ScienceDaily: Top Environment News |
- Desert design ... scorpions are master architects
- The plant that only grows when the going's good…
- Lights out… light pollution alters reproduction cycle in lemurs
- Polyphenols could yield small benefit for people with PAD
- Genetic study reveals vulnerability of northwest dolphins
- Hair from mummy's clothes provides insights into red deer lineage
- New species of spider wasp may use chemical signals from dead ants to protect nest
- Die-offs of band-tailed pigeons connected to newly discovered parasite
- Extinct human cousin gave Tibetans advantage at high elevation
- Boron tolerance discovery for higher wheat yields
- A case study of manta rays and lagoons
- Fruit fly research may reveal what happens in female brains during courtship, mating
- Deforestation remedies can have unintended consequences
- Upending a cancer dogma: Cyclin D, long believed to promote cancer, actually activates tumor suppressor
- 'Green buildings' have potential to improve health of low-income housing residents
- Squid sucker ring teeth material could aid reconstructive surgery, serve as eco-packaging
- Putting a price tag on the 2 degree Celsius climate target
- Japanese gold leaf artists worked on a nanoscale: X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy is a non-destructive way to date artwork
- NASA launches carbon mission to watch Earth breathe
- Fine-scale climate model projections predict malaria at local levels
- Flood fear has temporary effect on property prices
- Dramatic decline of Caribbean corals can be reversed: Stop killing parrotfish to bring back Caribbean coral reefs
- How does your garden grow? 3-D root imaging in real time
- A sheep's early life experiences can shape behavior in later life
- Smarter than you think: Fish can remember where they were fed 12 days later
- Locusts harness the sun to get their optimum diet
- Dairy farmers keep flies guessing by alternating pesticides
- For cancer patients, sugar-coated cells are deadly
- Hibernating frogs give clues to halting muscle wastage
- Climate change could stop fish finding their friends
Desert design ... scorpions are master architects Posted: 02 Jul 2014 05:38 PM PDT |
The plant that only grows when the going's good… Posted: 02 Jul 2014 05:38 PM PDT |
Lights out… light pollution alters reproduction cycle in lemurs Posted: 02 Jul 2014 05:38 PM PDT |
Polyphenols could yield small benefit for people with PAD Posted: 02 Jul 2014 02:00 PM PDT |
Genetic study reveals vulnerability of northwest dolphins Posted: 02 Jul 2014 12:14 PM PDT |
Hair from mummy's clothes provides insights into red deer lineage Posted: 02 Jul 2014 12:14 PM PDT |
New species of spider wasp may use chemical signals from dead ants to protect nest Posted: 02 Jul 2014 12:14 PM PDT |
Die-offs of band-tailed pigeons connected to newly discovered parasite Posted: 02 Jul 2014 11:06 AM PDT A new parasite, along with one possibly found in T-Rex, has been implicated in the recent deaths of thousands of Pacific Coast band-tailed pigeons. Avian trichomonosis is an emerging and potentially fatal disease that creates severe lesions that can block the esophagus, ultimately preventing the bird from eating or drinking, or the trachea, leading to suffocation. The disease may date back to when dinosaurs roamed the earth, as lesions indicative of trichomonosis were found recently in T-Rex skeletons. |
Extinct human cousin gave Tibetans advantage at high elevation Posted: 02 Jul 2014 10:17 AM PDT Several thousand years ago, the common ancestors of Han Chinese and Tibetans moved onto the Tibetan plateau, a low-oxygen environment that probably proved fatal to many because of early heart disease and high infant mortality. But a specific variant of a gene for hemoglobin regulation, picked up from earlier interbreeding with a mysterious human-like species, Denisovans, gradually spread through the Tibetan population, allowing them to live longer and healthier and avoid cardiovascular problems. |
Boron tolerance discovery for higher wheat yields Posted: 02 Jul 2014 10:16 AM PDT The genes in wheat that control tolerance to a significant yield-limiting soil condition found around the globe – boron toxicity -- have been identified by researchers. They say that in soils where boron toxicity is reducing yields, genetic improvement of crops is the only effective strategy to address the problem. |
A case study of manta rays and lagoons Posted: 02 Jul 2014 09:25 AM PDT Doug McCauley chose one of the most isolated places in the world, Palmyra Atoll, to study the ecology of the Manta alfredi. About halfway between Hawaii and American Samoa, this complex of small islands and inlets in the central Pacific is surrounded by more than 15,000 acres of coral reefs and encircles three lagoons. |
Fruit fly research may reveal what happens in female brains during courtship, mating Posted: 02 Jul 2014 09:24 AM PDT |
Deforestation remedies can have unintended consequences Posted: 02 Jul 2014 09:22 AM PDT When it comes to fixing deforestation and forest degradation, good intentions can lead to bad outcomes. Among other points, researchers note that even when there's technically no net deforestation, tropical forests can still suffer. For example, if degraded natural forests are replaced by plantations of invasive exotic trees or low water-use efficiency trees, biodiversity will diminish, wildlife could suffer and soil erosion could render streams unusable by local villagers. |
Posted: 02 Jul 2014 09:22 AM PDT A protein essential to regulating cell cycle progression – the process of cell division and replication – activates a key tumor suppressor, rather than inactivating it as previously thought, researchers report. The findings fundamentally change the understanding of G1 cell cycle regulation and the molecular origins of many associated cancers. |
'Green buildings' have potential to improve health of low-income housing residents Posted: 02 Jul 2014 08:10 AM PDT The 'green building' trend is often associated with helping the environment by using eco-friendly materials and energy-saving techniques, but these practices are designed to improve people's health, too. Now scientists are reporting evidence that they can indeed help people feel better, including those living in low-income housing. |
