Seagull species that have bigger brains are more likely to nest on coastal cliffs and may also be better adapted to breed in urban environments such as on the roofs of buildings.
Read Also
- NASA conducts ‘moonwalks’ in the Arizona desert for Artemis lunar mission
- Twitter is officially X.com now
- The 20 best PC games you can play right now for 2024
- A devastating fire 2,200 years ago preserved a moment of life and war in Iron Age Spain, down to a single gold earring
- Watch SpaceX stack Starship rocket ahead of fourth test flight
- We love this Hisense 65-inch mini-LED TV, and it’s $100 off
- Get a lifetime of 1TB cloud storage for $160
- Apple’s best-selling AirPods are back at their Black Friday price
- Get this HP 17-inch laptop for $300 instead of the usual $660
- 3 underrated shows on Hulu you need to watch in May 2024
Latest phys
- A devastating fire 2,200 years ago preserved a moment of life and war in Iron Age Spain, down to a single gold earring
- Airborne technology brings new hope to map shallow aquifers in Earth's most arid deserts
- Detecting influence campaigns on X with AI and network science
- The impact of inter-satellite links on the ECOM model performance for BDS‑3 MEO satellites
- Q&A: Medical historians examine organization's silence over rise of Nazism
- Kenya floods prompt calls for warning systems
- Norway spruce in Finland is susceptible to European spruce bark beetle damage especially near clear-cuts: Study
- Revving up individual's climate action: How our plates and wheels can drive down carbon emissions
- New photos show Jupiter's tiny moon Amalthea
- Identifying appropriate pondscapes for protecting amphibians