For thousands of years, humans have shaped the world around us, leaving other animals to adapt to the activities of the industrious ape. But new research shows how animals also respond directly to our ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A six-year, 50-country study just confirmed wildlife is watching us back — animals read human presence as a threat even in the most remote corners of the planet
Somewhere in a forest that looks untouched from orbit, a golden eagle adjusts its flight path because a group of hikers appeared on a ridge two kilometers away. A herd of red deer in a nominally ...
Animals living in cities are consistently bolder, more aggressive, and less fearful of humans than their rural counterparts.
A new analysis of GPS tracking data from 37 animal species, paired with cellphone location data from across the United States ...
When people disappeared from the landscape, as they did during the pandemic, wild animals changed how they used space and ...
Scientists tracked people and wildlife during COVID-19 and discovered new ways humans and animals may coexist.
Understanding how these animals manage to survive for centuries offers us a humbling look at our own place in the ecosystem.
Nonhuman animals (animals) and human animals are constantly dying for a wide variety of reasons. Each individual's death is a loss, and while most people I know have thought about their own and others ...
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