Biology


Host Cuckoo Cuckoos Species Eggs Color
- How Parasitic Cuckoos Lay Host-Matching Eggs Yet Remain A Single Species Parasitic cuckoos are truly remarkable birds. Not only do they they lead peculiar social lives, but in doing so, they show us how the process of evolution actually works. For example, many cuckoo species rely upon other bird species to raise their chicks for them; an unusual life history trait known as "brood parasitism". As you might expect, the host birds are not very happy about this deception and blatant theft of their ... [Read More]

Source: forbes.com

Jellyfish North Atlantic Botrynema Knob Arctic Ocean
- Follow Earth on Google Life in the deep ocean often sorts into hidden zones shaped by temperature, salt, and moving water. Many animals, like Botrynema jellyfish, stay within a narrow band of conditions, almost like having a stable homeland. When a marine species turns up far outside that usual zone, it raises questions about both the animal and the ocean itself. New research by marine scientists at The University of Western Australia ( UWA ) suggests that the way a deep-sea jellyfish of the ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Hoyo Negro South America Pit Fossils Ch Aacute Vez Arce Cave System
- Reading time 11 minutes Deep beneath the tropical forests of the Yucatán Peninsula lies a vast subterranean domain few people can explore. Accessible by sinkholes known as "cenotes" and potentially stretching across thousands of kilometers underground, these are the world's most extensive underwater cave systems. Their tunnels are dark and flooded now, but they were dry at times during the Late Pleistocene, a period approximately 126,000 to 11,700 years ago. Proof that humans and animals ... [Read More]

Source: gizmodo.com

Collagen Marsupial Lion Koalas Years Bones Thylacoleo
- Cuddly koalas are closely related to one of the deadliest mammals ever. Australian folklore warns of the "drop bear," a legendary and savage version of the koala said to leap from trees onto unsuspecting tourists. Now, scientists have found that the myth may have roots in the deep past. A new study provides the first molecular evidence linking modern koalas to the long-extinct Thylacoleo carnifex , better known as the "marsupial lion," one of the largest mammalian predators ever to stalk Ice ... [Read More]


Cells Bird Birds Dodo Germ Pigeon
- Follow Earth on Google Colossal Biosciences says it has cleared a major hurdle toward bring the dodo bird back from extinction. The dodo was a large, flightless island bird known for its rounded body, sturdy legs, and calm behavior around humans. The team reports growing pigeon reproductive cells and preparing gene-edited chickens to carry them, with the goal of releasing flocks within five to seven years. The scale is ambitious. The plan is to build enough healthy birds to survive in the wild ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Wolves Yellowstone Scientists Elk Vegetation Populations
- Yellowstone has long been a mecca for scientists studying how predators affect the environment. When the US Fish and Wildlife Service reintroduced 14 gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park in 1995, the animals were, in some ways, stepping into a new world. After humans hunted wolves to near-extinction across the Western US in the early 20th century, the carnivore's absence likely altered ecosystems and food webs across the Rocky Mountains. Once wolves were reintroduced to the landscape, ... [Read More]


Eels Trade Species Eel Protections Japan
- Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... By PATRICK WHITTLE, Associated Press SCARBOROUGH, Maine (AP) — Eels are the stuff of nightmares — slimy, snakelike creatures that lay millions of eggs before dying so their offspring can return home to rivers and streams. They've existed since the time of the dinosaurs, and some species are more poorly understood than those ancient animals. Yet they're also valuable seafood fish that are declining all over the world, leading to a new push ... [Read More]


Species Lizard Emu Wildlife Skink Decade Scientists
- Secretive 'no arm' lizard crowned new species after decade-long search We'd like to welcome this curious armless burrowing lizard into the New Species Hall of Fame. Despite being built for life underground, in the end this slider skink was no match for scientists who had searched for a decade to confirm its existence. Australian Wildlife Conservancy (AWC) ecologists have announced the formal identification of this snake-like lizard as a new reptile species, following two specimen captures a ... [Read More]

