Life

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Life

  1. Animals

    This fish may play a hole in its head like a drum

    The rockhead poacher is a little fish with a big pit in its head. The divot may be like a drum, making sound that rises above a chaotic, nearshore din.

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  2. Animals

    Animal personalities can play a big role in saving species

    From bold foxes to gregarious birds, animals’ personalities are increasingly being seen as crucial to conservation efforts.

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  3. Animals

    How cheetah mummies could help bring the species back to Arabia

    Arabian cheetah mummies' DNA reveals that the long-lost population could be closely replaced by a cheetah population in northwestern Africa.

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  4. Paleontology

    This dino’s fossil claw suggests it snatched eggs, not insects

    A 67-million-year-old claw fossil reveals a new dinosaur species that may have used its hand spikes to snatch and pierce eggs.

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  5. Plants

    Plants packed close enough to touch are more resilient to stress

    Signals transmitted via leaves can warn neighboring plants of stressful events, making the group collectively more resilient than plants in isolation.

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  6. Physics

    Queen bumblebees are poor foragers thanks to sparse tongue hair

    The density of fine hairs on bumblebees’ tongues determines how much nectar they can collect — and workers put queen bees to shame.

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  7. Plants

    In a new kind of plant trickery, this yam fools birds with fake berries

    Black-bulb yam’s mimicry tricks birds into spreading its berrylike clones. The plant's novel strategy helps it spread without seeds or sexual reproduction.

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  8. Animals

    Among chimpanzees, thrill-seeking peaks in toddlerhood

    In humans, teens do the most dangerous things. In chimpanzees, that honor goes to toddlers. The difference may lie in caregiver supervision.

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  9. Animals

    An all-female wasp is rapidly spreading across North America’s elms

    The elm zigzag sawfly has spread to 15 states in five years. Now it's attacking the tree that cities planted to replace Dutch elm disease victims.

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