
Orca Groups with Radically Different Cultures Are Actually Separate Species
“Resident” and “transient” killer whales, or orcas, have unique hunting habits and genetics, proving they are in fact separate species
Douglas Main is an independent journalist who covers environmental issues, the natural world and a range of other scientific topics. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Atlantic, MIT Technology Review, Hakai Magazine and other publications. Until recently, he was a senior writer and editor at National Geographic. Follow him on X (formerly Twitter) at @douglas_main.

Orca Groups with Radically Different Cultures Are Actually Separate Species
“Resident” and “transient” killer whales, or orcas, have unique hunting habits and genetics, proving they are in fact separate species

How Wild Animals Actually Responded to Our COVID Lockdowns
The COVID lockdowns and the subsequent reemergence of humans had some surprising effects on wildlife beyond “nature is healing” tropes

Mystery of Earth’s Missing Nitrogen Solved
Scientists have discovered a previously unknown environmental source of nitrogen

Great Ape Makes Good Doc
Orangutans were observed to use plant extracts to treat their own pain.

Orangutans Use Plant Extracts to Treat Pain
Humans aren’t the only animals that have discovered medicinal products in nature

World’s Heaviest Bony Fish Was Misidentified
The bump-head sunfish, and not the ocean sunfish, is the world’s largest bony fish

Salmon Spawning May Move Mountains
The fish’s reproduction erodes riverbeds over millennia, research suggests

Smoke Taint: Wildfires Pose a Growing Threat to Winegrowers
Wildfires can contaminate grapes and ruin the beverage's flavor

Smoke from Deadly California Wildfires Could Damage Wine Crops
Chemicals from these blazes can give the libation an ashy flavor​

Sharks Do Get Cancer: Tumor Found in Great White
Documentation of rare tumors further disproves the misconception that sharks cannot get cancer

New House Cat-Size Feline Species Discovered
The oncillas found in northeastern Brazil belong to a different species from those elsewhere in South America, though they look virtually identical

Mushrooms "Make Wind" to Spread Spores
Mushrooms rely on evaporation to induce a bit of air flow

Pufferfish Courtship Explains Mysterious Underwater Circles
In order to attract mates, a newly discovered species of pufferfish makes geometric patterns that involve radially aligned ridges and valleys decorated with fragments of shells

The Unusual Mating Dance of the Colorful Peacock Spider
For a creature so tiny — most are around an eighth of an inch long — the display is surprisingly complex and visual

New Glue-Spitting Velvet Worm Found in Vietnam
The ancient animals, which spit an immobilizing material onto prey, hadn't been spotted before because they spend most of their lives hidden in soil to keep their permeable skin moist

Monarch Butterflies' Birthplaces Pinpointed
Monarch butterflies may take as many as five generations to make it from Mexico to southern Canada and back again

Illegal Sea Turtle Egg Poaching on the Rise in Costa Rica
The eggs' alleged aphrodisiac properties have made it popular amongst Panamanian poachers, who have contributed to a 30 percent rise in turtle egg poaching since 1996

How Eerie Sea Ice 'Brinicles' Form
Brine-rich compartments within sea ice have properties that could have helped life originate

How Eerie Sea-Ice "Brinicles" Form
When salt-rich water leaks out of sea ice, it sinks into the sea and can occasionally create an eerie finger of ice called a brinicle. New research explains how these strange fingers of ice form and how the salty water within sea ice could have been a prime environment in which life may have evolved

How to Count Komodo Dragons
Camera traps worked about as well as physical traps at detecting the presence of Komodo dragons―and, in certain areas, did even better, an analysis reveals. The finding is significant because Komodo populations are threatened by human activities

Fish, Turtle and Duck Excrement Helps Spread Sea Grass
It was already known that animals consume seeds in one location and excrete them in another where they can germinate, but now this process is confirmed to occur in eelgrass beds

Once-Extinct Toads Reintroduced to Wild
Waterfall-loving Kihansi spray toads had been declared extinct in the wild. Some of the frogs conserved at New York's Bronx Zoo were later bred in Tanzania and are now living in the wild near an artificial system of sprinklers

Why Did Isaac Take So Long to Become a Hurricane?
Isaac encountered and ingested a system of dry air that prevented the storm's eye wall from forming, a key step in a storm's intensification

Submarine Volcanoes Help Rebuild Great Barrier Reef
"Pumice rafting" colonizes large swaths of the damaged reef instantaneously with organisms hitching a ride on trillions of pieces of floating rock