You ever felt like punching a fish for no reason? Yeah, octopuses, too.
Recent research into giraffe behavior has revealed some unexpected—and, frankly, gross—mating habits.
Two years after wondering if their 12-year-old white-handed gibbon had pulled a Virgin Mary, zookeepers in Japan say they finally know how the ape got pregnant.
The medium-sized wild cat is now safe at a nearby wildlife refuge.
Cops said they arrested Davion Irvin after he was spotted at the Dallas World Aquarium, where they believed he was getting ready to commit another crime.
A report on the rhino's violent death in September found that the animal was distressed and had broken out of its enclosure.
Police found the monkeys in the closet of an abandoned home on Tuesday.
The Dallas Zoo announced that two emperor tamarin monkeys were missing, saying their enclosure was "intentionally compromised."
Colossal Biosciences also intends to resurrect the thylacine and woolly mammoth—an ambitious agenda, considering no extinct species has ever been brought back.
A viral Chinese food blogger who filmed herself cooking and eating a great white shark in April 2022 is getting some big pushback.
The winners of the Ocean Art Contest show off glimpses of life underwater.
Many intercat behaviors are somewhere between playing and fighting, but there are some telltale signs that a tussle is getting too aggressive.
Ancient entelodonts are routinely portrayed as brutal carnivores, but they probably kept to the same menu as today's pigs and peccaries.
Australian park rangers stumbled upon the ample amphibian and quickly removed it from the wild. But there's drama over its official weigh-in.
The trove of fossils suggest dinosaurs' egg-laying habits may have been similar to those of modern birds.
Burn tests showed that new strains of cotton were able to self-extinguish after being set on fire.
The Dallas Zoo issued a Code Blue after reporting that a clouded leopard went missing.
Enjoy these perspective-altering images of our world.
A researcher claims that Robert DePalma published a faulty study in order to get ahead of her own work on the Tanis fossil site.
Nearly 300 genomes from 2,000 years of Scandinavian history point at several new findings.