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Wildlife

Do Chimpanzees Have Rhythm? Listen to their Drumming
National Geographic

‘Ghost Gear,’ or Abandoned Fishing Equipment, Is Haunting the Oceans. Here’s How Conservationists Are Fighting Back
Smithsonian Magazine

Is This Really the World’s Most Dangerous Bird?
National Geographic

Mental Time Travel Helps Birds Remember Food
Stashes
Scientific American

Cuttlefish and Their Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoats
Hakai Magazine

Sea Otters Have Helped Bolster California’s Kelp Forest
Smithsonian Magazine

Male Songbirds Need Daily Vocal Practice to Woo Females
Scientific American

Scientists Discover Creatures Living Beneath the Bottom of the Deep Sea
National Geographic

Why Have European Wolves Recovered So Much in the Past Decade?
Smithsonian Magazine

'Part of the Evolutionary Fabric of Our Societies': Same-sex Sexual Behavior in Primates May Be a Survival Strategy, Study Finds
Live Science

Five Amazing Dolphin Behaviors, Explained
Smithsonian Magazine

Five Dramatic Ways Animals Respond to Human Noise, From Mimicking Car Alarms While Wooing Mates to Calling Higher Over the Din of Traffic
Smithsonian Magazine

Wild Birds Gesture ‘After You’ to Insist Their Mate Go First
Scientific American

From a Motorcycle Revving to a Pig Oinking, Eight Amazing Sounds Made by Frogs
Smithsonian Magazine

Dogs May Have Domesticated Themselves Because They Really Liked Snacks, Model Suggests
Live Science
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