Monthly Archives: August 2018

Two new truffle species discovered in Florida pecan orchards

Two new species of truffles were recently discovered on the roots of pecan trees in Florida orchards. The good news is that you can eat them -- the bad news is that you wouldn't want to.

While Tuber brennemanii and Tuber floridanum are edible "true" truffles, in the same genus as the fragrant underground mushrooms prized...

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New study highlights shark protections, vulnerability to fishing

A new analysis shows that the habitats of three shark species (great hammerhead, tiger, and bull sharks) are relatively well protected from longline fishing in federal waters off the southeastern United States, but that that some prime locations are still vulnerable to fishing.

The new study led by scientists at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel...

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Cryopreserving ladybird beetle ovaries

A new study has found an effective way to cryopreserve -- preservation by cooling to very low temperature -- and subsequently transplant ovaries of the multicolored Asian ladybird beetle, Harmonia axyridis.

In mammals (including humans), long-term cryopreservation of fertilized eggs, sperm, ovaries is possible. However, in insects, cryopreservation of fertilized eggs has not been successful, and...

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Human/wildlife conflict: Social and ecological theory

Wildlife Conservation Society. "Human/wildlife conflict: Social and ecological theory: Researchers apply social and ecological theory to understand human/black bear conflicts in Colorado." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 22 August 2018. .

Wildlife Conservation Society. (2018, August 22). Human/wildlife conflict: Social and ecological theory: Researchers apply social and ecological theory to understand human/black bear conflicts in...

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Want to know what ancient koalas ate? Check modern koalas' teeth

Paleontologist Larisa DeSantis studies the teeth of ancient and modern mammals to determine how their diets changed across the millennia and, by extension, their responses to climate change.

But the question lingered: Is wear on teeth an indicator of what kangaroos and koalas ate or just how much gritty dust and dirt they consumed?

The Vanderbilt University...

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