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General Science / Biology news 1234

Researchers Discover Dual-Use Sexual Attraction and Population-Control Chemicals in Nematodes

August 01, 2008 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 5 vote(s) | No comments yet

(PhysOrg.com) -- Organisms ranging from humans to plants to the lowliest bacterium use molecules to communicate. Some chemicals trigger the various stages of an organism's development, and still others are used to attract ...


Australia bans exotic cat breed

August 03, 2008 | User rating: 4.3 / 5 after 21 vote(s) | User comments: 2

Australia has banned imports of an exotic breed of cat, calling it an extreme risk to the country's native wildlife, a minister said Sunday.


Oral pill turns slacker mice into marathonists: study

August 03, 2008 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 21 vote(s) | User comments: 3

US researchers have come up with a pill that promises to give a typical junk-food snacking couch potato the silhouette of an athlete and the endurance of a marathon runner.


Booger is back: Woman receives 5 cloned puppies

August 05, 2008 | User rating: 3.6 / 5 after 5 vote(s) | User comments: 6

(AP) -- Booger is back. An American woman received five puppies Tuesday that were cloned from her beloved late pitbull, becoming the inaugural customer of a South Korean company that says it is the world's ...


Great white's mighty bite revealed

August 04, 2008 | User rating: 4.5 / 5 after 8 vote(s) | User comments: 7

The bite force of a great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) is the highest known for any living species, according to new research to be published in the Journal of Zoology. This is the first time that scientists ...


Exercise pill is no replacement for exercise

August 05, 2008 | User rating: 4 / 5 after 5 vote(s) | User comments: 1

Recently, researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, a research organization focused on biology and its relation to health, published a study in the journal ...


World's smallest snake found in Barbados

August 03, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 27 vote(s) | User comments: 4

(PhysOrg.com) -- The world's smallest species of snake, with adults averaging just under four inches in length, has been identified on the Caribbean island of Barbados. The species -- which is as thin as ...


Survival of the fittest: even cancer cells follow the laws of evolution

August 01, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 14 vote(s) | User comments: 1

Scientists from The Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton and the University of California discovered that the underlying process in tumor formation is the same as for life itself—evolution. After analyzing a half million ...


For the birds or for me? Why do conservationists really help wildlife?

5 hours ago | User rating: not shown ( 2 vote(s) ) | User comments: 1

Volunteers who take part in conservation efforts may do it more for themselves than the wildlife they are trying to protect, a University of Alberta case study shows.


Humans' response to risk can be unnecessarily dangerous, study

August 06, 2008 | User rating: 3.6 / 5 after 14 vote(s) | User comments: 7

The traffic light ahead of you is turning yellow. Do you gun the engine and speed through the intersection, trusting that others will wait for their green, or do you slow down and wait your turn?


Multi-tasking maggots in superbug showdown

August 05, 2008 | User rating: 5 / 5 after 12 vote(s) | User comments: 6

Scientists at Swansea University (Wales, UK) have discovered a new type of antibiotic in maggot secretions that can tackle up to 12 different strains of MRSA, as well as E. coli and C. difficile. The research ...