Strategic networking is key to career success, and not just for humans. A study of bottlenose dolphins reveals that in early life, dolphins devote more time to building connections that could give them an edge later on. Analyzing nearly 30 years of records for some 1700 dolphins in Australia, researchers find that dolphins under age 10 seek out peers and activities that could help them forge bonds and build skills they'll need in adulthood.
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200723172000.htm
Friday, 24 July 2020
Related Posts
Socio-economic, environmental impacts of COVID-19 quantifiedHow is COVID-19 impacting people and the planet and what are the impli… Read More
Study identifies unique cells that may drive lung fibrosisThis is one of the first comprehensive looks at lung cells using a tec… Read More
New study supports remdesivir as COVID-19 treatmentA new study found that remdesivir potently inhibited SARS-CoV-2, the v… Read More
Community initiative increases teenage use of effective contraceptionStudy finds that teenagers utilize Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptio… Read More
Salmonella biofilm protein causes autoimmune responses -- Possible link with Alzheimer'sScientists have demonstrated that a Salmonella biofilm protein can cau… Read More
A complex gene program initiates brain changes in response to cocaineResearchers used single-nucleus RNA sequencing to compare transcriptio… Read More
0 comments: