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Bird Eavesdrops on Another Bird's Alarm Calls
Feb 28, 2007
Bird Eavesdrops on Another Bird's Alarm Calls
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nuthatches appear to have learned to understand a foreign language -- chickadee. It's not unusual for one animal to react to the alarm call of another, but nuthatches seem to go beyond that -- interpreting the type of alarm and what sort of predator poses a threat....
Genetically Tweaked Mice Get Human-Like Vision
Feb 28, 2007
Genetically Tweaked Mice Get Human-Like Vision
Scientists have some lab mice seeing red. The animals had their vision genetically upgraded and can now see colors normally invisible to rodents. The finding, detailed in the March 23 issue of the journal Science, has implications for the evolution of full-color, or “trichromatic,” vision in our own ancestors. “What...
Bats Found to Feed On Migrating Birds at Night
Jan 31, 2007
Bats Found to Feed On Migrating Birds at Night
The blood of the largest bat in Europe reveals it can devour birds in midair at night, the only animal known to do so thus far, evidence now strongly suggests. Roughly five billion songbirds migrate across the Mediterranean Sea every year, mainly at night. Although more than 90 percent of...
You Can Help: Great Backyard Bird Count
Jan 31, 2007
You Can Help: Great Backyard Bird Count
People from all walks of life will don binoculars, if they can find them, and trek outside this weekend to count birds ranging from finches to juncos for 15 minutes as part of the Great Backyard Bird Count. In its 10th year, the project relies on participants to create a...
Fish Sensory Organ Duplicated for Submarines
Jan 31, 2007
Fish Sensory Organ Duplicated for Submarines
Fish use a row of specialized sensory organs along the sides of their bodies, called lateral lines, to hunt for prey, alert them of predators, and aid in synchronized school swimming. Now scientists have developed a lateral line for submaries. Our development of an artificial lateral line is aimed at...
New Albino Millipedes Discovered in Grand Canyon Caves
Jan 31, 2007
New Albino Millipedes Discovered in Grand Canyon Caves
Two albino millipedes have come out of their cavernous hiding places to represent an entirely new genus of these leggy organisms. Scientists spotted the millipedes in caves on opposite sides of the Grand Canyon. One species was found in a cave on the South Rim and the other in two...
Beavers Could Be Frogs Best Friends
Dec 31, 2006
Beavers Could Be Frogs Best Friends
Beavers' stream-clogging ways may be pesky to humans, but their dams might be just what some frogs and toads need to survive in their dwindling wetland habitats, a new study concludes. Cam Stevens of the University of Alberta and his colleagues conducted a survey of the calls of male frogs...
Dogs Get Found, Cats Stay Lost
Dec 31, 2006
Dogs Get Found, Cats Stay Lost
A lost Fido is more likely to be found than a missing Tabby. Why? Because man’s best friend is more likely to have identification tags and dog owners are more prompt in searching for their missing pets, according to a new study. The findings, published in the Jan. 15 issue...
Dwarf Crocodiles Split into 3 Species
Nov 30, 2008
Dwarf Crocodiles Split into 3 Species
Looking at the genes of the African dwarf crocodile, researchers found that the group comprises three distinct species rather than one. This finding ends a long debate about the taxonomy of this group, previously thought to consist of two closely related subspecies, and also defines a new, distinct species from...
Dinosaur Dads Watched Over Eggs
Nov 30, 2008
Dinosaur Dads Watched Over Eggs
In families of some of the most vicious and carnivorous dinosaurs, dad took care of the developing eggs, possibly laid by more than one mom, a new study suggests. Evidence for dino daddy daycare and potential polygamy comes from the fossilized remains of three dinosaurs sitting on nests. In the...
Reindeer Could Remain on the Run
Nov 30, 2008
Reindeer Could Remain on the Run
Caribou, aka reindeer in North America, could soon become endangered by threats such as oil exploration and climate change, according to a new book. The animals are revered by many cultures and are also central to the health and vitality of the Far North, the authors of Caribou and the...
Image Gallery: Snakes of the World
Oct 31, 2008
Image Gallery: Snakes of the World
Atlantic Salt Marsh Snake (Image credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)Found only in Florida, the Atlantic Salt Marsh Snake is threatened by waterfront development that eats into its habitat. Broad-banded Copperhead (Image credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)The copperhead is the most common venomous snake in the Eastern United States....
Huge Cave Bears: When and Why They Disappeared
Oct 31, 2008
Huge Cave Bears: When and Why They Disappeared
Enormous cave bears that once inhabited Europe were the first of the mega-mammals to die out, going extinct around 13 millennia earlier than was previously thought, according to a new estimate. Why'd they go? In part because they were vegetarians. The new extinction date, 27,800 years ago, coincides with a...
Unraveling the Wonders of Spider Silk
Oct 31, 2008
Unraveling the Wonders of Spider Silk
This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation. Spiders have fascinated Cheryl Hayashi since her undergraduate days at Yale, where one day a professor offered her an opportunity that changed her life. Hayashi had to hand-feed the professor’s laboratory colony of tropical...
Tiny Skull Sheds Light on Strange Dinosaur Diets
Sep 30, 2008
Tiny Skull Sheds Light on Strange Dinosaur Diets
A juvenile dinosaur weighing less than two sticks of butter was a toothy hodgepodge equipped with fang-like canines to tear into small mammals, reptiles and insects, as well as flat molars for plant munching. Researchers recently found the skull of this dinosaur called Heterodontosaurus tucki in a drawer at the...
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