Scientists have unveiled the head of Arthropleura, the largest bug to ever exist, which roamed the Earth 300 million years ...
Was the biggest bug to ever live a predator? Scientists claim that the huge primitive millipede was a plant eater.
What's as big as an alligator, with the body of a millipede, the head of a centipede and the eyestalks of a crab? That would ...
During the Carboniferous Period, Earth's atmospheric oxygen levels surged, helping some plants and animals grow to gigantic ...
Small-scale robots with chemical propulsion and shape-morphing abilities mimic aquatic insects, enabling autonomous ...
However, the stress caused by capture, handling, and tagging can have an effect on the locomotion and activity of the animals and thus also affect the validity of the collected data. Therefore ...
The insects and birds who pollinate plants are dynamic, moving from flower to flower — while the flowers and the plants on which they bloomed remain in the same place (as plants tend to do).
The better an insect can camouflage itself, the higher their chances are for survival. Because of this, adaption and evolution have created some of the most interesting-looking insects in the world.
Recognizing that conventional understanding of animal and human locomotion is based on a dated and reductionist machine modeling of organisms, we set out to create a theory of locomotion by reasoning ...
These were easily recognizable as fig beetles, those loud buzzing insects, sounding like bumblebees ... use the stiff hairs on their backs for locomotion. Between fall and late winter, the ...