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9 votes
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As floods get worse, Britain tries a new solution: beavers
27 votes -
White-tailed eagles are returning to southern England after 240 years
20 votes -
Japan is using $4,000 animatronic wolves to scare off bears, and can't make them fast enough
10 votes -
Timmy the stranded whale is dead. Please, let’s put animal welfare first and human emotion second.
29 votes -
‘Monster Wolf’ robots deployed in Japan amid spike in bear attacks
17 votes -
A young walrus who became something of a celebrity as he toured the Scottish coastline has now crossed the North Sea and arrived in Norway
10 votes -
Tiny robot drones learn to navigate the world like honeybees
18 votes -
In a village in Norway, humans representing flora and fauna of all kinds meet to reimagine ‘nature-centric governance’
7 votes -
San Francisco coyote swims to Alcatraz for first time ever
18 votes -
Scientists gave cocaine to salmon and you will absolutely believe what happened next
37 votes -
The Great Moose Migration has become a ‘slow TV’ sensation, keeping audiences worldwide glued to the beasts' epic trek – we go behind the scenes with its Swedish makers
16 votes -
Students develop faux but sexy robotic sage grouse to strut their stuff in an effort to move a Grand Teton National Park breeding-ground lek away from jets
25 votes -
What is your favourite shark?
I've been working on an ocean life repository website for work, and I found myself randomly rambling about sharks because they've always been such a fascinating example to me of how evolution can...
I've been working on an ocean life repository website for work, and I found myself randomly rambling about sharks because they've always been such a fascinating example to me of how evolution can keep a very recognizable blueprint while splitting into a ridiculous range of lifestyles.
A whale shark, a thresher shark, an angelshark, a tiger shark, a goblin shark, and a reef shark all still read instantly as "shark", and yet they're doing such different things that it almost feels wrong. Filter-feeding giants, ambush predators, open-water hunters, deep-sea weirdos, tail-whip specialists. All while still sticking to this unmistakable shark... ness?
I've been trying to pin down what I even mean by that "blueprint". Not just body shape exactly, but some deeper structural identity that survives a lot of diversification. Other groups feel a bit like this too. Felines, canines, birds… they can branch into very different niches, sizes, and behaviors while still feeling strongly constrained by a common template. A tiger, a lynx, and a house cat are all very clearly "cat". Wolves, foxes, and chihuahuas are very clearly "dog". Canaries, hawks, parrots, and hummingbirds are all still "bird".
It fascinates me how common this is in evolution: nature finding one robust structure and then radiating outward in very different directions without losing the core design. Not the most morphologically extreme variation possible, maybe, but variation under a very conserved plan.
Sharks just feel like one of the wildest examples of that.
So: what's everyone's favourite shark, and why?
Mine is probably either the lemon shark or the thresher shark because of how smart they are. Lemon sharks are fascinating for their social behavior and learning, then threshers are incredible both for that absurd tail and for feeling like such a weirdly specialized, clever branch of the shark blueprint.
29 votes -
The man who made San Francisco's flock of wild parrots famous dies at 74
15 votes -
Study finds sperm whales help each other give birth
18 votes -
Researchers in Copenhagen are actively monitoring bat activity and traffic conditions along a road to evaluate how red-spectrum LEDs from street lights affect local wildlife
11 votes -
Chimpanzees are really into crystals
34 votes -
World Nature Photography Awards 2026 winners
11 votes -
Listers - a glimpse into extreme birdwatching
10 votes -
Wolves killed more than 2,100 reindeer in Finland last year – herders suspect Russian wolf numbers have exploded after hunters were sent to the frontline in Ukraine
11 votes -
I taught an octopus piano (it took six months)
16 votes -
Scientists think that Svalbard polar bears have adapted to recent ice loss by eating more land-based prey, including reindeer and walruses
6 votes -
J. David Bamberger, Church’s Chicken tycoon who made land conservation his mission, dies at 97
15 votes -
Frozen in for nine months every year and located 800km from the next town, Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland, offers a fascinating glimpse at life at the edge of the world
21 votes -
One mother for two species via obligate cross-species cloning in ants
12 votes -
Drunk raccoon found passed out in Virginia liquor store
56 votes -
You're not crazy. The bugs are disappearing.
37 votes -
Follow-up on that drunk raccoon in VA; apparently, he has a history
19 votes -
Claude the albino alligator passes away at age 30
13 votes -
This is what peak evolution looks like
23 votes -
The woman on a mission to photograph every species of hummingbird in the world
23 votes -
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to end all monkey research
39 votes -
A new take on Colombia’s cocaine hippos
25 votes -
Shock discovery reveals sea urchins are basically 'all brain'
45 votes -
Norwegian fisherman creates urban lodgings for gull species threatened by climate change, predators and avian flu in their natural habitats. It's booked out.
12 votes -
In Alaska, fishing skippers and hungry orcas vie for halibut pulled from the deep
8 votes -
Researchers have found the culprit behind sea star wasting disease that has killed billions across twenty species over the last ten years
18 votes -
Salmon clear last Klamath dams, reaching Williamson and Sprague rivers
28 votes -
Mosquitoes have been found in Iceland for the first time as global heating makes the country more hospitable for insects
28 votes -
'It was the start of a new movement': the Dutch rewilding project that took a dark turn
22 votes -
Scientists say they have solved the mystery of what killed more than five billion sea stars
28 votes -
Hover flies are long-distance travellers
10 votes -
Wolves have returned to Denmark, and not everyone is happy about it
14 votes -
Jane Goodall, chimp expert, dies at 91
69 votes -
Watch ticks fly through the air via the power of static electricity
12 votes -
‘Grue jay’ hybrid spotted in Texas
34 votes -
Fat Bear Week is here early, and the bears are fat and playful
32 votes -
Stones have been ‘overfished’ from the sea – here's how Denmark's rocky reefs are being restored
7 votes -
Light pollution is causing birds like the Australian magpie-lark to sing for longer
9 votes