New research suggests the annoying birds are sensitive to how we say things.
The third season of this Apple TV+ natural history docuseries invites viewers to experience life during one of Earth’s most dramatic climatic shifts.
Before we can test for AI consciousness, we need to understand how consciousness actually emerges, experts say.
SquidKid is a small bioreactor housing real, glowing bacteria for children to nurture and raise.
New research shows that woolly mammoths roamed farther east than scientists previously thought.
The victims were stung dozens of times and suffered severe anaphylactic shock.
A pod of orcas in the Gulf of California have learned to effectively paralyze juvenile great white sharks.
Paleontologists have long debated whether small tyrannosaurs were their own species or simply teenage T. rexes. This debate just got a major shake-up.
Researchers are not even halfway through analyzing the thousands of samples collected from the Southern Ocean, but they've already discovered 30 new deep-sea creatures.
Scientists discovered a peculiar “fish neighborhood," one more reason to designate the Weddell Sea as a Marine Protected Area.
Invasive brown rats appear to be systematically preying on local bat populations, German researchers say.
The bones are exceptionally well-preserved, and the skeleton is "incredibly complete," the researchers say.
An entomologist answers your questions about the Joro invasion this fall.
This giant, woolly rat is nearly 3 feet long, weighs almost 5 pounds, and is all-natural.
Two duck-billed dinosaur carcasses were preserved in a thin layer of clay for 66 million years. Now, they’ve helped researchers recreate their living appearance.
The "worm-charging mechanism" of parasitic nematodes illustrates the wildest physics on the tiniest scales.
This annual contest celebrates the most hilarious wildlife photos of the year, from headless flamingoes to grinning brown bears.
The largest known lion's mane jellyfish was 120 feet (36.5 meters) long.
Reptiles produce crystal "pee," which, in humans, would cause gout or kidney stones. But this seems to be working out great for them.
“If you’ve ever felt like your car is a magnet for bird droppings, you’re not wrong.”