African Monkeys Eating Bats May Provide Clues On How Ebola, Other Diseases Spread Among Species African Cercopithecus monkeys have been found to opportunistically prey on bats that are known to carry Marburg, Henipa and Ebola viruses. This could help explain how the primates manage to contract these microbes as well. by Ted Ranosa
Science This Bird Is Small But Very Brutal: Shrike Impales Victims On Thorns Or Barbed Wires by Ted Ranosa
Science White Storks Skip Migration To Feed On Junk Food From Landfill Sites The Whole Year Round by Ted Ranosa
Life This Penguin From Patagonia Swims 5000 Miles Every Year To Visit Man Who Saved Its Life In Brazil by Ted Ranosa
Science Amber Shows Prehistoric Ants Were Socializing And Fighting 100 Million Years Ago by Alyssa Navarro
Science Not Once But Twice: New Study Suggests Cats Were Also Domesticated In China 5,000 Years Ago by Ted Ranosa
Science Females In Colder Climates More Promiscuous Than Those In Hotter Regions, Insect Study Reveals by Alyssa Navarro
Science Female Flies Found To Be More Promiscuous In Cold Climates, But Monogamous Behavior Is Based On Genes by Lauren Keating
Science Study Finds Crocodiles 'Keep An Eye Out' To Stay Safe During Sleep: 3 Other Animals With Unusual Sleep Behaviors by Ted Ranosa
Science Baboons Are A Lot Like People When It Comes To Who They LIke To Hang Around With by Jim Algar
Science Cockroaches Can Be Adventurous Or Shy: How Individual Personalities Shape Group Behavior And Survival by Dianne Depra
Science Hummingbirds aren't the only birds that know how to get aggressive: A look at angry birds by James Maynard
Science Farm raided at night by thieving…chimps: Primate neighbors getting comfortable in the dark? by Jim Algar
Science Raising chimpanzees apart from other chimps hurts them in the long run, says study by Rebecca Kaplan
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