Most Viewed Predators Current Events | Predators News
|
| Page
1 of
7 |
132 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Relevance | Date |
Study shows that parasites form the thread of food webs Scientists have discovered that parasites are suprisingly important in food webs and their findings appear in a report published this week in the Early Edition of the on-line version of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. view more (2006-07-13)
Squid Skin Reveals Hidden Messages In the animal world, squid are masters of disguise. Pigmented skin cells enable them to camouflage themselves-almost instantaneously-from predators. view more (2006-09-22)
Disease-impact models may rely on incorrect assumptions Even when we know how a disease affects individual animals, it is challenging to predict what impact it will have on the whole population, and yet predicting how disease affects a population is a primary concern for wildlife conservation and even public health. view more (2006-04-13)
Duck-billed dinosaur crests not linked to sense of smell After decades of debate, a U of T researcher has finally determined that duck-billed dinosaurs' massive but hollow crests had nothing to do with what many scientists suspected - the sense of smell. view more (2006-01-25)
Mussels evolve quickly to defend against invasive crabs Scientists at the University of New Hampshire (UNH) have found that invasive crab species may precipitate evolutionary change in blue mussels in as little as 15 years. view more (2006-08-11)
Chimpanzee cooperators In the animal kingdom cooperation is crucial for survival. Predators hunt in prides and prey band together to protect themselves. Yet no other creature cooperates as successfully as we do. view more (2006-03-03)
Cornell conservationists propose allowing wild animals to roam parts of North America If Cornell University researchers and their colleagues have their way, cheetahs, lions, elephants, camels and other large wild animals may soon roam parts of North America. view more (2005-08-18)
Poison dart frog mimics gain when birds learn to stay away Studying neotropical poison dart frogs, biologists at the University of Texas at Austin uncovered a new way that the frog species can evolve to look similar, and it hinges on the way predators learn to avoid the toxic, brightly colored amphibians. view more (2006-03-09)
How butterflies got their spots: A 'supergene' controls wing pattern diversity Butterflies are known to employ some interesting convergent evolutionary tactics to survive-some nonpoisonous species have similar wing patterns to those of noxious species that predators avoid. view more (2006-09-26)
500 million years of errors: Brachiopod shells record shadow of arms race in ancient oceans A study of fossils from the Paleozoic Era, collected across the world, reveals that ancient brachiopods were little bothered by predators. However, the rare predation traces left on brachiopod shells by unknown assailants coupled with a subtle increase in their frequency through time may be the shadows on the wall that show killers were in the... view more... (2005-06-16)
Female guppies risk their lives to avoid too much male attention Sexual harassment is a burden that females of many species face, and some may go to extreme lengths to avoid it. view more (2006-05-15)
Creeping crinoids! Sea lilies crawl to escape predators, new video shows With their long stalks and feathery arms, marine animals known as sea lilies look a lot like their garden-variety namesakes. view more (2005-10-17)
Antarctic krill provide carbon sink in Southern Ocean New research on Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), a shrimp-like animal at the heart of the Southern Ocean food chain, reveals behaviour that shows that they absorb and transfer more carbon from the Earth's surface than was previously understood. view more (2006-02-07)
Scientist's persistence sheds light on marine science riddle When he started compiling an online database of seashells 15 years ago, Dr. Gary Rosenberg did not envision that his meticulous record-keeping would eventually shed light on a 40-year-old evolutionary debate. view more (2006-09-08)
Predicting species abundance in the face of habitat loss Habitat loss poses the greatest threat to the survival of a species, and often precipitates the demise of top predators and wide-ranging animals, like the Siberian tiger and the orangutan. view more (2006-09-26)
How our ancestors were like gorillas Research published in this week's Science journal shows that some of our closest extinct relatives had more in common with gorillas than previously thought. view more (2007-11-30)
Fishing kills Fijian coral reefs Outbreaks of a coral-eating starfish have occurred in Fiji resulting from overexploitation of the predatory fishes that normally limit its numbers. The impacts of the starfish are dramatic, with previously pristine coral reefs being turned into dull algal mats. Worryingly, Dulvy, Freckleton and Polunin - the authors of a study in the May issue of... view more... (2004-05-04)
Theory of oscillations may explain biological mysteries New mathematical studies of the interactions between oscillating biological populations may shed light on some of the toughest questions in ecology, including the number and types of species in an ecosystem, according to an article in the December 2006 issue of BioScience. view more (2006-12-04)
Sea slug mixes chemical defense before firing at predators When threatened by predators, sea slugs defend themselves by ejecting a potent inky secretion into the water consisting of hydrogen peroxide, ammonia and several types of acids. view more (2005-12-19)
Primates harvest bee nests in Ugandan reserve In the first study of native African honeybees and honey-making stingless bees in the same habitat, humans and chimpanzees are the primary bee nest predators. view more (2006-02-28)
| |
| Page
1 of
7 |
132 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Relevance | Date |
|