This bird’s mimic abilities are so advanced that they can fool other species. Here’s what the science reveals about nature’s ...
Animals such as the orchid mantis mimic the look of flowers, and the corpse flower emits a smell like rotting meat to attract ...
Research and innovation in Texas A&M University's biomedical engineering department often centers around clinical impact on ...
We thought it was evolution, but an experiment with pencils shows that tips like teeth and thorns may owe their rounded shape ...
Shark skin-inspired surfaces are reducing drag and limiting bacterial growth, whale fin-shaped wind turbine blades are ...
Immediate call for global action to shift world towards a “nature positive” approach is published in Frontiers in Science.
A Texas A&M University biomimicry design course shows that scaffolded, nature‑inspired, inquiry‑based learning significantly ...
Beavers are increasingly being recognized as vital ecosystem engineers who can help us navigate the challenges of climate ...
A team of chemists has uncovered an unexpected way to use phosphorus to perform chemical reactions typically reliant on rare ...
Aggressive or Peckhamian mimicry, named after arachnologist Elizabeth G. Peckham, is the classic ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’, ...
Hidden within fish DNA are powerful genetic twists that may explain one of nature’s biggest mysteries: how new species form so quickly. In Lake Malawi, hundreds of cichlid fish species evolved at ...
Jon McCormack's new book celebrates the whorls, hexagons, and half-moons that appear in the world all around us.