Morning Overview on MSN
Amazon stingless bees become the 1st insects granted legal rights
In a remote corner of Peru’s central Amazon, a small, ancient pollinator has quietly rewritten legal history. Native ...
Experts say the bee species keeps the Amazon's ecosystems pollinated and produces honey with medicinal properties ...
Understanding the evolution of insect mating behavior is essential for explaining how early insects adapted to life on land.
Fossil insect find, Zekuforma maculata, reveals a land-to-water experiment in evolution, rewriting 230 million years of true ...
ZME Science on MSN
40-Million-Year-Old Amber Discovery Reveals an Insect “Missing Link”
The Natural History Museum of Denmark houses a unique collection of 70,000 pieces of amber from various time periods.
Over 70 new species, from insects to dinosaurs, were identified in 2025 by combining fieldwork, museum collections, and ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
How Stingless Bees in the Amazon Became the First Insects With Legal Rights
Learn how stingless bees quietly sustain Amazonian forests — and how a new law is changing what happens when they’re harmed.
An entomologist at Anglia Ruskin University has discovered seven new species of leafhopper. A researcher at Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) in Cambridge, England has identified seven previously unknown ...
Researchers discover that insect sex systems influence the speed of mitochondrial evolution, impacting biodiversity tracking ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
How Insects Decide Which Plants Survive in Forests and Grasslands
Through pollination and feeding on all parts of plants, insects influence which plants thrive, which struggle, and even ...
The consumption of edible insects, a common part of the diet of some Asian and Latin American countries, is tentatively ...
Producers spot healthy soil through diverse ground cover, beneficial insects, earthworms and lab tests measuring microbial ...
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