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Birds like the African starlings engage in reciprocal helping behavior, a concept once thought exclusive to humans.
Africa has several different types of habitats from jungles and forests to grasslands and deserts. The second-largest ...
A trio of researchers from institutions in Africa have explored whether honeyguides in Mozambique sometimes lead human ...
Animal welfare officers faced the grisly task of euthanizing more than 350,000 chickens by hand after they were left starving ...
A study of starlings in Africa shows that they form long-term social bonds similar to human friendships. The fact that humans who are not related by blood help each other repeatedly over time is ...
Some 350,000 birds at Daybreak Farms sites in Mpumalanga, an hour east of Johannesburg, were left starving after the company ...
At least 123 vultures have died in South Africa’s flagship national park after eating the carcass of an elephant that was ...
The research, published Wednesday in the scientific journal Nature, is based on 20 years of data collected from starlings ...
Birds form close bonds, just like human friendships, reveals new research. Starlings show “reciprocity” - helping each other ...