Animals
Platypus fur has a surprising feature seen only in bird feathers
Platypuses are the first mammals known to have hollow melanosomes, pigment-bearing structures found in the hair of many animals.
By Jude Coleman
Every print subscription comes with full digital access
Platypuses are the first mammals known to have hollow melanosomes, pigment-bearing structures found in the hair of many animals.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
A new analysis of a large fossil shinbone suggests T. rex ancestors came from North America instead of Asia. Not everyone agrees.
Environmental cues can flip a molecular switch in the brain, turning males from caregivers to killers.
An experiment mimicking conditions on the Saturn moon suggests that cell-like bubbles don’t form in methane lakes, puncturing hopes for alien life.
The Amazon molly reproduces without sex. A genomic copy-and-paste trick called gene conversion may explain how it avoids evolutionary meltdown.
Submerged bees breathe and use strategies that don’t require oxygen, lab tests show. In nature, that trick could help the bees survive floods.
Ultraviolet cameras captured faint electrical flashes from leaves and branches as storm charges built up in the atmosphere.
A new study reports signs that nerve cells in the brain keep dividing over the decades. It’s not so simple.
As koalas in southern Australia have grown from a few hundred to almost half a million, the marsupials show signs of regaining lost genetic variation.
Chickpeas produced seeds in simulated lunar soil, offering clues for future space farming.
Subscribers, enter your e-mail address for full access to the Science News archives and digital editions.
Not a subscriber?
Become one now.