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ScienceDaily: Plants & Animals News |
Correcting night blindness in dogs Posted: 22 Mar 2022 04:12 PM PDT Researchers have developed a gene therapy that restores dim-light vision in dogs with a congenital form of night blindness, offering hope for treating a similar condition in people. |
Getting fuel to an invading cell's front line Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:42 PM PDT Invading armies need a steady supply of fuel and armaments. That's just as true when the invaders are cells, such as when tumor cells break away and spread to other parts of the body in a process called metastasis -- the most deadly part of cancer. Now, a study in C. elegans worms provides new insight into how invading cells deploy fuel to the front lines of invasion to power their break-through machinery. |
Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:09 PM PDT A series of studies on endangered species that make their homes on the border of Vietnam and China underscores the growing importance of transboundary conservation efforts in the face of climate change. As the world warms, many plant and animal species migrate from their traditional habitats, increasing the likelihood of local and global extinctions. |
Researchers control brain circuits from a distance using infrared light Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:09 PM PDT Scientists have developed the first non-invasive technique for controlling targeted brain circuits in behaving animals from a distance. The tool has the potential to solve one of the biggest unmet needs in neuroscience: a way to flexibly test the functions of particular brain cells and circuits deep in the brain during normal behavior. |
Nature study: Ocean life may adapt to climate change, but with hidden costs Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:09 PM PDT A new study shows that some ocean animals may be able evolve their way out of troubles caused by climate change -- but at a high cost. By artificially evolving 23 generations of a marine copepod, Acartia tonsa, a team of scientists found that the tiny creatures could adapt to the high temperatures and carbon dioxide levels forecast for the warming oceans. But to get there, the populations had to spend a lot of their genetic flexibility -- leaving them vulnerable to new stresses, like low food. |
Trial use of soybean waste to tackle obesity Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:08 PM PDT Scientists have found that fermented soybean waste, or okara, could improve fat metabolism and mitigate effects of diet-induced obesity. |
Nanoparticle-based COVID-19 vaccine could target future infectious diseases Posted: 22 Mar 2022 12:08 PM PDT Just one dose of a new nanoparticle-based COVID-19 vaccine was enough to produce an immune response in animals on track with vaccines currently in clinical use. And with minor changes, researchers hope the same vaccine platform could target other infectious diseases. |
Seen and ‘herd’: Collective motion in crowds is largely determined by participants’ field of vision Posted: 22 Mar 2022 09:28 AM PDT Researchers have developed a new model to predict human flocking behavior based on optics and other sensory data. |
New tool to accelerate drug discovery Posted: 22 Mar 2022 09:28 AM PDT New technology will accelerate drug development by allowing researchers a better look inside the cell membrane to observe how cells react to drugs. |
Early evolution of sea urchins Posted: 22 Mar 2022 09:25 AM PDT New insight on the origins and early evolution of echinoids, a group that includes the sea urchins, the sand dollars, and their relatives, has been published. |
Environmentally conscious consumers more likely to buy chicken raised on insects or algae Posted: 22 Mar 2022 09:25 AM PDT Eating chicken raised on a diet of bugs or algae may sound downright unappetizing to some, but there are ways to make the idea more palatable to at least one type of food shopper. Consumers who are environmentally aware will likely warm up to the idea of using alternative proteins like insect meal in poultry feed if they're given enough information about the health and environmental benefits, a new study shows. |
Striking lane-like patterns found in bacteria populations Posted: 22 Mar 2022 08:13 AM PDT Researchers have found that competing strains of Escherichia coli bacteria form distinctive lane-like patterns as their populations grow. |
Posted: 22 Mar 2022 08:13 AM PDT Using multiple high-resolution satellite datasets, researchers found that tropical carbon loss has doubled over the past two decades due to excessive forest removal in the tropics. The tropics are an important ecosystem as they store massive amounts of carbon in their woody vegetation and soil -- but they have suffered from extensive forest clearance since 2001. The researchers analyzed the gross forest carbon loss associated with forest removal in the tropics during the 21st century. |
100g of cranberries a day improves cardiovascular health, study finds Posted: 22 Mar 2022 08:12 AM PDT A new clinical trial found daily consumption of cranberries for one month improved cardiovascular function in healthy men. |
Finding ways to turn down the heat in cities Posted: 21 Mar 2022 12:04 PM PDT Rooftop gardens and greenery can help ease some of the severe heat in cities, according to research from climate scientists. |
