An evolutionary biologist’s posthumous publication restores the peppered moth to its iconic status as a textbook example of evolution.
An evolutionary biologist’s posthumous publication restores the peppered moth to its iconic status as a textbook example of evolution.
A completely colorblind musician and painter perceives the world in a new way with help from technology.
Pathogens lurk in illegal wildlife products confiscated at US airports.
Conservationists working in Madagascar are doing the unthinkable—defacing the shells of endangered ploughshare tortoises—but it may be the animals’ last hope.
More-realistic whiskered robots are better able to navigate dark or dusty environments, while providing insights into rodent sensory processing.
A researcher in Florida changes lives by showing struggling 20-somethings the ins and outs of life in the lab.
Two researchers are trying to train bees to sniff out tuberculosis.
Forget stamps: one bioengineer amasses broken artificial joints to learn why they failed and how to build better ones.
An anthropologist and a herpetologist join forces to reveal the complex shared evolutionary and ecological history of pythons and primates.
A National Zoo researcher works to perfect gamete preservation and in vitro fertilization techniques in order to better manage endangered populations.