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100 New Sharks and Rays Named
Aug 31, 2008
100 New Sharks and Rays Named
More than 100 species of sharks and rays have been classified and named as new species, including some that had been discovered as far back as the early 1990s. The new namings and classifications are the result of an 18-month Australian project using DNA analysis to clarify the identity of...
Fish Fingers: Your Digits Used to Be Fins
Aug 31, 2008
Fish Fingers: Your Digits Used to Be Fins
An ancient fish sported something like fingers that were the precursors to our own digits, according to an analysis of a new fossil skeleton. It's really the last piece of evidence to say fingers are not new. They were really present in fish, said lead researcher Catherine Boisvert, an evolutionary...
Extinct Giant Tortoise Could Be Revived
Aug 31, 2008
Extinct Giant Tortoise Could Be Revived
An extinct giant tortoise could make a comeback now that living turtles in the Galapagos Islands have been confirmed as hybrid descendents. Researchers had previously scratched their heads over the group of mixed-ancestry tortoises living on the island of Isabela in the Galapagos. But the connection to the extinct species...
Bees Can Count
Aug 31, 2008
Bees Can Count
Honeybees are clever little creatures. They can form abstract concepts, such as symmetry versus asymmetry, and they use symbolic language — the celebrated waggle dance — to direct their hivemates to flower patches. New reports suggest that they can also communicate across species, and can count — up to a...
Bug's Incredible Leaps Explained
Aug 31, 2008
Bug's Incredible Leaps Explained
Lickety-split, insects called froghoppers can leap a distance of 100 times their body length. Now, scientists have found the bugs' secret: They sport bow-like structures that work like catapults. Froghoppers are also called spittlebugs because the nymph stage of these insects produces a frothy sap for protection. The adults store...
City Bears Get Fat, Die Young
Aug 31, 2008
City Bears Get Fat, Die Young
As bears spend more time near cities, the animals gain weight, get pregnant at a younger age and die young, violent deaths. A new study of black bears near the populated Lake Tahoe, Nev., area found an alarming percentage are hit by cars. Urban areas are becoming the ultimate bear...
World's Smallest Snake Discovered on Barbados
Jul 31, 2008
World's Smallest Snake Discovered on Barbados
As slim as a spaghetti noodle and able to fit snugly on a U.S. quarter, a new species of snake has been found hiding out in a forest on Barbados. The reptilian runt is now the world's smallest snake. Blair Hedges, an evolutionary biologist at Penn State, discovered the snake,...
Ancient Shark's Bite More Powerful Than T. Rex's
Jul 31, 2008
Ancient Shark's Bite More Powerful Than T. Rex's
The most powerful bite of all time has been found — that of the prehistoric giant shark Megalodon, which makes that of T. rex look puny. The giant shark Megalodon, which means Big Tooth in Greek, may have grown to more than 50 feet long and weighed up to 110...
Plant-Eating Dinos Grew Fast to Fend Off Tyrannosaurs
Jul 31, 2008
Plant-Eating Dinos Grew Fast to Fend Off Tyrannosaurs
What some dinosaurs lacked in body armor, they made up for in size. The duck-billed hadrosaur grew to adulthood much faster than its predators, such as tyrannosaurs, a new study suggests. By about age 10, the plant-eating hadrosaur called Hypacrosaurus stebingeri had likely ballooned to its mature length of 30...
Flypaper No Match for This Slippery Bug
Jul 31, 2008
Flypaper No Match for This Slippery Bug
In the United States it’s not only summer, it’s insect season. While flypaper is among the many items used to keep the buzzing to a minimum, in South Africa, they don’t need it. Hanging a few leaves of the Roridula gorgonias plant from the rafters will take hold of pests....
Man Recalls Encounter With Obscure Wild Beast
Jul 31, 2008
Man Recalls Encounter With Obscure Wild Beast
To find me twenty years ago, you might have looked under a Mexican blue oak in the mountains of southern Arizona. From there I would often watch javelinas wander among shin dagger agave in open stretches of juniper and oak woodland. They would gnaw on the yellow flame of flowers...
Scientists Learn How Nemo Finds His Way Home
Jul 31, 2008
Scientists Learn How Nemo Finds His Way Home
How does the orange clownfish — aka Nemo from the movie Finding Nemo — really find its way home? It turns out the colorful saltwater fish can sniff for leaves that fall into the sea from rainforests growing on the islands near their coral reef homes. After clownfish hatch from...
Golden Oldie: Mr. Fish Is 27
Jul 31, 2008
Golden Oldie: Mr. Fish Is 27
Five years ago, Edith had a problem: Her goldfish of 25 years, Mr. Fish, had dropsy, a disease characterized by a swollen or hollow abdomen and in most cases fatal. In her last attempt to save her pet, on a whim, Edith wrote a message on GoldfishConnection asking for help....
Threatened Monkey Populations Surprisingly Large
Jul 31, 2008
Threatened Monkey Populations Surprisingly Large
A new census in Cambodia reveals remarkably large populations of two monkey species that are threatened with extinction. The monkey tally, announced today, represents the largest known populations of these species in the world. Scientists with the Wildlife Conservation Society counted 42,000 black-shanked douc langurs and 2,500 yellow-cheeked crested gibbons...
Researcher Walks Among Dying Baby Chimps
Jul 31, 2008
Researcher Walks Among Dying Baby Chimps
This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation. As the sun rises, my commute to work begins. There is no traffic at all to speak of except for a few baboons frolicking about and a couple warthogs at their favorite grazing spot...
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