Animals

  1. Animals

    Birds learn what danger sounds like

    In just two days, superb fairy-wrens learned to recognize an unfamiliar alarm call as a sign that a predator loomed.

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  2. Animals

    Feeding seabirds may give declining populations a boost

    Supplementing the diets of kittiwakes with additional food might give fledglings a head start, a new study finds.

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  3. Paleontology

    50-million-year-old fossil sperm discovered

    Ancient worm sperm preserved in 50-million-year-old cocoons from Antarctica set age record.

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  4. Animals

    Some animals’ internal clocks follow a different drummer

    Circadian clocks in some animals tick-tock to a different beat.

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  5. Life

    A downy killer wages chemical warfare

    The common fungus Beauveria bassiana makes white downy corpses of its victims.

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  6. Animals

    Children’s classic ‘Watership Down’ is based on real science

    The novel ‘Watership Down’ is the tale of a bunch of anthropomorphized rabbits. Their language may be unreal, but the animals’ behavior was rooted in science.

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  7. Animals

    Giant pandas live in the slow lane

    Giant pandas burn far less energy than similarly sized land mammals.

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  8. Climate

    Bumblebee territory shrinking under climate change

    Climate change is shrinking bumblebee habitat as southern territories heat up and bumblebees hold their lines in the north.

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  9. Animals

    Cuckoos may have a long-lasting impact on other birds

    Some birds that don’t have to worry about parasites like cuckoos reject eggs that aren’t their own. It might be a legacy of long-ago parasitism.

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  10. Animals

    Seabirds may navigate by scent

    Shearwaters may use olfactory cues to find islands far across the open ocean, a new study suggests.

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  11. Animals

    Why seahorses have square tails

    3-D printed seahorse tails reveal possible benefits of square cross-sections for armor and gripping.

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  12. Life

    Genetic tweak hints at why mammoths loved the cold

    An altered temperature sensor helped mammoths adapt to the cold.

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