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ZME Science on MSNPlants can “hear” pollinators and make more nectar when there’s buzzing aroundPlants are not just passive organisms. Snapdragons may not hear exactly, but they respond to pollinator vibrations.
An energetic OneMIT Commencement ceremony today featured calls for MIT's newest graduates to have a positive impact on ...
Gusts of wind blow through the Bryant Street alley in San Francisco's Mission District, sending tablecloths flapping ...
Lerzan Aksoy is dean, George N. Jean Ph.D. chair and professor of marketing at Fordham University’s Gabelli School of ...
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TheCollector on MSNWhy H.G. Wells’ “The Time Machine” Is a Timely Warning to the WorldIn his first published work of fiction, the British writer and futurist Herbert George Wells (1866-1946) shot to literary ...
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Documented on MSNCaribbean Immigrant Nurses: The Backbone of New York’s Healthcare SystemFor Nurses Month, we highlight the stories of immigrant nurses from the Caribbean who navigate language barriers, immigration ...
The light trap, named MothWatcher, consists of a wooden box with a built-in camera, flash, and a special LepiLED lamp. This LED light source emits UV, blue, green, and white light to attract moths and ...
If there’s something strange in your neighborhood — a bump in the night, a voice in the wind or a spirit in your closet, you ...
A research team led by Prof. Xu Cao from the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology (IGDB) of the Chinese Academy of ...
Why,” I asked my biology professor some 45 years ago, “do lynx cross a frozen river at the end of a sand bar?” ...
There is a concerning decline in street-level greenery in cities, raising important questions about urban resilience, climate ...
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