A new report from the World Health Organization predicts only very minimal increases in cancer risk for residents in the vicinity of the nuclear disaster.
Daily News Roundup
A new report from the World Health Organization predicts only very minimal increases in cancer risk for residents in the vicinity of the nuclear disaster.
Scientists have identified the sticky substance that is damaging the feathers of hundreds seabirds washed ashore in England as an additive for lubricant oils.
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.
Stomachs of flesh-eating flies carry the DNA of animals in remote rainforests.
Fungi in 100 million year-old seafloor sediments could possess novel antibiotics.
Researchers are getting closer to detecting abnormal tumor DNA circulating in the bloodstream.
A type of scallop expels water and waste through a sort of cough that could reveal clues about water quality.
Decades can pass between the discovery of a new animal or plant and its official debut in the scientific literature.
An all-female species, distantly related to flatworms, steals all of genetic material it needs to diversify its genome.