Live Science Newsletter

“Science News This Week:  A breakthrough cure for Huntington’s disease.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 27 September 2025, 1512 UTC.

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September 27, 2025
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Science news this week

This week’s science news has been dominated by medical marvels, with the announcement of a breakthrough gene therapy that has treated Huntington’s disease for the first time.
Huntington’s disease is relatively rare, affecting 1 in 10,000 to 20,000 people in the U.S., but it’s a cruel and terrible disease. Caused by a single defective gene, the disease runs through families and appears between the ages of 30 and 50 with dementia-like symptoms that include loss of cognition and motor control. Until now, no treatments have slowed the disease’s progression, and patients typically die within 10 to 25 years of it manifesting.
The new therapy introduced a new gene into cells in the two parts of the brain hit hardest by the disease to slow its progression by 75%, marking a remarkable first in the field. And while the treatment remains in clinical trials, the researchers have begun the application process to get it approved in the U.S. and then Europe.

Another remarkable medical procedure also featured heavily in our coverage this week: a Vancouver man whose vision was restored by Canada’s first ever tooth-in-eye surgery. Brent Chapman lost his left eye after a severe allergic reaction to the painkiller ibuprofen. Following two decades of failed attempts to fix it, doctors resorted to the rare procedure of implanting his tooth into his cornea, where it served as a platform for a plastic lens that brought back his sight.

Elsewhere, we reported on the intriguing and troubling links between daylight saving time and strokes in a study which argues for abandoning biannual clock switching altogether.

Amazing discoveries

‘Shocking’: Astronomers find monster black hole growing at 2.4 times the theoretical limit
Live Science
Black holes are famous for breaking all the rules, most notoriously creating crazy singularities in Einstein’s general relativity, which describes how gravity works. Yet beyond their physics-warping event horizons, the cosmic monsters are usually neatly constrained by theory — obeying a strict “Eddington limit” for how fast they can grow based on their outward radiation pressure and gravitational pull.
That’s why the discovery of a giant black hole growing at 2.4 times this limit caught astrophysicists off guard. It’s not the first super black hole to blow past this limit (others have been spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope), but it does provide clear evidence that our current cosmological models are missing something big in their description of these massive eaters, and it could have universe-altering consequences.
Read more
Life’s Little Mysteries

Did ancient Egyptians really booby-trap the pyramids?
Live Science
Indiana Jones, Lara Croft or  Nathan Drake — picture any of these characters and you’ll likely arrive at an image of them fleeing from booby-trapped tombs with a priceless treasure in hand. But where did we arrive at this idea? And were Egypt’s tombs really rigged to kill thieves and archaeologists alike? We dug up the answer.
Read more
Also in the news this week

Science Spotlight

Scientists are unraveling the link between pollution and psoriasis
Live Science
Hundreds of millions of people suffer from psoriasis. Yet the condition, an autoimmune response which causes itchy scales to appear on the scalp and skin, is not fully understood.
While scientists know that some genes make people more susceptible to psoriasis, the condition is also triggered by air pollution, emerging research is revealing. With 99% of people around the world exposed to air beneath the World Health Organization’s guidelines, Live Science reported from Maharashtra, India, on the role low quality air plays in worsening autoimmune conditions.
Read more
Beyond the headlines

‘A serious threat’: China braces as Super Typhoon Ragasa, this year’s strongest storm, nears with winds of up to 177 mph
Live Science
A brief lull in hurricane activity during the season’s apparent peak last week left some experts asking where all the tropical storms had gone. But they weren’t left wondering for long, as Super Typhoon Ragasa — the strongest storm of the year so far with wind speeds topping 177 mph (285 km/h) — rampaged across the Philippines, Taiwan, Hong Kong, China and Vietnam, causing mass evacuations and shutdowns of the region’s megacities.
It’s also far from the last, with another storm, named Buloi, developing into a typhoon and on its way to the Philippines. Meanwhile in the Atlantic, three storm systems are developing into next week, drawing extra strength from warming ocean waters.
Read more
Something for the weekend

