Life

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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.

More Stories in Life

  1. Animals

    Female giant rainforest mantises grow up to strike harder than males

    Scientists tracked mantis strike force from youth to adulthood, showing females eventually hit far harder than males. Why is a mystery.

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  2. Space

    How realistic is Project Hail Mary?

    Ryan Gosling is on a mission to save the sun — and Earth — from star-killing microbes. Science News dissects the science behind the sci-fi movie.

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  3. Plants

    Check out 6 ways orchids use tricks to reproduce

    This spring, these six orchids will lure pollinators with mimicry, scent or other unusual strategies.

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  4. Animals

    Mosquitoes get the ‘I’m full’ signal from their butts, not their brains

    Mosquitoes stop feeding because signals from rectal cells tell them they’re full, offering a target for preventing human bites.

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  5. Microbes

    How warming is shifting microbial worlds

    Climate change is affecting microbes, and that has implications for all life on Earth.

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  6. Animals

    Sharks are ingesting drugs in the Bahamas

    Nearly one third of sharks studied near the Bahamas’ Eleuthera Island were found to have caffeine, painkillers and other drugs in their bloodstreams.

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  7. Animals

    Platypus fur has a surprising feature seen only in bird feathers

    Platypuses are the first mammals known to have hollow melanosomes, pigment-bearing structures found in the hair of many animals.

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  8. Animals

    Wild monkeys invaded Florida. Should people protect them?

    A colony of African vervets in Dania Beach raises big questions about how humans can and should manage nonnative species.

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  9. Neuroscience

    Yaks may hint at a way to treat brain diseases like MS

    A genetic mutation tied to keeping the brain healthy at high altitudes may point to a way to repair nerve damage, experiments in mice show.

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