Attorney Carol Lockwood joins producer/host Coralie Chun Matayoshi to discuss Assisted Reproductive Technology law, the role ...
Humans like plants. We like seeing them change the color of their leaves throughout the year. They connect us to nature even ...
The white-handed gibbon comes closest to humans in the study, with a monogamy rate of 63.5%. It’s the only other top-ranked “monotocous” species, meaning it usually has one offspring per pregnancy, ...
A study suggests menopause gives an evolutionary advantage to some whales. The findings could offer clues about menopause in ...
The analysis of dental remains from Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia has important implications regarding the balance and ...
If you’re watching the person you love struggle to survive an illness, things aren’t going to be the same — for better or for ...
Four mice went to space as astronauts. One came back and became a mother. And that simple fact might matter more than you'd ...
Here are 10 major Neanderthal findings from 2025 — and what they teach us about our own evolution. The hottest — but also ...
For decades, biologists have suspected a fundamental bargain in nature: energy spent making offspring is energy not spent maintaining the body. A sweeping new analysis led by the University of Otago ...
Human biology evolved for a world of movement, nature, and short bursts of stress—not the constant pressure of modern life. Industrial environments overstimulate our stress systems and erode both ...
I began thinking about invasive species this past summer when two of them made their first appearances in my yard. No, they were not my in-laws. Like in-laws, though, the Asiatic jumping worms and the ...
Handing peanuts to a squirrel in a city park may seem harmless, but a new study shows that red squirrels in fed parks became pregnant 24 percent more often than forest females. The research team ...