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The U.S. has closed its southern border again to livestock imports, saying that a flesh-eating parasite has moved further ...
When large marine animals like whales die, they sink down to the seabed. Once their flesh has been stripped away by ...
A turning point in the development of events was the release of a video recording capturing the moment of Jean-Pierre's ...
What they're farming, she says, are the bacteria that live on their bodies. Those bacteria convert methane gas that bubbles up from the sea floor into carbon-based nutrient sources that the spiders ...
Following Penny Wong's talks with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, some experts have conceded it may finally be time for ...
Writer Joanna Weiss journeys into the world of C. elegans worms and the people who love them. But will federal budget cuts ruin it all?
Vinegar eel "flash mob" caught under the microscope! Researchers were stunned when they measured the force of the roiling worm swarm.
Under the microscope, the team saw that the worms had slender, elongated bodies that were covered in what looked like minuscule cut marks.
McNally puts the transparent worm under a microscope, focuses on a single egg cell and records videos as the different proteins — marked by their red, green or blue glow — delicately maneuver about.
The destiny of each cell is easy to map, since the worms become translucent under the light of a microscope and cycle through all developmental stages in about three days.