ScienceDaily: Top Environment News |
- Analysis of Marcellus flowback finds high levels of ancient brines
- Ants aquaplaning on a pitcher plant
- Birdsong bluster may dupe strange females, but it won't fool partners
- Ozone levels have sizeable impact on worker productivity
- Host cholesterol secretion likely to influence gut microbiota
- Internet outages in the US doubled during Hurricane Sandy
- The Green Revolution is wilting
- Study of pipestone artifacts overturns a century-old assumption
- Survival of the females: Horse embryo study provides important new information
- Crisis in Syria has Mesopotamian precedent, experts say
- Bad news for bats: Deadly fungus persists in caves
- Botany experiment will try out zero gravity aboard space station
- Bugs in the Christmas tree
- Prehistoric ghosts revealing new details: Synchrotron helps identify previously unseen anatomy preserved in fossils
- Antibiotics based on a new principle may defeat MRSA
- Consequences of abandoning alpine meadows: Scrubs now encroaching on land that had been cultivated for centuries
- Who's zooming who? Frogs, fractals and the tree of life
- Tropical trees are largest emitter of methane in their ecosystem
- Pharaoh's throat was cut during royal coup, study shows
- Experts discover why Rudolph's nose is red
Analysis of Marcellus flowback finds high levels of ancient brines Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:35 PM PST Brine water that flows back from gas wells in the Marcellus Shale region after hydraulic fracturing is many times more salty than seawater, with high contents of various elements, including radium and barium. The chemistry is consistent with brines formed during the Paleozoic era, a new study found. |
Ants aquaplaning on a pitcher plant Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:35 PM PST An insect-trapping pitcher plant in Venezuela uses its downward pointing hairs to create a 'water slide' on which insects slip to their death, new research reveals. |
Birdsong bluster may dupe strange females, but it won't fool partners Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:35 PM PST Male birds use their song to dupe females they have just met by pretending they are in excellent physical condition. Just as some men try to cast themselves in a better light when they approach women, so some male birds seek to portray that they are fitter than they really are. But males do not even try to deceive their long-term partners, who are able to establish his true condition by his song. |
Ozone levels have sizeable impact on worker productivity Posted: 18 Dec 2012 12:32 PM PST Researchers assessed the impact of pollution on agricultural worker productivity using daily variations in ozone levels. Their results show that ozone, even at levels below current air-quality standards in most parts of the world, has significant negative impacts on worker productivity. Their findings suggest that environmental protection is important for promoting economic growth and investing in human capital in contrast to its common portrayal as a tax on producers. |
Host cholesterol secretion likely to influence gut microbiota Posted: 18 Dec 2012 11:30 AM PST For more than half a century, researchers have known that the bacteria that colonize the gastrointestinal tract of mammals influence their host's cholesterol metabolism. Now, researchers show that changes in cholesterol metabolism induced by diet can alter the gut flora. |
Internet outages in the US doubled during Hurricane Sandy Posted: 18 Dec 2012 10:31 AM PST Scientists who track Internet outages throughout the world noted a spike in outages due to Hurricane Sandy, with almost twice as much of the Internet down in the US as usual. |
The Green Revolution is wilting Posted: 18 Dec 2012 10:31 AM PST The Green Revolution has stagnated for key food crops in many regions of the world, according to a new study. |
Study of pipestone artifacts overturns a century-old assumption Posted: 18 Dec 2012 09:15 AM PST In a new study, the first to actually test pipestone from quarries across the upper Midwest, researchers conclude that those who buried ceremonial pipes in a famous mound site in southeastern Ohio got the stone – and perhaps even the finished, carved pipes – from Illinois. The findings offer new insight into the Hopewell people, who lived in the region from about 100 B.C. to A.D. 400. |
Survival of the females: Horse embryo study provides important new information Posted: 18 Dec 2012 08:20 AM PST It is well known that many mammals are able to adjust the ratio of male and female young depending on the surrounding conditions at the time of conception. A recent study provides important information on how the survival of female embryos may be enhanced under conditions that would otherwise favor the birth of males. |
Crisis in Syria has Mesopotamian precedent, experts say Posted: 18 Dec 2012 08:19 AM PST New research has revealed intriguing parallels between modern day and Bronze-Age Syria as the Mesopotamian region underwent urban decline, government collapse, and drought. |
Bad news for bats: Deadly fungus persists in caves Posted: 18 Dec 2012 06:42 AM PST Researchers have found that the organism that causes deadly white-nose syndrome persists in caves long after it has killed the bats in those caves. |
Botany experiment will try out zero gravity aboard space station Posted: 18 Dec 2012 06:42 AM PST Gravity: It's the law in these parts. But to reach the stars, humans may have to learn to live outside the law. |
Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:18 AM PST Your Christmas tree may be adorned with lights and glitter. But 25,000 insects, mites, and spiders are sound asleep inside the tree. |
Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:17 AM PST Scientists have used synchrotron-based imaging techniques to identify previously unseen anatomy preserved in fossils. Their work on a 50-million-year-old lizard skin identified the presence of teeth (invisible to visible light), demonstrating for the first time that this fossil animal was more than just a skin moult. This was only possible using some of the brightest light in the universe, X-rays generated by a synchrotron. |
Antibiotics based on a new principle may defeat MRSA Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:17 AM PST Scientists have presented a new principle for fighting bacterial infections, in other words, a new type of antibiotic. The new antibiotic mechanism is based on selectively blocking the thioredoxin system in the cells, which is crucial to the growth of certain bacteria. Scientists hope to be able to treat such conditions as stomach ulcers, TB and MRSA. |
Posted: 18 Dec 2012 05:16 AM PST Agriculture is increasingly vanishing from the Alps. Land that was cultivated for centuries is now being abandoned and scrubs are encroaching on it. This affects not only the landscape, but also the water balance and will in future also have an impact on power generation. These are the conclusions reached by an interdisciplinary research group supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). |
Who's zooming who? Frogs, fractals and the tree of life Posted: 17 Dec 2012 08:49 PM PST As ecologists assemble ever larger parts of the tree of life, whose evolutionary branches connect the millions of species on Earth, they need better ways of presenting and organizing information. Now, a biologist has developed a revolutionary way of visualizing the tree of life. |
Tropical trees are largest emitter of methane in their ecosystem Posted: 17 Dec 2012 08:49 PM PST Researchers have found that trees in Bornean rainforests emit more methane than any other element of the ecosystem, which provides a new understanding about sources of this powerful greenhouse gas from tropical ecosystems. |
Pharaoh's throat was cut during royal coup, study shows Posted: 17 Dec 2012 04:06 PM PST Conspirators murdered Egyptian king Ramesses III by cutting his throat, concludes a new study. |
Experts discover why Rudolph's nose is red Posted: 17 Dec 2012 04:06 PM PST Rudolph's nose is red because it is richly supplied with red blood cells which help to protect it from freezing and to regulate brain temperature. |
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