science
Study the science of animals to get a deeper understanding of your pet's brain, body and behavior.
Growing sea urchin populations are too much for coral reefs to withstand.
The majority of the spiny sea urchins have entered Hawaiian coral reefs and have set up these essential underwater ecosystems with a serious risk. Recent research has shown that coral reefs can erode faster due to increased marine organism imbalances than the reconstruction of the coral reef.
By Francis Dami8 months ago in Petlife
Scientists believe that dolphins use whistles to communicate in a specialised language.
Something unusual unfolds in the sun-covered flat areas of Sarasota Bay. For more than 50 years, researchers have observed and documented local communities with bottlenecks. Her goal was to better understand these intelligent marine mammals. But now, a group of scientists may have moved quite a bit -- to understand how dolphins can talk to each other.
By Francis Dami9 months ago in Petlife
Longer-migrating songbirds are more genetically diverse.
Each winter, birds that make the long, dangerous trek from the northern boreal woods to tropical locations benefit from more than just a warm haven. A hidden benefit of these songbirds might be their increased genetic diversity.
By Francis Dami9 months ago in Petlife
Personal Space is a Human Construct
You’re trying to work. Or eat. Or, God forbid, use the bathroom in peace. But there they are—your dog, your furry little personal space invader, staring at you with the intensity of a Netflix documentary narrator: "And here we see the human, attempting to exist without canine supervision. How quaint."
By Just One of Those Things9 months ago in Petlife