Scientists determine structure of a DNA damage 'first responder' Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:22 AM PDT The results of this collaborative project overturn some conventional wisdom about how the DNA repair process works. |
Researchers studying ways to ease asthma symptoms caused by seasonal allergies Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:22 AM PDT Researchers are studying new ways to treat seasonal or intermittent asthma. |
Tree cover helps gray foxes coexist with coyotes in the country Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:22 AM PDT Preserving tree cover may be essential in helping the gray fox survive with coyotes in rural areas, researchers found in a new study. |
Ape 'vocabularies' shaped by social mingling — like in humans Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:21 AM PDT Social mingling shapes and transforms the 'vocabularies' of apes, just like in humans, according to new research. |
Microbial communities where cells cooperate have increased drug tolerance Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:21 AM PDT Research has revealed a key mechanism which increases tolerance to drugs amongst microbial communities. The findings could help the development of more effective antifungal treatments. |
Cryo-EM reveals how '911' molecule helps fix damaged DNA Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:21 AM PDT When something goes wrong during DNA replication, cells call their own version of 911 to pause the process and fix the problem -- a failsafe that is critical to maintaining health and staving off disease. Now, scientists have for the first time revealed how a key piece of this repair process -- appropriately called the 911 DNA checkpoint clamp -- is recruited to the site of DNA damage. The findings illuminate new insights into the way cells ensure genetic instructions are properly passed from one generation of cells to the next. |
How the Chagas pathogen changes the intestinal microbiota of predatory bugs Posted: 21 Mar 2022 10:21 AM PDT In Central and South America, predatory blood-sucking bugs transmit the causative agent of the widely prevalent Chagas disease. As the disease can induce severe symptoms and to date there is no vaccine against the Trypanosoma parasites, the main approach at present is to control the bug using insecticides. A research team has now studied how trypanosomes change the bug's intestinal microbiota. The long-term goal: to change the bacterial community in the predatory bug's intestine in such a way that it can defend itself against the trypanosomes. |
The shape of bacteria can make it a more effective, and useful predator Posted: 21 Mar 2022 08:58 AM PDT Scientists have found that a predatory bacterium, capable of invading and consuming harmful bugs such as E.coli and Salmonella, can sculpt its own shape to fit inside its prey. Scientists have shown that the curved (boomerang-like) shape of the bacterium, called Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus, is an important feature that affects its lifestyle, enabling it to efficiently invade, grow and live inside other bacteria. |
Staying alive: How 'self-pollen' can cheat death Posted: 21 Mar 2022 08:58 AM PDT A new gene that controls self-fertilization has been identified in an engineered version of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. |
Vegetable oil emissions study reveals urgent need for greener growing solutions Posted: 21 Mar 2022 08:58 AM PDT A new global study has revealed the extent of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions caused by vegetable oil production, highlighting the need for more sustainable growing solutions. |
Bacteria-shredding insect wings inspire new antibacterial packaging Posted: 21 Mar 2022 07:38 AM PDT Inspired by the bacteria-killing wings of insects like cicadas, scientists have developed a natural antibacterial texture for use on food packaging to improve shelf life and reduce waste. |
A whale’s tale: The story hidden in their mouths Posted: 21 Mar 2022 07:37 AM PDT Baleen plates -- the signature bristle-like apparatus toothless whales use to feed -- reveal how these large aquatic mammals adapt to environmental changes over time. |
COVID-19 pandemic fueled massive growth in green industry Posted: 21 Mar 2022 07:37 AM PDT The COVID-19 pandemic hasn't been a great couple of years. But for the green industry, like plant nurseries and greenhouses, it's been a boon. But will the uptick in gardening last once the last coronavirus restrictions are lifted? Probably not to the same extreme levels, according to new research. But for some, the introduction to gardening may have been just what they needed to dive into a new hobby. |
Soil erosion and wildfire another nail in coffin for Triassic era Posted: 21 Mar 2022 07:37 AM PDT New research has revealed that soil erosion and wildfires contributed to a mass extinction event 201 million years ago that ended the Triassic era and paved the way for the rise of dinosaurs in the Jurassic period. |
Chef’s kiss: Research shows healthy home cooking equals a healthy mind Posted: 21 Mar 2022 06:19 AM PDT New research has found being confident in the kitchen is not only good for your taste buds: it's also good for your mental health. |
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