Animals able to change behaviors but slow to evolve might fare better than previously thought amid climate change.
A rhesus macaque on Cayo Santiago, which is less than a mile east of Puerto Rico. Rhesus macaques spend upwards of 20 percent of their time engaged in cooperative behaviors like grooming. Andi ...
Wild animals are reshaping Earth’s surface more than expected, altering soil, rivers, and sediment movement across ecosystems ...
This video explores the life cycle of various animals including butterflies and frogs, showing how animals change as they ...
A global meta-analysis led by Dr Zareena Khan and Professor Gemma Harvey from Queen Mary University of London analysed data from 64 studies covering 61 species of wild animals across freshwater and ...
Why is it that a squirrel may calmly take food from a picnic table while a deer runs as if its life depends on it at the snap of a twig? For years, ecologists have asked whether animals always treat ...
Newly opened fruits of hōʻawa (Pittosporum flocculosum) are exposing their seeds to birds (left), but older fruits and seeds have withered on the plant without being consumed (right) because the ...
Gemma Harvey receives funding from the Leverhulme Trust (Leverhulme Research Fellowship Grant number RF-2022- 284\4) and UKRI Natural Environment Research Council (NE/W007460/1 and NE/Y005163/1) and ...
A prehistoric predator changed its diet and body size during a major warming event 56 million years ago, revealing how climate change can reshape animal behavior, food chains, and survival strategies.
Scientists explored a cave in Norway containing 75,000-year-old animal remains, offering insights into how Arctic wildlife responded to past warming periods. The findings reveal a diverse ecosystem ...