Latest science news in Biology & Nature

Birds of a feather like to dance together

15 years ago from MSNBC: Science

Flamingos could probably outdo any contender on "Dancing With the Stars." They  march with perfect posture, shifting their heads in unison from side to side. As their dance continues, the...

Rural Ants Supersize When They Go Urban

15 years ago from Live Science

Rural ants can live in supercolonies with more than 6 million worker ants and 50,000 queent ants.

Will genetics ever have the promised impact on medical practice?

15 years ago from Science Daily

Since the discovery of gene sequencing in the late 1970s, it was predicted that genetics would revolutionize medicine and provide answers to the causes of many of our common killers....

Montana State researcher discovers that bile sends mixed signals to E. coli

15 years ago from Science Blog

BOZEMAN, Mont. -- Bile secretions in the small intestine send signals to disease-causing gut bacteria allowing them to change their behavior to maximize their chances of surviving, Montana State...

Putting African sleeping sickness to bed

15 years ago from Sciencenews.org

Mouse experiments could lead to new treatment for parasitic disease

Oceanic Dispersal Drove Blind Snake Evolution

15 years ago from

Blindsnakes are one of the few groups of organisms that inhabited Madagascar when it broke from India about 100 million years ago, and continental drift had a profound impact on...

Max Planck scientists develop gene switch for chloroplasts in plant cells

15 years ago from

In order for a gene to create a protein, the gene's DNA must first be converted into what's known as messenger RNA. These RNA molecules are the instruction manuals that...

Researchers look at reducing yield loss for crops under stress

15 years ago from

People feel it, animals feel it, and yes, plants sense it too. It's stress. Plant researchers are taking a long look at stress in order to improve crop productivity, especially...

Young salamanders' movement over land helps stabilise populations

15 years ago from

Amphibians - frogs, toads, salamanders, and newts - are disappearing worldwide, but the stream salamanders of the Appalachian Mountains appear to be stable. This region is home to the largest...

U of I researchers say foliar fungicides may not be the answer for hail-damaged corn

15 years ago from

University of Illinois researchers may have debunked the myth that foliar fungicides can improve corn's tolerance to hail damage...

Special Report: Fast machines, genes and the future of medicine

15 years ago from Reuters:Science

WASHINGTON/CHICAGO/LONDON (Reuters ) - Francis Collins, who helped map the human genome, did not get around to having his own genes analyzed until last summer. And he was surprised by...

A push makes neuron longer

15 years ago from Physorg

Some neurons from spinal cord have quite long neurites, but the molecular mechanism of long-neurite outgrowth has been still mysterious. The research team led by Assistant Professor Koji Shibasaki in...

Pushy neighbour sends several messages

15 years ago from Physorg

How does a plant ensure that one cell remains responsible for making root cells for the rest of its life? The plant embryo contains the transcription factor MONOPTEROS. This tells...

Researchers use light to coax cells to move

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Suppose you could get immune cells to move just where you wanted them to in the body - to fight infection or kill a tumor? It may sound...

Third gender identified in a close relative of the olive tree

15 years ago from Physorg

A hitherto unknown reproductive system in a species closely related to the olive tree, Phillyrea angustifolia L., has been discovered by French researchers. This system explains the high concentration of...

Amoeba Genome Shows Evolution of Complex Life

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- An amoeba with a split personality is giving biologists clues to the ancestry of organisms from fungi to people and insight into how complex organisms evolved.

St. John's wort collection mined for its medicinal value

15 years ago from Physorg

A unique collection of St. John's wort (Hypericum) curated by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Ames, Iowa, is providing university collaborators with genetically diverse, well-documented sources of this herb...

10 Surprising Sex Discoveries

15 years ago from Live Science

Researchers are constantly coming up with new discoveries that teach us more about the many surprising ways sex plays out in our lives and how it affects us.

Nanofluidics Identify Epigenetic Changes One Molecule at a Time

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Using a system of nanofluidic channels and multicolor fluorescence microscopy, a team of investigators at Cornell University has developed a method that analyzes the binding of DNA and...

Shell Shock: U.S. State Department bans shrimp imports from Mexico to protect endangered turtles

15 years ago from Science Blog

No turtle protections, no shrimp. That's the word from the U.S. Department of State, which ruled on Thursday to ban imports of wild-caught Mexican shrimp if they are collected in...

Agricultural mega-programmes 'will not attract funding'

15 years ago from SciDev

Key donors say that radical CGIAR reforms, which could dictate the direction of agricultural research for the next decade, lack bite.

Japan's Science Budget Faces Scrutiny—Again

15 years ago from Science NOW

A Japanese cabinet member said today that research institutes will be among the targets...

Regulation of mindin expression and the signaling pathway

15 years ago from Physorg

Mindin has an indispensable role in both innate and adaptive immunity. A research group in China investigated regulation of mindin expression and the signaling pathway involved. mRNA expression of mindin...

Elephants Divvy Up The Leg Work

15 years ago from Science Blog

Elephants. They’re the SUVs of the animal kingdom. They’re big and rugged, and can carry lots of cargo. And now a study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of...

Study shows chocolate reduces blood pressure and risk of heart disease

15 years ago from Science Blog

Easter eggs and other chocolate may be good for you -- at least in small quantities and preferably if it's dark chocolate -- according to research that shows...

Model shows why males have lower immunity to disease

15 years ago from Physorg

(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers from the University of Cambridge in the UK have for the first time incorporated sexual reproduction in a mathematical model of the evolution of defense against disease,...

Smoke exposure alters seeds

15 years ago from Science Alert

Some seeds respond to smoke by becoming more sensitive to light, a new study has found – adapting them to the post-fire environment.

Ground-Nesting Wasps - Great To Watch If You Get A Chance - Keep A Sharp Eye Out!

15 years ago from

One day last summer, I was making a feeble stab at cleaning the deck (or as I like to call it the “backyard basement!”) There was a long, thin plastic planter (junk) with...