Animals

  1. Animals

    Elephant’s big nose wins most sensitive sniffer

    A genetic survey reveals that African elephants harbor more smell sensors than any other known animal.

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  2. Animals

    Termite soldiers locate battles with vibrational clues

    To locate invasions, termite soldiers listen for millisecond-long delays in vibrational distress signals sent out by other soldiers.

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  3. Microbes

    Gut microbes help packrats eat poison

    Antiobiotics and fecal transplants in desert woodrats shown that gut microbes can help plant-eaters metabolize toxins.

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  4. Ecosystems

    Offshore wind farms may be seal feeding grounds

    Harbor seals were tracked visiting offshore wind farms, probably to find food, researchers say.

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  5. Life

    You don’t have to go to Antarctica to see wild penguins

    Tourists can visit many species of wild penguins outside of Antarctica.

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  6. Earth

    Bird’s-eye views of the globe highlight avian trouble spots

    Recent maps reveal trouble spots for the world’s imperiled birds.

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  7. Life

    Domesticated animals’ juvenile appearance tied to embryonic cells

    Mild defects in embryonic cells could explain physical similarities along with tameness across domesticated species.

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  8. Animals

    That stinky gorilla may be trying to say something

    Scientists have found the first evidence of wild gorillas communicating by scent.

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  9. Animals

    Elephant shrews are, oddly, related to actual elephants

    A new species in the group is the smallest yet, with adults smaller than a newborn kitten.

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  10. Animals

    New water bear species found in Antarctica

    A tiny creature called a tardigrade could shed light on how animals reached the far southern continent.

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  11. Life

    Gecko adhesion takes electric turn

    Challenging a favored theory, measurements suggest that electrostatic interactions make gecko feet supersticky.

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  12. Health & Medicine

    Yet another reason to hate ticks

    Ticks are tiny disease-carrying parasites that should also be classified as venomous animals, a new study argues.

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