Butterflies Current Events | Butterflies News | 4
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
Green lanes research EARLY MORNINGS IN STORE FOR CYCLING BIRD RESEARCHER A RESEARCHER at Staffordshire University will be getting on his bike to search out early birds in the ancient green lanes of Cheshire. Mike Walker, aged 23, from Chester, is to study whether green lanes - sunken routes that criss-cross the British countryside - provide a more valuable habitat for... view more... (2002-03-15)
Migratory moths may hitch their rides, but they're anything but drifters Night-traveling migratory moths may hitch a ride on the wind, but a new study in the October 14th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, confirms that they are anything but drifters. view more (2008-10-14)
Arctic spring comes weeks earlier than a decade ago In the Earth's cold and icy far north, the harsh winters are giving way to spring weeks earlier than they did just a decade ago, researchers have reported in the June 19th issue of Current Biology, published by Cell Press. view more (2007-06-19)
Real Threats To Countryside Ignored In GM Furore, Ecologists Warn *PLEASE NOTE THIS IS EMBARGOED UNTIL 16 OCTOBER* The UK should be cautious in developing GM technology in agriculture, the British Ecological Society (BES) has said. However, scientists, policy makers and environmental campaigners should beware that by focussing solely on GM crops, the real threats to the British countryside are being ignored.... view more... (2003-10-15)
New Collection Of Bacteria In recent times, efforts in protecting plants from insect pests are aimed at reducing the use of chemical controls, i.e., pesticides, and employing biological methods. The latter, as distinct from the chemical ones, do not contaminate the environment and agricultural products, do not accumulate in soil and water, and do not poison warm-blooded... view more... (2003-03-07)
Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History reveals ants as fungus farmers It turns out ants, like humans, are true farmers. The difference is that ants are farming fungus. view more (2008-03-25)
Global warming increases species extinctions worldwide Global warming has already caused extinctions in the most sensitive habitats and will continue to cause more species to go extinct over the next 50 to 100 years, confirms the most comprehensive study since 2003 on the effects of climate change on wild species worldwide by a University of Texas at Austin biologist. view more (2006-11-15)
When Hosts Go Extinct, What Happens to Their Parasites? Hands wring and teeth gnash over the loss of endangered species like the panda or the polar bear. But what happens to the parasites hosted by endangered species? view more (2009-06-02)
Dutch ecologists plea for scientific research to aid risk assessment A survey among nine prominent Dutch ecologists has identified gaps in knowledge on the potential effects of Bt-crops on food chains and ecosystems. Bt-crops have been modified to express a bacterial gene that codes for a toxin that kills certain groups of insects. The toxin is continuously produced in all plant tissues and target as well as... view more... (2003-08-28)
Academy of Finland and National Natural Science Foundation of China enhance their collaboration Academy of Finland and National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) fund four co-operation projects in the fields of population biology, forest sciences, signal processing algorithm and chemical engineering. The Academy of Finland funds the Finnish part, while NSFC funds the Chinese part of the project. The Academy's share of funding for... view more... (2002-07-19)
Bright white beetle dazzles scientists An obscure species of beetle could teach us how to produce brilliant white ultra-thin materials, according to a research team led by the University of Exeter. view more (2007-01-19)
| |
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
|