A proposal to grant captive chimpanzees the same endangered species status as wild chimps could hamper medical research.
Daily News Roundup
A proposal to grant captive chimpanzees the same endangered species status as wild chimps could hamper medical research.
Reassurances from the chap in charge of government spending have not assuaged researchers’ concerns that Britain’s science budgets will be cut.
Following criticism of a National Cancer Institute communications office budget, biologists defend the spending.
Rules regarding the use of cells derived from human embryos will deny many US researchers the chance to study new stem-cell lines created by cloning.
Despite cicadas’ high profile, scientists still don’t fully understand when and why they decide it is time to mate.
Top brass at the US science agency aired monetary grievances before a Senate committee last week.
A sequencing study suggests that some genes have evolved in parallel in humans and their canine companions, likely as a result of shared selection pressures.
The cost of DNA sequencing has gotten more expensive for the first time since records have been kept.
HHS tells an open-access publisher to stop using the NIH, the names of its employees, and its scientific literature databases in a “misleading manner.”
The agency released details of the sequester’s effects.