A UCLA campus shutdown during COVID revealed rapid evolution in urban birds, as junco beaks shifted with the rise and fall of ...
When the world slowed down during the COVID-19 pandemic, its effects extended beyond humans. A recent study found that it ...
For ecologists, the Covid-19 pandemic has presented a remarkable natural experiment in what can happen to wild animals when ...
InsideHook on MSN
Study reveals how the pandemic changed the shape of birds' beaks
If you’ve ever been curious about how wildlife adapt to short-term environmental changes, a recently-published study has big ...
Nature never runs out of ways to surprise us! It is endowed with birds that have beautiful covers of feathers on their bodies and perform unmissable courtship dances. But the vibrant and colourful ...
It was a spirited debate between friends that surfaced every time we got together. It was not about politics, the economy or the weather, but the more significant question, do birds have bills or ...
In his back yard in Fremont, Nikos Anton spotted a house sparrow that seemed to be toting a twig in its beak. But when he looked a little closer, Anton saw the "stick" was actually the grotesquely ...
Weighing in at just 0.2 ounces, the Long-billed Hermit doesn’t seem like it would pose much of a threat to anything. But hummingbirds have what biologist Alejandro Rico-Guevara calls an “extremely ...
🛍️ The 52 best Walmart Black Friday deals to shop right now (updating) 🛍️ By Lydia Chain Published Sep 23, 2015 5:00 PM EDT Get the Popular Science daily ...
For anyone who has regular trouble with their teeth, science has some good news. Humans could one day grow beaks, a biologist has predicted. Unlike teeth, a beak would not rot, chip or fall out. This ...
Like their birdie descendants, some types of dinosaurs had beaks — but what good were they? X-ray fossil scans and computer modeling suggest that those beaks stabilized the Cretaceous creatures' ...
Certain birds in the U.K. have longer beaks than their non-U.K. brethren of the same species. Evolutionary biologists suggest that it's the British people's fondness for setting out bird feeders that ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results