Biology
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 17-Dec-2025 16:11 ET (17-Dec-2025 21:11 GMT/UTC)
It takes a village: Chimpanzee babies do better when their moms have social connections
Duke UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- iScience
- Funder
- Jane Goodall Institute
Human fishing reshaped Caribbean reef food webs, 7000-year old exposed fossilized reefs reveal
Smithsonian Tropical Research InstitutePeer-Reviewed Publication
A groundbreaking study of 7000-year-old exposed coral reef fossils reveals how human fishing has transformed Caribbean reef food webs: as sharks declined by 75% and fish preferred by humans became smaller, prey fish species flourished —doubling in numbers and growing larger. This unprecedented look into prehistoric reef communities shows how the loss of top predators cascaded through the entire food web, shifting the balance amongst coral reefs
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Groundbreaking analysis provides day-by-day insight into prehistoric plankton’s capacity for change
University of SouthamptonPeer-Reviewed Publication
Scientists at the University of Southampton have developed a new way of analysing fossils allowing them to see how creatures from millions of years ago were shaped by their environment on a day-to-day basis for the first time.
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Funder
- Natural Environment Research Council
Genomes reveal the Norwegian lemming as one of the youngest mammal species
Stockholm UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Funder
- Carl Tryggers Foundation, Vetenskapsrådet, Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas, European Research Council, The Bolin Centre for Climate Research, the Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences, Riksmusei Vänner, Längmanska Kulturföreningen, Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing (SNIC), the Uppsala Multidisciplinary Centre for Advanced Computational Science, the AWaP (Agence Wallonne du Patrimoine), the Ministère de la Région wallonne, the Trou Al’Wesse excavation, the National Institute of Health, Cambridge University, UK
Hurricane ecology research reveals critical vulnerabilities of coastal ecosystems
American Institute of Biological SciencesPeer-Reviewed Publication
A recently published article in the journal BioScience reveals that endangered longleaf pine ecosystems—among North America's most biodiverse habitats—face mounting threats from intensifying hurricane regimes driven by climate change. An interdisciplinary team of authors headed by Nicole Zampieri (Tall Timbers and The Jones Center at Ichauway) describe the urgent situation: The North American Coastal Plain was once characterized by extensive longleaf pine savannas covering approximately 36 million hectares. Today, these ecosystems "now occupy less than 5% of their historic distribution, primarily because of habitat fragmentation, widespread unsustainable logging, land-use conversion, and fire suppression during the past half millennium."
- Journal
- BioScience
THC undetectable after withdrawal period in cows fed hemp byproduct
Oregon State UniversityPeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry