Mary the elephant shows off her hose-showering skills. Credit: Urban et al./Current Biology An Asian elephant named Mary ...
Transformative technologies that drive growth and jobs will benefit from new investment by the government’s national research ...
Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching in high temperatures, according to a new study.
Vampire bats rely on amino acids from their blood diet to fuel their exercise, scientists discovered after observing the ...
Google DeepMind releases AlphaFold 3's source code to academics, marking a significant advance in AI-powered molecular biology and drug discovery, while balancing open science with commercial ...
Hiding beneath scrap metal and abandoned cars in the Australian desert, you can find an ordinary-looking species of gecko ...
Pando is the world's largest tree. Its name means "I spread" in Latin, and it does indeed spread: The organism has given rise ...
When active filaments are exposed to localized illumination, they accumulate into stable structures along the boundaries of ...
Temperatures have become too warm in the southern parts of the Gulf of Maine for kelp forests, a foundation for marine life.
Producing herbal medicines on an industrial scale is challenging. However, a team of bioengineers from Kobe University has ...
Researchers reveal that metabolic enzymes known for their roles in energy production and nucleotide synthesis are taking on unexpected 'second jobs' within the nucleus, orchestrating critical ...
Mary, a 54-year-old Asian elephant at the Berlin Zoo, is the “queen of showering,” but her companion Anchali seems to have figured out how to exploit that habit to play pranks ...