
Home Alone: The Fate of Postpandemic Dogs
Our canine companions have become accustomed to having their humans around 24/7
Our canine companions have become accustomed to having their humans around 24/7
Indris’ dramatic family “songs” show repeatable timing patterns
A deep-sea sponge’s unique structure helps it eat and mate while reducing drag
New research using a camera that can “see" sound” shows some elephants can produce high-pitched buzzing with their lips.
New noise-cutting tech could pinpoint North Atlantic right whales and other species
New research uses night vision to see how nocturnal bees navigate the dark.
Scientists silenced CO2-sensing genes to determine how the destructive pests find their food
It is a tale of sound: the song of a solitary whale that vocalizes at a unique frequency of 52 hertz, which no other whale—as the story goes—can seemingly understand. It is also a tale about science and ocean life, laced with fantasy and mystery and mostly shrouded in darkness...
Scientists are collecting photographs of the insects’ eggs to train an algorithm and curtail their rapid spread
A team of birders races to find as many bird species as possible in 24 hours
As owners head back to offices, pets’ anxiety and frustration may rise
Researchers find the mammoth walked far enough to circle the globe twice
Mice woken at odd hours may skew research results—and most studies don’t track the timing
Animals this small and squishy usually don’t have legs
A lost “treasure trove” of bird samples reveals how eye shape changes with environment
An ambitious and popular project to connect the dangerously inbred Santa Monica mountain lions to a larger population is about to break ground
Here’s how researchers are zeroing in on the culprit
Their acrobatic leaping skills could serve as inspiration for new robotics
A new study found large species are rare, but those with fewer individuals are abundant
By associating caffeinated sugar water and a target scent, researchers teach bumblebees to stay on task
Support science journalism.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Knowledge awaits.
Already a subscriber? Sign in.
Thanks for reading Scientific American. Create your free account or Sign in to continue.
Create Account