Animals
- 			 Animals AnimalsWhy bat scientists are socially distancing from their subjectsScientists are calling for a “hands-off” approach to research to decrease the chances of spreading the coronavirus to bats in North America. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsThe diabolical ironclad beetle can survive getting run over by a car. Here’s howThe diabolical ironclad beetle is an incredibly tough little creature. A peek inside its exoskeleton reveals what makes it virtually uncrushable. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsNaked mole-rats invade neighboring colonies and steal babiesNaked mole-rats invade neighboring colonies, steal pups and evict any others left behind. The show of force may be central to their underground lifestyle. By Jake Buehler
- 			 Animals AnimalsFire ants build little syphons out of sand to feed without drowningTo escape a watery death, some fire ants use build sand structures that draw the insects’ sugary, liquid food out of containers and to a safer place. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsA rope bridge restored a highway through the trees for endangered gibbonsWhen critically endangered Hainan gibbons started making dangerous leaps across a new gully, researchers came up with an alternative route. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsGlowing blue helps shield this tardigrade from harmful ultraviolet lightTardigrades have a newly discovered trick up their sleeve: fluorescence. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsPufferfish may be carving mysterious ‘crop circles’ near AustraliaIn 2011, scientists discovered that tiny pufferfish were sculpting Japan’s underwater “mystery circles.” Now, more circles have emerged in Australia. By Jake Buehler
- 			 Animals AnimalsThis rare bird is male on one side and female on the otherResearchers at Powdermill Nature Reserve near Pittsburgh spotted a bird with pink male coloring on half of its body and yellow female hues on the other. 
- 			 Neuroscience NeuroscienceYour dog’s brain doesn’t care about your faceComparing brain scans of people and pups shows that faces hold no special meaning to the brains of dogs, a new study suggests. 
- 			 Paleontology PaleontologyCannibalism in the womb may have helped megalodon sharks become giantsThe ancient sea terror Otodus megalodon may have grown to at least 14 meters long thanks to a firstborn pup’s predatory behavior, some researchers say. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsThis snake rips a hole in living toads’ stomachs to feast on their organsA particularly gruesome way to kill may help small-banded kukri snakes avoid toxins secreted from the neck and backs of some toads. 
- 			 Life LifeA new map shows where Asian giant hornets could thrive in the U.S.Suitable habitat along the Pacific West Coast means so-called “murder hornets” could get a foothold in North America if they aren’t eradicated.