Their findings, published in Communications Biology, reveal remarkable adaptations that allow these cricket species to thrive in a hostile environment. Animals that live in ant colonies ...
In a mountainous town of western India, a “large” creature sat in a puddle outside a home and called out. Its “golden” eyes scanned the surrounding buildings, but it wasn’t the only one looking around ...
New research is reshaping our understanding of one of nature’s most stunning yet destructive phenomena —  massive swarms of desert locusts.
A small parasitic fly listens to the mating song of the Pacific field cricket to track the insects down. As these crickets have evolved different songs to escape the fly, it seems the fly has been ...
K P Dinesh, scientist, ZSI, and co-author of the study, said, “The newly discovered species, being a large-sized cricket frog, belongs to one of the ancient lineages among its related members.
There is a good chance that there are additional species of upland pygmy mole crickets in other sandy areas of southeastern North America. /// Se describe una nueva especie de Tridactylidae, Ellipes ...
"Eavesdroppers, like flies that listen in on cricket songs, show how some species develop incredible abilities to detect sounds or signals that aren't meant for them." In previous studies ...