Bats And Death Metal Singers Use The Same Throat Structure To Growl - [2022-11-30 F9H3Ye]

in #partiko2 years ago

Critically endangered tiny gecko comes back from the brink:


The population of Union Island geckos plummeted due to growing demand from the illegal international pet trade, but conservationists working with locals in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines have helped boost its numbers

Drug clears sleeping sickness parasite from the body in clinical trial:


In a small trial, an experimental medicine was 100 per cent effective at ridding the parasite that causes sleeping sickness from the bodies of people with an early to intermediate infection

Mauna Loa eruption interrupts key record of atmospheric CO2:


The Mauna Loa Observatory has kept a nearly uninterrupted record of atmospheric carbon dioxide for more than 60 years, but a volcanic eruption has cut off power

'Unselfish' genes that make plants cooperate could boost crop yields:


A simple breeding experiment can identify genetic variants that make plants grow well without impeding their neighbours, improving overall yields

Bats and death metal singers use the same throat structure to growl:


Daubenton’s bats use false vocal folds in their throat to produce a lower frequency grunt for communication – the same structure that lets death metal singers growl

Gliding sensors inspired by floating seeds will biodegrade after use:


A biodegradable glider based on the seeds of the Javan cucumber, which float for long distances, could be used to monitor the environment without leaving polluting e-waste

Boarding school rules on phones and bedtimes help teens get more sleep:


At one high school, students who boarded had a consistent lights-out time and no phone access in bed, with these students getting almost five hours of extra sleep a week compared with the students who only attended school during the day

Do we have 'immunity debt' and how could it affect our infection risk?:


The covid-19 lockdowns undoubtedly saved many lives, but the prolonged restrictions also reduced our exposure and immunity to other infections, which could be set to spike in the UK this winter

Brain mapping in mice may explain why pain makes us lose our appetite:


Researchers have identified different pathways that lower a mouse's desire to eat when it's in pain - and a similar brain circuit could also occur in humans

A rat without a Y chromosome could be a glimpse of our genetic future:


Researchers have figured out how the Amami spiny rat lost its Y chromosome, and some believe the same fate may be in store for humans