If you’re looking for something a little longer to read over the weekend, here are some of the best long reads, book excerpts and interviews published this week.
Video of the week

Microscopic baby sea urchin crawling with tubed feet is among video winners of Nikon Small World in Motion competition
Live Science
This photograph that took fifth place in this year’s Nikon Small World in Motion competition came entirely by accident after a zoologist in Brazil investigated a piece of red algae that had washed ashore. Studying the aquatic plant underneath a microscope, Alvaro Migotto spotted a tiny baby sea urchin crawling across its surface using hundreds of tubed feet.
Watch here

This week’s newsletter was written by Ben Turner
This week's newsletter was written by Ben Turner
Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist. When he’s not writing, Ben enjoys reading literature, playing the guitar and embarrassing himself with chess.
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ScienceAdviser (AAAS).

ScienceAdviser (AAAS):  “How fungus-farming ants control weeds.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 26 September 2025, 1435 UTC.

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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).

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26 September 2025
Today’s Deep Dive asks: What’s in a (species) name? But first, catch up on the latest science news, including the pros and cons of standing out and why we sigh.
Animals  |  News from Science
How fungus-farming termites control weeds
More than 50 million years before humans plowed their very first field, termites began farming fungi inside their nests for food. And just like human farmers, termites must contend with “weeds,” in the form of unwanted fungi that can spoil their crop. In this week’s Science, researchers report one way that termites keep their crop in good order: by burying noxious fungi within soil that contains antifungal microbes.

The termites in the new study, a southwest Asian species called Odontotermes obesus, prepare their “fields” by bringing bits of leaves into the nest. The worker termites then chew the leaves into tiny bits and stuff them into special cavities that are at the right temperature and humidity for a fungus called Termitomyces to thrive. As the white fungus grows on the leaf matter, called comb, the termites continually reap and eat it.

Other kinds of fungi can compete with Termitomyces. The researchers were curious how the termites keep these unwanted fungi in check. So, they dug up comb and termites and brought them into the lab. The team gave termites both healthy comb and comb on which they placed a common weedy fungus, Pseudoxylaria. The termites buried the contaminated comb but not the healthy comb. Further experiments showed that microbes in the soil combat the unwanted fungus.

The team is now studying how the microbes specifically inhibit fungi. They also hope to generate a little more public respect for termites. “As fungus-growing termites remain underground, and notoriously difficult to work with, very little is known about their unique biology,” noted evolutionary biologist Rhitoban Raychoudhury. “We hope that people realize that these out-of-sight insects also have very interesting lifestyles.”

Read the SCIENCE PAPER and RELATED PERSPECTIVE
Read the full story
Ecology  |  Science
Is it better to blend in or stand out?
bird with a butterfly in its mouth
Warning colors didn’t protect this butterfly.  Stanislav Harvancik
The 2004 classic Mean Girls famously shows that the animal kingdom and high school aren’t so different. The creatures in each need to make a tough choice for survival amidst top predators: blend in or stand out? There are merits to both approaches, suggests new research.

To study how insects avoid predation, researchers placed more than 15,000 paper moths in forests across six continents, each pinned with mealworm bait. Some of the fake moths were camouflaged in bark-colored brown, and some had warning patterns of bright orange or turquoise. Then the team monitored how often birds ate each kind of moth.

It turned out that successfully avoiding predation depended on the surrounding ecology. Camouflage was a good strategy in low-light conditions or where predators were common. Warning colors were more successful when there were fewer predator species around, meaning birds didn’t test out a brightly colored snack out of necessity. In general, both strategies thrived when the surrounding animals tried the opposite tactic; in other words, camouflage worked best when most other creatures had warning colors, and being bright was successful when nearby prey blended in.

While the authors wrote that “there was no overall ‘best’ strategy,” camouflaging was likely more vulnerable to ecological change and therefore more often lost and regained throughout evolutionary history.

