Animals

  1. Animals

    Stinkbugs are color conscious when it comes to their eggs

    P. maculiventris moms control the color of their eggs, seemingly pairing darker eggs with darker surfaces.

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  2. Animals

    Stink bug moms are color conscious when it comes to their eggs

    P. maculiventris moms control the color of their eggs, seemingly pairing darker eggs with darker surfaces.

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  3. Animals

    Social pecking order gives roosters something to crow about

    Small groups of laboratory roosters keep to the rankings for orderly morning crows.

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  4. Paleontology

    Museum fossil links snakes to lizards

    Scientists have discovered the fossilized remains of the first four-legged snake. The fossil bridges the gap between snakes and lizards.

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  5. Animals

    Boas kill by cutting off blood flow, not airflow

    Boas actually kill by constricting blood flow of their prey, not suffocating them, as scientists previously suspected.

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  6. Animals

    Sea level rise threatens sea turtles

    Sea level rise is causing coastal areas to be inundated with water. Even short periods of being wet can kill sea turtle eggs, a new study finds.

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  7. Animals

    Eyewitness account of a dolphin birth takes a dark turn

    Scientists witnessed the first wild birth of a bottlenose dolphin — and an attempt at infanticide.

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  8. Animals

    Polar bears’ ‘walking hibernation’ not much of an energy saver

    Summer’s “walking hibernation” doesn’t shut down polar bears as much as winter does.

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  9. Life

    Good luck outsmarting a mosquito

    Mosquitoes use their senses in sophisticated combinations and sequences to find you.

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  10. 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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  11. 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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  12. 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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