Many dog-specific TV programs are available today, but not all are suited to your unique pet.
Sleeping on their left sides keeps the right side of cats' brains alert and ready to detect immediate threats, scientists say.
Pepper the pet cat has made yet another contribution to virology.
A newly discovered cell helps pythons digest entire skeletons—and might be present in other bone-eating predators, too.
Known for their aggressive behavior, Africanized bees appear to be looming near Georgia, threatening local farmers and beekeepers.
These sensors could improve food and drug monitoring, the researchers say.
The Department of Agriculture is pursuing a disgusting—but effective—strategy to eliminate the larva of the New World screwworm fly.
Despite near-consensus that memory has a physical basis, neuroscientists are split on whether we might someday be able to extract memories from a preserved brain or upload them into a computer.
The never-before-seen organelle serves as a recycling center for cellular cargo, evidence suggests.
Researchers discovered two previously unknown species of parasitic fungi inside ancient amber fossils.
A new forensic test could help identify poached elephant ivory being disguised and smuggled as legal mammoth tusks.
Scientists found that an Australian moth navigates using a celestial compass, possibly guided by the Milky Way itself.
New research challenges previous theories suggesting the two young canines were domesticated dogs and reveals their surprising last meal.
Some bat species can live cancer-free for up to 25 years, which is equivalent to 180 human years. How do they do it?
Researchers in the U.K. analyzed vet records from over two million dogs to uncover the messy truth about canine diarrhea.
This new tyrannosauroid serves as an evolutionary link between the colossal T. rex and its tinier ancestors.
A new study analyzes 12 events in which whales may have tried to communicate with humans.
Ed's escape shut down a highway in the area at one point.
Mindy Weisberger's new book details the crafty worms, fungi, and other parasites that have learned to mind-control their hosts.
Researchers discovered that the absence of one critical gene made the plague less virulent, and may have allowed two major pandemics to last longer.