In the University of Arkansas study, researchers looked at almost 20,000 images of raccoons across the United States. They ...
Most of us see raccoons as troublemakers that raid bins and disappear before sunrise, so the idea of keeping one at home feels strange. Even so, their behavior in cities is shifting.
Raccoons have easy access to food in the form of human trash. It could be jump-starting physical and behavioral changes in the masked bandits, new research suggests.
Our cities are chaotic, noisy, and dangerous. To many of us, they feel like home. But to most wild animals, they’re a ...
Biologists at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock analyzed images of urban and rural raccoons and found that ...
A new study has found that the snouts of urban raccoons are getting smaller indicating they may be domesticating the same way ...
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