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14 votes
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These animals have the world's biggest ears
3 votes -
The Egg Collection at the Field Museum of Natural History
4 votes -
How a drunken swim in Nevada's Devils Hole and a dead endangered pupfish led to a rare prosecution and prison sentence
13 votes -
The gut microbiome as a major regulator of the gut-skin axis
7 votes -
The Iranian spider-tailed viper preys on birds by luring them with a spider-shaped bulge on its tail
11 votes -
Far infrared radiation (FIR): Its biological effects and medical applications
5 votes -
Ketamine may relieve depression by repairing damaged brain circuits
12 votes -
A rare trio of bald eagles — two dads, one mom — are raising eaglets together in one nest
8 votes -
Scott Kelly spent a year in orbit. His body is not quite the same.
11 votes -
Radical climate action 'critical' to Great Barrier Reef's survival, government body says
11 votes -
What a year in space did to Scott Kelly
6 votes -
Mars methane hunt comes up empty, flummoxing scientists
6 votes -
Chinese scientists create monkeys with human brain genes
7 votes -
Nature’s skyscrapers: X-ray imaging reveals the secrets of termite mounds
6 votes -
Can bacteria help us prevent salt damage to concrete roads and bridges?
4 votes -
Some cancers become contagious
5 votes -
Something on Mars is producing gas usually made by living things on Earth
9 votes -
The science of migratory birds
7 votes -
A magician explains why we see what’s not there
6 votes -
Where disease-carrying mosquitoes will go in the future
5 votes -
Human sound systems are shaped by post-Neolithic changes in bite configuration
4 votes -
Human body might be able to pick up on Earth's magnetic field
9 votes -
Dormant viruses activate during spaceflight
6 votes -
The math that tells cells what they are
5 votes -
Cracking the mystery of egg shape
5 votes -
The ten best horns in the animal world: The definitive list
6 votes -
Brain-imaging modern people making Stone Age tools hints at evolution of human intelligence
6 votes -
Semi-identical twins identified for only the second time ever
14 votes -
Why humans have evolved to drink milk
15 votes -
Scientists release controversial genetically modified mosquitoes in high-security lab
16 votes -
A whale’s afterlife
8 votes -
World's biggest bee found alive
12 votes -
Zebra stripes prevent biting flies from making controlled landings
13 votes -
The devastating allure of medical miracles
7 votes -
The Australian government has formally recognised the extinction of a tiny island rodent, the Bramble Cay melomys - the first known demise of a mammal because of human-induced climate change.
The current news report: 'Our little brown rat': first climate change-caused mammal extinction The recent government statement: Stronger protection for threatened species The news report from...
The current news report: 'Our little brown rat': first climate change-caused mammal extinction
The recent government statement: Stronger protection for threatened species
The news report from 2016: First Mammal Species Goes Extinct Due to Climate Change
The scientific report from 2016: Confirmation of the extinction of the Bramble Cay melomys Melomys rubicola on Bramble Cay, Torres Strait (PDF)
8 votes -
Links between gut microbes and depression strengthened
10 votes -
How the body and mind talk to one another to understand the world
6 votes -
Why do South Asians have such high rates of heart disease?
7 votes -
The lizard and the egg: lizards break golden rule of biology
5 votes -
Are negative ions good for you?
8 votes -
How the brain creates a timeline of the past
8 votes -
Scientists are totally rethinking animal cognition
12 votes -
The case for transmissible Alzheimer's grows
14 votes -
Becoming - Watch a single cell become a complete organism in six pulsing minutes of timelapse
14 votes -
White-tailed spiders may be Australia's most misunderstood animals, caught in a tangled web of myth and hysteria. We take a closer look.
7 votes -
Rare half-male, half-female cardinal spotted in Pennsylvania
15 votes -
Where do kangaroos come from, why do they hop, and should we kill them?
6 votes -
Thousands more fish found dead at Menindee (New South Wales) as locals fear there will be 'none left'
Thousands more fish found dead at Menindee as locals fear there will be 'none left' Here's the previous story about the last mass death in the area: A million fish dead in 'distressing' outback...
Thousands more fish found dead at Menindee as locals fear there will be 'none left'
Here's the previous story about the last mass death in the area: A million fish dead in 'distressing' outback algal bloom at Menindee (New South Wales)
This is now the third mass death of fish in that area in the past month.
The state government's response: Menindee fish deaths 'out of NSW Government's hands' says Regional Water Minister Niall Blair
5 votes -
Biopunk Manifesto - Meredith Patterson
5 votes