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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

    • Probiotic cream that ramps up heat production could prevent frostbite
      Tweaking our skin's microbiome via a probiotic cream could prevent frostbite and hypothermia in extreme environments
    • Mathematician wins 2026 Abel prize for solving 60-year-old mystery
      Gerd Faltings shocked mathematicians around the world for his 1983 proof of the Mordell conjecture, which brought together seemingly disparate mathematical fields
    • Physicists create formula for how many times you can fold a crêpe
      When you fold a flexible material such as a pancake or a tortilla, its behaviour depends on a competition between gravity and elasticity
    • Fluorescent ruby-like gems have been found on Mars for the first time
      The Perseverance rover has found tiny crystals that seem to be rubies or sapphires inside pebbles on Mars, where they have never been seen before
    • How worried should you be about ultra-processed foods?
      We are constantly told to watch out for the health risks of eating ultra-processed food, but should you be worried every time you sit down for a meal? Sam Wong takes a look at the evidence
  • Scientific American

    • Influential vaccine advisory panel ACIP may be ‘disbanded’ after lawsuit, says former vice chair

      For years, ACIP has advised U.S. vaccine policy. But after changes to its members made by health secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. were challenged in court, the Trump administration is apparently changing tack

    • What animal are you? Humans and animals tend to like the same mating calls

      Whether it’s a canary’s chirp or a treefrog’s croak, humans tend to prefer many of the same sounds that animals do themselves, a new study finds

    • When did plate tectonics on Earth begin? New research finds some of the earliest clues

      Scientists have found the oldest direct evidence for tectonic motion on Earth by more than half a billion years

    • How the Project Hail Mary directors brought science to the big screen

      Project Hail Mary directors Christopher Miller and Phil Lord talk about astrobiology, optimistic science fiction, heist films and handsome scientists

    • Drug retatrutide helps people lower blood sugar and lose weight, clinical trial results show

      Retatrutide is among a new class of weight-loss drugs that are being tested for effectiveness

  • Science News

    Science News
    • Earth’s continental plates were moving 3.48 billion years ago
      Magnetic crystals provide the earliest evidence yet of the plate tectonics that likely made Earth habitable, pushing its start back by 140 million years.
    • A new study questions when people first reached South America
      Data suggest people lived at Chile’s Monte Verde site thousands of years later than thought, challenging key “pre-Clovis” evidence. Not all agree.
    • How warming is shifting microbial worlds
      Climate change is affecting microbes, and that has implications for all life on Earth.
    • A static electricity mystery comes to the surface
      Seemingly random charging of identical materials depends on the carbonaceous molecules stuck to their surfaces
    • To make a ‘Snowball Earth,’ sci-fi moves fast. Geology is far slower
      The Day After Tomorrow, Snowpiercer, Snowball Earth: Such end-of-days visions of a frozen Earth are fantastical … but can contain a snowflake of truth.
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