Birds' lives are dictated by internal biological rhythms, crucial for everything from waking to breeding. However, artificial ...
ZME Science on MSN
How Humans Rank on a Monogamy Scale in Nature: Right Between Meerkats and Wild Dogs
The monogamy rate in humans may be higher than you expected... but we do it in a strange way compared to other animals.
The study reveals how Balanophora plants function despite abandoning photosynthesis and, in some species, sexual reproduction ...
An international research team, including scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, ...
Research into how a father’s choices — such as diet, exercise, stress, nicotine use — may transfer traits to his children has ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
An Anthropologist Made a Mammal 'Monogamy Scale'. Here's Where Humans Rank.
Sticking with a long-term life partner to rear children has long been considered a dominant mating pattern for our species, ...
Why do parasites harm their hosts? That's a question evolutionary biologists ask as they try to predict how a parasite might ...
Archaeologist and anthropologist Jerry Moore reviews the findings that explain a relationship marked first by fear and then by mutual interest and admiration ...
Imagine if everyone treated fertility the way they do heart health: checking it regularly, interpreting data early and taking ...
Human pair bonding is more comparable to exclusive mating seen in meerkats and beavers than in our primate cousins ...
Using tools borrowed from human medical research, we found that male dolphins with stronger social bonds appear biologically younger than their less social counterparts. This means their bodies show ...
Corrales, a recent biological sciences Ph.D. graduate from the University of Rhode Island, and his advisor, Associate ...
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