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Why Some Animals Follow The Moon

AdultsAnimalsEnvironmentNature
Organisms of all shapes and sizes synchronize their behaviors using biological clocks. Some keep pace with the daily rising and setting sun using circadian rhythms.

How Cats Became our Feline Overlords

AdultsAnimalsHumanPets
Check out how cats became our favorite little murder machines.

Leopard Mother Rescues Cub from Wild Dogs

AdultsAnimalsNatureWildlife
A young leopard is taught a lesson in caution after a close call with a group of African wild dogs.

How squids outsmart their predators

AdultsAnimalsBiologyNature
There are about 500 species of squid, and they live in all the world's oceans, making them a reliable food source for whales, dolphins, sharks, seabirds, fish - and even other squids. As a result, the squid's most extraordinary adaptations are those that have evolved to help them thwart these predators.

Are Birds Modern-Day Dinosaurs?

AdultsAnimalsHistoryNature...
An asteroid strike 66 million years ago devastated the dinosaurs. But today's birds are proof there were a few survivors.

What's the difference between hibernation and sleep?

AdultsAnimalsNature
The Arctic Ground Squirrel hibernates by burrowing under the permafrost and slipping into a state of suspended animation.

A simple way to tell insects apart

AdultsAnimalsNature
There are nearly a million known insect species in the world, but most have one of just five common types of mouthparts.

Cannibalism in the animal kingdom - Bill Schutt

AdultsAnimalsNature
Until recently, scientists thought cannibalism was a rare response to starvation or other extreme stress.

Why Don't Sheep Shrink In The Rain?

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience...
Getting wet isn't REALLY what makes wool shrink; it merely exacerbates the friction between the wool fibers, which is stronger in one direction than another, so when agitated in the washer or dryer, they migrate in relation to each other in a process called "felting."

Why BEAVERS Are The Smartest Thing In Fur Pants

AdultsAnimalsNatureEnvironment
Beavers have done more to shape North American landscapes than any animal beside humans. We don't notice them much today because there aren't many left, but before colonization, North America was home to hundreds of millions of these furry engineers.

Why Are There As Many Males As Females?

AdultsAnimalsBiologyNature...
In almost every animal species on Earth, equal numbers of males and females are conceived. Why is that?

Why Are Mosquitoes Attracted To Me?!

AdultsAnimalsGeneticsNature...
Mosquitoes are attracted to me and it's likely due to my genes.

True Facts About The Mantis Shrimp

AdultsAnimalsNatureBiology
Incredible sea predator.

Why Is Blue So Rare In Nature?

AdultsAnimalsEcologyNature...
Among living things, the color blue is oddly rare. Blue rocks, blue sky, blue water, sure. But blue animals? They are few and far between. And the ones that do make blue? They make it in some very strange and special ways compared to other colors. In this video, we'll look at some very cool butterflies to help us learn how living things make blue, and why this beautiful hue is so rare in nature.

Emergence - How Stupid Things Become Smart Together

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience...
How can many stupid things combine to form smart things? How can proteins become living cells? How become lots of ants a colony? What is emergence?

Where Do Our Drugs Come From?

AdultsAnimalsHealthHuman...
The incredible chemical weapon-making abilities of fungi, bacteria, and plants have created a diverse array of compounds that are useful to humans.

Why do animals form swarms?

AdultsAnimalsNatureScience
When many individual organisms come together and move as one entity, that's a swarm. From a handful of birds to billions of insects, swarms can be almost any size.