Real Science on MSN
Watch a Dragonfly Catch Insects in Flight – Without Missing
Dragonflies may look delicate, but they are among the most precise predators in nature. Instead of chasing prey, they predict ...
13don MSN
Massive insect body size 300 million years ago may not have been due to high atmospheric oxygen
Three-hundred-million years ago, Earth was very different. The continents had coalesced into Pangea, which was dominated in ...
Scientists rethink why giant insects once ruled the skies, finding oxygen may not explain their size or disappearance.
Insects first took to the skies about 350 million years ago, some 200 million years before birds first flapped their wings.
Phantom crane flies change the angle of their splayed legs to increase or reduce drag, helping them navigate varying winds.
Briefly on MSN
South African scientists debunk ancient myth about why prehistoric insects grew so large
Researchers from the University of Pretoria debunk the myth that high oxygen levels were essential for ancient insects' 70cm ...
THIS is the moment a ground crew wrangle a swarm of bees from a plane turbine as passengers face delays on the tarmac.
A flight at Charlotte Douglas International Airport was delayed after a swarm of bees gathered on one of the aircraft’s turbines.
The concept of moths being attracted to light is so established that it’s found in poems, song lyrics, and folklore. These days, moths fly around lightbulbs, but in the past, it would be a naked flame ...
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