Read the Paper
Physiology  |  Science Advances
*Sigh*—but why? So you can breathe easy
Sighing is an essential human reflex—which is why we do it roughly once every 5 minutes. And there’s more to it than simply forcing open any of the little air sacs in your lungs that have collapsed. According to new research, sighing helps rearrange molecules in the mucusy layer inside the alveoli that makes contact with the air, which in turn helps prevent the alveoli from collapsing when you exhale.

Thanks to mechanical ventilators, we know that if a person only breathes the ordinary amount—exchanging about 10% of the air in their lungs—the lungs become harder to inflate over time. Maria Clara Novaes-Silva and her colleagues wanted to know exactly why that is, and what it is about sighing that ‘resets’ this. So, they took a super close look at what happens to the part of the lungs that’s actually in contact with air.

“Inside of our alveoli, we have this very thin liquid layer, and this creates a liquid–air interface,” Novaes-Silva explained to Science Podcast Host Sarah Crespi. “We are constantly expanding and compressing this area.” This liquid is a mixture of lipids and proteins that forms a multilayered film.

When you breathe normally, you stretch this film a little. But when you sigh, you breathe in more than twice as much air—and that quickly stretches the film, which then compresses as you exhale. Using artificial pulmonary fluid, Novaes-Silva and her colleagues showed that this process redistributes lipids: moving tight-packing saturated fats to the top, air-contacting layer and looser-packing unsaturated lipids to the lower layer. Overall, this makes the film easier to stretch—making inhalation easier—as well as more resistant to compression, making alveoli more resilient to collapse.

Read the paper
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Deep Dive
an old skull
The Yunxian 2 cranium that some may claim should be labeled Homo longi  Gary Todd via Wikimedia Commons | CC0
What’s in a name? Ask a Denisovan
Michael Price, Deputy News Editor, Science
Want to start a fistfight at an anthropology conference (or at least a polite verbal tussle)? Ask which species Neanderthals and their close cousins, the Denisovans, belong to.

The definition of a species in the study of evolution has always been a slippery and imprecise one. You may have learned in school that two animals belong to the same species if they can produce viable offspring, but that’s an oversimplification. After all, coyotes and wolves can have babies that have babies, but few would argue that the two canids are the same species. In truth, the boundaries between species are often messy, contentious and, ultimately, arbitrary.

Regarding Neanderthals in the above question, there are a few different camps the answers might come from. Some might go with Homo neanderthalensis, first proposed in 1863, named after Germany’s Neander Valley where the first identified Neanderthal was found. Others argue Neanderthals are a subspecies of our own species, Homo sapiens, making them Homo sapiens neanderthalensis.

No less contentious are the proposed designation for Denisovans. No formal species name has been given to this hominin, which was first identified in 2010 based on the analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequenced from a finger bone found in Siberia’s Denisova Cave. But one proposed candidate is Homo longi, a species name proposed for a skull found in Harbin, China, that was described in 2021. Researchers argued its morphological characteristics were distinct enough from other known hominins to warrant a separate species name. Then, earlier this year, ancient proteins confirmed the Harbin skull was a Denisovan. Now, a paper out this week in Science argues, based on morphological analysis, that a 1-million-year-old Chinese skull known as Yunxian 2, previously classified as Homo erectusbelongs to H. longi, too . And based on physical similarities between known Denisovans, the Harbin skull, and Yunxian 2, the authors argue that Denisovans most likely belong to the H. longi clade.

So, does that mean Denisovans should now be called Homo longi? According to the rules set down by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, there’s a good case to be made that they should. After all, according to the ICZN’s so-called Principle of Priority, “the valid name of a taxon is the oldest available name applied to it, unless that name has been invalidated or another name is given precedence.” So, assuming you buy the argument that modern humans, Neanderthals and Denisovans deserve to be classified as separate species in the first place, then there’s a good argument that Denisovans should now be considered H. longi.

Still, there’s room for dissent. Some have argued that the Harbin skull may not accurately represent the breadth of Denisovan diversity, and just because the Harbin Denisovan can be called H. longi doesn’t mean that all Denisovans should be lumped under the same taxonomic category. In this view, there may yet be other hominins currently categorized under the broad term Denisovan that deserve entirely different species names.

