Wildlife / Video

Preview thumbnail for Native American Tribes Suffer When the Truckee River Slows to a Trickle

Native American Tribes Suffer When the Truckee River Slows to a Trickle

Several communities rely on the 121-mile-long river, fed by snowpack melting into Lake Tahoe. (Carla Schaffer/AAAS)

Preview thumbnail for What Is the Anthropocene?

What Is the Anthropocene?

Discover why scientists think we are in a new geologic age and what it means for our future.

Preview thumbnail for Impalas and Baboons Share a Feast

Impalas and Baboons Share a Feast

Research in Tanzania shows that impalas follow baboons to sausage trees to share fruits and feel safer from predators. (Video courtesy Brooke Davis)

Preview thumbnail for How Army Ants Build Better Bridges

How Army Ants Build Better Bridges

In Panama, researchers recorded army ants crafting living bridges to take the most efficient route along the forest floor. (Christopher R. Reid, Matthew J. Lutz, Simon Garnier, and the New …

Preview thumbnail for Electric Eels Curl Up to Boost Their Power

Electric Eels Curl Up to Boost Their Power

In these clips, an electric eel in the lab attacks a dead fish attached to wire, which is shaken to simulate a struggle. The sounds represent the change in voltage …

Preview thumbnail for Jays Robbing a Hummingbird Nest

Jays Robbing a Hummingbird Nest

A new study shows that hummingbirds often nest near hawks to avoid egg-robbing Mexican jays, like the pair seen here. (Video by Harold F. Greeney, Yanayacu Biological Station)

Preview thumbnail for Fishing With Irrawaddy Dolphins

Fishing With Irrawaddy Dolphins

Local Burmese fisher Maung Lay shows how his family has traditionally teamed up with rare river dolphins and explains why their partnership is now at risk. (Video by Demelza Stokes …

Preview thumbnail for Mysterious Octopus Pranks Its Prey

Mysterious Octopus Pranks Its Prey

Rather than pouncing on its prey, the larger Pacific striped octopus extends a tentacle and taps its victim, startling it into the octopus’s deadly embrace. (Video courtesy Roy Caldwell, UC …

Preview thumbnail for This Prototype for a Robotic Flipper Was Inspired by Sea Lions

This Prototype for a Robotic Flipper Was Inspired by Sea Lions

Megan Leftwich, an engineering professor at George Washington University, is building a robotic flipper based on her observations of sea lions

Preview thumbnail for Bumblebees Are Feeling the Heat

Bumblebees Are Feeling the Heat

While bumblebees are not expanding northward, some are retreating to higher elevations as the temperature warms. This animation shows the range compression for a hypothetical North American species forced to …

Preview thumbnail for Why Seahorses Have Square Tails

Why Seahorses Have Square Tails

Used more for grasping than locomotion, seahorse tails are both flexible and uniquely strong. (Video courtesy Dominique Adriaens, UGent)

Preview thumbnail for Aerial Acrobatics of the Praying Mantis

Aerial Acrobatics of the Praying Mantis

High-speed video captures the unique ability of a leaping praying mantis to control its spin in mid-air and precisely land on a target.

Preview thumbnail for World Pangolin Day 2015

World Pangolin Day 2015

A new video from conservation nonprofit Save Vietnam’s Wildlife shows the plight of the world’s only scaled mammal, the endangered pangolin.

Preview thumbnail for Luna Moth Wings Deflect Bat Attacks

Luna Moth Wings Deflect Bat Attacks

Spinning tails on the moths’ wingtips scramble bats’ echolocation signals to keep the moths from being eaten

Preview thumbnail for Orphaned Baby Elephant Takes a Flight

Orphaned Baby Elephant Takes a Flight

When Gary Roberts found this orphaned elephant next to its dead mother, he made an attempt to fly it to safety

Preview thumbnail for Sloth Bear Cub Plays a Harmonica

Sloth Bear Cub Plays a Harmonica

Sloth bear cub Remi plays harmonica as part of an animal enrichment program at the Smithsonian National Zoo. The activity encourages the same behavior sloth bears in the wild use …

Preview thumbnail for Eating the Amputated Arm of Another Octopus

Eating the Amputated Arm of Another Octopus

The octopus places the arm in its mouth, treating it like food.

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Could a Plague Pandemic Strike Again?

SmartNews: Could a Plague Pandemic Strike Again?

Digging up the past to find out what caused one of the world’s deadliest pandemics

Preview thumbnail for The T-Rex's Journey to D.C

The T-Rex’s Journey to D.C

Follow the “Nation’s T-Rex” as it travels from Montana to Washington

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Extinct Frog Resurrected

SmartNews: Extinct Frog Resurrected

The gastric-brooding frog eats its young, well sort of - our Kelly Carnes explains

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Tobacco Hornworm

SmartNews: Tobacco Hornworm

Researchers investigating nicotine poisoning discover the “breath of death”

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Suicidal Sloths?

SmartNews: Suicidal Sloths?

Why three-toed sloths risk life and limb when nature calls

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Cracking the Code on Camouflage

SmartNews: Cracking the Code on Camouflage

Scientists are looking at the sea to help protect our soldiers in the field

Preview thumbnail for SmartNews: Apps for Apes

SmartNews: Apps for Apes

Zookeepers at the National Zoo keep orangutans mentally stimulated with an innovative use of iPads

Preview thumbnail for Weird Science: Female Ferrets

Weird Science: Female Ferrets

Sometimes, in fact, nature is stranger than fiction

Preview thumbnail for Weird Science: Humongous Fungus

Weird Science: Humongous Fungus

Sometimes, in fact, nature is stranger than fiction

Preview thumbnail for How Scientists Are Tagging Reindeer to Track Climate Change

How Scientists Are Tagging Reindeer to Track Climate Change

In the Arctic regions of Norway, researchers track down reindeer to measure how the warming winters affect the species at large

Preview thumbnail for Weird Science: Ambergris

Weird Science: Ambergris

Sometimes, in fact, nature is stranger than fiction

Preview thumbnail for Weird Science: It Snows What on Venus?

Weird Science: It Snows What on Venus?

Sometimes, in fact, nature is stranger than fiction

Preview thumbnail for A Right Whale Skeleton Arrives at the Smithsonian

A Right Whale Skeleton Arrives at the Smithsonian

See the process involved when a massive specimen arrives at the Smithsonian

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