Some of the 200 or so human embryonic stem cell lines approved for federal funding may have been derived from sperm or eggs of unconsenting donors.
Daily News Roundup
Some of the 200 or so human embryonic stem cell lines approved for federal funding may have been derived from sperm or eggs of unconsenting donors.
A new study disputes findings of a 2011 analysis suggesting that black researchers are funded less than their equally qualified white peers.
Domestic cats kill billions of birds and mammals every year, making them a top threat to US wildlife.
The heat emanating from large metropolitan areas may be changing weather patterns thousands of miles away.
After a year-long voluntary moratorium to discuss regulations and safety measures, scientists are set to resume controversial H5N1 research.
A National Institutes of Health working group urges the agency to send most of its chimpanzees to a national sanctuary and halt half of the experiments involving such animals.
A neurodegenerative disease researcher found guilty of fabricating results in funding applications has written an open letter of apology and clarification.
Stomachs of flesh-eating flies carry the DNA of animals in remote rainforests.
Experts in Washington have reached an agreement over how to fund avian influenza research.
Fungi in 100 million year-old seafloor sediments could possess novel antibiotics.