 
					Life sciences writer Susan Milius has been writing about botany, zoology and ecology for Science News since the last millennium. She worked at diverse publications before breaking into science writing and editing. After stints on the staffs of The Scientist, Science, International Wildlife and United Press International, she joined Science News. Three of Susan's articles have been selected to appear in editions of The Best American Science Writing.
 
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All Stories by Susan Milius
- 			  Beast BuddiesAs researchers muse about the evolutionary origins of friendship, even the social interactions of giraffes are getting a second look. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsYour Spiral or Mine? Snail gene reverses coil, makes new speciesA snail with a shell spiraling to the right can't mate readily with a lefty, so changes in the single gene that controls shell direction have created new snail species. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsBad Bubbles: Could sonar give whales the bends?Odd bubbles of fat and gas have turned up in the bodies of marine mammals, raising the question of whether something about human activity in the oceans could give these deep divers decompression sickness. 
- 			 Earth EarthWhen Genes EscapeThe focus of the debate over transgenic crops has changed from whether genes will escape to what difference it will make when they do. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsCarnivores in Captivity: Size of range in wild may predict risk in zooA survey of zoo reports of troubled animals suggests that the minimum size of a species' range predicts how well it will adapt to captivity. 
- 			 Plants PlantsBean plants punish microbial partnersIn a novel test of how partnerships between species can last in nature, researchers have found that soybeans punish cheaters. 
- 			  Breathless: Reef fish cope with low oxygenA coral reef may look like a high-oxygen paradise, but the first respiration tests of fish there show an unexpected tolerance for low oxygen. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsLeashing the RattlesnakeEven in the 21st century, there's still room for old-fashioned, do-it-yourself ingenuity in experimental design for studying animal behavior. 
- 			  Unfair Trade: Monkeys demand equitable exchangesResearchers say they have shown for the first time that a nonhuman species—the brown capuchin monkey—has a sense of what's fair and what's not. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsRisk of egg diseases may rush incubationBird eggs can catch infections through their shells, and that risk may be an overlooked factor in the puzzlingly early start of incubation. 
- 			 Plants PlantsGlitch splits hermaphrodite flowersIn a newly proposed scenario, polyploidy may trigger perfectly good hermaphrodite plants to evolve gender forms. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsSkin Chemistry: Poison frogs upgrade toxins from preyFor the first time, scientists have found a poisonous frog that takes up a toxin from its prey and then tweaks the chemical to make it a more deadly weapon.