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May 5, 2010 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Whales, mate!

I can’t imagine not being awed by massive air-breathing creatures that move through the water. Whales are smart creatures that live in a dark, alternative Earth-world, where sound is the dominant sense. This weekend I got a chance to see this wonderful exhibition from New Zealand— complete with two sperm whale skeletons and a life-size model…

Permalink animals how it's served up science AMNH blue whale Carnegie Museum of Natural History Museum of Science sperm whale Te Papa whales
September 24, 2009 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

Introducing Material of the Week: Spider Silk

Followers of this blog might have noticed that the Molecule of the Week (MotW) feature took a summerish hiatus. I’ve decided to expand the feature to include interesting materials, which are often more complex mixtures, either of synthetic or naturally-made compounds. So, I’m adding Material of the Week (MatotW in blogospheric shorthand) to help round…

Permalink animals Material of the Week science AMNH Charlotte's Web Cheryl Hayashi silk spider spider silk spider web
June 4, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Whales in NY Harbor: Update

In my post last week about blue whales singing in NY Harbor, I mentioned that I had an email out to the Cornell Bioacoustics Research Program to find out the current status of the NY harbor listening project. I heard back yesterday from Connie Bruce at Cornell: The current status is that we have terminated…

Permalink animals environment science blue whale Christopher Clark NY harbor whales
June 4, 2009 By Sarah Webb

More animal giggles: primates this time

Tickling Techniques from Science News on Vimeo. Last month, I posted about laughing rats. Well, here’s the follow-up: chortling chimps, orangutans, gorillas, and bonobos. From the article posted on Science News’s website: Don’t try this at home, but tickling a gorilla, orangutan, bonobo or chimp can inspire bursts of grunting sounds. Yes, that’s laughter, says…

Permalink animals science bonobo chimpanzee gorilla laughter orangutan rat tickle
May 29, 2009 By Sarah Webb 4 Comments

Whales in New York Harbor

They’re the largest animal to ever live on Earth, and for the first time researchers have confirmed that blue whales have been singing off the coast of Long Island. (These animals are almost unfathomably huge. If you’re in NYC sometime, check out the blue whale model suspended in the American Museum of Natural History’s Hall…

Permalink animals environment science blue whale Christopher Clark NY harbor whales
May 25, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Summer is (almost) here

Fleeting moments between spring and summer are magic in my little corner of NY harbor. Bikes and rollerblades speed by– walkers, joggers, and marathoners-in-training drink in the cool breeze laced with sweetness (honeysuckle?). And the hardy fishermen (with an occasional woman) cluster in cultural pockets, speaking Chinese, Spanish, or Brooklyn-drenched English. At another fisherman’s pocket,…

Permalink animals food New York City fish NY harbor spring summer
May 22, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Looking out for her rats

Rats and mice clearly don’t get the cute and cuddly points that most other animals get. Check out this video that accompanies this Wall Street Journal article published last weekend about improving conditions for research rodents. I interviewed Amber Alliger last year for an article I wrote for Science Careers about the challenges and moral…

Permalink animals science Amber Alliger mouse rat rodent Wall Street Journal
May 17, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Cat fashion statement

Our recovering diabetic is not having a good weekend.  She’s licking and chewing on her back legs until they’re raw. But if we gave her steroids to deal with those problems, we could send her pancreas into a tailspin. So we’re stuck with the bad fashion statement and letting her back leg heal over the…

Permalink animals science cat diabetes fashion steroid
May 15, 2009 By Sarah Webb

The best part about my job

Is talking to enthusiastic scientists with a story to tell. When I was at the AMNH Extreme Mammals preview on Tuesday, I talked with Natalia Rybczynski of the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa, one of the scientists who discovered this fossil, Puijila darwini. It’s an exciting find: a pre-pinniped (pinnipeds are a group of…

Permalink animals career science AMNH Arctic Canadian Museum of Nature Extreme Mammals fossil pinniped seal walrus
May 13, 2009 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

Mammals to an extreme

I’ve been making the rounds of interesting New York City science events this week. Yesterday morning– along with a bunch of other journalists– I got a preview of the American Museum of Natural History‘s Extreme Mammals exhibition, which opens on Saturday, May 16. Walking through the exhibit, it’s interesting to think about what we consider…

Permalink animals New York City science American Museum of Natural History AMNH Extreme Mammals fossil marsupial sugar glider
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    Here's a really great recording of some racketts. https://youtu.be/HGI4zG-Zddw
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