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  • TV Highlights This Week

News Articles: Animals

University of Miami Marine Sciences student Lauren Hayes with her catch, a 7 or 8 pound mutton snapper, which was released and returned to its reef habitat more than 100 feet below the surface.

Tagged as: 

  • National

After catch and release, here's how to make sure reef fish survive

People who fish in Florida and in federal waters are required to have special gear on board to help ensure groupers, snappers and other reef fish survive when they're returned to the water.

April 18, 2024
|
By:
  • Greg Allen
<em>Selkirkia tsering</em> fossil found in a collection from the Fezouata Formation in Morocco.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Ancient predatory worms have scientists rethinking the history of life on Earth

500 million years ago, the world was a very different place. During this period of time, known as the Cambrian period, basically all life was in the water. The ocean was brimming with animals that looked pretty different from the ones we recognize today — including a group of predatory worms with a throat covered in teeth and spines.

Researchers thought these tiny terrors died out at the end of the Cambrian period. But a paper published recently in the journal Biology Letters showed examples of a new species of this worm in the fossil record 25 million years after scientists thought they'd vanished from the Earth. One of the authors of the paper, Karma Nanglu, tells us how this finding may change how scientists understand the boundaries of time.

Curious about other weird wonders of the ancient Earth? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

April 17, 2024
|
By:
  • Rachel Carlson,
  • Emily Kwong,
  • and 1 more
The Fulton County Commission and the LifeLine Animal Project.

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

Atlanta City Council approves resolution for Fulton County to resume providing animal control services

The Atlanta City Council approved a resolution at its Monday meeting authorizing the mayor to execute an agreement with Fulton County to resume providing animal control services.

April 16, 2024
|
By:
  • Dyana Bagby
With diary cows getting bird flu, researchers are trying to figure out what mutations could make the virus a threat to humans.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

More states are finding bird flu in cattle. This is what scientists are watching for

Avian influenza is being detected in more dairy herds. Scientists are paying close attention to how the virus is changing and what that means for its pandemic potential.

April 11, 2024
|
By:
  • Will Stone

Tagged as: 

  • Science

In the womb, a brother's hormones can shape a sister's future

When siblings share a womb, sex hormones from a male fetus can cause lasting changes in a female littermate. This effect exists for all kinds of mammals — perhaps humans too.

April 10, 2024
|
By:
  • Jon Hamilton
A two-spot octopus, like the type an Oklahoma family brought home as a pet.

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

Terrance the octopus came to live with a family. Then she laid dozens of eggs

The Clifford family was as prepared as possible to welcome Terrance the octopus. But there was one thing they missed: she was pregnant. And then she laid a whole lot of eggs.

April 10, 2024
|
By:
  • Jordan-Marie Smith and
  • Sarah Handel
A dog tries on eclipse sunglasses in London in 2015. Experts say pets don't need eclipse sunglasses — in fact, quite the opposite.

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

How to keep pets safe during the solar eclipse, whether at home or on the road

Experts say pets are unlikely to be impacted by the eclipse itself — but there are steps their humans should take to help them deal with the crowds, traffic and stress.

April 07, 2024
|
By:
  • Rachel Treisman
Zoo Atlanta's southern white rhino calf.

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

Zoo Atlanta takes a play from March Madness with baby rhino name game

Sports brackets for baby animal names? Try your hand at Zoo Atlanta's "Rhino Naming Madness." The moniker for its new southern white rhino calf, born Christmas Eve, will be revealed April 11, 2024.

April 05, 2024
|
By:
  • Ambria Burton
The black-capped chickadee, seen here, is well known for its strong episodic memory.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

The "barcodes" powering these tiny songbirds' memories may also help human memory

Tiny, black-capped chickadees have big memories. They stash food in hundreds to thousands of locations in the wild – and then come back to these stashes when other food sources are low. Now, researchers at Columbia University's Zuckerman Institute think neural activity that works like a barcode may be to thank for this impressive feat — and that it might be a clue for how memories work across species.

Curious about other animal behavior mysteries? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

April 05, 2024
|
By:
  • Regina G. Barber,
  • Rachel Carlson,
  • and 3 more
Onlookers gather to watch as volunteers  release rehabilitated and endangered Kemp's ridley sea turtles into the waters off Jekyll Island.

Tagged as: 

  • Environment

A second chance at life for rehabilitated sea turtles released off Georgia coast

Volunteers gathered at Jekyll Island’s South Beach to release dozens of endangered sea turtles back to water — the largest such release in Jekyll Island's recorded history.

April 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Sofi Gratas
A cicada sheds its nymph shell in Chevy Chase, Md., during the emergence of Brood X in May 2021.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Billions of cicadas will buzz this spring as two broods emerge at the same time

Billions of cicadas will emerge this spring across eastern and southern states as two broods arrive simultaneously for the first time in more than 200 years.

April 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Clare Marie Schneider
Thousands of young salmon died after the truck crash, unable to reach nearby Lookingglass Creek in northeast Oregon.

Tagged as: 

  • National

Fish out of water story ends with 77,000 young salmon in the wrong water

The Chinook got shook when their truck got cooked. Now the salmon are swimming — but in the wrong brook.

April 04, 2024
|
By:
  • Bill Chappell
This combination of 2003 and 2006 photos shows a northern spotted owl, left, in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman, Ore., and a barred owl in East Burke, Vt.

Tagged as: 

  • Animals

A government proposal to kill a half-million owls sparks controversy

A U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposal to kill some 470,000 owls over 30 years to protect other owl species has prompted conservationists and animal welfare advocates to weigh the consequences.

April 02, 2024
|
By:
  • Clare Marie Schneider
Dairy cattle feed at a farm on March 31, 2017, near Vado, N.M. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says cows in multiple states have tested positive for bird flu.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

A person in Texas caught bird flu after exposure to cows that were thought to be ill

Livestock in Texas, Kansas and Michigan are confirmed to have the virus, and herds in New Mexico and Idaho have also tested positive. Officials confirmed that one person in Texas also had bird flu.

April 01, 2024
|
By:
  • Joe Hernandez
A researcher holds up a sandy De Winton's golden mole.

Tagged as: 

  • Science

Once lost to science, these "uncharismatic" animals are having their moment

Historic numbers of animals across the globe have become endangered or pushed to extinction. But some of these species sit in limbo — not definitively extinct yet missing from the scientific record. Rediscovering a "lost" species is not easy. It can require trips to remote areas and canvassing a large area in search of only a handful of animals. But new technology and stronger partnerships with local communities have helped these hidden, "uncharismatic" creatures come to light.

Have other scientific gray areas you want us to cover in a future episode? Email us at shortwave@npr.org!

March 29, 2024
|
By:
  • Anil Oza,
  • Rebecca Ramirez,
  • and 1 more
  • Load More

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