Just because a female olive baboon has mated with a specific male doesn't mean he will be the father of her offspring.
A new study by Harvard biologists reveals how octopuses feel their way to potential mates with a "taste by touch" sensory ...
New research shows female baboons influence fertilization through immune and chemical changes that affect sperm survival.
Scientists found that the male’s hectocotylus, the specialized arm for mating, is lined with receptors that can sense ...
A newly discovered group of tarantulas is so bizarre that scientists had to invent a whole new genus—Satyrex—to describe them ...
How do octopuses mate in the dark? A new study shows how the hectocotylus arm uses progesterone receptors to "taste" for a mate.
Happening soon: Cherokee County Republican Women to Host Gubernatorial Candidate Forum April 9 on the Canton Patch calendar ...
Whether they're offering gifts, courting for weeks or dying during sex, these are the romantic animal species doing courtship ...
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