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Feed SubscriptionVampire Spiders Home In on Female Mosquitoes
Vampire spiders, as the name suggests, like blood. And they feast on blood-filled mosquitoes to get it.
Read More »Happy World Oceans Day from North Carolina!
It s World Oceans Day today (in North Carolina it s No It s Not! Day), so the moment seemed opportune for a very brief followup on the Plugged-In post of a week or so ago about the NC state legislature considering a law that would make it all kinds of illegal for you to try to figure out what the ocean was likely to do in the next century.
Read More »Thinning Arctic Ice Allows Plankton Bloom
Scientists who traveled to the Arctic on a NASA research cruise last summer were looking for signs of climate change. What they found was a secret world hidden beneath the region's cap of sea ice. [More]
Read More »MIND Reviews: The Emotional Life of Your Brain
The Emotional Life of Your Brain: How Its Unique Patterns Affect the Way You Think, Feel, and Live--And How You Can Change Them [More]
Read More »Day-Glo Velocirabbit – bioart begins to mature
Day-Glo Velocirabbit / Bacteriograph of Albasaurus, E. coli genetically modified to express GFP Zachary Copfer Bioart at first seemed to be such a novelty. [More]
Read More »Why Wearing Fakes Makes Us Cheat More [Excerpt]
Think donning an Armani knockoff or phony Prada only hurts the fashion industry? Take another look in the mirror By Dan Ariely* [More]
Read More »Parasitic flower pirates genes from its host
Rafflesia cantleyi , perhaps better known as the corpse flower for its pungent scent, steals everything from its host. Though each blossom can be in excess of three feet across, the massive buds cannot support themselves, and have no leaves, stalks or true roots
Read More »Treating Baldness is "Not Like Growing Grass"
More than 40 percent of men in the U.S. will show signs of male-pattern baldness sometime between the ages of 18 and 49. But studies looking at the genomes of this group of men have failed to turn up a genetic cause, which makes a true cure seem an unlikely prospect.
Read More »Jellies from Another World
Stunning footage of comb jellies captured at the New England Aquarium in Boston.
Read More »EPA Sued over Wildlife Exposure to Spent Ammo Lead
(Reuters) - Environmental groups filed suit on Thursday seeking federal regulation of lead in ammunition, claiming exposure to the toxic metal from spent bullets fired into the environment by hunters kills millions of birds and poses a risk to human health. The Center for Biological Diversity was among 100 organizations that this year unsuccessfully petitioned the U.S
Read More »Aspirin Could Lower Some Cancer Mortality Risk
Aspirin has long been prescribed to help prevent heart attacks. For those who have had a heart attack or stroke or are at high risk, a low daily dose can lower the odds their blood will form dangerous, deadly clots. But could it also help to prevent other diseases
Read More »Fetal Genome Deduced from Parental DNA
From Nature magazine [More]
Read More »North Dakota’s Oil Boom Brings Environmental Damage with Economic Prosperity
Oil drilling has sparked a frenzied prosperity in Jeff Keller's formerly quiet corner of western North Dakota in recent years, bringing an infusion of jobs and reviving moribund local businesses. [More]
Read More »Is Earth Nearing an Environmental "Tipping Point"?
Human activities are pushing Earth toward a "tipping point" that could cause sudden, irreversible changes in relatively stable conditions that have allowed civilization to flourish, a new study warns. [More]
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