Animals
Songs prep the brains of finches yet to hatch for a hot world
Adult finches make "heat calls" as the temperature rises. Exposure to the song prepares their unhatched young's brains for the heat.
By Jake Buehler
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Adult finches make "heat calls" as the temperature rises. Exposure to the song prepares their unhatched young's brains for the heat.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
In a first, researchers genetically modified hookworms. It’s a step toward turning the parasites into living pharmacies.
DNA preserved in ancient scat reveals what Yukon ground squirrels ate and what animals shared their world.
During courtship, male scissor-tailed nightjars crack their wings together to make a sharp snapping sound. It's the result of colliding arm bones.
A new analysis of a 120-million-year-old fossil suggests at least one pterosaur species shimmered in iridescent greens and magentas.
A shrimp vaccine for commercial use could protect the environment and prove vaccines aren’t just for vertebrates.
The deep-sea octopus is fully mature despite fitting in a palm, a trait researchers think may help it reproduce faster than larger relatives.
With no training, bumblebees can work out how to use a ball like a ladder to feed on sugar from an out-of-reach flower.
Queen-cell wax helps shape honeybee queen development, challenging the idea that royal jelly alone makes a queen, a new study suggests.
Answers to key questions could help public health officials develop Ebola treatments, predict the outbreak’s trajectory and prevent a future one.
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