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ENN ENN ENN Environmental News Network -- Know Your Environment
03
Thu, Jul
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  • NASA’s TESS Mission Spots Its 1st Star-shredding Black Hole

    For the first time, NASA’s planet-hunting Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) watched a black hole tear apart a star in a cataclysmic phenomenon called a tidal disruption event. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Predicting a Hurricane’s Intensity Can Prove Difficult – But Very Important

    Rapid intensification is a serious challenge for the prediction of hurricane intensity. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Scientists Finally Find Superconductivity in Exactly the Place They've Been Looking for Decades

    Researchers at Stanford University and the Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory say they have found the first, long-sought proof that a decades-old scientific model of material behavior can be used to simulate and understand high-temperature superconductivity ­– an important step toward producing and controlling this puzzling phenomenon at will.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Study Champions Inland Fisheries as Rural Nutrition Hero

    Synthesizing new data and assessment methods is showing how freshwater fish is an invisible superhero in the global challenge to feed poor rural populations in many areas of the world.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • First Fully Rechargeable Carbon Dioxide Battery with Carbon Neutrality

    Lithium-carbon dioxide batteries are attractive energy storage systems because they have a specific energy density that is more than seven times greater than commonly used lithium-ion batteries. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Finds Tropical Storm Karen’s Strength on Western Side

    NASA’s Terra satellite captured an image of Tropical Storm Karen on Sept. 26 and found the strongest thunderstorms west of center.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Scientists Find Potential Diagnostic Tool, Treatment for Parkinson’s Disease

    Investigators at the Stanford University School of Medicine have pinpointed a molecular defect that seems almost universal among patients with Parkinson’s disease and those at a high risk of acquiring it.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Thousands of Meltwater Lakes Mapped on East Antarctic Ice Sheet

    More than 65,000 meltwater lakes have been discovered on the edge of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet by our researchers.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Viruses as Modulators of Interactions in Marine Ecosystems

    The Oceans not only host large predators such as sharks or orcas. Even in the realm of the microscopic some unicellular species consume others. Choanoflagellates belong to these unicellular predators. They are widespread in the ocean and eat bacteria and small algae. Choanoflagellates are considered among the closest living unicellular relatives of animals and can transition to a multicellular state. For that reason they are often studied for understanding how multicellular organisms like us came to be.

    Now, a team of scientists led by Professor Alexandra Z. Worden (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Germany/Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, MBARI, USA) has provided the first insights in the interaction between choanoflagellates and viruses. In a multi-year intensive effort the team was able to detect the genome of a giant virus in these unicellular predators. The virus had a genome size and gene numbers comparable to small bacteria. More surprising than the genome size were the many functions it encodes and brings to the host. The study has just been published in the international journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA.

    For the study the scientists repeatedly went to sea with high-tech instrumentation and the goal to look at all the predatory unicellular organisms in the water using a laser-based visualization system. Then they individually separated these cells from other microbes in a process called single-cell sorting. “Each individual predator from the wild was then sequenced – and the single-cell sorts from one Pacific Ocean sample were dominated by an uncultured species of choanoflagellate”, Professor Worden explains.

    Read more at: Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel (Geomar)

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Researchers Discover How a Protein Connecting Calcium and Plant Hormone Regulates Plant Growth

    Plant growth is strongly shaped by environmental conditions like light, humidity, drought and salinity, among other factors. But how plants integrate environmental signals and the developmental processes encoded in their genes remains a mystery.

    >> Read the Full Article

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