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Search Result for “predator fish”

Showing 1 - 10 of 15

WORLD

Cuttlefish dazzle mates with light patterns invisible to humans

New York Times, Published on 27/01/2026

» NEW YORK - Many of the snazziest decorations in the animal kingdom are charm offensives, put on by creatures trying to mate. While some of these adornments, like a peacock’s tail feathers or a moose’s antlers, are obvious even to humans, others can be perceived only with sensory capabilities that we do not have.

WORLD

He studied elephant behaviour to save lives

New York Times, Published on 04/11/2025

» Joshua Plotnik: For about 20 years, I have been studying Asian elephant cognition. The biggest issue for the conservation of Asian elephants is human-elephant conflict. Humans and elephants are fighting to share limited resources, and you’re starting to see conflict that is resulting in the loss of human and elephant life.

WORLD

Fossil’s 3 eyes are not its most surprising feature

New York Times, Published on 14/05/2025

» NEW YORK -  More than 500 million years ago a three-eyed predator chased prey through seas of the Cambrian Period. Once it caught its quarry, a pair of spine-covered grasping claws and a circular mouth covered in teeth would finish the job.

WORLD

Animal celebs who surprise, sooth and scream at us

New York Times, Published on 26/12/2024

» Every year has its breakout stars, and 2024 yielded a bumper crop: Glen Powell, Chappell Roan, Pommel Horse Guy.

WORLD

SpaceX Starship launch ends with dramatic water landing

New York Times, Published on 20/11/2024

» BROWNSVILLE — The late-afternoon launch brought United States President-elect Donald Trump to the company's South Texas launch site along the Gulf of Mexico for a show of solidarity with Elon Musk, SpaceX's founder and the world's richest man, who helped catapult the former president back to the White House.

WORLD

Subterranean ‘baby dragons’ found to sneak up to the surface

New York Times, Published on 13/03/2024

» NEW YORK - Scientists have discovered that blind cave salamanders in northern Italy leave their underground homes to go on expeditions to the surface. Eyeless and ghostly pale from millions of years spent below ground, the salamanders appear to commute back and forth to the sunny surface using springs where water bubbles up from hundreds of feet deep.

WORLD

She's a doctor. He was a limo driver. They pitched a $30m arms deal

New York Times, Published on 06/10/2022

» NEW YORK: After falling out with his partner at a limousine company in the St. Louis suburbs, Martin Zlatev recently sought a lucrative new business opportunity: selling $30 million worth of rockets, grenade launchers and ammunition to the Ukrainian military.

WORLD

'To save whales, don’t eat lobster'

New York Times, Published on 14/09/2022

» American lobster may be a beloved and delicious splurge, but it is no longer a sustainable seafood choice and consumers should avoid eating it, according to Seafood Watch, a group that monitors how fish and other seafood are harvested from the world’s oceans.

THAILAND

‘Captain Condom’ turned the tide in war on Aids, overpopulation

New York Times, Published on 06/08/2022

» Mechai Viravaidya twice saw Thailand in desperate trouble — first from a ruinous population explosion and then from the Aids epidemic — and he responded to both crises the same way: with condoms and his own considerable charisma.

THAILAND

Unmasked Songkran parties dent Phuket’s reopening hopes

New York Times, Published on 26/04/2021

» PHUKET: Around the corner from the teeth-whitening clinic and the tattoo parlour with offerings in Russian, Hebrew and Chinese, near the outdoor eatery with fried rice meant to fuel sunburned tourists or tired go-go dancers, the Hooters sign has lost its H.