Symbiotic fungi on the roots of bean plants can act as an underground signaling network, transmitting early warnings of impending aphid attacks.
Daily News Roundup
Symbiotic fungi on the roots of bean plants can act as an underground signaling network, transmitting early warnings of impending aphid attacks.
The decline of a population of Arctic foxes isolated on a small Russian island may be due to mercury pollution from their diet of seabirds and seals.
Researchers in the Amazon are measuring how much carbon dioxide fertilizes the rainforest.
Researchers welcome a new ruling saying that financial holdings will no longer need to be published in an online database.
Scientists are stumped as to why hundreds of starved pups have been washing up on the California shore.
Academic research universities and cancer centers will have a large hunk of their funding cut because of the government sequester.
European scientists have taken down the HeLa genome after publishing it without the consent of Henrietta Lacks’s family.
The country’s fertility regulator reported that the technique has “broad support.”
Newly constructed ramps will expand the habitat available to a colony of water voles in London, and similar ramps elsewhere could encourage isolated populations to mix.
Native Australian frog tadpoles outcompete the tadpoles of the invasive cane toad, suggesting the native frogs could form part of a suburban control program.