
Picture Mushroom App
Picture Mushroom is an AI-powered mushroom identification app designed to help users identify mushrooms quickly and responsibly using photos. By taking or uploading a clear image, the app analyzes visual features such as cap shape, color, gills, and stem structure to suggest the most likely species. Its database spans a wide range of edible, inedible, and toxic mushrooms, making it

Picture Insect App
Picture Insect is an AI-driven insect identification app that brings the fascinating world of bugs right to your fingertips. By snapping or uploading a photo of any insect, spider, moth, beetle, butterfly, or other arthropod, the app analyzes the image and tells you what species it most likely is within seconds. With a database covering thousands of species and an

Picture this App
PictureThis is an AI-powered plant identification app that feels like having a friendly botanist in your pocket. At its core, the app uses sophisticated image recognition to identify plants instantly from photos — from common garden flowers to mysterious weeds— with reported accuracy above 98% on over 400,000 species. Simply snapping a clear picture is all it takes to get

Is Slavery Unique to Humans, or Does Nature Have Its Own Versions?
Years ago, I believed that humans were the only species capable of deep cruelty—that behaviors like slavery, war, and exploitation were exclusive to our kind. But as I learned more about animal behavior, I discovered that many of the traits we often think of as uniquely human—deception, coercion, even forced labor—also exist in the natural world. What surprised me most

Bird Feeders and Their Impact: A Birder’s Guide to Science-Based Feeding Practices
I grew up in a city so tough that only the most resilient birds—mostly sparrows and crows—managed to survive. My childhood version of bird feeding? Tossing leftover rice and bread scraps onto the ground, hoping they’d find a taker. No fancy feeders, no carefully chosen seeds—just an old-school way of giving birds a snack. Then life changed. I moved—first to

Stink Bugs: The Unwanted Guests in Your Home and Garden.
Until three years ago, I had never even noticed a stink bug (Pentatomidae), also known as a shield bug. In Bratislava, Slovakia, my garden thrived with vibrant tomatoes and corn, and each autumn, our house was beautifully adorned with ladybirds. But then, everything changed. My once-picturesque world became a battleground as stink bugs invaded, covering the house where ladybirds once