How do the many carnivorous animals of the Americas avoid competing for the same lunch, or becoming each other's meal?
| Biology | March 10, 2009 12:08 PM |
How do the many carnivorous animals of the Americas avoid competing for the same lunch, or becoming each other's meal?
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| Environment | March 10, 2009 12:08 PM |
More than 150 years after a small Eurasian tree named tamarisk or saltcedar started taking over river banks throughout the U.S. Southwest, saltcedar leaf beetles were unleashed to defoliate the exotic invader.
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| Environment | March 10, 2009 12:08 PM |
Phytoplankton comprise the forests of the sea, and are responsible for providing nearly half of the oxygen that sustains life on Earth including our own. However, unlike their counterparts on land, the marine plants are nearly exclusively microscopic in size, and mostly out of human sight. Consequently, we are still in a very early stage of understanding even the most basic aspects of phytoplankton biology and ecology.
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| Health & Medicine | March 10, 2009 12:08 PM |
University of Queensland research has revealed the older a dad is the more likely his children will have reduced cognitive abilities.
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