Animalogic on MSN
Why sage grouse courtship looks more like biology than romance
Sage grouse rely on one of the most visually striking courtship displays in the animal world. Males inflate large chest sacs, producing sounds and movements designed to attract selective females.
Study Finds on MSN
Having More Kids (Or None At All) Linked To Faster Aging In Women
Women who had two to three children in their late 20s and early 30s showed the slowest aging and best survival rates, ...
Asking ‘what is life?’ is a good way to start arguments in science. As a recent informal poll suggests, no two individuals ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
NASA scientists zoomed in on the ocean and uncovered a tiny red organism that keeps whales alive
Far offshore in the North Atlantic, one of the most endangered species on the planet continues to shift its migratory ...
Martin Johnson explores why leadership development fails when it ignores the biology driving behaviour. He examines survival, ...
Evolutionarily speaking, the ultimate goal of a lifeform is to reproduce and stave off extinction. Many plants and animals ...
An international team of scientists has developed ways to measure and compare the impact of "darkwaves"—when extreme weather ...
Childbirth depends not just on hormones, but on the uterus’s ability to sense physical force. Scientists found that pressure ...
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