I went to the Reflecting Pool because, as a certain American naturalist once said of a different pond, I wished to “live deliberately” and “see if I could not learn what it had to teach.” I doubted ...
At that stage they aren’t very good at cannibalism, but if a would-be Hulk manages to capture one of its siblings or cousins ...
Enlisting nature to help purify the Reflecting Pool could be more patriotic and successful than tossing in more chemicals.
Viruses play a major role in the functioning of ecosystems. They profoundly influence the dynamics of microbial communities, ...
Flagella and cilia are used in unicellular and multicellular eukaryotes for fast cell motility, rapid movement of material over cell surfaces, cell feeding and cell division. The structure of the ...
University of California San Diego marine microbiologist and Distinguished Professor Emeritus Farooq Azam has been selected ...
Reinhard Hinterleitner is an assistant professor in the Department of Immunology at the University of Pittsburgh. He studied biotechnology at the University of Applied Sciences in Vienna and received ...
Oral hygiene and dentistry weren't exactly stellar in the 18th century, so it makes sense that George Washington and many of ...
Discover the astonishing microscopic life thriving beneath Antarctica's icy exterior. A new PBS series reveals the groundbreaking research that could transform our understanding of ecosystems and ...
These spheres from the abyss conceal creatures with startling biology.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), infectious diseases are the second global cause of death after ...
Morning Overview on MSN
A teaspoon of soil holds more living microbes than there are people on Earth
Beneath every garden bed, farm field, and forest floor, a single teaspoon of soil teems with billions of microorganisms, a population that dwarfs the roughly eight billion humans alive on the planet.
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