Life

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Life

  1. Genetics

    The Amazon molly — a sex-skipping fish — hacks evolution

    The Amazon molly reproduces without sex. A genomic copy-and-paste trick called gene conversion may explain how it avoids evolutionary meltdown.

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  2. Animals

    Submerged bumblebee queens breathe underwater

    Submerged bees breathe and use strategies that don’t require oxygen, lab tests show. In nature, that trick could help the bees survive floods.

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  3. Plants

    Tree tops sparkle with electricity during thunderstorms

    Ultraviolet cameras captured faint electrical flashes from leaves and branches as storm charges built up in the atmosphere.

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  4. Neuroscience

    The remarkable brains of ‘SuperAgers’ hold clues about how we age

    A new study reports signs that nerve cells in the brain keep dividing over the decades. It’s not so simple.

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  5. Animals

    A koala population’s rapid rebound may let it escape inbreeding’s perils

    As koalas in southern Australia have grown from a few hundred to almost half a million, the marsupials show signs of regaining lost genetic variation.

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  6. Plants

    Chickpeas can grow in moon dirt and make seeds

    Chickpeas produced seeds in simulated lunar soil, offering clues for future space farming.

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  7. Animals

    Cockroaches that eat each other’s wings turn into a fierce fighting force

    The wood-feeding cockroach’s cannibalistic love bites lead to a lasting bond. Afterward, the pair prefer each other over all other roaches.

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  8. Neuroscience

    The right sounds may turn sleep into a problem-solving tool

    Lucid dreamers who heard puzzle-linked soundtracks while sleeping were more likely to solve those unsolved problems the next day.

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  9. Anthropology

    The ancient human ancestor ‘Little Foot’ gets a new face

    A new digital reconstruction of the face of an early Australopithecus specimen helps add details about the origins of our own species.

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