Animals

  1. Animals

    Animal moms sacrifice a lot — sometimes even themselves

    In the animal kingdom, there are bad mothers and good ones — and then there are those that let their kids eat them.

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  2. Climate

    Flood planners should not forget beavers

    Beaver dams can reduce flooding downstream, new research shows.

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  3. Animals

    Ivory listings found on Craigslist as elephant poaching continues

    Elephants are hunted by the thousands to meet demand for ivory products.

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  4. Paleontology

    Oldest known avian relative of today’s birds found in China

    Fossil find suggests modern birds’ oldest avian relative lived about 6 million years before previous record holder.

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  5. Animals

    Stretchy nerves help some big whales open wide

    Blue whales and their closest relatives have stretchy nerves near their mouths so they can open wide and swallow a lot of prey.

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  6. Animals

    Lazy sunfish are actually active predators

    Ocean sunfish were once thought to be drifting eaters of jellyfish. But they’re not, new research shows.

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  7. Animals

    Beetle’s toxic, explosive vapor explained

    From a two-chambered gland in their rears, bombardier beetles unleash a toxic, blazing hot spray to defend themselves.

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  8. Animals

    Climate change revs up extinction risks

    One in six species on the planet may face extinction if the global temperatures continue to rise.

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  9. Animals

    Rock-wielding monkeys make adjustments when cracking nuts

    Videos show that monkeys carefully pound open nuts to avoid smashing kernels inside.

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  10. Plants

    Medfly control methods were ready for pest’s influx

    50 years ago, researchers prepared to greet Mediterranean fruit flies with sterile males.

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  11. Animals

    Rare fossils expand evolutionary history of sperm whales

    A pygmy fossil unearthed in Panama reveals that the organ the whales use to produce sound and echolocate shrunk over time.

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  12. Animals

    Woolly mammoth DNA shows toll of low diversity

    A new sequencing analysis of two woolly mammoth genomes reveals evidence of genetic decline due to isolation and inbreeding just prior to extinction.

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