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Developers for the game Tombwater have showed off more of the game map, as we get a better idea of how big the world will be ...
Australia’s bogong moth is officially the first known invertebrate to use the stars as its guide on its long, annual migrations. The “world-first discovery” made by a team of international researchers ...
Age is just a number, or is it? A new study by UTEP researchers shows that adult moths are more vulnerable to attack than when they are young.
ATL24 provides global along-track coastal and nearshore bathymetry, consisting of refraction-corrected seafloor and sea surface heights (orthometric and ellipsoidal heights and instantaneous depths), ...
Each spring, millions of Bogong moths fly 1,000km south to the caves of the Australian Alps to escape the summer heat. Now we know how they find their way.
As apple blossoms bloom, watch out for the pesky Codling Moth that threatens your harvest. Regular checks and clever bagging techniques can help keep your fruit safe this season.
You might guess a spider. And a gator. But a snail? That and others make up the 10 deadliest creatures found in Louisiana, ...
Bogong moths use stars and Earth’s magnetic field to navigate epic migrations - revealing the first known stellar compass in an insect.
Birds routinely navigate by starlight, but the moths are the first known invertebrates, or creatures without a backbone, to find their way across such long distances using the stars.