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Mitotype PCR genetic test results of bee specimens (feral and managed hives) are updated weekly.
Target goal of 1,000 hives to be tested in 2024.
  • New Scientist

    • Some Arctic warming ‘irreversible’ even if we cut atmospheric CO2
      Efforts to lower the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere may come too late to prevent long-term changes to the Arctic
    • Mars may once have had a much larger moon
      There are two small moons in orbit around Mars today, but both may be remnants of a much larger moon that had enough of a gravitational pull to drive tides in the Red Planet's lost lakes and seas
    • Qubits break quantum limit to encode information for longer
      Controlling qubits with quantum superpositions allows them to dramatically violate a fundamental limit and encode information for about five times longer during quantum computations
    • De-extinction was big news in 2025 – but didn't live up to the hype
      Biologists poured cold water on Colossal Biosciences’ claim to have brought the dire wolf back from extinction, and some worry the overblown headlines will undermine conservation work
    • Disney and OpenAI have made a surprise deal – what happens next?
      In a stunning reversal, Disney has changed tack with regard to safeguarding its copyrighted characters from incorporation into AI tools – perhaps a sign that no one can stem the tide of AI
  • Scientific American

    • Trump Officials Keep Comparing the U.S.’s Vaccine Schedule to Denmark’s. They’re Missing the Point

      The U.S.’s and Denmark’s health systems are starkly different, so it makes sense that their vaccination schedules would differ, too

    • How Conifers and Christmas Trees Secretly Shaped U.S. History

      Christmas trees—and conifers in general—have made some surprising cameos throughout U.S. history, author Trent Preszler reveals in his book Evergreen

    • Why Humanoid Robots and Embodied AI Still Struggle in the Real World

      General-purpose robots remain rare not for a lack of hardware but because we still can’t give machines the physical intuition humans learn through experience

    • New Cell Transplant Therapy Restores Insulin Production in Patient with Type 1 Diabetes

      Scientists have successfully transplanted gene-edited insulin-producing cells into a man with type 1 diabetes—allowing him to make some of his own insulin without immunosuppressants.

    • What Is 'Spoofing'? How a U.S.-Seized Oil Tanker Reportedly Tried to Evade Detection

      An oil tanker seized by the U.S. this week reportedly used a technique that scrambled its location, but new advanced visual tracking can help expose such ships’ true coordinates

  • Science News

    Science News
    • Mosquitos use it to suck blood. Researchers used it to 3-D print
      A mosquito proboscis repurposed as a 3-D printing nozzle can print filaments around 20 micrometers wide, half the width of a fine human hair.
    • ‘Black Religion in the Madhouse’ examines psychiatry and race post-Civil War
      In the aftermath of slavery, white psychiatrists diagnosed Black people with “religious excitement” and claimed they were unfit for freedom.
    • Early Earth’s belly held onto its water
      When the early Earth’s magma ocean crystallized 4.4 billion years ago, the deep mantle trapped an ocean’s worth of water, scientists say.
    • How these strange cells may explain the origin of complex life
      The tiny pantheon known as the Asgard archaea bear traits that hint at how plants, animals and fungi emerged on Earth.
    • Bats might be the next bird flu wild card
      Finding that vampire bats along Peru’s coast carried H5N1 antibodies raises concerns that multiple bat species could become reservoirs for the virus.
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