Animals respond to injury in many ways. So far, evidence for animals tending wounds with biologically active materials is ...
Khabargaon on MSN
New discovery reveals chimpanzees in Uganda use flying insects to tend their wounds
In our research based in Kibale National Park, Uganda, chimpanzees have been seen applying insects to their own open wounds on five occasions, and in one case to another individual.
A research team including a Keele University scientist have made a breakthrough in monitoring insect populations across the ...
Scientists in Leeds have developed a new method of monitoring biodiversity, employing technology typically used to track ...
Scientists have made a breakthrough in monitoring insect populations across the UK using an unexpected tool: weather ...
Insect smuggling rarely grabs headlines, yet it has real consequences. The trades draw far less public concern than big‑animal crime.
Scientists have identified hundreds of genes that may increase the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease but the roles these ...
Climate change and human-made shelters have created survivable habitat for the cold-adapted mosquito species Culiseta ...
At a remote field station in Louisiana, scientists study the insects that arrive within minutes of death. Each maggot and ...
“In urban waterways like ponds and creeks, the shallow water warms more quickly at the end of winter, which speeds up ...
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