Source: newatlas.com

Consciousness Brain Awareness Cortex Theory Birds
- Scientists are digging into one of evolution's strangest puzzles — why only certain creatures developed minds that know they exist. Consciousness is the strangest thing evolution ever pulled off. It's not a trait like wings or fur, but rather something that exists solely as a product of the mind. For the longest time, we've treated consciousness as humanity's private club — no entry for creatures without language or a big, folded cortex. But science is starting to catch up to ... [Read More]


Pumas Jaguars Prey Ocelots Oregon State University Margays
- Follow Earth on Google In Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve, four wild cat species avoid competition by staking out different vertical tiers of the forest, from the ground-dwelling jaguar to the treetop-moving margay. A new study led by Oregon State University shows that each species leans on a different "floor" of the rainforest, with some prowling the leaf litter and others targeting prey in the trees.  "This research challenges long-held assumptions about how large carnivores coexist ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

Surface Sharks Area Animals Heat Exchange Ad
- Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. . I t's a universal fact that as any 3-D object, from a Platonic sphere to a cell to an elephant, grows outward in all directions, its total surface area will increase more slowly than the space it occupies (its volume). If the object's geometry and shape remain the same as it gets bigger, then its surface area will increase roughly as fast as its volume to the two-thirds power. For centuries, biologists have wondered if life forms, too, follow this ... [Read More]

Source: nautil.us

Portugal Whale Formosa Natural Park Home Species Region
- Home to scenic cities like Porto, Aveiro and Lisbon, Portugal has earned widespread acclaim for its eye-catching architecture and rich cultural heritage—but it's not just humans that call this country home. From the depths of the Azores to the peaks of the Serra da Estrela, Portugal is also brimming with a wealth of native mammals, birds and reptiles, several of which are endemic to the country. As you plan your next trip to Western Europe, the following regions offer a glimpse into the ... [Read More]

Source: forbes.com

Vampire Squid Squid Vampire Octopuses Genome Study
- Follow Earth on Google The deep sea often challenges our ideas about how life evolves. Some creatures carry stories that stretch across unimaginable time. The vampire squid sits among these quiet survivors. Its soft body and drifting lifestyle hide a complex past written in its genome. A new study now brings that history into view, revealing how this species links the worlds of squids and octopuses . Vampire squid reveals family story Researchers sequenced the vampire squid genome and uncovered ... [Read More]

Source: earth.com

B Lesueur B Penicillata Species Seeds Experience Ad
- Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. . A ustralia has some tough nuts to crack. But to some species of rat kangaroo, busting into the extremely hard seeds of the sandalwood and quandong trees down under is all in a night's work. Commonly called "bettongs" (genus Bettongia ), these nocturnal marsupials scurry around at night foraging on these seeds, as well as roots, leaves, grubs, fruits, and fungi. In a new study published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society , researchers ... [Read More]

Source: nautil.us

Penis Sperm Penises Species Humans Competition
- In the animal kingdom, penises can be spiked, split, corkscrewed – even detachable. They're one of the most diverse structures in biology. The human penis is so uniform, it's an anatomical outlier. Understanding why penises evolved, and why they differ so widely, also helps explain why humans have one at all. Penises first evolved as a solution to one simple problem: how to achieve internal fertilisation. The first animals lived in the sea before our ancestors started living on land half ... [Read More]


Species Foot Deyiremeda A Scientists A Deyiremeda
- Newly discovered fossils prove that a mysterious foot found in Ethiopia belongs to a little-known, recently named ancient human relative. Newly discovered fossils prove that a mysterious foot found in Ethiopia belongs to a little-known, recently named ancient human relative who lived alongside the species of the famous Lucy, scientists said Wednesday. The discovery is the latest twist in the tale of human evolution and could even cast some doubt on the status of Lucy's species, Australopithecus ... [Read More]