biology
-
Explaining How Tardigrades Manages to Survive Under Extreme Conditions
Tardigrades are quite good at adjusting to challenging environmental circumstances. In the past, Ralph Schill, a professor at the University of Stuttgart's Institute of Biomaterials and Biomolecular Systems, showed that dried tardigrades might remain unharmed for several years without ingesting water.
Latest Research Articles
-
Research Showed that Skulls of Prehistoric Tetrapods Restricted them from Evolving
-
Synthetic Embryos of Lab-Made Mouse Develop Hearts and Brains in Laboratory
-
Parasitic Genes Comprising over Half of Human DNA Being Monitored for Potential Disease Treatments
-
Compared to Tiny Animals, Huge Animals Consume Less Food and Expend Less Energy
-
New Study Disclaims Conventional Notion That Biological Animal Growth is Constrained by Laws of Physics
-
Biological Sex Differences Instead of Behavioral Differences, the Reason Why Men are More Prone to Cancer: New Study
-
Scientists Studied the Brains of Comb Jellies to Understand How Neurons Evolved
-
New Genetic Study Reveals Hidden DNA that May Unlock Mysteries on How Animals Live
-
Pig Cells Revived an Hour After Death, Can this be Done on Humans?
-
Asexual Reproduction: Species Reproducing on Their Own are Susceptible to Dangerous Genetic Mutations
-
European Panda: Fossils Found in 1970 May Actually be the Giant Panda's European Relatives
-
Heart Disease Treatment: Tissue Engineering Leads to Development of Artificial Heart for Humans