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Coloration Signals Among Male Locusts Reduce Mating Mistakes

A Texas A&M professor has identified a sex-adapted color-change gene that helps the insects distinguish between females and fellow males in swarms.

Researchers Report Major Advance in Semiconductor Materials

High Carrier Mobility in Cubic Boron Arsenide Offers Promise for Next-Gen Electronics

New Discoveries in Lupus Research

University of Houston Expert Identifies Biomarkers for Heart Disease and for Children with Lupus Nephritis

Unlocking Cell Nucleus Behaviors May Be Key In Cancer Fight

Researchers discovered how the nucleus of a cell preserves its shape, allowing cells to squeeze past pores and fibers in body tissues.

Research Reveals Issues With Fracture Healing In People With Down Syndrome

A Texas A&M study sheds light on a "major" health concern for a population already facing bone density loss.

Texas A&M AgriLife Develops New Bioremediation Material To Clean Up ‘Forever Chemicals’

The sustainable, cheaper method has potential for commercial applications.

New Evidence For Liquid Water Beneath The South Polar Ice Cap Of Mars

An international team of researchers has revealed new evidence for the possible existence of liquid water beneath the south polar ice cap of Mars.

Set Up Reserve Lab Capacity Now For Faster Response To Next Pandemic, Say Researchers

Researchers say a ‘human bottleneck’, due to historical cuts in public health funding, delayed the UK’s scale-up of COVID-19 testing in the early stages of the country’s pandemic response.

Seawater Could Have Provided Phosphorous Required For Emerging Life

The problem of how phosphorus became a universal ingredient for life on Earth may have been solved by researchers from the University of Cambridge and the University of Cape Town, who have recreated primordial seawater containing the element in the lab.

New Phases Of Water Detected

Water can be liquid, gas or ice, right? Think again.

‘Synthetic’ Embryo With Brain And Beating Heart Grown From Stem Cells By Cambridge Scientists

Researchers from the University of Cambridge have created model embryos from mouse stem cells that form a brain, a beating heart, and the foundations of all the other organs of the body – a new avenue for recreating the first stages of life.

Pheasant Meat Sold For Food Found To Contain Many Tiny Shards Of Toxic Lead

Eating pheasant killed using lead shot is likely to expose consumers to raised levels of lead in their diet, even if the meat is carefully prepared to remove the shotgun pellets and the most damaged tissue.

Risk Of Volcano Catastrophe ‘A Roll Of The Dice’, Say Experts

While funding is pumped into preventing low-probability scenarios such as asteroid collision, the far more likely threat of a large volcanic eruption is close to ignored – despite much that could be done to reduce the risks, say researchers.

DNA Profiling Solves Australian Rabbit Plague Puzzle

A new study proves that a single introduction of 24 rabbits shipped from England in 1859 caused the infamous invasion and argues that wild genetic traits gave these animals a devastating advantage over earlier arrivals.

Lava From 2021 Icelandic Eruption Gives Rare View Of Deep Churnings Beneath Volcano

After centuries without volcanic activity, Iceland’s Reykjanes peninsula sprang to life in 2021 when lava erupted from the Fagradalsfjall volcano. New research involving the University of Cambridge helps us see what is going on deep beneath the volcano by reading the chemistry of lavas and volcanic gases almost as they were erupted.

Shaking The Dinosaur Family Tree: How Did ‘Bird-Hipped’ Dinosaurs Evolve?

Researchers have conducted a new analysis of the origins of ‘bird-hipped’ dinosaurs – the group which includes iconic species such as Triceratops – and found that they likely evolved from a group of animals known as silesaurs, which were first identified two decades ago.

Shift Work Increases The Severity Of Strokes Later In Life

New research finds living against our internal body clocks can damage long-term health by altering gut and brain interactions.

With Changing Climate, Global Lake Evaporation Loss Larger Than Previously Thought

Texas A&M researchers have created a new dataset that quantifies trends of evaporative water loss from 1.4 million global lakes and artificial reservoirs.

Scientists Uncover Key Factor In Human Brain Development

Texas A&M College of Medicine researchers have answered a major question about how the neocortex develops, offering insights into the underlying causes of intellectual disabilities.