Jackass Penguin Calls Follow Similar Rules to Human Speech
These birds are nicknamed for donkeys, but structure their calls like words
Why Mosquitoes Find Your Warm Blood So Appealing
These bloodthirsty buggers repurposed a gene normally used to sense and avoid high temperatures into a heat-seeking molecular machine
Some Salamanders Can Regrow Lost Body Parts. Could Humans One Day Do the Same?
In recent decades, the idea of human regeneration has evolved from an ‘if’ to a ‘when’
Albatrosses Outfitted With GPS Trackers Detect Illegal Fishing Vessels
By utilizing the majestic birds to monitor huge swaths of the sea, law enforcement and conservationists could keep better tabs on illicit activities
Ancient Bat Guano Reveals Thousands of Years of Human Impact on the Environment
Like sediment cores, ice samples and tree rings, bat excrement can be used to study the climate of the past
Coyotes Poised to Infiltrate South America
The crab-eating fox and the coyote may soon swap territories, initiating the first American cross-continental exchange in more than three million years
World’s Oldest Scorpions May Have Moved From Sea to Land 437 Million Years Ago
A pair of pristinely preserved fossils suggest scorpions have looked mostly the same since they first crawled onto land
Scientists Assemble Frog Stem Cells Into First ‘Living Machines’
The so-called ‘xenobots’ could replace traditional metal or plastic robots without polluting the planet, but they raise ethical questions
Parrots Will Share Currency to Help Their Pals Purchase Food
Animals often share food, but these birds understand that metal rings can be exchanged for treats, and they share the rings with no promise of reward
Scientists Velcroed 3-D Glasses to Cuttlefish to Study Their Depth Perception
The results of the eye-popping study suggest cuttlefish see the world in surprisingly human ways
The Top Ten Scientific Discoveries of the Decade
Breakthroughs include measuring the true nature of the universe, finding new species of human ancestors, and unlocking new ways to fight disease
Lizard-Like Fossil May Represent 306-Million-Year-Old Evidence of Animal Parenting
Shortly after transitioning from sea to land, our egg-laying ancestors may have started parenting their young
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Why Are Black Leopards So Rare?
Several species of cat have members with all-black coats, but the evolutionary advantages and disadvantages are just starting to be understood
Eighteen Things We’ve Learned About the Oceans in the Last Decade
In the past 10 years, the world’s oceans have faced new challenges, revealed new wonders, and provided a roadmap for future conservation
The Smithsonian’s Ten Splashiest New Acquisitions of 2019
This year marks the arrival of a brilliant diamond, a hybrid space rocket, exciting paintings and two darling clouded leopard cubs
What Elephants Teach Us About Consumption and Extinction
A new exhibition places the human-elephant relationship in the context of American history
Ancient Whale Fossil Helps Detail How the Mammals Took From Land to Sea
A 39-million-year-old whale with floppy feet, which may not have been very good for walking, helps illuminate the massive animals’ transition to the oceans
Lice-Filled Dinosaur Feathers Found Trapped in 100-Million-Year-Old Amber
Prehistoric insects that resemble modern lice infested animals as early as the mid-Cretaceous, living and evolving along with dinosaurs and early birds
Scientists Pumped Ovarian Tissue Full of Sugar and Microwaved It. Here’s Why
Though only tried in cat tissues so far, the technique could someday aid fertility preservation, wildlife conservation and more
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