The animal-loving team at Ginger Cat showcases animals whose love for their humans is unmatched and truly one-of-a-kind.
Scientists have documented same-sex behavior in many animals. Learn what it means, how it varies, and why human labels can mislead.
They sometimes touched their lips together, breathed into one another’s open mouths, or stood on two legs and hugged.
Animals may not celebrate Valentine’s Day, but courtship rituals, pair bonding and fierce competition shape love in the wild.
The animal-loving team at Ginger Cat captures animals imitating humans and performing nonstop silly antics.
In jellyfish and sea anemones, neurons accumulate DNA damage while animals are awake and repair that damage during sleep.
“Dogs like to watch dogs, just like humans like to watch humans,” said Dr. Freya Mowat, a veterinary ophthalmologist at the ...
There are few things more joyful, if occasionally nerve-wracking, than having a pet in your home. And plenty of people agree. According to the American Pet Products Association, around 94 million ...
Humans aren't the only species that can pretend, a study shows. Scientists offered a bonobo imaginary juice and grapes in a ...
Like most mammals, humans are diphyodont: We have two sets of teeth – baby teeth and adult teeth. The technical term for our baby teeth is deciduous teeth because they fall out, the same way deciduous ...
Many animals touch noses, beaks, or mouths, but science reveals these behaviors signal grooming, dominance, feeding, or even fights.
A bonobo demonstrated the ability to track imaginary objects in controlled tests, challenging the belief that imagination is uniquely human and hinting at deep evolutionary roots. In a set of ...