Description: Unlike lots of other animals, there’s no such thing as the “mating season” for humans, and it might have to do ...
While humans often struggle to find a partner who is both physically attractive and a reliable co-parent, yeast may already have cracked the formula for the perfect match. When choosing mates, these ...
Scientists found that the male’s hectocotylus, the specialized arm for mating, is lined with receptors that can sense ...
When the scientists paired two male octopuses in the same setup, the males interacted by touching arms, but they never ...
Set to lift off this week, the NASA flight will take astronauts around the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years.
How we manage or mismanage intimacy is one of the core drivers of whether we find a balance among solitude, isolation, and ...
Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella questions Enzo Marescas exit in an interview with The Athletic; Spaniard says: If you asked ...
How do octopuses mate in the dark? A new study shows how the hectocotylus arm uses progesterone receptors to "taste" for a mate.
A new study by Harvard biologists reveals how octopuses feel their way to potential mates with a "taste by touch" sensory ...
We don’t experience the world through neat, separate senses—everything blends together. Smell, touch, sound, sight, and balance constantly influence one another, shaping how food tastes, objects feel, ...
Learn how specialized sensory cells and 500 million neurons help octopuses recognize mates and reproduce through touch alone.
Few people have been lucky enough to see a whale birth, with the last one witnessed decades ago. Now, two major papers ...