Laden...
ScienceDaily: Top Environment News |
Driving in the snow is a team effort for AI sensors Posted: 27 May 2021 02:25 PM PDT A major challenge for fully autonomous vehicles is navigating bad weather. Snow especially confounds crucial sensor data that helps a vehicle gauge depth, find obstacles and keep on the correct side of the yellow line, assuming it is visible. Averaging more than 200 inches of snow every winter, Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula is the perfect place to push autonomous vehicle tech to its limits. |
Key early steps in gene expression captured in real time Posted: 27 May 2021 01:34 PM PDT Scientists have observed early RNA transcription dynamics by recording where, when and how RNA polymerase enzymes kick off transcription by binding to a DNA sequence. |
Partners in crime: Agricultural pest that relies on bacteria to overcome plant defenses Posted: 27 May 2021 12:54 PM PDT The oral secretions of herbivorous insects can activate plant defense mechanisms that protect plant cells from being digested. However, scientists have discovered that some larvae 'partner up' with bacteria that help interrupt these plant defense mechanisms. This disrupts the plant's defenses before the digestive proteins that the larvae smear on them. These findings may help agricultural scientists devise countermeasures that protect important agricultural species from the larvae. |
Managing global climate change--and local conditions--key to coral reefs' survival Posted: 27 May 2021 12:02 PM PDT According to a new study, what's key to coral reefs surviving climate-driven heatwaves and subsequent bleaching is managing global climate change -- and local conditions. |
Parasites as fountains of youth: Study finds infected ants live much longer Posted: 27 May 2021 12:01 PM PDT According to the results of a multi-year scientific study, ants of the species Temnothorax nylanderi show exceptionally high survival rates when infected with a tapeworm. |
Aging: Clinical trial on potential reversal of epigenetic age using a diet and lifestyle Posted: 27 May 2021 11:53 AM PDT A randomized controlled clinical trial was conducted among 43 healthy adult males between the ages of 50-72. The 8-week treatment program included diet, sleep, exercise and relaxation guidance, and supplemental probiotics and phytonutrients. |
Biologists construct a 'periodic table' for cell nuclei Posted: 27 May 2021 11:52 AM PDT One hundred fifty years after Dmitri Mendeleev's periodic table classified atomic nuclei, biologists have created a new classification system for cell nuclei - and shown how they can be transmuted from one type into another. |
Fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria has a glowing new weapon Posted: 27 May 2021 11:52 AM PDT In the perpetual arms races between bacteria and human-made antibiotics, there is a new tool to give human medicine the edge, in part by revealing bacterial weaknesses and potentially by leading to more targeted or new treatments for bacterial infections. |
Posted: 27 May 2021 08:26 AM PDT About 12,000 bacteria and viruses collected in a sampling from public transit systems and hospitals around the world from 2015 to 2017 had never before been identified, according to a new study. |
Lead levels in urban soil are declining but hotspots persist Posted: 27 May 2021 08:26 AM PDT Lead paint and leaded gasoline have been banned for decades, but unsafe levels of lead remain in some urban soils, a new study finds. The researchers mapped soil lead concentrations along 25 miles of streets in Durham, N.C. Though contamination generally has declined since the 1970s, soil collected near houses predating 1978 still averaged 649 milligrams of lead per kilogram of soil, well above the 400 mg/kg threshold associated with health risks to children. |
Gene research on brassicas provides potential for making better crops Posted: 27 May 2021 08:26 AM PDT Scientists have used gene technology to understand more about the make-up of the evolution of brassicas - paving the way for bigger and more climate resilient yields from this group of crops that have been grown for thousands of years. |
Fish adapt to ocean acidification by modifying gene expression Posted: 27 May 2021 08:25 AM PDT To survive in a reduced pH environment, marine organisms have to adjust their physiology which, at the molecular level, is achieved by modifying the expression of genes. The study of such changes in gene expression can aid in revealing the adaptive mechanisms of life under predicted future ocean acidification conditions. |
How New Zealand's cheeky kea and kaka will fare with climate change Posted: 27 May 2021 08:25 AM PDT With global warming decreasing the size of New Zealand's alpine zone, a new study found out what this means for our altitude-loving kea. |
Slushy iceberg aggregates control calving timing on Greenland's Jakobshavn Isbræ Posted: 27 May 2021 08:25 AM PDT shows that a relaxation in the thick aggregate of icebergs floating at the glacier-ocean boundary of the Jakobshavn Isbræ occurs up to an hour before calving events. This finding may help scientists better understand future sea-level rise scenarios and could also help them predict when major episodes of calving are about to occur. |
