News

Forest Without Rarthworms
Feb 29, 2012 03:36 PM EST

Study Shows Earthworms to Blame for Decline of Ovenbirds in Northern Midwest Forests

A recent decline in ovenbirds (Seiurus aurocapilla), a ground-nesting migratory songbird, in forests in the northern Midwest United States is being linked by scientists to a seemingly unlikely culprit: earthworms.

Satish Kumar Pillai, University of California San Francisco
Feb 29, 2012 03:26 PM EST

Old Drug Reveals New Tricks

A drug once taken by people with HIV/AIDS but long ago shelved after newer, modern antiretroviral therapies became available has now shed light on how the human body uses its natural immunity to fight the virus—work that could help uncover new targets for drugs.

La Selva Geothermal System
Feb 29, 2012 02:42 PM EST

Contamination of La Selva Geothermal System in Girona, Spain

Monitoring the construction of wells, avoid over-exploiting cold groundwater close to hot groundwater, and controlling mineral water extraction. These are the recommendations from the Polytechnic University of Catalonia and the University of Barcelona, after analysing the contamination of La Selva g...

Frozen Continent
Feb 29, 2012 02:27 PM EST

3 Scientific Expeditions Seek treasure Under the Ice in the Frozen Continent

In a modern iteration of the great age of Antarctic exploration of the 19th and 20th centuries, three teams of scientists are rushing to reach not the South Pole like Roald Amundsen, Robert Falcon Scott and Ernest Shackleton, but lakes deep below the surface of the Frozen Continent believed to hold ...

Camels Not to be Blamed for Warming of Earth, Study
Feb 29, 2012 02:12 PM EST

UF Scientists Name New Ancient Camels from Panama Canal Excavation

The discovery of two new extinct camel species by University of Florida scientists sheds new light on the history of the tropics, a region containing more than half the world's biodiversity and some of its most important ecosystems.

Clockwork Green Team
Feb 29, 2012 01:58 PM EST

Studying the Importance of Biological Rhythms for the Ecological Performance of Plants

The central question of the 5-year project starting in April 2012 is whether these "arrhythmic" plants whose circadian clocks no longer work can survive in the wild. In other words, much like the night-shifted dysfunctional character in the movie Clockwork Orange whose behavioral abnormalities could...

Laboratory
Feb 29, 2012 01:49 PM EST

LSUSHC Research Identifies New Experimental Drug for Stroke

Research led by Nicolas Bazan, MD, PhD, Boyd Professor and Director of the Neuroscience Center of Excellence at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, has found that a synthetic molecule protected the brain in a model of experimental stroke. Dr. Bazan was issued a patent on the molecule called LAU-...

Bones
Feb 29, 2012 01:15 PM EST

Foot Bones Allow Researchers to Determine Sex of Skeletal Remains

Law enforcement officials who are tasked with identifying a body based on partial skeletal remains have a new tool at their disposal. A new paper from North Carolina State University researchers details how to determine the biological sex of skeletal remains based solely on measurements of the seven...

Lodged Corn
Feb 29, 2012 01:07 PM EST

Researcher Tracks Agricultural Overuse of Bug-killing Technology

High corn prices are leading many growers to plant corn every year and to overuse pesticides and other bug-killing technology to maximize yields, researchers report. In many instances, pesticides are applied without scouting fields to see if they are needed, violating a bedrock principle of integrat...

Prescription Painkiller Overdose Deaths Increases by 400 Percent Among Women Since 1999: CDC
Feb 29, 2012 12:49 PM EST

New Hybrid 'NOSH Aspirin' as Possible Anti-Cancer Drug

Scientists have combined two new "designer" forms of aspirin into a hybrid substance that appears more effective than either of its forebears in controlling the growth of several forms of cancer in laboratory tests. Their report on the new NOSH-aspirin, so named because it releases nitric oxide (NO)...

Endurance Runners 10 Times More Likely to Die of Heat Stroke
Feb 29, 2012 12:13 PM EST

Winning Makes People More Aggressive Toward the Defeated

In this world, there are winners and losers – and, for your own safety, it is best to fear the winners. A new study found that winners – those who outperformed others on a competitive task – acted more aggressively against the people they beat than the losers did against the vi...

Nanofibers
Feb 29, 2012 12:05 PM EST

Nanofiber Breakthrough Holds Promise for Medicine and Microprocessors

A new method for creating nanofibers made of proteins, developed by researchers at Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly), promises to greatly improve drug delivery methods for the treatment of cancers, heart disorders and Alzheimer's disease, as well as aid in the regeneration of h...

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