Life

  1. Life

    Sponge’s secret weapon restores antibiotics’ power

    A chemical from an ocean-dwelling sponge can reprogram antibiotic resistant bacteria to make them vulnerable to medicines again, new evidence suggests.

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  2. Humans

    AAAS: March of the Hungry Penguins

    Patagonian penguins have become sentinels of climate change and human impacts on the marine world.

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  3. Humans

    AAAS: Darwin is the 1000th Steve

    The amusing list of living scientists supporting evolution was topped, this evening, by a man named Darwin.

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  4. Agriculture

    AAAS: Stress Can Make Plants More Nutritious

    People who aren't veggie lovers might want to seek out types of produce that deliver an especially big nutrient bang for the gram.

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  5. Life

    Mitochondria Gone Bad

    Problems in the cell’s energy factories power new ideas on disease and aging.

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  6. Humans

    First rough draft of Neandertal genome released

    A rough draft of the Neandertal genome is complete, scientists announced on Darwin’s 200th birthday.

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  7. Health & Medicine

    Sequencing virus genome to cure the common cold

    The genomes of all known common cold viruses have been sequenced, providing new information on how the different strains are related, how they replicate and how to predict their virulence.

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  8. Life

    Darwin: The reluctant mathematician

    Despite disliking mathematics, the great biologist inadvertently advanced statistics.

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  9. Life

    Duplication in genomes may separate humans from apes

    A sudden peak in duplication of chunks of DNA in the common ancestor of humans, chimps and gorillas led to genetic flexibility, which created differences among the species.

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  10. Climate

    Winter birds shift north

    More than 170 common North American species are wintering farther north than they did in the past.

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  11. Life

    Mother right whales know best, maybe

    Southern right whales learn where to eat from mom and may not seek new feeding grounds if these favorite restaurants go belly-up.

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  12. Life

    Vertebrates, perhaps even humans, share teeth genes

    Researchers have uncovered what may be a shared genetic toolkit for teeth, one common among vertebrates and mammals, including humans

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