The consumption of edible insects, a common part of the diet of some Asian and Latin American countries, is tentatively ...
In a type of relationship known as mutualism, two different species benefit from one another through cooperation. While some ...
Meet a katydid that sounds like a bird and is as big as one too! It's even able to modulate its call to avoid attracting bats ...
Belgica antarctica is a tiny little thing – just about the length of a grain of rice. It doesn’t bite, living instead on moss ...
From polygamous tree toads to heavy stick bugs, this year’s extensive new species discoveries are changing the way we see our ...
Green tree frogs will hide in any crevices, logs, branches, leaves, or other small spaces they can find. Leaving the leaves ...
AFRICA: CREATURES consuming species that contain deadly toxins have evolved a suite of clever strategies to stay alive. The 10 snakes faced a tough predicament. Collected from the Colombian Amazon, ...
Roughly 60 years ago, the United States eradicated the New World screwworm, an insect that feeds on living tissue. But now, ...
Honey badgers are not actually named for their love of honey, in fact, they raid bee hives to loot the delicious, protein-rich larva inside, which seems like an overly complicated way to get protein.
Northern giant hornets, also known as murder hornets, incite fear in many. These venomous hornets can take out an entire hive of honey bees in a matter of hours. A single sting can kill a mammal many ...
Researchers filmed a small pond frog in Japan as it swallowed live hornets and then sat there as if nothing happened. The core finding is simple: most frogs tested ate the hornets despite getting ...