 
					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
- 			 Animals AnimalsTo Bee He or She: Honeybees use novel sex-setting switchAfter more than a decade of work, an international team has found the main gene that separates the girls from the boys among honeybees. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsSnapping shrimp whip up a riot of bubblesHigh-speed video and fancy math demonstrate that snapping shrimp make so much noise by popping bubbles. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsMusical Pairs: Egg-deploying bird species divide for a songA new genetic analysis bolsters the idea that musical taste, rather than geography, split Africa's indigobirds into multiple species. 
- 			 Ecosystems EcosystemsRisky High Life: Mountain creatures prove extra-vulnerableSome of the species hardest hit by climate change will be those living in particular mountain highlands. 
- 			 Plants PlantsNext loosestrife is already looseA Florida botanist warns against Nymphoides cristata and Rotala rotundifolia, very troublesome escapees from aquariums and water gardens. 
- 			 Plants PlantsMisunderstood stripes confuse individualityIn the debate over how many fungi make up one lichen body, a researcher argues for two unrelated fungal species in the same lichen. 
- 			 Plants PlantsEverglades plant is he, then she, then heSawgrass, the signature plant of the Everglades, switches genders twice during its week of blooming and thus reduces the chances of self- fertilization. 
- 			 Ecosystems EcosystemsShark Serengeti: Ocean predators have diversity hot spotsThe first search for oceanic spots of exceptional diversity in predators has turned up marine versions of the teeming Serengeti plains. 
- 			 Earth EarthBt corn pollen can hurt monarchsA second test of a strain of corn genetically engineered to make its own insecticide finds potential for harm to monarch butterfly caterpillars. 
- 			 Ecosystems EcosystemsVirtual skylarks suffer weed shortfallA new mathematical model raises the concern that switching to transgenic herbicide-tolerant crops could deprive birds of weed seeds. 
- 			 Animals AnimalsSexual conflict pushes species makingA novel comparison of 25 pairs of insect lineages finds that sexual conflict plays more of a role in making new species than scientists had realized. 
- 			 Plants PlantsEmergency GardeningHigh-tech tissue culture is helping some ultrarare plants finally have sprouts of their own.