Scientists develop plan to save freshwater crocodiles from toxic cane toads
A freshwater crocodile eats a rigged cane toad bait. Credit: Georgia Ward-Fear Scientists from Macquarie University, working with Bunuba Aboriginal ...
A freshwater crocodile eats a rigged cane toad bait. Credit: Georgia Ward-Fear Scientists from Macquarie University, working with Bunuba Aboriginal ...
Once mixed with water and allowed to separate, the solvent rises to the surface, carrying the nanoplastics into its molecular ...
The stone tool was glued into a handle of liquid bitumen with 55% ocher. It is no longer sticky and ...
Credit: University of Chicago Sometimes our bodies need a boost. Millions of Americans rely on pacemakers, small devices that regulate ...
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public domain Fashioned from the same element found in sand and covered in intricate patterns, electronic chips power ...
Graphical summary. Credit: Molecular cell (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2024.01.022 Are you sick and tired of being sick and tired? A UNLV-led ...
Reconstructed satellite tracks of leatherback turtles tagged off Massachusetts in summer (A) and North Carolina in spring (B) between 2017 ...
Younger species are generally at greater risk of extinction. A new model from the University of Kansas shows this new ...
The first-ever photograph of the Yellow-crested Shrike, or Prionops alberti, was taken during a recent expedition led by scientists from ...
Sperm, shown inside each round cell, were not generated when the mice were taking the HDAC inhibitor drug (top right), ...
© 2023 Manhattan Tribune -By Millennium Press
© 2023 Manhattan Tribune -By Millennium Press