In a playtime experiment, scientists found that apes, our closest living relatives, have the capacity for make-believe, too.
New study reveals our closest relatives share the cognitive roots of imagination and pretense. Remember childhood tea parties ...
In a series of tea party-like experiments, Johns Hopkins University researchers demonstrate for the first time that apes can ...
The Turtle Survival Center, run by the Turtle Survival Alliance, exists to buy time for species that no longer have much of it. Founded in 2013 in South Carolina, the center functions as a ...
A full planning application for an ambitious and visionary new conservation and wildlife-led visitor attraction that puts ...
Imagine an asteroid striking Earth and wiping out most of the human population. Even if some lucky people survived the impact ...
A world where extinct animals are brought back for the betterment of both the planet and mankind may seem like science ...
The Farm is a Sarasota County Schools initiative, launched last year, to increase agricultural literacy among today’s ...
Scientists used the April 2024 solar eclipse to show how animals adjust their behavior when daylight suddenly disappears.
Discover how an ape playing tea party teaches us humans are not the only beings with complex mental lives.
Given that bonobos are endangered in their home of the Democratic Republic of Congo, he added, “My hope is that that kind of ...