A mutated feline receptor for sweet tastes explains why cats don’t love sugar but do dig mushrooms.
A mutated feline receptor for sweet tastes explains why cats don’t love sugar but do dig mushrooms.
The story of a group of high school students who, with the help of a Rockefeller University researcher, conducted and published studies on the biological provenance of sushi and teas from around New York City.
Epigenetic perturbations could jump-start heritable variation.
Dried plant specimens reveal the origin of an insect pest that has spread throughout Europe.
A young botanist pays tribute to his mentor by naming a newly discovered, rare species in his honor.
I the dark Arctic shallows one research finds heterotrophic marine bacteria doing a surprising amount of carbon fixing.
In discovering their shared ancestry, a distantly related animal geneticist and plant pathologist find a common thread in their work on immune receptors.
Floral bouquets are the most ephemeral of presents. The puzzle of how flowers get their shape, however, is more enduring. It’s a question that has kept Enrico Coen, a plant biologist at the John Innes Centre in the United Kingdom, busy for more than
Two lizard taxonomists champion the use of Bayesian species delimitation to settle taxonomic debates.
A snapshot of the highest-ranked articles from a 30-day period on Faculty of 1000