Scientists exploring a World War II weapons dumpsite in the Baltic Sea have discovered swarms of sea creatures thriving on the surfaces of long-abandoned explosives thought to be toxic to marine life.
According to a new study by the EHU's BEZ-EKOFISKO research group, the choice of using eucalyptus in forestry needs to be reconsidered. The research highlights an urgent need to conserve and restore ...
More marine life is living on some World War II munitions disposed of on the Baltic Sea's seabed than on the sediment ...
Our rapidly changing world requires experts trained in global biodiversity and its conservation. The EEOB Option emphasizes organismal diversity, ecology, and evolution in courses with outdoor field ...
Warming temperatures have prompted a rare hybridization of a blue jay and green jay, according to researchers at the University of Texas.
Marine life is unexpectedly flourishing on discarded World War II munitions in the Baltic Sea. A new study has found that ...
It's been 10 years since a white supremacist shot and killed nine people studying the Bible at the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina. In a statement that ...
The carbon cycle is a natural process that plays a crucial role in Earth's climate system. However, human activities have ...
Scientists conducted a multiomics study of the world’s oldest verified person (117 years), uncovering protective genetic, ...
Researchers reviewing evidence in NeuroSci show how dietary AGEs and their interaction with RAGE drive oxidative stress, ...
A major milestone for steppe restoration was reached as a group of globally endangered kulans (Asiatic wild ass) were released from the “Alibi” Reintroduction Center into the vast landscapes of the ...
This work, combining behavioural genetics and calcium imaging, provides evidence for a form of learning in Drosophila that derives solely from direct or (optogenetically induced) phantom experience of ...