Officials are searching for multiple vervet monkeys that have been on the loose in St. Louis for several days. Missouri’s ...
18hon MSNOpinion
'Primate' Review: Paramount comes out swinging in 2026 with wild horror flick about a nightmare pet chimp
Fox News Digital reviews the Paramount Pictures horror film "Primate" starring Johnny Sequoyah, Troy Kotsur and Miguel Torres ...
Mongabay News on MSN
Chimpanzees and gorillas among most traded African primates, report finds
Between 2000 and 2023, more than 6,000 African primates were traded internationally in 50 countries, according to a newly ...
As many as four vervet monkeys were spotted in a neighborhood in North St. Louis on Thursday, city officials said. No one ...
New research shows gut bacteria can directly influence how the brain develops and functions. When scientists transferred ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Gut microbes are reshaping how scientists think about brain evolution
A new study from Northwestern University is reshaping how scientists think about brain evolution. The research suggests that ...
The Gulf of Mexico covered the gently sloped sand hills of lower Arkansas until about 50 million years ago. The Ouachita orogeny--the collision that pushed up what we know, in eroded form, as the ...
In the mice with large-brain primate microbes, the researchers found increased expression of genes associated with energy ...
ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Put Human Gut Bacteria Into Mice and Found Their Brains Showed Primate-like Activity
Synaptic plasticity allows brains to learn, adapt, and rewire. It’s foundational to memory, problem-solving, and complex ...
Parade Pets on MSN
French Guitarist Serenades Baboons Who Respond in Most Hilarious Way
Plumes sits calmly and sings to the primates when one baboon responds by sitting down and relieving itself right next to him.
Health officials in St. Louis, Missouri confirmed that multiple vervet monkeys remain loose in the city, as of Saturday, Jan.
Morning Overview on MSN
Human gut microbes made mice brains act more like primates
Scientists have long suspected that the trillions of microbes in our intestines do more than digest lunch, but new work goes ...
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