Time and debate and flurries of papers will eventually settle this issue. Punches may or may not get thrown.

Read the paper
podcast
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Salty permafrost’s role in Arctic melting, the promise of continuous protein monitoring, and death in the ancient world
By Sarah Crespi, Angela Saini, Tim Appenzeller   |   25 September 2025
Et Cetera
Letai for NCI?
President Donald Trump is expected to tap Anthony Letai, a highly regarded Harvard Medical School oncologist and basic scientist, to lead the National Cancer Institute. He “brings a strong basic science background, which is very important for NCI,” said former NCI director Monica Bertagnolli.
Read more at ScienceInsider
Turbulence reimagined
Physicists’ new model to explain turbulence could help engineers and pilots figure out how to make flights smoother. “Airplane design is going to benefit,” one expert said. “The better the model, the more it captures of the particular turbulent field, then the better the forecast, which is what the pilot is going to use,” added another.
Physical Review Research Paper  |  Read more at The New York Times
The importance of interpretability
To truly understand LLMs, experts need to examine their training, not just how they behave at the end of it, according to Naomi Saphra. “We don’t know what makes a language model tick,” she said. “If we have these models everywhere, we should understand what they’re doing.”
Read more at Quanta Magazine
Last but not least
The idea of a 40% cut to the U.S. National Institutes of Health is even scarier when you look at all the medical science that wouldn’t have happened if such a cut had been made in the past.
Christie Wilcox, Editor, ScienceAdviser

With contributions from Erik Stokstad and Hannah Richter

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Scientific American-Today in Science

Scientific American:  Today in Science.  “A ‘nightmare’ bacteria is surging in hospitals.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 25 September 2025, 2338 UTC.

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SciAm | Today in Science
 
September 25, 2025—Why we love to “people watch,” a vicious new bacterial infection is surging in hospitals, and an unproven drug for treating autism.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

Gloved hand holding petri dish

A petri dish growing Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria, one species that can become resistant to last-resort antibiotics. Eric Carr/Alamy Stock Photo

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TOP STORIES

Four macaques sitting in a tree.

Macaques. Whitworth Images/Getty Images

People Watching

Our drive to “people watch” may be an important evolutionary trait. Chimps and macaques, our primate cousins, express social curiosity, too. In one experiment, researchers played human children and chimps videos showing members of their respective species. Both groups preferred watching social scenes compared to videos with solitary individuals. Likewise, in a different study, long-tailed macaques preferred watching videos of their peers engaging in more aggressive interactions than peaceful ones, and paid more attention to videos of familiar individuals.
Why this is interesting: In ancient humans and other primates, reputational damage can bar access to food and mates, incite physical confrontations and, in extreme cases, lead to potentially fatal ostracism from the community. With so much at stake, primates evolved to keep a close eye on each other. “Modern humans retain this keen attention to other people’s social interactions as an evolutionary adaptation,” says Gillian Forrester, who studies comparative cognition at the University of Sussex in England and was not involved in either study—so people watching might just pay off.
What the experts say: “These findings demonstrate that social information is important, rewarding and valuable for humans and other primate species,” says Laura Lewis, a comparative and developmental psychologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara. “It suggests that social information was also important for our shared primate ancestors who lived somewhere between five million and eight million years ago and that for millions of years it has been adaptive for primates to gain social information about those around them.” —Andrea Tamayo, Newsletter Writer
 

Superbad Bugs

Between 2019 and 2023, there was a 461 percent increase in the infection rate of a certain bacteria in the group Enterobacterales that can thwart many antibiotic treatments, according to a report released this week by CDC scientists. Such infections are resistant to carbapenems, a powerful class of drugs used to treat severe multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, including pneumonia and bloodstream, bone and urinary tract infections.
Why this matters: Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) infections are notoriously difficult to treat and can be fatal: In 2020 alone, CRE caused about 12,700 infections and 1,100 deaths in the U.S. People receiving care and treatment in hospitals and other health care facilities are most at-risk for contracting CRE infections. The antibiotics that work against CRE are only available intravenously.
What the experts say: “We are concerned because there is risk that this could spread into communities, meaning that common infections like urinary tract infections that are usually treated with the oral antibiotics may increasingly need to be treated with the IV antibiotics and require hospitalization,” says Danielle Rankin, a co-author of the new report and an epidemiologist at the CDC.

