Animals
- 			 Animals AnimalsCamelid ComebackThe future of vicuñas in South America and wild camels in Asia hinges on decisions being made now about their management. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsHoming Lobsters: Fancy navigation, for an invertebrateSpiny lobsters are the first animals without backbones to pass tests for the orienteering power called true navigation. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsAnt Traffic Flow: Raiding swarms with few rules avoid gridlockThe 200,000 virtually blind army ants using a single trail to swarm out to a raid and return home with the booty naturally develop three traffic lanes, and a study now shows that simple individual behavior makes the pattern. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsAnt Traffic Flow: Raiding swarms with few rules avoid gridlockThe 200,000 virtually blind army ants using a single trail to swarm out to a raid and return home with the booty naturally develop three traffic lanes, and a study now shows that simple individual behavior makes the pattern. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsSingle singing male toad seeks sameMale spadefoot toads of the Spea multiplicata species evaluate male competitors by the same criterion females use. By Ruth Bennett
- 			 Animals AnimalsFrogs Play Tree: Male tunes his call to specific tree holeBorneo's tree-hole frog may come as close to playing a musical instrument as any wild animal does. [With audio file.] By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsHawkmoths can still see colors at nightFor the first time, scientists have found detailed evidence than an animal—a hawkmoth—can see color by starlight. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsMad Deer Disease?Chronic wasting disease, once just an obscure brain ailment of deer and elk in a small patch of the West, is turning up in new places and raising troubling questions about risks. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsThe whole beehive gets a fever…When bee larvae are fighting off disease, the nest temperature rises, so the whole hive gets a fever. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsEar for Killers: Seals discern foes’ from neighbor-whales’ callsHarbor seals eavesdrop on killer whales and can tell the harmless neighborhood fish eaters from roving gangs with a taste for fresh seal. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsTadpoles kill by supersuctionA high-speed video shows tiny African tadpoles that catch their prey in a manner unlike that used by any other frog larvae: by shooting out a tubular mouth for superfast suction. By Susan Milius
- 			 Animals AnimalsLizard’s Choice: Mating test pits physique versus domainWhen she decides to move in, is it him or is it his real estate? By Susan Milius