Animals

  1. 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.

    By
  2. 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.

    By
  3. 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.

    By
  4. Animals

    Climate change revs up extinction risks

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

    By
  5. Animals

    Rock-wielding monkeys make adjustments when cracking nuts

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

    By
  6. Plants

    Medfly control methods were ready for pest’s influx

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

    By
  7. 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.

    By
  8. 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.

    By
  9. Genetics

    Mosquito bites might be foretold in genes

    Attractiveness to mosquitoes could be inherited, twin study suggests.

    By
  10. Animals

    Bees may like neonicotinoids, but some may be harmed

    Two high-profile tests raise worries that bees can’t avoid neonicotinoid pesticides and that wild species are at special risk.

    By
  11. Animals

    Only three wolves left on Michigan island

    Without an infusion of new wolves, the Isle Royale wolf population, and the famous study associated with it, will die off.

    By
  12. Animals

    Growth of mining on land may promote invasions at sea

    Ballast water taken in to keep ships stable could, when discharged elsewhere, release species that become invasive in their new homes.

    By