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It's OK to love all the bees (the honey bees, too)

North America's bee populations are in trouble, but don't blame the honey bees. While some people argue that an overabundance of managed honey bees—those raised to help pollinate crops and produce honey—is causing native ...

Four sperm whale strandings point to potential human causes

Four sperm whales that stranded separately on southeastern U.S. coastlines between 2020–22 were emaciated and malnourished, with ingested fishing gear and marine debris found in two of them, according to a new study that ...

Ant larvae control parental care by using odor signals

In the clonal raider ant (Ooceraea biroi), workers in a colony alternate between caring for larvae and laying eggs in a coordinated cycle. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena have discovered ...

Emperor penguins listed as endangered species: IUCN

The emperor penguin has been declared an endangered species as climate change pushes the icon of Antarctica a step closer to extinction, the global authority on threatened wildlife announced on Thursday.

Buried bounty: Caribou survival depends on lichen and snow

A study by researchers at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry indicates that if lichen continues to decline across the Arctic, caribou populations could struggle to survive the winter.

Pollinator-friendly gardens don't have to sacrifice style

For gardeners who love colorful, tidy flower beds, helping pollinators doesn't have to mean going fully wild. A new study from plant biologists at Northwestern University and the Chicago Botanic Garden found that some cultivated ...

City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world

The urban monkeys in New Delhi are so bold they'll steal the lunch right off your plate. If you've spent time in New York, you've probably seen squirrels try to do the same. Sydney's white ibises got the nickname "bin chickens" ...

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Plants & Animals
The lengths male octopuses go to protect the arm they need to mate
Plants & Animals
Triple threat emerges as sharks, beach nourishment and murky waters collide
Plants & Animals
Mangrove crab outruns its namesake, expanding its range 200 miles north
Plants & Animals
Tracking reef winners and losers after a Category 4 storm
Plants & Animals
New glassfrog species named for first Ecuadorian woman to win a gold medal
Plants & Animals
Avoiding the very hungry caterpillar: Herbivores pose unexpected threat to predatory mite eggs
Ecology
Global trade in wild birds is poorly monitored: The risks to wildlife, ecosystems and human health
Ecology
Seizure of 2,000 ants at Nairobi airport highlights the hidden scale of insect trafficking
Evolution
African frogs haven't forgotten the ice ages. Scientists can tell by where they live.
Plants & Animals
When trees get 'sunburn': Study shows how young trees can handle the heat
Ecology
Network analysis reveals mammal food web drivers across Africa
Ecology
Born to roam, built for home: New genomic insights for snapper fisheries
Plants & Animals
Rich biodiversity found in Japan's deepest ocean trenches, including an unidentified 'mystery' species
Plants & Animals
Bird flu spread could be impacted by where waterfowl like to live
Plants & Animals
Social honey bees stay cool: How groups mitigate heat-triggered hormone spikes
Plants & Animals
Oyster reefs stack up for shoreline protection
Ecology
From decades-long studies of humble grasses, new clues to climate resistance
Ecology
New leading cause of tree death in US northeast shifts from logging to natural causes
Plants & Animals
Three Himalayan predators coexist by partitioning prey, reducing direct competition
Plants & Animals
Parasitic tapeworm—a risk to domestic dogs and humans—found in Washington coyotes

Other news

Social Sciences
Integrative experiment design reveals hidden patterns in decades-old social science research
Plants & Animals
African swine fever: A novel model assesses transmission between domestic pigs and wild boar
Biochemistry
Nickel catalyst enables precision mirror-image assembly for key drug scaffolds
Biotechnology
AI diffusion models tailor drug molecules to custom-fit protein targets, speeding drug development and evaluation
Earth Sciences
Hidden ocean feedback loop could accelerate climate change
Nanomaterials
Carbon nanotube fiber sensors achieve record measurement error below 0.1%
Cell & Microbiology
Liquid-like histone H1 'glues' nucleosomes, reshaping how DNA compacts
Evolution
Mammal ancestors laid eggs—and this 250-million-year-old fossil proves it
Analytical Chemistry
Plant-inspired water membrane filters CO₂ with constant selectivity and adjustable permeance
Analytical Chemistry
Hydroxyl radicals in UV-exposed water reveal surprising reaction pathway
Plants & Animals
How an internal plant 'thermostat' guides root growth in unpredictable temperatures
Archaeology
No more giants, no more heavy handaxes: Why early humans downsized their stone tools
Molecular & Computational biology
A smarter way to build vaccines: Scientists harness AI to target emerging alphaviruses
Cell & Microbiology
Decoy molecules trick soil bacteria into attacking persistent pollutants without genetic engineering
Plants & Animals
Oxygen sensing helps explain why amphibians regenerate limbs but mammals cannot
Earth Sciences
Deadly heat thresholds have already being crossed in six recent heat waves, study shows
Cell & Microbiology
Keeping up with the phages: How V. cholerae neighbors swap defenses against viruses
Mathematics
Mathematical signature spots when competition is fair, winner-take-all, or too soft
Biochemistry
How surface chemistry impacts the performance of malaria nets
Evolution
From Asgard to Earth: Tiny tubes may reveal the moment complex life began

Microbial clues uncover how wild songbirds respond to stress

Every animal carries a microscopic community of bacteria, fungi, and other microbes that play a critical role in health. These gut microbes help regulate the immune system, support digestion, and even influence how animals ...

Harnessing eDNA to help conserve Australia's oceans

As we move through the world, we leave behind invisible traces of ourselves encased in the hair, skin, and other bodily matter we shed. These tiny pieces of DNA—known as environmental DNA or eDNA—have major conservation potential. ...

Shell game: How oysters enlist help from microbes

For an oyster, creating an internal environment for calcification that forms its distinctive hard shell is essential. But new Harvard research has found that these bivalves may outsource the work, coordinating with microbes ...

Wolves kill—and ravens remember where

When a wolf pack runs down its prey, the first on the scene is often the raven. Even before the predators have had time to dig in, the ravens are already in line, waiting to take advantage of the odd scrap of meat that becomes ...

Tiny marine organism stressed by warmer Arctic waters

Some of the smallest marine species are actually the most important because all other life depends on them. Phytoplankton are probably the most important, but just above them in the food chain are zooplankton. In Norway's ...

The 'croak' conundrum: Parasites complicate love signals in frogs

Across the animal kingdom, sound is more than communication—it's a signal of survival and success. From birds and primates to insects, fish, and amphibians, animals broadcast acoustic "advertisements" to defend territory, ...

How biological invasions are silently remodeling ecosystems

Many of the most damaging invasions do not simply subtract species; they fundamentally remodel the environment, altering habitats, rewiring interactions, and shifting processes in ways that species lists alone cannot reveal.