A very poorly pet rabbit has made a remarkable recovery thanks to pineapple juice!
Vets saved Finbar's life by giving him the fruity juice, as a last resort to remove a giant fur ball inside his stomach.
Finbar's owners knew something was wrong after he suddenly stopped eating and drinking, and seemed sleepy.
Vets at a pet hospital in Glasgow, thought something might be wrong with Finbar's intestines, so they prescribed drugs and liquid feeding at home to try and help him.
When Finbar didn't get any better, the vet decided to x-ray his intestines, showing that he had the biggest hairball staff at the hospital had ever seen. It filled his entire stomach.
In a last attempt to make Finbar better the vets gave him pineapple juice, which is thought to break down the fibres that hold hair together, and he's now made a full recovery!
Harvest mice who live in a country park in Leicestershire will soon be setting up home in tennis balls.
It's after the area was hit by seven major floods in six months, destroying the reed beds where the mice live.
Around 200 tennis balls raised on sticks will be put in the ground at Watermead Country Park North for the mice to raise their babies in.
They were donated by the public and Leicester Lawn Tennis Club.
Dale Osborne, senior ranger at the country park, said: "They will lay their young in there and they are so small you could probably get 10 in a tennis ball."
An alleyway, which would not accommodate even the smallest car, has been painted with double yellow lines and in the second half of the alley was painted another set of double yellow lines, just in case...
Swindon council said residents had asked the authority to deal with illegal parking in alleyways, so here is the solution.
The state of Florida in America is fighting a growing infestation... of giant snails!
So biiiig!
More than 1000 of the mighty molluscs are being caught each week in the Miami-Dade county area.
The giant African land snail can grow as big as a rat and damage buildings, as it gnaws through plaster.
It also attacks "over 500 known species of plants", according to Denise Feiber, from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
Experts got together last week in Gainesville, Florida, for a Giant African Land Snail Science Symposium, to try and find out the best ways to get rid of the snails.
Ms Feiber said investigators were trying to trace where the snail infestation had started.
The worry is that Florida could soon be as badly hit by the creatures as some Caribbean islands like Barbados, where snail shells on the roads cause accidents, and pavements and walls are coated in slime.
British-based Hawk-Eye has been awarded the contract to provide the system.
Hawk-Eye uses seven cameras per goal to detect the ball and claims its system is "millimetre accurate, ensuring no broadcast replays could disprove the decision".
This video is produced by Hawkeye to show how the technology will work using a number of cameras placed around the ground.
It is similar to the systems used in tennis and cricket, and was ratified at meeting of the 20 top-flight clubs in London on Thursday.
The Football Association will install a system at Wembley Stadium in time for August's Community Shield.
Top-flight clubs voted to adopt the system during a meeting of the 20 Premier League chairmen on Thursday.
Hawk-Eye is known for providing tennis and cricket with ball-tracking technology. Its football system notifies the referee if the ball has crossed the goal line via a vibration and optical signal sent to the officials' watches within one second.
Inventor Paul Hawkins said: "It will not slow the game down - it is not going to become like rugby.
"In under a second we will provide the information to the watch, then afterwards we will show a TV replay that will definitively prove what we showed the referee was correct.
"Football's a great game. It does not need enhancements to add to the drama. Our technology is there to ensure decisions are correct."
England manager Roy Hodgson welcomed the Premier League's move, saying it would prevent "gross injustices" affecting results.
"It is something that people in football have wanted for a long time. There's been a big debate, and for a while it was pushed back but now everyone's on the same page and we've introduced it," said Hodgson.
"At least it will stop some of those gross injustices that we have seen in recent years where goals have obviously been scored and not allowed."
Once work is under way, installation of the system for the 17 Premier League clubs who avoid relegation and the three teams promoted from the Football League is expected to take up to six weeks to complete.
Richard Scudamore , chief executive of the Premier League, added: "When these incidents come along, they are so controversial, so seismic, that it is all about getting it right.
"If there is some technology available to help the officials get it right then it is right we should be doing it."
Hollywood film star Angelina Jolie has praised the strength of Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl shot by the Taliban.
She was speaking at a big meeting in New York where Malala launched a new charity to help pay for girls in Pakistan to go to school.
Last October, Malala was shot whilst on her school bus in Pakistan after campaigning for girls' education.
Her new charity will start by funding school lessons for 40 girls.
Jolie said Malala was "a sweet, creative, loving girl".
'Happiest moment'
"Announcing the first grant of the Malala Fund is the happiest moment in my life," Malala said in a video message at the Women in the World conference.
Speaking in support of the charity, Angelina Jolie said that Malala would be "in charge" on the fund.
The star, whose voice you may have heard in films like Kung Fu Panda and Shark Tale, has donated $200,000 of her own money to the charity.
Scientists from Salford University claim large amounts of white fish in Britain is labelled incorrectly and being swapped for cheaper types of fish.
They discovered seven per cent of cod and haddock - what you find in your fish and chips - was actually the cheaper pollock, or farmed fish from Vietnam.
Dr Stefano Mariani from Salford University is concerned consumers are being deceived: "Consumers should be able to go to a shop and know they are eating what they paid for."
Even though scientists say there's no serious health risk, Dr Mariani said it could be a problem for people with certain allergies if they don't know what they're eating.
Cod is sometimes being replaced by cheaper fish without the consumer knowing.
He wants tougher regulation and better labelling and is worried that if fish aren't labelled correctly, over-fishing of certain types could be harder to trace.
Mark Drummond, from the organisation representing fish and chip shops, also wants more accurate labelling.
He says it will protect the consumer but also the restaurants who are serving their customers honestly and not trying to cut costs through deception.