Animals

  1. Animals

    Orcas and other animals may speak with complexity

    From finches to orangutans, animal vocalizations may be more complex and not as distant from the structure of human language as previously thought.

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  2. Animals

    Olinguito’s bio built by crowd-sourcing

    Crowd-sourcing fleshes out the bio of little-known raccoon relative, the olinguito.

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  3. Animals

    New subspecies of Philippine tarsier discovered

    Genetic tests settle a taxonomic debate surrounding Philippine tarsier, one of the world’s smallest primates.

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  4. Animals

    Zebra finches go mad with mercury, and other animal updates

    Mercury exposure makes zebra finches bold and hyperactive, and additional research from the 2014 Animal Behavior Society Meeting.

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  5. Animals

    Dolphins and whales may squeal with pleasure too

    Dolphins and whales squeal after a food reward in about the same time it takes for dopamine to be released in the brain.

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  6. Physics

    Common motion emerges in swarms of only 10 midges

    A swarm of midges may start to fly as a collective group with as few as 10 individuals, a new study shows.

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  7. Animals

    Aboriginal lizard hunting boosts kangaroo numbers

    An aboriginal technique for hunting lizards with fire in Western Australia feeds wallaroo populations.

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  8. Animals

    New dolphin species gets a name

    A species of humpback dolphin from Australia has now received its proper name.

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  9. Life

    Grizzly bears master healthy obesity

    Tuned insulin signals explain how grizzly bears can fatten up for hibernation in the winter without developing diabetes.

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  10. Psychology

    Feedback

    Readers way in on slacktivism, cockroaches, dinosaur tracks and more.

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  11. Animals

    Here’s your chance to see the last passenger pigeon

    On display for the 100th anniversary of her species’ extinction, the final passenger pigeon specimen looks pretty good.

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  12. Animals

    Octomom and six other extreme animal parents

    The octopus that brooded her young for 4.5 years is just the start when it comes to tales of extreme parenting.

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