Neuroscience
Dogs know words for their favorite toys
The brain activity of dogs that were expecting one toy but were shown another suggests canines create mental concepts of everyday objects.
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The brain activity of dogs that were expecting one toy but were shown another suggests canines create mental concepts of everyday objects.
The reflective wax, which cools males on sunny courtship flights, may also armor them against the effects of climate change.
In a study of over 400 mammal species, less than half have males that are, on average, heavier than females, undermining a long-standing assumption.
Masked bees in Australia and French Polynesia have long-lost relatives in Fiji, suggesting that the bees’ ancestors island hopped.
Instead of nipping milkweed to drain the plants’ defensive sap, older monarch caterpillars may seek the toxic sap. Lab larvae guzzled it from a pipette.
Similar to mammals, these ringed caecilians make a nutrient-rich milk-like fluid to feed their mewling hatchlings up to six times a day.
Certain air pollutants that build up at night can break down the same fragrance molecules that attract pollinators like hawk moths to primroses.
Over six years, researchers took CT scans of over 13,000 vertebrates to make museum collections more easily accessible to researchers and the public.
Humans could live on the fictional planet Arrakis from Dune but (thankfully) no giant sandworms would menace them.
An invasion of Spanish cedar trees on Santa Cruz Island may block the seasonal migration routes of the island's giant tortoise population.
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