Human activity can reshape wildlife behavior, even when the landscape remains physically unchanged. The findings point to a ...
Morning Overview on MSN
65% of wild animals just got caught changing how they move when humans are near — Yale tracked wolves, hawks, vultures, and cranes by GPS across the US
A wolf in Yellowstone doesn’t need to see a hiker to know one is close. It picks up the scent, hears the footfall, registers ...
Researchers examined GPS tracking data from thousands of animals representing 37 species and anonymized cellphone location ...
A new study shows that wildlife reacts not only to roads and cities, but also to the daily presence of humans.
Morning Overview on MSN
A camera strapped to a wild Alaskan bear just caught the animal building tools to crack open salmon skulls — behavior scientists had never seen in any bear before
In May 2011, biologists with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game strapped a prototype camera collar onto a brown bear in ...
Over 80 percent of the world’s population is currently heating up for summer, and with it comes the realization that many of ...
Scientists tracked people and wildlife during COVID-19 and discovered new ways humans and animals may coexist.
A new large-scale study led by a research team from the Yale Center for Biodiversity and Global Change has found that ...
An "aggressive" population of wild turkeys has been picking fights with Alameda residents in recent weeks. An 83-year-old woman was sent to the emergency room for six stitches in one incident.
Up to two-thirds of species are changing their behavioral patterns in response to seeing people in their natural environment.
4don MSN
Introduced wild pigs linked to fewer invasive plants, while native deer show the opposite pattern
Wild pigs are generally considered among the world's most problematic invasive mammals. But a major new study from Aarhus ...
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