Plants
- 			 Plants PlantsBuilt-in bird perch spreads the pollenTests confirm the idea that a plant benefits from growing a bird perch to let pollinators get the best angle for reaching the flowers. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsIn a Snap: Leaf geometry drives Venus flytrap’s biteBehind a Venus flytrap's rapid snap lies an extraordinary shape-changing mechanism. By Peter Weiss
- 			 Plants PlantsBotany under the MistletoeTwisters, spitters, and other flowery thoughts for romantic moments. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsGive and Take: Plant parasites dole out genes while stealing nutrientsNew evidence suggests that parasitic plants can transfer their own genes into host plants. 
- 			 Plants PlantsGreen Red-Alert: Plant fights invaders with animal-like trickMustard plants' immune systems can react to traces of bacteria with a burst of nitric oxide, much as an animal's immune system does. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsMorphinefree Mutant Poppies: Novel plants make pharmaceutical starterA Tasmanian company has developed a poppy that produces a commercially useful drug precursor instead of full-fledged morphine, and a research team now reports how the plant does it. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsA new, slimy method of self-pollinationWhen all else fails for pollination, a Chinese herb in the ginger family resorts to something botanists say they haven't seen before: a do-it-yourself oil slick. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsSmokey the GardenerWildfire smoke by itself, without help from heat, can trigger germination in certain seeds, but just what the vital compound in that smoke might be has kept biologists busy for years. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsLowering lilies on the tree of lifeWater lilies may belong on the lowest branch of the family tree of flowering plants, along with a shrub called Amborella. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsRewriting the Nitrogen Story: Plant cycles nutrient forward and backwardFor the first time, a green plant has been found to break down nitrogen-containing compounds into the readily usable form of nitrates, a job usually done by microbes. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsWind Highways: Mosses, lichens travel along aerial pathsInvisible freeways of wind may account for the similarity of plant species on islands that lie thousands of kilometers apart. By Susan Milius
- 			 Plants PlantsA Frond Fared Well: Genes hint that ferns proliferated in shade of flowering plantsAnalyses of genetic material from a multitude of fern species suggest that much of that plant group branched out millions of years after flowering plants first appeared, a notion that contradicts many scientists' views of plant evolution. By Sid Perkins