Search Results for:
Skip to resultsCan’t find what you’re looking for? Visit our FAQ page.
113,161+ results for:
-
PlantsHere’s what a leaf looks like during a fatal attack of bubbles
Office equipment beats synchrotrons in showing how drought lets air bubbles kill the water-carrier network of veins in plant leaves.
By Susan Milius -
MicrobesLeptospirosis bacterium still haunts swimming holes
Bacterial scourges lurk in warm recreational waters.
-
AnimalsCause of mass starfish die-offs is still a mystery
Sea stars off the U.S. west coast started dying off en masse in 2013. Scientists are still struggling to figure out the cause.
-
Particle PhysicsReaders ponder gravity wave physics
Gravitational waves, the benefits of fat and more reader feedback.
-
AnimalsWhy Labrador retrievers are obsessed with food
A genetic variant could explain obesity trends seen in Labrador retrievers.
-
NeuroscienceA breakdown product, not ketamine, may ease depression
Ketamine’s breakdown product, not the drug itself, eases depression, a mouse study suggests.
-
AnimalsNew species of hairy weevil named after Chewbacca
A new weevil species,Trigonopterus chewbacca, joins the ranks of insects with a Star Wars moniker.
-
TechHigh-fashion goes high-tech in ‘#techstyle’
‘#techstyle,’ an exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, considers how technological innovations such as 3-D printing are influencing fashion.
-
LifeStudying cheese reveals how microbes interact
Microbiologist Rachel Dutton uses cheese rinds to study how microbes form communities.
-
AnimalsMale giant water bugs win females by babysitting
Female giant water bugs prefer males already caring for eggs, an evolutionary force for maintaining parental care.
By Susan Milius -
AnimalsMale giant water bugs win females by babysitting
Female giant water bugs prefer males already caring for eggs, an evolutionary force for maintaining parental care.
By Susan Milius -
Science & SocietyGun research faces roadblocks and a dearth of data
Gun violence research is stifled by funding shortfalls and limitations on data access.
By Meghan Rosen