‘Cull of the Wild’ questions sacrificing wildlife in the name of conservation
In his new book, ecologist Hugh Warwick seeks middle ground in the waging battle that is wildlife management.
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Two centuries on, scientists are still seeking a proof of the Second Law and why heat always flows from hot to cold.
In his new book, ecologist Hugh Warwick seeks middle ground in the waging battle that is wildlife management.
Mirror-image nerve cells, tight bonds between neuron pairs and surprising axon swirls abound in a bit of gray matter smaller than a grain of rice.
Growing out patches of grass can lure adult butterflies and moths with nectar and offer lawn mower–free havens for toddler caterpillars.
Scientists and journalists share a core belief in questioning, observing and verifying to reach the truth. Science News reports on crucial research and discovery across science disciplines. We need your financial support to make it happen – every contribution makes a difference.
Deaf experimental psychologist Rain Bosworth has found that babies are primed to learn sign language just like spoken language.
Rakus the orangutan appeared to be treating a cut to his face with a plant that’s also used in traditional human medicine.
An experimental weight loss procedure blasts the stomach lining with heat to curb hunger and cut pounds.
Physicists haven’t yet ruled out the possibility that the universe has a complicated topology in which space loops back around on itself.
The new low-tech transportation method could help scientists in Africa assess if malaria-carrying mosquitoes are resistant to a common insecticide.
A worm preserved in 99-million-year-old amber resembles modern flatworms in shark intestines. The rare finding has scientists stumped.
Scientists successfully entangled quantum memories linked by telecommunications fibers across two different urban environments.
Hundreds, not thousands, occupied the Turkish site of Çatalhöyük nearly 9,000 years ago, undermining arguments for a Neolithic social revolution.
By 2050, as many as an additional 246 million adults 69 and older could experience temperature extremes that exceed 37.5° Celsius.
Rats and fleas previously got all the blame, but humans’ own parasites could be involved.
When dice snakes fake their death to avoid predators, those that use a combination of blood, poop and musk spend less time pretending to be dead.
In response to recordings of echolocating bats, tiger beetles emit noises that mimic toxic moths that bats avoid.
An experiment studying the neutrino’s “wave packet” sets a limit on the uncertainty of the subatomic particle’s position.
The moon of Jupiter is considered one of the most promising places to look for life, but its subsurface ocean may be less habitable than once thought.
Mars Sample Return and missions to study other planets and celestial bodies, including lunar efforts, face big cuts and delays.
Archaeologist Eric H. Cline’s new book reconstructs ancient examples of societal resilience and fragility that have modern-day relevance.
The solar wind and sunspots seem to give lightning a boost. But exactly how solar activity stimulates strikes is an enduring mystery.
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