SCIENTISTS AT WORK

A gloved researcher peers into an illuminated tray in a dimly-lit laboratory.

Grace Baey

  • Microalgae has an extremely high protein content—as much as 70 percent. That makes it an ideal raw material for making meat alternatives, says materials scientist Stefan Guldin at Technical University of Munich, Germany. The trick will be to make the taste and texture as delicious as the real thing; a challenge unlike his previous work in biosensors and photonics, he says. “First, all the components and solvents must be food-grade—a huge constraint. Second, my colleagues and I aren’t working with nanograms, micrograms or milligrams, but with grams. There’s more mass to master.” Nature | 3 min read
                Content courtesy of Nature Briefing

EXPERT PERSPECTIVES

  • In 1993 U.S. hospitals recorded fewer than 2,000 MRSA infections. In 2017 that number had jumped to 323,000, according to CDC data. Yet despite the urgent need for new antibiotics, Howard Dean, physician and former governor of Vermont, wrote in 2024, the pipeline for developing them is drying up. Patients and doctors need to take more responsibility with how they use and prescribe antibiotics, he says. And the U.S. government should incentivize pharmaceutical companies to invest in developing and testing new drugs. | 4 min read
 
I know a few people who would be happy to plant themselves on a city bench or at an outdoor cafe and watch the passers-by for hours. It does scratch an indescribable itch to observe our fellow humans going about their business, navigating their environments and circumstances, no? And now science suggests that we can’t be too quick to condemn such voyeurism as nosiness (though please try not to stare too much).
This newsletter is for you! Send comments or feedback to: newsletters@sciam.com. See you tomorrow.
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Science | The Guardian.

“Surgeons transplant pig heart into dead human recipient for first time.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 25 August 2025, 2325 UTC.

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Exposure to high temperatures could result in long-lasting damage to health of billions of people, scientists warn Repeated exposure to heatwaves is accelerating ageing in people, according to a study. The impact is broadly comparable with the damage smoking, alcohol use, poor diet or limited exercise can have on health, the researchers said. Extreme temperatures are increasingly common owing to
With the number of very hot days rising as well as average temperatures, more and more animals are vulnerable. But while some species can adapt, others are seeing huge population declines The residents of Tecolutilla, Mexico, knew the heatwave was bad when they heard the thuds. One by one, the town’s howler monkeys, overcome with dehydration and exhaustion, were falling from the trees like apples

Yesterday

Since our early ancestors came down from the canopy, we may think we have learned how to live without trees. But our lives remain intertwined in incredible ways Once upon a time there was a girl who lived in a tree. She had deep-set brown eyes and brown hair. She ate fruit – orange mangosteen and black juniper berries – crunched on nuts, sucked on sweet grasses and chewed juicy leaves, and dug up
The constellation contains no bright stars – but once seen seems to dominate its patch of night sky In August, track down the constellation of Hercules, the hero. It is well placed from the northern hemisphere at this time of year, but finding it requires a little bit of celestial sleuthing owing to the fact that the constellation contains no really bright stars. Once seen, however, it seems to d
Elon Musk’s ambitious timetable for reaching the moon and conquering Mars left hanging in the balance The launch of Elon Musk’s gargantuan Starship space rocket was scrubbed late on Sunday afternoon, with the billionaire entrepreneur’s ambitious timetable for reaching the moon and conquering Mars left hanging in the balance. SpaceX said it was standing down from the launch to “allow time to troub

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The organisation that manages the Square Kilometre Array Observatory has denied whistleblower allegations of financial mismanagement Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast It is hailed as a global endeavour to explore the hidden universe – a powerful telescope comprising more than 130,000 antennae being built in outback Western Australia . Along with a sister telescope in So

