Even a single nearby light can throw off the butterfly’s internal compass, UC biologists say
articles
New Breathable Gas Sensors May Improve Monitoring of Health, Environment
Newly developed flexible, porous and highly sensitive nitrogen dioxide sensors that can be applied to skin and clothing
In the Wake of Coup, Gold Mining Boom Is Ravaging Myanmar
In a village in Kachin State, Myanmar, bordering China’s Yunnan province, a day laborer named Naw had earned just enough in the sugarcane and cornfields to feed his family of six before pandemic-induced border closures left him struggling to find work.
Baby Corals Are Just as Susceptible as Adults to Deadly Reef Disease, Study Finds
Baby corals are just as susceptible as adults to a deadly disease that has been spreading across Florida’s reefs since 2014, according to a new study led by scientists at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science.
HZDR Team Comes Across Unexpected Flow Behavior in Liquid Metals
Temperatures deep inside the Earth are so high that part of its iron core is liquid. This liquid iron is in constant motion, continuously churning and circulating.
New Study Links Red Tides and Dead Zones Off West Coast of Florida
A new study found that when red tides began in early summer and continued into the fall, low oxygen areas—or dead zones— were more likely to also occur. T