Researchers recently discovered that dozens of species in the flamboyant family are biofluorescent, emitting a gleaming light ...
Phys.org on MSN13d
When birds lose the ability to fly, their bodies change faster than their feathers, scientists discoverand kiwi birds. In a study in the journal Evolution, researchers compared the feathers and bodies of different species of ...
A team of researchers from Princeton University is exploring how feather-like flaps on aircraft wings could improve stability ...
Feathered dinosaurs were first reported in the 1990s, but many mysteries remain about how and when feathers emerged.
A survey of museum specimens reveals that more than a dozen species of the birds sport biofluorescence in feathers, skin or even inside their throats.
Birds-of-paradise are known for their bright colours and courtship displays. Now, it turns out that many species also have body parts that fluoresce ...
Phys.org on MSN13d
Conservation focusing on birds of a feather may have mixed resultsConservation strategies are turning back the doomsday clock in threatened Florida-Scrub Jays—but not without caveats, a new ...
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