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12 votes
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27 votes -
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18 votes -
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16 votes -
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30 votes -
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6 votes -
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24 votes -
How to manipulate a beaver
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23 votes -
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26 votes -
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Can alligators survive this apex predator? | Kenny Coogan
8 votes -
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31 votes -
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18 votes -
Mapping arctic foxes’ spectacular solo journeys
8 votes -
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9 votes -
US federal grants will replace tunnels beneath roads that let water pass but not fish
16 votes -
Texas woman injured after hawk drops snake on her
56 votes -
We moved into a vacant house in the Japanese countryside (and only pay $300/year for rent)
19 votes -
"Tanzania: Land of the Lion" shows the benefits of community-based conservation
6 votes -
East Africa port workers inspired to fight wildlife crime after “game-changing” WildAid campaign
9 votes -
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30 votes -
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15 votes -
Outrage as Alaska's Attorney-General asks US Supreme Court to reverse Environmental Protection Agency's Pebble Mine veto
13 votes -
By selectively breeding forty generations of silver fox over the course of sixty years, researchers managed to make them as friendly as dogs
64 votes -
Gray whales in Baja California frequently interact with humans in a remarkable shift. They were known to fight back when harpooned, even damaging boats, earning the nickname "devil fish."
https://www.businessinsider.com/gray-whales-or-devil-fish-friendly-to-humans-baffling-scientists-2023-7#:~:text=Gray%20whales%20were%20nicknamed%20'devil,humans%20pet%20them%2C%20baffling%20scienti...
Gray whales put up such a fight against whalers and their boats they earned the nickname "devil fish." Today, in the same places where the whales were hunted to the brink of extinction just decades ago, they swim right up to boats, enchanting and even befriending the people in them.
One of those remarkable encounters was captured in March in the Ojo de Liebre, a lagoon in Mexico's Baja Peninsula. The video showed a gray whale right beside a boat, allowing the captain to pick whale lice off its head.
Although some thought the whale was purposefully going to the captain for help with the whale lice — which are actually crustaceans, not insects — experts told Insider that's probably not the case.
Still, the fact that the gray whales of the Baja lagoons interact with boats and humans at all baffles researchers.
"This is what's so strange. They were hunted almost to extinction," Andrew Trites, director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the University of British Columbia, told Insider. "You would think being near a person in a boat is the last thing the few remaining gray whales would've ever done and they would've had this disposition to avoid them at all costs, the few that survived."
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10 votes -
Brazil claims record shark fin bust: Nearly twenty-nine tons from 10,000 sharks seized
15 votes -
How to befriend a crow?
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5 votes -
$25 million has been allocated to transfer more bison from federal to tribal lands and forge management agreements with tribes
5 votes -
Walrus Freya killed by Norway gets Oslo sculpture – online campaign earlier raised $25,000 to make the statue
6 votes -
The myth of the alpha wolf
6 votes -
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3 votes -
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8 votes -
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3 votes -
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4 votes -
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6 votes -
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10 votes -
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5 votes -
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10 votes -
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3 votes -
US government approves use of world’s first vaccine for honeybees
10 votes -
Svalbard reindeer thrive as they shift diet towards popsicle-like grasses – increased plant growth due to warmer climate
3 votes -
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4 votes -
Research group Whale Wise are investigating how net entanglement is affecting humpback whale populations in Iceland using drones
3 votes