Researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies captured a shark eating another shark in the Great Barrier Reef! The a tasselled wobbegong shark was swallowing brown-banded bamboo shark head first!
The Scale of the Universe by Cary Huang takes you from the edge of the universe to the quantum foam of space-time. Along the way you will see molecules, animals, countries, and galaxies; all putting you in your scale. Awesome!
McDonald’s X California Poppy Seed Bomb Ad by Sean Click. The California poppy is the California state flower, protected by legislature, making it illegal to pick, dig up, or destroy.
Stunning deep sea discoveries off the California coast. Beautiful slideshow of the latest findings published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
BBC's Weird Nature shows us how some creatures found rolling is the fastest way down a hill - See how some salamanders and caterpillars curl up and roll!
The male orb-web spider Nephilengys malabarensis has been discovered to break of its own sex organs to avoid being eaten during mating. Incredible finding published in Biology Letters.
Biggest, Fastest, Bloodiest: Earth’s Most Extreme Insects from Wired tells of some amazing bugs and why they hold 14 positions in the Guinness Book of World Records.
Amazing photos of incredible species. National Geographic photographer Joel Sartore is on a mission to capture our incredible biodiversity before it disappears.
Some crab species burrow homes into sandy beaches. When large colonies of crabs are active, they can form unintentional but intricate and beautiful patterns.
This incredible creature is the Flamboyant Cuttlefish, one of my favorites at the California Academy of Science's Steinhart Aquarium. These stunning cephalopods are both beautiful to look at and fascinating to watch.
Researchers have discovered a unique visual attribute called image defocus that jumping spiders use in attacking and catching prey, proven in part by spiders jumping with deadly accuracy in green light, but fumbling in red.
Fascinating new research on the golden mole, the only iridescent mammal may have evolved the iridescent hairs to streamline the moles or repel water, rather than attract a mate.