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It doesn’t blink. It just stares. Meet the shoebill stork.

The shoebill stork, Balaeniceps rex, also called the whale-headed stork, is one of the most unsettling and surreal birds on Earth. Standing up to 5 feet tall with an 8-foot wingspan, it towers over the African wetlands it calls home. Its bill looks more like a worn wooden clog than a bird’s tool, and its
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Hundreds of dogs rescued from Oklahoma breeding facility in shocking raid

It started with a tip. And by the time the raid was over, more than 400 dogs were in urgent need of care, and one of Oklahoma’s most notorious commercial breeders was behind bars. The small storefront operation in Stroud, Oklahoma known as Add Love Pets was supposed to be a breeding business. Instead, law
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Why reindeer eyes turn blue in Arctic winter

In the Arctic, where sunlight disappears for weeks on end, reindeer eyes undergo a transformation unlike anything else in the animal kingdom. As winter sets in and darkness swallows the tundra, their eyes shift from a warm, golden glow to an eerie, electric blue. It’s not a trick of the light or a seasonal pigment
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Orcas could attack us in the wild but never do. Here’s why

In the cold hush of the open ocean, a diver floats, barely moving, as a black fin cuts through the water. It belongs to an orca, a killer whale with the power to shatter seals, chase down great whites, and pull penguins from ice. Yet it approaches slowly. Curiously. And leaves. This scene is not
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This Fiji plant grew condos to house feuding ants

High in the rainforest canopy of Fiji, a peculiar plant has taken on the role of urban planner. Squamellaria, an epiphyte that clings to tree branches, has evolved a remarkable solution to an age-old ecological dilemma: how to house rival ant species without letting them tear each other apart. The answer? Condos. Not in the
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The truth behind those ‘stoned dolphins’ and their toxic pufferfish toy

It started with a slow float. In a 2013 BBC documentary, a pod of adolescent dolphins was filmed gently passing a pufferfish between them. They didn’t bite or kill. They just nudged it, mouthed it, and then drifted near the water’s surface, as if mesmerized. One dolphin stared at its own reflection. Another hovered with
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China’s clean air efforts may be speeding up global warming

In 2013, China launched an ambitious campaign to clean up its air. Cities like Beijing, once blanketed by thick industrial smog, began to see blue skies. Sulphur dioxide levels across East Asia dropped by approximately 75 percent over the following decade. It was a global public health victory, saving lives and improving daily life for
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Cascadia’s threat: The quake that could redraw the Pacific Northwest in minutes

Off the coasts of Northern California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia lies a 600-mile geological fault that’s been ominously quiet for over 300 years. This is the Cascadia Subduction Zone, where the smaller Juan de Fuca Plate pushes beneath the North American Plate. Instead of sliding smoothly, the plates are locked. Strain builds year after
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First documented harpy eagle attack on human shocks scientists

The forest near the Kourou River in French Guiana had fallen quiet, save for the hush of wind through canopy leaves. It was October 2023. A group of birdwatchers, guided by a local ecotourism camp, had set out on a jungle trail toward a natural bathing pool. Somewhere overhead, a harpy eagle watched. They spotted