Researchers are learning how species from across the animal kingdom use seismic signals to mate, hunt, solve territorial disputes, and much more.
Researchers are learning how species from across the animal kingdom use seismic signals to mate, hunt, solve territorial disputes, and much more.
At age 16, Alexandra Sourakov has her first scientific publication, on the foraging behavior of butterflies.
Is printing out your own lab equipment, molecular models, and drug compounds the wave of the future?
House mice sing melodies out of the range of human hearing, and the crooning is impacting research from evolutionary biology to neuroscience.
Japanese researchers unravel the mystery of miracle fruit.
Researchers find that newts are capable of regenerating body parts well into old age.
Dried plant specimens reveal the origin of an insect pest that has spread throughout Europe.
When it comes to studying cephalopod brains and behavior, it helps to have a philosopher around.
Have researchers found the seat of urination control in a primitive brain region?
New types of biological filaments are turning up in yeast, fly, bacterial cells and in rat neurons, and they may yield clues to how the cytoskeleton evolved from metabolically active enzymes.