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Istiorachis macarthurae, named after sailor Ellen MacArthur, had a pronounced sail along its back that may have been used to attract mates Scientists have discovered a new species of dinosaur with an “eye-catching sail” along its back and tail that may have been used to attract mates. The iguanodontian dinosaur, whose fossils were found on the Isle of Wight, was identified by Dr Jeremy Lockwood,
Satellite mega-constellation missions behind threefold increase in emissions of climate-altering soot and CO 2 Scientists are calling for a new global regime to address air pollution caused by the space industry. Prof Eloise Marais’s team at University College London (UCL) began tracking space activities in 2020. Their latest figures reveal 259 rocket launches in 2024, and 223 launches in 2023. T
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South Lake Tahoe resident was probably bitten by infected flea while camping in the area, local health authorities say A resident of South Lake Tahoe in California has tested positive for the plague, local authorities announced this week. A statement released on Tuesday by health officials in El Dorado county said they were notified of the situation by the California department of public health (
My friend Michael Waldman, who has died aged 83, was a palaeontologist and an inspiring teacher of geology. He discovered one of the most productive and important fossil sites in Scotland, and named several new species of extinct animals. Mike discovered the fossil site in 1971, during a Duke of Edinburgh school trip that he was co-leading to Skye. There, near the village of Elgol, he found the f
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Entrepreneur who overcame the odds to realise his vision of a spaceport in the Shetland Islands The serial entrepreneur Frank Strang, who has died aged 67 of oesophageal cancer , seized an unpremeditated opportunity to deliver the first licensed spaceport for vertical launches in western Europe, overcoming multiple barriers along the way. Having acquired a disused RAF radar station at the most no
Isotopes shows animal began life in Wales, adding weight to theory cattle used in hauling stones across country A cow’s tooth from a jawbone deliberately placed beside the entrance to Stonehenge at the Neolithic monument’s very beginning in 2995 to 2900BC could offer tantalising new evidence about how the stones were transported about 125 miles from Wales to Salisbury Plain. Analysis of the third
Analysis of blood samples finds women with the disease have 20% lower levels, a pattern not seen in men Women should ensure they are getting enough omega fatty acids in their diets according to researchers, who found unusually low levels of the compounds in female patients with Alzheimer’s disease. The advice follows an analysis of blood samples from Alzheimer’s patients and healthy individuals,

Aug 19, 2025

Flash of light visible for hundreds of miles was an exceptionally bright meteor, say experts A huge fireball dashed across the skies of western Japan, shocking residents and dazzling stargazers, though experts said it was a natural phenomenon and not an alien invasion. Videos and photos emerged online of the extremely bright ball of light visible for hundreds of miles shortly after 11.00pm local
Why evolutionary theory should be applied to peacocks, politics, iPhones and quite a lot in between Nobody expected the Spanish Inquisition, but then again no one could have predicted the giraffe, the iPhone or JD Vance. The laws of physics don’t demand them; they all just evolved, expressions of how (for better or worse) things happened to turn out. Ecologist Mark Vellend’s thesis is that to und
Triggerplants in particular live up to their name with a rapid response when touch-sensitive stamen are nudged Flowers are surprisingly touchy, especially their male parts, the stamens, with hundreds of plant species performing touch-sensitive stamen movements that can be endlessly repeated. Insects visiting Berberis and Mahonia flowers to feed on nectar get slapped by stamens that bend over and
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends children as young as six months and up to 23 months get the shot The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is urging that children as young as six months and up to 23 months receive the Covid-19 vaccine – a position that diverges from the current federal guidance given by the Trump administration ’s health agencies. The AAP released its updated childhood i
Deaths from short-term exposure to fine particulates spewed by forest fires underestimated by 93% Choking smoke spewed by wildfires is far more dangerous than previously thought, a new study has found, with death tolls from short-term exposure to fine particulates underestimated by 93%. Researchers found that 535 people in Europe died on average each year between 2004 and 2022 as a result of brea

 

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