Oceans
Got pesky, invasive corals? Blast ‘em away with air guns
Compressed air bids bye-bye to invasive sun corals in Brazil. The blasts obliterated soft tissue and fragments couldn't regenerate.
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Compressed air bids bye-bye to invasive sun corals in Brazil. The blasts obliterated soft tissue and fragments couldn't regenerate.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Linguists can mix, match or even break the rules of real-world languages to create interesting imaginary ones.
The strangler fig is a keystone species in the tropics, providing food and shelter, and a place to poop for 17 different mammal species.
In a study, people with gene variants in two genes lost slightly more weight on GLP-1 drugs, but threw up more on Zepbound.
The findings show how the H5N1 bird flu virus is evolving in livestock and what that may mean for human health.
Millions of objects stashed at a site open only to select visitors tell the history of Earth's inhabitants.
Advances in decoding animal sounds might someday make animal translators a possibility.
Climate change could be forcing gray whales to seek food in San Francisco Bay, where vessel strikes may be driving rising deaths.
By recording brain activity directly, scientists showed that imagining an object can revive parts of the neural pattern used to see it.
A cave preserved two animals’ rib cages, cartilage and even traces of protein, revealing a flexible breathing apparatus like that of today’s land dwellers.
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