How to Keep Your Pets Safe In a Natural Disaster
Wildfires and other natural disasters can cause pets to panic and get stressed out, but these emergency preparedness tips can help you keep them safe.
Wildfires and other natural disasters can cause pets to panic and get stressed out, but these emergency preparedness tips can help you keep them safe.
The species has long been extinct.
Business is buzzing.
The Hawaiian poo-uli has been wiped out.
Welcome to the club.
Blood, sweat, and tears (and a few other choice substances): It’s all on the menu.
If you’ve ever been to a major aquarium, there’s a good chance you've been face to fin with one.
Long before the wonders of keyboard cat, felines and music had a tense relationship. The two were tied by an infernal instrument—the katzenklavier, or cat organ.
Less Felix, more Fluffy.
It's less stressful for the fish than transporting them on the ground.
Yes, really.
In case you need an excuse to smile at goats.
These places are pupper paradise.
Tip: Don't buy the ones that look doped up on laudanum.
From Benjamin the thylacine to Lonesome George the Pinta Island Tortoise, these endlings had an unfortunate claim to fame.
Regretful pet owners can drop off their fish, no questions asked.
The law was inspired by a special spaniel named Lucy.
Most of our feathered friends can sing, but only a few can talk. And if those talkers witness something naughty, they might just tell on you.
Take a deep dive into the butterfly's family tree.
But instead of eating brains, it kills mutated cells.
The truth behind the trope.
The six rooks pecking at litter within the Puy du Fou theme park in Les Epesses, France, aren't unwelcome pests: They're part of the staff.
Some insects can't hold their liquor.
The salary includes a house with a garden and an ocean view.