Squid sucker ring teeth material could aid reconstructive surgery, serve as eco-packaging Posted: 02 Jul 2014 08:10 AM PDT Squid tentacles are loaded with hundreds of suction cups, or suckers, and each sucker has a ring of razor-sharp 'teeth' that help these mighty predators latch onto and take down prey. Researchers report that the proteins in these teeth could form the basis for a new generation of strong, but malleable, materials that could someday be used for reconstructive surgery, eco-friendly packaging and many other applications. |
Putting a price tag on the 2 degree Celsius climate target Posted: 02 Jul 2014 08:10 AM PDT Addressing climate change will require substantial new investment in low-carbon energy and energy efficiency -- but no more than what is currently spent on today's fossil-dominated energy system, according to new research. To limit climate change to 2 degrees Celsius, low-carbon energy options will need additional investments of about US $800 billion a year globally from now to mid-century, according to a new study. |
Posted: 02 Jul 2014 08:09 AM PDT Ancient Japanese gold leaf artists were truly masters of their craft. An analysis of six ancient Namban paper screens show that these artifacts are gilded with gold leaf that was hand-beaten to the nanometer scale. Researchers believe that the X-ray fluorescence technique they used in the analysis could also be used to date other artworks without causing any damage to them. |
NASA launches carbon mission to watch Earth breathe Posted: 02 Jul 2014 07:30 AM PDT NASA successfully launched its first spacecraft dedicated to studying atmospheric carbon dioxide on July 1, 2014. OCO-2 soon will begin a minimum two-year mission to locate Earth's sources of and storage places for atmospheric carbon dioxide, the leading human-produced greenhouse gas responsible for warming our world, and a critical component of the planet's carbon cycle. |
Fine-scale climate model projections predict malaria at local levels Posted: 02 Jul 2014 07:24 AM PDT Fine-scale climate model projections suggest the possibility that population centers in cool, highland regions of East Africa could be more vulnerable to malaria than previously thought, while population centers in hot, lowland areas could be less vulnerable, according to a team of researchers. The team applied a statistical technique to conventional, coarse-scale climate models to better predict malaria dynamics at local levels. |
Flood fear has temporary effect on property prices Posted: 02 Jul 2014 07:24 AM PDT |
Posted: 02 Jul 2014 06:36 AM PDT |
How does your garden grow? 3-D root imaging in real time Posted: 01 Jul 2014 04:32 PM PDT Growing plants in a microscope is helping scientists to view roots developing in 3-D and in real time. Scientists already know that lateral roots in plants develop from cells deep within the main root, so that the emerging roots must force through multiple layers of tissue to reach the soil. Until now, capturing the cell-division events behind this process has proved exceptionally difficult. |
A sheep's early life experiences can shape behavior in later life Posted: 01 Jul 2014 04:32 PM PDT New research has found that a sheep's experiences soon after birth can shape its later behavior and also that of its offspring. Scientists investigated whether early-life experiences can alter behavioral responses to a naturally painful event in adulthood -- giving birth -- and also affect behavior of the next generation. |
Smarter than you think: Fish can remember where they were fed 12 days later Posted: 01 Jul 2014 04:32 PM PDT |
Locusts harness the sun to get their optimum diet Posted: 01 Jul 2014 04:32 PM PDT |
Dairy farmers keep flies guessing by alternating pesticides Posted: 01 Jul 2014 11:55 AM PDT Old-fashioned fly swatters may be the most foolproof housefly killer, but for dairy farms, insecticides are the practical choice. Flies spread disease and a host of pathogens that cost farms hundreds of millions of dollars in annual losses. Unfortunately, with the repeated use of the same insecticides, flies develop resistance through genetic mutations that make these products less effective. Entomologists analyzed levels of resistance to six insecticides in flies, and have identified the mutations that led to resistance in houseflies and from cattle farms. |
For cancer patients, sugar-coated cells are deadly Posted: 01 Jul 2014 11:55 AM PDT Every living cell's surface has a protein-embedded membrane that's covered in polysaccharide chains – a literal sugar coating. A new study found this coating is especially thick and pronounced on cancer cells – leading to a more lethal cancer. "Changes to the sugar composition on the cell surface could alter physically how receptors are organized," one researcher said. "That's really the big thing: coupling the regulation of the sugar coating to these biochemical signaling molecules." |
Hibernating frogs give clues to halting muscle wastage Posted: 30 Jun 2014 04:34 PM PDT Key genes that help burrowing frogs avoid muscle wastage while they are dormant have been discovered by researchers. These genetic insights could help prevent muscle atrophy in bedridden human patients, or even astronauts. For most mammals, including humans, when muscles are inactive over a long period, they lose condition and waste away. However, some animals can remain dormant for several months and yet suffer minimal muscle damage, including green-striped burrowing frogs, the focus of this study. |
Climate change could stop fish finding their friends Posted: 30 Jun 2014 04:34 PM PDT Like humans, fish prefer to group with individuals with whom they are familiar, rather than strangers. This gives numerous benefits including higher growth and survival rates, greater defense against predators and faster social learning. However, high carbon dioxide levels, such as those anticipated by climate change models, may hinder the ability of fish to recognize one another and form groups with familiar individuals. |
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