Two weeks ago, much of the country stopped for a few minutes in the middle of the day to watch at least a partial solar eclipse. And in the path of totality, researchers were keeping an eye on animals to see how four minutes of darkness changed their behaviors.
This week on Something Offbeat, Dr. Adam Hartstone-Rose, a professor of biological science at North Carolina State University, joined Mike Rogers, to discuss his findings from April 8.
Offbites: An alligator wrangler, a serial pooper, and horses loose on the London streets
Cicada-mania: Why we're excited about weird bugs crawling out of the ground
Love UFOs, will travel: The cosmos drive tourism in Roswell and beyond
Offbites: Getting ID'd for non-alcoholic drinks and $28K in free gas
'They're all high': Problems at the New Orleans PD go beyond stoned rats
What does it take to blow glass? How an offbeat artform became a Netflix hit
Offbites: A clothes-free cruise, a gym stabbing and more
Biotech company aims to extend dogs' lives. Here's how it'd work
'The sky is not classified': The latest on the search for UFOs
Offbites: Florida Man Games, freezing swims and more unusual athletic feats
World War II bomb unearthed at construction site: Where else could they be hiding?
Millennials zapped color from life. Gen Z is bringing it back
Offbites: Selfie-taking rats, 'Lake Barbie,' and swearing parrots
Why Leap Day is the most 'offbeat' day of the year
Applebee's breaks the internet: Are chain restaurants back from the dead?
Offbites: Romance scams and plane fights
Will beer disappear? What Americans are drinking instead
Offbites' Valentine's Day gift guide: Breakup pizzas and zoo poo
Offbites: Will aliens invade the Super Bowl and force a tie?
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