Researchers explore what happens when ants can’t properly use smell to detect friend from foe.
A honeybee is performing the waggle dance in the center of this photo to communicate the location of a rich nectar source to its nestmates.
Heather Broccard-Bell
Honeybees possess one of the most complex examples of nonhuman communication. New research suggests that it is learned and culturally passed down from older to younger bees.
The coquí frog, Eleutherodactylus coqui, is loud enough to wake people at night.
Éktor/flickr
North American red squirrels produce a range of sounds, but their distinctive rattle call may have more to do with identifying themselves than warning off other squirrels.
According to researcher Marc-Antoine Fardin, under the right circumstances, cats’ bodies can behave like liquids.
Nevena Uzurov/Moment via Getty Images
Have you wondered why cats are so nimble and seem to fit perfectly in cups, boxes, and other small places? Or how cats communicate with humans? A physicist and a psychologist explain.
Scientist and seal, under the Antarctic ice.
McMurdo Oceanographic Observatory
Microphones on the seafloor recorded life under the Antarctic ice for two years – inadvertently catching seal trills and chirps that are above the range of human hearing. Could they be for navigation?
‘Hey everybody, there’s big news happening over here!’
Wesley Martinez Da Costa/EyeEm via Getty Images
Worker naked mole-rats take care of their colony’s young even though they aren’t the pups’ actual parents. New research suggests the queen gets them ready via hormones in her poop.
Nisarg Desai observes wild chimps known as Sandi, Ferdinand and Siri in Tanzania.
Michael Wilson
Do chimpanzee talk to each other? Scientists follow and record chimpanzees in the wild to find out – and to fill in details about how human language might have evolved.