Morning Overview on MSN
Yale’s six-year GPS study of 4,500 animals shows 65% of species shift behavior the moment humans show up
More than 4,500 wild animals tracked by GPS across six years changed how they used their habitat the moment people arrived, ...
A new large-scale study led by a research team from the Yale Center for Biodiversity and Global Change has found that ...
A new study shows that wildlife reacts not only to roads and cities, but also to the daily presence of humans.
Understanding how genes influence complex behaviors remains one of biology's most fascinating challenges. Now, however, in a recent study, researchers have compiled a comprehensive dataset documenting ...
Photo Credit Gary Bendig via UnsplashA new analysis of GPS tracking data from 37 animal species, paired with mobile phone location ...
As a career ethologist, I was thrilled when I learned about Dr. Matthew Calarco's new and highly original book titled The Three Ethologies: A Positive Vision for Rebuilding Human-Animal Relationships.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Surprising link between chimpanzee tool use and human evolution
Understanding the ways humans and animals organize and execute complex sequences of behavior sheds light on the evolution of ...
Animal behavior research relies on careful observation of animals. Researchers might spend months in a jungle habitat watching tropical birds mate and raise their young. They might track the rates of ...
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