Life sciences writer Susan Milius has been writing about botany, zoology and ecology for Science News since the last millennium. She worked at diverse publications before breaking into science writing and editing. After stints on the staffs of The Scientist, Science, International Wildlife and United Press International, she joined Science News. Three of Susan's articles have been selected to appear in editions of The Best American Science Writing.

All Stories by Susan Milius

  1. No one villain behind honey-bee colony collapse

    Many factors may interact to bring on the mysterious honey-bee colony collapse disorder.

  2. Life

    When feminine beauty thrives on competition

    Gorgeous plumage for both starling sexes comes from rivalry in co-op nests

  3. Humans

    Another livestock drug endangers vultures

    After one veterinary NSAID almost wiped out vultures in South Asia, one of the possible replacements turns out to be toxic too.

  4. Life

    Bird feeding, migration could be splitting a species

    German birds that spend the off-season at U.K. birdfeeders now look slightly different from neighbors that migrate to Spain

  5. Animals

    Little push turns snail lefties to righties

    Bumping an early embryo’s cells can switch the direction of its spiral.

  6. Life

    Fecal architecture is beetle armor

    Predators have a hard time getting through the layers of excrement some beetle moms give their young.

  7. Agriculture

    Nation by nation, evidence thin that boosting crop yields conserves land

    Intensifying agriculture may not necessarily return farmland to nature without policy help.

  8. Botanical Whales

    Adventures in the Tortugas reveal that seagrass fields need saving too.

  9. Animals

    Classic view of leaf-cutter ants overlooked nitrogen-fixing partner

    A fresh look at a fungus-insect partnership that biologists have studied for more than a century uncovers a role for bacteria.

  10. Life

    Killer bees aren’t so smart

    Brains are probably not what powers the invasive bee’s takeover from European honeybees

  11. Ecosystems

    Impatiens plants are more patient with siblings

    Streamside wildflower holds back on leaf competition when roots meet close kin

  12. Animals

    Textbook case of color-changing spider reopened

    Female crab spiders switch colors to match flowers but may not fool their prey