Life sciences writer Susan Milius has been writing about botany, zoology and ecology for Science News since the last millennium. She worked at diverse publications before breaking into science writing and editing. After stints on the staffs of The Scientist, Science, International Wildlife and United Press International, she joined Science News. Three of Susan's articles have been selected to appear in editions of The Best American Science Writing.

All Stories by Susan Milius

  1. Animals

    One bold, misinformed spider slows a colony’s ability to learn

    Incorrect ideas prove more dangerous in bold velvet spiders than in shyer ones.

  2. Animals

    Male peacocks keep eyes low when checking out competition

    Eye-tracking technology shows peacocks barely gaze at the full height of other males magnificent eyespot feather spreads.

  3. Animals

    How a trap-jaw ant carries a baby

    Powerful jaws make the Odontomachus brunneus ant a skilled escape artist.

  4. Animals

    Why whistling caterpillars scare birds

    Caterpillars that whistle when birds peck at them may be giving phony avian warning calls.

  5. Animals

    Pregnant male pipefish not so great at giving embryos oxygen

    During male pregnancy, pipefish embryos can get stunted by low oxygen in dad’s brood pouch.

  6. Animals

    Octopuses can ‘see’ with their skin

    Eyes aren’t the only cephalopod body parts with light-catching molecules.

  7. Animals

    Vampire squid take mommy breaks

    The vampire squid again defies its sensationalist name with a life in the slow lane.

  8. Life

    Male stag beetles face weighty problem for flight

    Male stag beetles need enormous mandibles to fend off other males and find a mate, but computer simulations show that the giant jaws make running and flying very difficult.

  9. Animals

    Ants snap jaws, shoot skyward, escape death

    Emergency trap jaw launchings help some ants pass death tests.

  10. Animals

    Deepwater dweller is first known warm-hearted fish

    The opah, a deep-diving fish, can keep much of its body warmer than its surroundings, making it similar to warm-blooded birds and mammals.

  11. Animals

    Nighttime light pollution sabotages sex pheromones of moths

    Artificial lighting at night can trick female moths into releasing skimpy, odd-smelling sex pheromones.

  12. Animals

    Pruning bug genitals revives puzzle of extra-long males

    Surgical approach highlights question of length mismatch in his and hers morphologies.