The origin of an understudied hybrid population of poisonous frogs—highly endangered colourful animals that live deep in the Colombian jungle—is the result of natural breeding and not caused by wildlife traffickers moving them.
articles
Canadian Scientists First to Test Novel Diagnostic Tool for TB in Bison
To help protect Canada’s cattle and bison and maintain the country’s bovine tuberculosis (TB)-free status, scientists from University of Saskatchewan ...
Research Reverses The Reproductive Clock In Mice
Researchers have lifted fertility rates in older female mice with small doses of a metabolic compound that reverses the ageing process in eggs, offering hope for some women struggling to conceive.
This PhD Student Can Predict Where Species Will Go Extinct
Peter Soroye has always been interested in learning about the birds and the bees.
Bumble Bees Can Experience An Object Using One Sense And Later Recognize It Using Another
It is because our brain is able to store information in such a way that it can be retrieved by different senses.
Insects, Seaweed and Lab-grown Meat Could Be the Foods of the Future
The world is facing a major food crisis where both obesity and hunger are rising in the context of rapidly changing environments.