animals
-
Chimpanzees: Large Social Groups Impact Grooming
Chimpanzees are less inclined to groom one another with numerous bystanders lingering about. This challenges the long-held belief that such cooperative behaviors are based on trust, suggesting they revolve more around immediate benefits.
Latest Research Articles
-
Vegan Flightless Bird Roamed Arctic 50 Million Years Ago
-
Red Light, Green Light, Robot Light? Robot Chameleon Changes Colors To Match, Researchers Say [WATCH]
-
Miranda Lambert Opens No-Kill Animal Haven, Donates $175,000 To US Shelters
-
Shark Attacks Reach All-Time High in 2015
-
Third Desert Tortoise Species Exists In Mexico, Says Study
-
Largest Gecko Ever Found In New Guinea
-
Rabbit Brain Successfully Preserved Using Innovative Cryonics Method
-
Massive Line-up of Sharks On Camera on Florida Coast
-
Touchy-Feely? Fish Can Feel With Their Fins, Researchers Say
-
Wisdom, 'World's Oldest Bird,' Welcomes 40th Chick
-
Red Sea is Home to Newly Discovered Luminous Creature
-
Researchers Plan To Sequence Genomes Of All Remaining 'Night Parrots' [WATCH]