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64 votes
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Drones are showing us sharks like never before
16 votes -
Crows and magpies using anti-bird spikes to build nests, researchers find
50 votes -
Parrots taught to video call each other become less lonely, finds research
10 votes -
The secret life of deep sea vents
16 votes -
Bees just wanna have fungi - a review of bee associations with nonpathogenic fungi
12 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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The surprisingly sinister history behind Texas’s cliff chirping frog
5 votes -
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36 votes -
Brazil claims record shark fin bust: Nearly twenty-nine tons from 10,000 sharks seized
15 votes -
What animal or insect going extinct would have the greatest impact on the ecosystem?
Curious on some replies here. I always hear having bees go extinct would be horrible for us. Curious if that’s the worse?
36 votes -
How to befriend a crow?
9 votes -
Octopuses may have vivid nightmares, video suggests
5 votes -
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Walrus Freya killed by Norway gets Oslo sculpture – online campaign earlier raised $25,000 to make the statue
6 votes -
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3 votes -
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8 votes -
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8 votes -
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3 votes -
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4 votes -
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3 votes -
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4 votes -
Oxford University-led study detects twenty-six types of PFAS compounds in ice around Svalbard, threatening downstream ecosystems
6 votes -
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15 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 -
Swedish reindeer herders say their animals are being affected by wind farms and other industry
4 votes -
I built a wildlife pond - here's what happened
4 votes -
Research group Whale Wise are investigating how net entanglement is affecting humpback whale populations in Iceland using drones
3 votes -
How to speak honeybee
7 votes -
Animal populations experience average decline of almost 70% since 1970, report reveals
7 votes -
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2 votes -
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7 votes -
Australia to set aside at least 30% of its land mass to protect endangered species
11 votes -
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6 votes -
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10 votes -
The Gombe Chimpanzee War (1974-1978)
8 votes -
Musa velutina - The hairy pink banana that peels itself when ripe | Weird Fruit Explorer
5 votes -
America has a rabid-raccoon problem
12 votes -
The ethics of hunting deer for meat
7 votes -
The Norwegians should not have killed Freya the walrus – if we valued the lives of animals, we would not simply exterminate the ones that inconvenience us
6 votes