Survival World on MSN
Ever wonder where bugs go in winter? These 12 facts explain how insects survive cold months out of sight
Ants, often seen as summer pests, showcase their incredible teamwork during winter. As the cold sets in, they retreat deep ...
Experts say that if people in the United States and Europe can get over the "ick", edible insects could revolutionise food ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Honey-Making Stingless Bees in the Peruvian Amazon Become the First Insects to Gain Legal Rights
Two local ordinances granted rights to at least 175 stingless bee species in Peru, which are culturally and spiritually ...
Winter doesn’t have to mean a lifeless garden or a silent backyard. Even when frost creeps in and most plants retreat, some ...
You spend enough time outside, you’re going to get stung. Maybe it’s while you’re weeding, or moving lumber, or trying to ...
A Peruvian scientist and her team are working together to make sure stingless bees are around for generations to come by ...
Over 70 new species, from insects to dinosaurs, were identified in 2025 by combining fieldwork, museum collections, and ...
The consumption of edible insects, a common part of the diet of some Asian and Latin American countries, is tentatively ...
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 ...
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 ...
Scientists want to release insects to curb invasive Chinese tallow. Beekeepers say it could hurt pollinators and raise food ...
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