Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
To Hide From Predators, Some Animals Camouflage Into Their Surroundings, While Others Display Bright Colors as a Warning. What Keeps Them Safest?
While many circumstances factor into the calculation, researchers found in a new study that local predators, not appearance ...
Daily Express US on MSN
Massachusetts issued warning over huge surge in great white sharks
A warning over a huge surge in great white sharks was issued in Massachusetts after several of the beasts were spotted.
For nearly twenty years, satellites have quietly gauged the flow of sunlight and heat through the Earth’s atmosphere. Today, ...
Marco Adda offers a new view of how to interact with nonhumans and explores how we can learn from other animals’ movement, ...
New fossil research shows how human impacts, particularly through the rise of agriculture and livestock, have disrupted ...
Bees don’t just follow dance directions - they recall landscapes, use memory, and build cognitive maps to guide efficient ...
Dr. Jane Goodall DBE, UN Messenger of Peace and founder of the Jane Goodall Institute was certainly a rarity among conservationists: She was a household name. For more than six de ...
Understanding the neural mechanisms underlying associative threat learning is essential for advancing behavioral models of threat and adaptation. We investigated distinct activation patterns across ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Animals Choose to Hide or Flaunt Their Colors Based on Light Conditions and Predator Behavior
Ever wondered why some animals warn with bold colors while others hide from predators? It depends on tiny shifts in their habitat.
This special issue of English Language Notes invites contributions that examine the dynamic exchanges of literature and other nonliterary forms between Eastern and Western countries throughout the 20 ...
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