ScienceDaily: Top Environment News |
- How knots can swap positions on a DNA strand
- New discovery in living cell signaling
- Sweet genes: New way found by which metabolism is linked to the regulation of DNA
- Rethinking the coral reef: How algal and coral cover affect the microscopic life that call the reef home
- Safer, cheaper building blocks for future anti-HIV and cancer drugs
- Cellular defense against fatal associations between proteins and DNA
- Timeline of human origins revised: New synthesis of research links changing environment with Homo's evolutionary adaptability
- Oklahoma earthquakes induced by wastewater injection by disposal wells, study finds
- Identifying microbial species: New device will help identify the millions of bacteria that populate the world
- Flower's bellows organ blasts pollen at bird pollinators
- With 'biological sunscreen,' mantis shrimp see the reef in a whole different light
- Ironing out details of the carbon cycle: Dissolved iron in North Atlantic traced to Sahara desert
- Jump to it! A frog's leaping style depends on the environment
- Weighing up the secrets of African elephant body fat
- Whales as ecosystem engineers: Recovery from overhunting helping to buffer marine ecosystems from destabilizing stresses
- Groovy giraffes: Distinct bone structures keep these animals upright
- 'Grass-in-the-ear' technique sets new trend in chimp etiquette: Chimpanzees spontaneously copy arbitrary behavior
- Review of primaquine to prevent malaria transmission
- First show off, then take-off: New specimen of Archaeopteryx reveals previously unknown features of the plumage
- New reprogramming method makes better stem cells
- Gene critical to early development of cilia identified
How knots can swap positions on a DNA strand Posted: 03 Jul 2014 01:23 PM PDT |
New discovery in living cell signaling Posted: 03 Jul 2014 12:18 PM PDT |
Sweet genes: New way found by which metabolism is linked to the regulation of DNA Posted: 03 Jul 2014 12:18 PM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:24 AM PDT |
Safer, cheaper building blocks for future anti-HIV and cancer drugs Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:24 AM PDT |
Cellular defense against fatal associations between proteins and DNA Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT DNA -- the carrier of genetic information -- is constantly threatened by damage originating from exogenous and endogenous sources. Very special DNA lesions are DNA-protein crosslinks -- proteins covalently linked to DNA. So far hardly anything was known about repair mechanisms specifically targeting DNA-protein crosslinks. Scientists have now discovered a protease that is able to chop down the protein component of DNA-protein crosslinks, thereby enabling organisms to copy their genetic information even if crosslinks arise. The results of this study have major implications for the understanding of genome integrity and cancer development. |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT |
Oklahoma earthquakes induced by wastewater injection by disposal wells, study finds Posted: 03 Jul 2014 11:23 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 09:58 AM PDT Millions of microbial species populate the world, but so far only a few have been identified due to the inability of most microbes to grow in the laboratory. An engineer and a biologist aim to change this. The pair has developed a device that allows scientists to cultivate a single species of bacteria that can then be studied and identified. |
Flower's bellows organ blasts pollen at bird pollinators Posted: 03 Jul 2014 09:55 AM PDT A small tree or shrub found in mountainous Central and South American rainforests has a most unusual relationship with the birds that pollinate its flowers, according to a new study. The plant known as Axinaea offers up its male reproductive organs as a tempting and nutritious food source for the birds. As the birds seize those bulbous stamens with their beaks, they are blasted with pollen by the flowers' complex 'bellows' organs. |
With 'biological sunscreen,' mantis shrimp see the reef in a whole different light Posted: 03 Jul 2014 09:55 AM PDT In an unexpected discovery, researchers have found that the complex eyes of mantis shrimp are equipped with optics that generate ultraviolet color vision. Mantis shrimp's six UV photoreceptors pick up on different colors within the UV spectrum based on filters made from an ingredient other animals depend on as built-in biological sunscreen, according to new research. |
Ironing out details of the carbon cycle: Dissolved iron in North Atlantic traced to Sahara desert Posted: 03 Jul 2014 08:28 AM PDT Iron is an essential element in all living creatures, and its availability in seawater can have a profound effect on phytoplankton growth and, consequently, the earth's carbon cycle. Scientists have assessed the various sources of dissolved iron in the north Atlantic Ocean, establishing that a great deal of it, some 70 to 90 percent, originates from dust blowing off the Sahara desert. |
Jump to it! A frog's leaping style depends on the environment Posted: 03 Jul 2014 08:28 AM PDT |
Weighing up the secrets of African elephant body fat Posted: 03 Jul 2014 08:24 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:29 AM PDT A review of research on whales shows that they have more a powerful influence on the function of oceans, global carbon storage, and the health of commercial fisheries than has been commonly assumed. The continued recovery of great whales from centuries of overhunting may help to buffer marine ecosystems from destabilizing stresses, including climate change, reports a global team of scientists. |
Groovy giraffes: Distinct bone structures keep these animals upright Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:29 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 07:26 AM PDT Chimpanzees are copycats and, in the process, they form new traditions that are often particular to only one specific group of these primates. Such are the findings of an international group of scientists, who waded through over 700 hours of video footage to understand how it came about that one chimpanzee stuck a piece of grass in her ear and started a new trend, and others soon followed suit. |
Review of primaquine to prevent malaria transmission Posted: 03 Jul 2014 06:20 AM PDT |
Posted: 03 Jul 2014 06:19 AM PDT |
New reprogramming method makes better stem cells Posted: 02 Jul 2014 10:16 AM PDT |
Gene critical to early development of cilia identified Posted: 01 Jul 2014 11:55 AM PDT The functions of a gene responsible for anchoring cilia – sensory hair-like extensions present on almost every cell of the body -- have been described by researchers. They show in a mouse model that without the gene Cc2d2a, cilia throughout the body failed to grow, and the mice died during the embryonic stage. The finding adds to an expanding body of knowledge about ciliopathies, a class of genetic disorders that result from defects in the structure or function of cilia. |
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