|
- Rewilding: Can it save our wildlife and temper climate change?
Rewilding: Can it save our wildlife and temper climate change? We’ve pushed nature to the brink, but it may be capable of repairing the damage - provided we step aside and let it go back to doing what it does best Jocelyn Timperley Published: January 8, 2021 at 12:00 am
- In photos: How glow-in-the-dark animals use the language of light
In February 2021, an African rodent called the springhare became one of the first non-Australian mammals known to fluoresce A secret patchwork of luminous markings was discovered upon its flanks, each made up of organic compounds called porphyrins found in the fur
- A leopard seal catches her lunch: The World Nature Photography Award . . .
The winners of the 2021 World Nature Photography Awards have just been announced
- Resurrecting the mammoth could be possible – but we shouldnt bother
Resurrecting the mammoth could be possible – but we shouldn't bother Kent H Redford and William M Adams, authors of Strange Natures, explain how de-extinction could be a strategy for conservation, but the real power of gene editing lies elsewhere
- How new X-ray scanning technology is revealing the secret lives of . . .
How new X-ray scanning technology is revealing the secret lives of ancient animals Palaeontologists using synchrotron X-ray scanning are calling it 'the superhero of visualisation' Exclusive US Offer - try a BBC Science Focus Magazine subscription and get your first 3 issues for only $12 99 PLUS get delivery from the UK!
- Stegosaurus: The enigmatic icon of the Jurassic
With its huge back plates, long tail spikes and teeny tiny head, Stegosaurus is one of the most distinctive dinosaurs we know about Comparable in size to the largest animals we share the Earth with today, this plodding herbivore has captured imaginations 150 million years after the species died out
- Were the dinosaurs cold-blooded? - BBC Science Focus Magazine
Were the dinosaurs cold-blooded? Whether dinosaurs were cold- or warm-blooded has been debated by experts for a long time However there is a new hypothesis Dr Stephen Brusatte Published: December 11, 2021 at 3:00 am
- Starling murmurations: Why do they form and how can I see one?
Starling murmurations: Why do they form and how can I see one? Up to five million starlings have been known to gather for a spectacular air show Thomas Ling Published: March 19, 2021 at 4:40 am
|
|
|