When winter comes, populations of red-neck phalarope from the Western Palearctic migrate to two different destinations –the Pacific Ocean or the Arabian Sea- following an exceptional migratory divide strategy which has never been described in this geographical area.
articles
Ocean Acidification ‘Could Have Consequences for Millions’
Ocean acidification could have serious consequences for the millions of people globally whose lives depend on coastal protection, fisheries and aquaculture, a new publication suggests.
Improving the Lifetime of Bioelectrodes For Solar Energy Conversion
The use of proteins involved in the photosynthetic process enables the development of affordable and efficient devices for energy conversion.
Study: Deep-Ocean Creatures Living a “Feast-Or-Famine” Existence Because of Energy Fluxes
Scientists for the first time have tracked how much energy from plants and animals at the surface of the open ocean survives as particles drop to the seafloor more than two miles below, where they say a surprisingly robust ecosystem eagerly awaits.
Monkeys Can Barter But Can They Gamble?
You’re not likely to see them flooding casinos any time soon, but the University of Lethbridge’s Dr. Jean-Baptiste Leca and his colleagues are embarking on a study that may turn a population of Balinese long-tailed macaque monkeys into gamblers.
Creativity Is Not Just for the Young, Study Finds
If you believe that great scientists are most creative when they’re young, you are missing part of the story.