Warmer temperatures mean Texas snakes are out again, and some snakebites have already been reported. Two Texas A&M veterinary experts have tips to keep you and your pets safe.

Texas A&M researchers argue their study's results provide evidence that cells in a mammalian amputation wound retain the capacity and information for joint regeneration.

A Texas A&M wildlife and fisheries graduate student helped discover that the North American flying squirrel fluoresces pink at night.

The exact cause and nature of the fog has remained mostly unknown for decades, but an international team of scientists that includes several Texas A&M University-affiliated researchers believes that the mystery has been solved and that the same air chemistry also happens in China and other locales.

Can that scary monster sneaking up behind you actually scare you to death? The answer may be as spooky as it gets.

Multiple factors influence decisions about evacuating, including residents’ genders, how long they have lived in their homes and their feelings of responsibility for friends and family members who decide not to move.

Hawaiians have always regarded pigs as something special, a notion that comes from their Polynesian roots centuries ago.

Organizers say the radar system will provide life-saving information regarding the movement of severe storms, hurricanes and perhaps could save numerous types of marine life during oil spills.

Kemp’s ridley turtles are still on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife and the IUCN critically endangered list of species.

Freshmen at Texas A&M are called “fish” and approximately 5,900 of them entering Texas A&M this fall will take part in Fish Camp.