-
White-faced saki: the Amazon’s silent seed predator

In the tangled canopy of the Amazon, a small, shaggy primate moves with both grace and power. Saki monkeys, members of the genus Pithecia, are built for life in the trees. Their long, bushy tails, strong hind legs, and forward-tilted incisors make them masters of two things: leaping extraordinary distances and cracking some of the
-
The secret to the barn owl’s ghostly flight

Barn owls are nature’s stealth engineers. In the dark, they patrol the night sky with eerie stillness, their wings whispering through the air as they home in on unseen targets. Every part of their body is tuned for one purpose: to turn sound into a precise, silent strike. This is more than instinct; it’s a finely
-
The tiny antelope with a lifelong mate and a built-in AC

It’s one of the smallest antelopes on Earth, but the dik-dik moves through the African bush like it owns the place. Paired off for life, fiercely territorial, and equipped with a built-in air conditioner in its nose, this palm-sized creature punches far above its weight in both survival and sentiment. Life partners in the land
-
Why these baby bats are wrapped like burritos

At Misfits Rehab in Maine, orphaned bats wrapped in tiny blankets are winning hearts online. But those adorable bundles serve a real purpose. Called “bat wraps,” they mimic the comfort of a mother’s wing. In nature, baby bats cling to their mothers constantly. When they’re orphaned, the separation is traumatic. The wraps offer warmth, reduce
-
Texas millionaire gored to death by Cape buffalo during African safari

Texas real estate developer and lifelong outdoorsman Asher Watkins died during a luxury hunting safari in South Africa, fatally gored by a Cape buffalo he was tracking. The 52-year-old millionaire, known for brokering multimillion-dollar ranches, had traveled to Limpopo Province for a guided big game hunt. His family was nearby at the safari lodge when
-
The babirusa: the pig that grows tusks through its face

You’re looking at the babirusa, one of evolution’s strangest survivors. Found only on the Indonesian islands of Sulawesi, Buru, and a few nearby outposts, this “deer-pig” belongs to a lineage that split from other pigs over 10 million years ago. What sets it apart is obvious at first glance: its tusks. In male babirusas, the
-
13,000 feet below, the Dumbo octopus drifts where nothing else dares

Not a cartoon. Not an alien. Just a survivor of the abyss. The Dumbo octopus isn’t your average eight-legged cephalopod. It’s a finned drifter from the deepest parts of the ocean, belonging to a primitive, mysterious branch of the octopus family tree. First discovered in 1883, and still baffling scientists well into 2025, it thrives
-
Why sharks look like they’re smiling (from below)

For a diver gazing upward in clear blue water, a shark’s visage can be eerily reminiscent of a grin. The broad jaws part slightly. Rows of teeth catch the light. The corners of the mouth curl upward. It’s a haunting image. Fear itself, wearing a smile. Yet this “smile” is an illusion born of anatomy,
-
Florida unleashes robot rabbits to trap giant pythons

In the shadowed wetlands of South Florida, a quiet war is unfolding. Burmese pythons, once exotic curiosities, have emerged as ruthless invaders. Scientists are turning to an unlikely ally in that conflict: robotic rabbits. Originally brought to Florida through the exotic pet trade, Burmese pythons native to Southeast Asia were released or escaped into the