Modern humans belong to a small minority of monogamous mammals and, in terms of partner fidelity, rank between the Eurasian beaver and the white-handed gibbon.
A gene that is important for human hearing could determine whether a dog’s ears are pendulous like a basset hound’s or stubby ...
New research suggests prodigious pups that already have large vocabularies can learn new words by listening in on their ...
The Daily Express reported last October 2025 how the three 'wolves' were spotted and caught roaming the streets of Preston, ...
COLUMN. British anthropologist Mark Dyble analyzed genetic data from 70 mammalian species to gain a deeper understanding of ...
Security video posted to Nextdoor on Monday shows the animals moving through the back of a driveway near Clemson, just ...
Exploring the instinctive, environmental, and survival-driven reasons behind street dogs' nocturnal vocalisations and the ...
The white-handed gibbon comes closest to humans in the study, with a monogamy rate of 63.5%. It’s the only other top-ranked ...
Standing nearly 7 feet tall and weighing as much as a small car, the Alaskan moose is a powerful reminder of the state's wild ...
Certainly not the first nor the last sighting in Denton, a pack of coyotes were seen not too far from McKinney Street in ...
Males engage in a two-week-long sex marathon with as many females as they can find. Each frenzied encounter can last up to 14 hours. As soon as he’s done with one female, he moves on to another, ...