Science
Study: All monogamous mammals are not ‘wired for love’ in the same way – News-Medical.net
Humans aren’t the only mammals that form long-term bonds with a single, special mate — some bats, wolves, beavers, foxes and other animals do, too. But new research…

Humans aren’t the only mammals that form long-term bonds with a single, special mate — some bats, wolves, beavers, foxes and other animals do, too. But new research suggests the brain circuitry that makes love last in some species may not be the same in others.
The study, appearing Feb. 12 in the journal Scientific Reports, compares monogamous and promiscuous species within a closely related group of lemurs, distant primate cousins of humans from the island Madagascar.
Red-bellied lemurs and mongoose…
-
General18 hours ago
Internal Revenue Service starts cutting 20,000 workers
-
Noosa News18 hours ago
Man killed, woman seriously injured in collision in Wongabel, Atherton Tablelands, Queensland
-
Noosa News18 hours ago
Helicopter pilots saving lives, providing food and fodder in flooded outback Queensland
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
’Lethal new opioids’ prompt Wide Bay pill testing call