And that’s just what her company Flox Intelligence is doing in Syracuse. It’s developed a way to tell animals in their own “language” when they’re near something dangerous, like a highway, railroad or ...
An equine makes the low-pitched part of its whinny by vibrating its vocal cords—similar to how humans speak and sing—and the high-pitched part by whistling ...
Advances in organ and computer models are raising the prospect that some animal experiments could be eliminated. But there are still huge hurdles to overcome.
A few small rodents like rats and mice whistle like this, but horses are the first known large mammal to have a knack for it.
As you read this, the screen is probably flashing over 240 times per second, yet, as a human, you won't notice this ...
The distinctive sound horses produce when they whinny is created by combining low and high pitch sounds together, like ...
Bats are some of the most highly specialized mammals to have ever evolved. This includes not only the evolution of active ...
Dolphins also have a habit of flinging octopuses. This has a practical benefit of killing the octopus before the dolphin tries to eat it, thus avoiding the danger of being choked by hundreds of ...
The unusual sighting of an evening bat in Wellington, Colorado, begs the question of how this flying mammal got there.
Some dolphins in Shark Bay use sea sponges as tools while hunting, revealing a rare example of learned behavior passed across ...
It may be the way they look or the way they behave – the end result is that they are truly fascinating. It may be the way ...
Denmark’s red streetlights cut light pollution, protect wildlife, and could reshape how cities light the night.