During mass extinction events or periods that were particularly warm, the role of coastline geometry in extinction risk was ...
Whales, dolphins and other marine mammals are highly social, but those social ties can also help diseases spread through ...
A group of German scientists tested the effects of a more acidic ocean on sharks’ teeth and found that future generations of sharks could have weaker teeth because of changing ocean chemistry.
A new study led by researchers at the University of Oxford has shown that the shape and orientation of coastlines ...
As increased industrial activity puts fragile deep-sea ecosystems at risk, one artist is raising awareness about imperiled ...
As temperatures soared on Saturday, the reformed criminal, 37, soaked up the sun with his 22-year-old girlfriend Ava. But as ...
Crazy Creatures on MSN
Why sharks tolerate this strange passenger
Some fish have evolved a remarkable way to survive by attaching themselves to much larger animals. This video explains how a suction cup on the fish’s head allows it to cling tightly to sharks as they ...
Encouraged by these results, Dudin, Dey, Guichard, and Hamel launched a close collaboration. Three years later, their work has produced near-encyclopedic insight into hundreds of protist species and ...
Many Russians and at least two Chinese were among those stranded. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at ...
It’s the day the “Animal Goncourt” is awarded. “Who better,” a judge says, “to talk about the fabulous relationship between animals and men than writers and philosophers?” Credit... Supported by By ...
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