Hunters from all over the world are in the Everglades right now, competing to bring in the most Burmese pythons before the Florida Python Challenge wraps up on July 19.
When that happens, animals may compete in ways scientists do not often get to observe in the wild.
The News-Press and Naples Daily News asked Kodiak Hengstebeck of the FWC 10 questions about this year's Python Challenge.
Preserving what's left of a python after its caught and killed requires a great deal of time, skill and patience.
Deep in the Florida Everglades, a team of snake hunters spent hours searching for one of the swamp's most elusive predators.
We may often come off as skeptical about AI in this newsletter. Our skepticism is primarily centered on the AI capital spend ...
The Hechinger Report reports that AI tutors show promise but can backfire if students rely too heavily on them.
An Australian snake catcher called to remove a large python from a resident's bedroom ended up rounding up a massive spider in the same room.
The One Nation leader’s gallivanting in Sicily matters because she built her appeal railing against an establishment that had ...
AI coding agents ported Fields Medalist Terence Tao’s Java 1.0 math visualizations to JavaScript in hours, identified two ...
Andy Burnham's return to the House of Commons became one of Westminster's most talked-about moments on Monday after the newly elected Labour MP delivered a quick-witted response to a Conservative ...
Walk into any gym in the evening and a familiar scene unfolds. Treadmills are packed. People spend 45 minutes jogging, ...