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  • Top Stories
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  • Climate
  • Energy
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    • Agriculture
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  • A Key to Climate Stabilization Could Be Buried Deep in the Mud, FSU Researchers Suggest

    Earth’s peatland soils store a lot of carbon — about as much as currently flows freely through the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. As global temperatures rise, scientists worry that the planet’s grip on these carbon reservoirs could weaken, unleashing a “carbon bomb” that could further destabilize Earth’s climate systems.

  • Surviving Plants and Insects Are Tougher Than We Think

    Insect pollinators that have survived the impacts of agricultural intensification may have a greater ability to resist future environmental changes than previously thought, a new study has found.

  • Increasing the Performance and Useful Service Life of Lithium Batteries in Renewable Energy Facilities

    Variations in power generation using renewable sources, such as solar and wind power, lead to control problems in the electricity grid. The technology of lithium batteries is a candidate offering great potential in solving these problems. An industrial engineer at the Public University of Navarre (NUP/UPNA) has come up with a new management system that allows good performance of these batteries to be achieved and their useful service life to be preserved when they are connected to a renewable facility for the purposes of storing the electrical power produced.

  • Global Trade in Exotic Pets Threatens Endangered Parrots Through the Spread of a Virus

    Beak and feather disease virus (BFDV) in wild parrot populations has been detected in eight new countries, raising concerns for threatened species.

  • The Nocturnal Pollinators: Scientists Reveal the Secret Life of Moths

    Scientists have discovered that moths may play a much broader role as plant pollinators than previously suspected.

  • Hardwired for Laziness? Tests Show the Human Brain Must Work Hard to Avoid Sloth

    If getting to the gym seems like a struggle, a University of British Columbia researcher wants you to know this: the struggle is real, and it’s happening inside your brain.

  • Zika Vaccine Shows Promise for Treating Deadly Brain Cancer

    An international team of researchers has successfully deployed a Zika virus vaccine to target and kill human glioblastoma brain cancer stem cells, which had been transplanted into mice. In a study published this week in mBio®, an open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, the team shows that a live, attenuated version of the Zika virus could form the basis of a new treatment option for this fatal brain cancer. 

  • Drugs That Stop Mosquitoes Catching Malaria Could Help Eradicate the Disease

    Researchers have identified compounds that could prevent malaria parasites from being able to infect mosquitoes, halting the spread of disease.

  • Household cleaners may cause obesity in young children

    Killing germs around the house may have a surprisingly negative impact on young children’s waistlines.

  • Aspirin Found Not to Prolong Healthy Aging

    Taking a low-dose aspirin daily does not prolong healthy living in older adults, according to findings from the ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) trial published online Sept. 16 in three papers in The New England Journal of Medicine.

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