Fisheries resilience following Tohoku tsunami Posted: 27 May 2021 08:25 AM PDT A small Japanese fishing community devastated by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami of 2011 managed to recover from the disaster through cooperative community activity despite the propensity for individualist-competitive behavior within fisheries - cooperative activity that continued many years later. |
Mathematical model developed to prevent botulism Posted: 27 May 2021 08:24 AM PDT Food producers can use a mathematical model to ensure their products do not cause botulism. |
New study confirms noble false widow spiders bites can result in hospitalization Posted: 27 May 2021 08:24 AM PDT Scientists have published a new study showing that Noble False Widow spiders can deliver a bite that requires hospitalization. The threat posed by the Noble False Widow spider has been debated among spider and healthcare specialists for many years. This new study confirms that some bite victims experience symptoms very similar to the true black widow spiders and some severe cases require hospitalization. |
Vaccine target for devastating livestock disease could change lives of millions Posted: 27 May 2021 08:24 AM PDT The first ever vaccine target for trypanosomes, a family of parasites that cause devastating disease in animals and humans, has been discovered. By targeting a protein on the cell surface of the parasite Trypanosoma vivax, researchers were able to confer long-lasting protection against animal African trypanosomiasis (AAT) infection in mice. |
Some forams could thrive with climate change, metabolism study finds Posted: 27 May 2021 08:24 AM PDT With the expansion of oxygen-depleted waters in the oceans due to climate change, some species of foraminifera (forams, a type of protist or single-celled eukaryote) that thrive in those conditions could be big winners, biologically speaking. |
Fungus fights mites that harm honey bees Posted: 27 May 2021 06:14 AM PDT A new fungus strain bred in a lab could provide a chemical-free method for eradicating mites that kill honey bees. Varroa destructor mites play a large role in Colony Collapse Disorder, which destroys thousands of bee colonies every year. |
Banning the sale of fossil-fuel cars benefits the climate when replaced by electric cars Posted: 27 May 2021 05:43 AM PDT If a ban were introduced on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars, and they were replaced by electric cars, the result would be a great reduction in carbon dioxide emissions. That is the finding of new research, looking at emissions from the entire life cycle - from manufacture of electric cars and batteries, to electricity used for operation. |
Plastic waste has some economic benefit for developing countries Posted: 27 May 2021 05:42 AM PDT For decades, wealthy nations have transported plastic trash, and its environmental problems, to poorer countries, but researchers have found a potential bright side to this seemingly unequal trade: plastic waste may provide an economic boon for the lower-income countries. Researchers analyzed 11 years of data on the global plastics trade against economic measures for 85 countries. They found plastic waste import was associated with growth in GDP per capita in lower-income countries. |
Inhaled nanobodies protect hamsters from COVID-19, study finds Posted: 26 May 2021 12:02 PM PDT Inhalable nanobodies targeting the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 can prevent and treat severe COVID-19 in hamsters, according to new research. |
Neotropical river otters in Brazil communicate in a rich vocal range Posted: 26 May 2021 12:01 PM PDT Solitary river otters in Brazil use a rich repertoire of vocalizations during play and conflict, according to a new study. |
Novel sensor discovered that helps bacteria detect and respond to formaldehyde Posted: 26 May 2021 12:00 PM PDT Bacteria called methylotrophs can use methane and methanol as fuel; in doing so, they produce large amounts of formaldehyde during growth, but until recently no one knew how they detected and responded to this toxic compound. Researchers describe their discovery of a novel formaldehyde sensor in the bacterium Methylorubrum extorquens, and other methylotrophs. |
Dive bombing killer flies are so fast they lose steering control Posted: 26 May 2021 08:55 AM PDT Killer flies can reach accelerations of over 3g when aerial diving to catch their prey - but at such high speeds they often miss because they can't correct their course. |
How 'non-professional' cells can trigger immune response Posted: 26 May 2021 06:30 AM PDT Researchers are finding new details on the complex dynamics involved in how organisms sense an infection from pathogens. The researchers found that worms can sense changes in their metabolism in order to unleash protective defenses, even if they don't directly sense an incursion from pathogens. |
How army ants' iconic mass raids evolved Posted: 25 May 2021 05:38 PM PDT Researchers combine phylogenetic reconstructions and computational behavioral analysis to show that army ant mass raiding evolved from group raiding through the scaling effects of increasing colony size. The transition evolved tens of millions of years ago and is perfectly correlated with a massive increase in colony size. |
You are subscribed to email updates from Top Environment News -- ScienceDaily. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google, 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
Laden...
Laden...