite her fame, you wouldn’t know about this beloved writer unless you visit the vanishing Midwestern landscape she helped save
Nine Rare Natural Phenomena Worth Traveling For
You have to be in the right place at the right time to see these awe-inspiring events
Fourteen Fun Facts About Love and Sex in the Animal Kingdom
Out in the wild, flowers and candy just aren’t gonna cut it
These Jellyfish Don’t Need Tentacles to Deliver a Toxic Sting
Smithsonian scientists discovered that tiny ‘mucus grenades’ are responsible for a mysterious phenomenon known as ‘stinging water’
Newly Discovered Tyrannosaur Was Key to the Rise of Giant Meat-Eaters
A partial skull found in Alberta helps put a timer on when the ‘tyrant lizards’ got big
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