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Konrad Wothe
A stoat in its summer coat. The brown fur helps it blend into grasses in warm months.
This honey bee queen (Apis mellifera) lays about 2,000 eggs daily. While daughters like the retinue of workers surrounding her have fathers, sons develop from unfertilised eggs. To the queen's left, white larvae rest at the bottom of individual cells.
Lucky coyotes like this one in Allen’s Park, Colorado, don’t have to figure out how to navigate life in the city.
They may look cute, but cats' killer instinct may be driving down whole populations of reptiles, according to new research.
A male resplendent quetzal.
Some tropical species, like these Honduran white bats, have been observed to make tents out of leaves. The tiny bats bite through a leaf's veins so that it droops down and forms a crevice for them to hide in.