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The incredible Greenland shark can live for 500 years or more. They are as big as great white sharks, but extremely ...
9h
Interesting Engineering on MSNFemale bonobos form wild 'girl gangs' to shut down stronger male aggressionA 30-year study finds that female bonobos dominate males through alliances, clever tactics, and full control over food and ...
For decades it had remained a mystery why females of this primate species, though smaller than males, tend to claim high ...
A new study shows female bonobos team up to fend off males in the wild. Scientists have long wondered why bonobos live in ...
Photograph by Christian Ziegler By banding together in coalitions—meaning groups of two or more animals, but usually three to ...
However, observations by Dr. Surbeck and his team, and those of other researchers, challenge the harmonious stereotyping of ...
Female bonobos team up to suppress male aggression against them -- the first evidence of animals deploying this strategy. In 85% of observed coalitions, females collectively targeted males, forcing ...
5h
Discover Magazine on MSNFemale Bonobos Ferociously Team Up To Assert Dominance Over MalesNew research out of the Max Planck Institute for Animal Behavior finds that female bonobos team up to keep male bonobos in line, even though the males are larger and stronger than the females. This ...
In 2009, a research group led by Dr. Keiichi Kakui at the Faculty of Science discovered a rather unusual small crustacean ...
A proposed change to P.E.I.’s Lands Protection Act is getting pushback from a land advocacy group and an MLA who say it doesn’t fix the biggest problems with how land is bought and controlled in the ...
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