Far below our feet, animals are quietly shaping the ground into labyrinths that function like villages, towns and even cities. I look at 11 species whose underground engineering rivals human suburbs, ...
A recent study led by researcher Harold Brindley, from the Institute for Communities and Wildlife in Africa at the University ...
By María de los Ángeles Orfila Under cover of night, a black-footed cat moves almost invisibly through the grasses of southern Namibia, hunting small rodents, birds and insects. Barely a third the ...
It's not just humans that build villages – so do other animals. And they can be so enormous they're visible from space ...
This Instagram post by @the_last_messiah shows a groundhog getting riled up by a pit bull who keeps sticking its nose into ...
Evidence from camera footage and researchers confirms 56 species relied on specific underground infrastructures for post-fire survival, namely wombat burrows. Entrances measuring only 19 cm high ...
The world’s largest palaeoburrow is located in the Amazon Rainforest and is so long it’d take you roughly 20 minutes to walk ...
During Australia’s 2019-2020 Black Summer bushfires, wombats made headlines as much as the firefighters. In fact, multiple wombats were observed supposedly herding other animals into their own burrows ...