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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

    • Gas from Uranus reveals it has an icy centre
      Carbon monoxide in Uranus's deep atmosphere indicates that the planet contains more ice than rock, suggesting it formed more like Neptune than we thought
    • Remarkable fossils rewrite the story of how animals conquered the land
      Palaeontologists have found new evidence that the early ancestors of amphibians, reptiles and mammals did not have a larval stage with external gills like modern frogs or salamanders
    • Almost the whole of Japan moved eastward after 2011 earthquake
      An extremely unusual tectonic movement took place 15 minutes after the Tohoku earthquake in 2011, causing almost the whole of Japan to move 5 millimetres to the east
    • Why El Niño’s impacts on the UK are hard to predict
      A planet-warming El Niño climate phase has begun, but while the phenomenon can influence Europe's weather through long-distance atmospheric teleconnections, the effects are often uncertain
    • Complex life on Earth may last 500 million years longer than expected
      As the sun expands over the coming billions of years, Earth will become inhospitable to any life more complex than a microbe – but that might take longer than we thought
  • Scientific American

    • Scientists discover remnants of Jellyfish Nebula’s ‘sibling’ supernova

      Astronomers may have found the remains of two long-dead stellar siblings

    • In world first, a man living with HIV received a lung transplant from an HIV-positive donor

      This operation opens the door to treating more people living with HIV who have end-stage organ disease

    • Ancient human ancestors may have first used fire 1.79 million years ago

      A new method that detects whether bones have been burned reveals Homo erectus brought fires into caves far earlier than previous evidence had suggested

    • JWST catches cosmic imposters spoofing faraway galaxies

      The James Webb Space Telescope has found nearby brown dwarfs masquerading as far-distant galaxies. The discovery reinforces how, in astronomy, what you see isn’t always what you get

    • Why some irrational numbers are more irrational than others

      The quest to approximate irrational numbers with fractions reveals hidden patterns, surprising hierarchies and enduring mathematical mysteries

  • Science News

    Science News
    • A textbook assumption about early land vertebrates may be wrong
      Three species that lived about 308 million years ago challenge the idea that the first land vertebrates underwent amphibian-like metamorphosis.
    • A 2011 earthquake bounced a seismic wave off Earth’s core, nudging Japan east
      The wave's round trip to Earth's core set off a fault slip along Japan's plate boundaries, revealing a seismic hazard scientists hadn't recognized.
    • The truth about brain rot, according to science
      Emerging research suggests overusing digital devices can be harmful, especially to mental health. But does being overly online truly rot our brains?
    • A deadly fungus that can infect cats and people is spreading
      It’s just a matter of time before Sporothrix brasiliensis reaches the U.S. a CDC expert says.
    • A ‘Super El Niño’ may be on the way. What does that mean?
      Past super El Niños have brought bad flooding, deadly fires and disease outbreaks. Climate experts already expect “shockingly high” temps this winter.
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