For its latest collection, Google traveled to the African rainforest where Jane Goodall pioneered her groundbreaking chimp research
In a new book, San Francisco-based photographer Susan Middleton captures the curious gestures and expressions of marine invertebrates
Australian banded stilts use mysterious cues to know when to head toward ephemeral lakes in the country’s otherwise dry interior
The mantis shrimp's eyes, which can see differences in polarized light, are informing researchers building a tiny, easy-to-use camera that can spot cancer
Sequencing 101 butterfly genomes has revealed a few of the monarch's secrets, including some keys to its epic annual migration
A diversity of coral guard-crabs is needed to fend off attacks by hungry snails and giant spiky sea stars
Researchers at Rice University have created pixels 40 times smaller than those found in today's LCD displays
The fish is facing an upstream struggle to survive. Can human ingenuity find a solution?
Robert Ballard, the famed explorer who discovered the wreck of the Titanic, ponders what else is on the ocean floor
Young birds will dumbly peck at anything that crawls their way—even if it winds up teaching them a painful lesson
Scotland doesn’t have the market cornered on exotic national symbols—check out the mouflon, the takin and the xoloitzcuintli
A new documentary profiles Klaus Kemp, the sole practicioner of a quirky art form that is invisible to the naked eye
Kissing bugs, which can spread Chagas disease, turned up positive for human blood meals in caves in Guatemala and Belize
Rising temperatures and a more acidic ocean may spell trouble for the Chesapeake Bay's iconic crabs, oysters and fish
The eye-popping structure devoted to the nation’s vibrant ecosystems makes its grand debut
A mysterious mustachioed man helped paleontologists piece together the life story of the long-lost, semi-aquatic “Egyptian spine lizard”
A new photo book showcases animals we humans rarely see—while a new study says we may have more in common with night-dwellers than thought
Researchers from 23 groups just released the fifth State of the Birds report, which contains good and bad news
Hips don’t lie: Whale pelvic bones are not vestigial but instead evolved to help the marine mammals maneuver better during sex
Tomb goods and historical texts show how a drying climate and an expanding human population took their toll on the region’s wildlife
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