Wild Things

The weird and wonderful in the natural world

  1. Animals

    Dog disease threatens Siberian tigers

    Canine distemper virus poses a particular danger to small groups of the big cats.

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  2. Animals

    Ten real-life Halloween horrors in the natural world

    Vampires and witches are nothing compared to mind-controlling parasites, nose ticks and antibiotic-resistant superbugs.

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  3. Animals

    Birds large and small hop over obstacles in similar ways

    Bipedal birds, from tiny quail to huge ostriches, tackled a step in a similar way, minimizing energy cost and maximizing safety.

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  4. Animals

    Invasion drives quick evolution of lizard feet

    After Florida islands were invaded by the Cuban anole, indigenous Carolina anoles quickly evolved feet better suited for climbing high.

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  5. Animals

    Southern birds may be moving into your winter backyard

    A warming climate is letting warm-adapted birds live farther north in winter, a new study finds.

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  6. Animals

    Camouflaged fish found hiding in plain sight

    Rockpool gobies change color depending on their background.

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  7. Animals

    French flamingos froze to death without freezing

    Cold snaps in 1985 and 2012 starved flamingos by the thousands in southern France.

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  8. Animals

    Quick-moving toads take the straight and narrow path

    Cane toads at the front line of an invasion in Australia have evolved to move in straighter paths than those left behind.

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  9. Animals

    Zebra finches use camouflage

    In an experiment, zebra finches camouflaged their nests to match the background, even though they lived in captivity and there was no danger of predators.

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  10. Animals

    How a saber-toothed cat is like a can opener

    A researcher argues that the saber-toothed cat’s teeth acted like an old-fashioned can opener.

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  11. Animals

    Crabs guard coral from army of sea stars

    Coral guard-crabs proved their worth during a 2008 outbreak of crown-of-thorns sea stars, with many successfully protecting their coral from being eaten.

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  12. Animals

    Blind cavefish got no (circadian) rhythm

    Eyeless Mexican cavefish have lost their circadian rhythm and become more efficient in the dark, a new study finds.

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