Morning Overview on MSN
A six-year global study found most wild animals change how they move the moment humans are near — and gray wolves roam far wider now to avoid us
Somewhere in the northern Rockies, a GPS-collared gray wolf trots along a logging road at 2 a.m., covering ground efficiently ...
Morning Overview on MSN
65% of wild animals just got caught changing how they move when humans are near — Yale tracked wolves, hawks, vultures, and cranes by GPS across the US
Somewhere in Wyoming, a wolf veered off its usual route. In the skies over Kansas, a red-tailed hawk shifted its hunting ...
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