Amazon S3 on MSN
Simple fish trap catches giant fish in seconds successfully
The expert anglers at Milliken Fishing demonstrate a simple, homemade fish trap that instantly lands enormous catches in mere seconds.
52mon MSN
Here's how newly approved pop-up traps could extend Bay Area crab season: 'A hard-fought battle'
The technology was considered experimental when we were first given a demonstration years ago. Finally, after several seasons of testing, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife has just ...
B2B Castaways (Strick and Fran) on MSN
Island survival: Building a fish trap and catching sharks by hand
Surviving on a remote island means getting creative - and this time, we built a fish trap from scratch using only what we could find around us. While setting it up, things took an unexpected turn when ...
Could Spinosaurus swim? A new fossil with a scimitar-like head crest provides new evidence on the unsettled question.
Emperor penguins raise their chicks in conditions that would overwhelm most animals. Winter temperatures can fall to minus ...
The Norwegian fishing industry is hoping artificial intelligence can help protect a native species of salmon from an invasive one. Huawei and Simula Consulting have come up with a method that can trap ...
A paper published in Science describes the discovery of Spinosaurus mirabilis, a new spinosaurid species found in Niger. A 20-person team led by Paul Sereno, Ph.D., Professor of Organismal Biology and ...
"We used fatty acid tablets, a skunk-based lure, sardines, and a sweet lure made of peanut butter, jelly, molasses, anise oil ...
“I envision this dinosaur as a kind of ‘hell heron’ that had no problem wading on its sturdy legs into two meters of water, but probably spent most of its time stalking shallower traps for the many ...
One minute, you’re shutting down the dance floor, the next you’re celebrating an early bedtime like it’s a major win.
Cooperation between Russia and the United States boosted conservation—and a resurgence in nationalism chilled it again.
A UChicago-led team unearthed ‘Spinosaurus mirabilis,’ a fish-eating giant and the first new species of its kind in a century, where nothing like it was supposed to exist ...
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