Latest science news in Biology & Nature

Real milk proteins, no cows: Engineered bacteria pave the way for vegan cheese and yogurt

23 weeks ago from

Bacteria are set to transform the future of dairy-free milk products. Scientists have successfully engineered E. coli to produce key milk proteins essential for cheese and yogurt production, without using...

Eyes in the sky: Using drones to safeguard our forests

23 weeks ago from

Originally from Nepal, Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury (UC) Ph.D. candidate Shiva Pariyar is breaking new ground with remote sensing research that could help reduce economic...

Why the UK's butterflies are booming in 2025

23 weeks ago from

Biodiversity is in rapid decline, across the UK and globally. Butterflies are excellent for helping us understand these changes. Where butterfly communities are rich and diverse, so too is the...

Scientists uncover hidden bone structures in the skin of Australian monitor lizards

23 weeks ago from

Beneath the scales of Australia's iconic monitor lizards (commonly known as goannas), scientists have discovered an unexpected secret: a hidden layer of bony skin structures known as osteoderms. These structures,...

This plant peacefully houses warring ant species by giving them their own apartments

23 weeks ago from

A new study shows that how Squamellaria plants in Fiji house warring species of ants by building them their own little walled-off compartments with separate entrances. When researchers removed those walls,...

Slow and steady progress in decade-long project to save B.C.'s only native turtle

23 weeks ago from

The 10-year project began in 2019, although the zoo was releasing turtles before that and has freed around 3,000 of them over the past decade.

How researchers are mapping genetics in N.B. to detect inherited diseases sooner

23 weeks ago from

Researchers at Vitalité are studying the genes of New Brunswickers to find common variants they may have inherited from their parents. The hope is that with a full map of...

For these dolphins, using sponges to dig up fish is a family tradition

23 weeks ago from

Dolphins off the coast of Australia are swimming around with sponges on their noses. But unlike the orcas who wear salmon on their heads, “sponging” isn’t a fashion statement or...

GPS ear tags help track bison at Sask.'s Buffalo Pound Provincial Park

23 weeks ago from

Buffalo Pound Provincial Park is believed to be the first provincial park in Saskatchewan using GPS ear tags to track the location of bison.

Spotting rare right whale off Newfoundland had this tour guide 'Out of my skin excited'

23 weeks ago from

There are less than 370 North Atlantic right whales left in the world — and a local man spotted one off the southern Avalon Peninsula earlier this month.

SeaWorld veterinarians euthanize orca that had lung disease

23 weeks ago from

SAN DIEGO (AP) -- SeaWorld euthanized one of the entertainment company's last killer whales to come from the wild, marking the third orca...

Science Says: DNA test results may not change health habits

23 weeks ago from

NEW YORK (AP) -- If you learned your DNA made you more susceptible to getting a disease, wouldn't you work to stay healthy?...

Weird 'Obelisks' Found in Human Gut May be Virus-Like Entities

23 weeks ago from

Rod-shaped fragments of RNA called “obelisks” were discovered in gut and mouth bacteria for the first time

What Apple's New Vision Pro Headset Might Do to Our Brain

23 weeks ago from

The release of Apple’s mixed-reality headset raises questions about hours spent in a virtual replacement of our world

Chimpanzees and Bonobos Have Surprisingly Different Parenting Styles

23 weeks ago from

Chimpanzee “helicopter moms” often protect their offspring from bullies, but bonobo moms are more hands-off

An Evolutionary 'Big Bang' Explains Why Snakes Come in So Many Strange Varieties

23 weeks ago from

Snakes saw a burst of adaptation about 128 million years ago that led to them exploding in diversity and evolving up to three times faster than lizards

Scientists create safer pig organs with goal of transplants for humans

23 weeks ago from

(Reuters) - Scientists at a Massachusetts company seeking to make pig organs safe enough to be transplanted into humans have used gene-editing technology to clone piglets that lack a potentially...

Majority of fruit fly immunity studies can be replicated, huge analysis finds

23 weeks ago from

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Paleontologist to lead U.S. national academy

23 weeks ago from

Neil Shubin, an evolutionary biologist best known for discovering an important fish fossil, has been nominated to head the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS). He will take over next year with the...

Molecular fossils offer first glimpse of how life survived Snowball Earth

23 weeks ago from

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A mushroom that escaped from kitchens could be harming North American wildlife

23 weeks ago from

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How a string of deadly shark attacks made a remote island a hub of lifesaving research

23 weeks ago from

Related podcast Studying a shark-haunted island, and upgrading our microbiomes with engineered bacteria ...

A taste for microbes

23 weeks ago from

Science & Tech A taste for microbes A video of a brooding octopus mother interacting with a fake egg that was doped with a microbial molecule isolated from rejected octopus egg bacteria....

Stealing a ‘superpower’

23 weeks ago from

Corey Allard in his lab at Harvard Medical School.Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer Science & Tech Stealing a ‘superpower’ Study finds some sea slugs consume algae, incorporate photosynthetic parts into their own bodies to...

Forecasting the next variant

23 weeks ago from

Health Forecasting the next variant Professor Eugene Shakhnovich (from left), Dianzhuo (John) Wang, and Vaibhav Mohanty worked together on the studies.Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer Yahya Chaudhry Harvard Correspondent July 3, 2025 5 min read Harvard...

For biologists studying tiny worms, new technologies make big improvements

23 weeks ago from

Two new technologies are helping scientists understand new aspects of organ and nervous system development in C. elegans. One allows them to image worms developing in a natural environment, while...

New study resolves the structure of the human protein that causes cystic fibrosis

23 weeks ago from

In order to better understand how genetic mutations give rise to cystic fibrosis, researchers need to map the protein responsible for the disorder. The new structure has led to new...

For microbes fighting viruses, a fast response means a better defense

23 weeks ago from

Researchers have found that the bacterial immune system targets an invading virus as soon as it enters the cell. This discovery answers a long-standing question about how microbes defend themselves....