Animals

  1. Animals

    Fish just wanna have fun

    Although biologists have observed fish playing before, scientists have now recorded hours of video showing a new type of antic in fish.

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  2. Animals

    Teen studies living flashlights of the deep

    A teen studies a cryptic fish to better understand when and why it flashes its bacterial glow.

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  3. Animals

    News Brief: No hopping for these ancient ‘roos

    By hopping, today’s kangaroos can scoot swiftly through the countryside. That was not true for some of their ancient cousins. True giants, those now-extinct kangaroos would have walked on two feet — and relied on their tippy-toes.

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  4. Earth

    Coming: The sixth mass extinction?

    Species are dying off at such a rapid rate — faster than at any other time in human existence — that many resources on which we depend may disappear.

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  5. Animals

    Picture this: Too many walruses

    A giant herd of walruses have hauled out onto a beach in Alaska. They don’t belong there, but with no ice nearby, they have taken to land.

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  6. Animals

    Rare as a rhino

    Most species are rare. Some have always been rare. A problem develops when people are responsible for accelerating a species’ rarity to the point that extinction threatens.

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  7. Animals

    Sharks’ super sniffers at risk

    Rising ocean acidity could rob sharks of their ability to sniff out dinner, marine biologists find.

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  8. Animals

    Chef puts eco-bullies on the menu

    Some immigrant species can become a nuisance, eating up or displacing the natives. Often people find little incentive to catch and remove the newcomers — unless they find them too yummy to pass up.

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  9. Animals

    A fish out of water — walks and morphs

    When this modern ‘walking’ fish was raised on land, its body changed. How it adapted resembles some prehistoric fish. These alterations hint at evolutionary changes that may have made life on land possible.

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  10. Animals

    Germs explain some animal behaviors

    The bacteria that people and other animals host in and on their bodies are invisible to the eye. Yet they can play a very visible role in behavior. It’s something scientists are just coming to appreciate.

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  11. Animals

    Wind farms: Restaurants for seals?

    Scientists have tracked harbor seals visiting the turbines of ocean wind farms. The predators may be drawn by fish that make their homes in the artificial reefs created by the manmade structures.

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  12. Animals

    How termites ‘hear‘ about trouble

    When danger comes too close, termites bang their heads against the walls of their homes. This action sends out a warning vibration that others ‘hear’ with their legs.

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