Morning Overview on MSN
A six-year study across 50 countries found most wild animals change how they move the moment people are near — even where humans have barely set foot
A puma in Patagonia shortens its nightly patrol. A wild boar in Poland sticks closer to the forest edge. An elephant in Kenya ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A six-year global study just found most wild animals change how they move the moment humans are near — and gray wolves roam farther to avoid us
Somewhere in the northern Rockies, a collared gray wolf veers off a ridgeline trail it has used for weeks. Nothing visible ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Closing the gap between animal movement and robotic control
Animals move with a level of precision and adaptability that robots struggle to match. In Carnegie Mellon University's ...
Young African lions (Panthera leo) on the road in Hluhluwe National Park, South Africa. When they leave their mothers, young male lions have to disperse to find new territories. To do this, they ...
Animals don't just see the world differently from one another, they experience time itself at dramatically different speeds. That is according to a new study that considered 237 species across the ...
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