Life Sciences

All that glitters is not gold

Butterflies have taken their colors and flash seriously--into the ultraviolet wavelengths where humans cannot see, but butterflies can. They utilize pigments and nanoscale structures that make human nanofabrication look downright crude, and make female butterflies swoon. (full text in SOLS News)

Shedding light on photosynthesis

By crystallizing and imaging photosystem I, scientists are learning how the 2.5-billion-year-old process of photosynthesis actually works. --by Diane Boudreau

Old genes, new tricks

When it comes to the social behavior of honeybees, evolution may have taught old genes some new tricks.--by Dan Jenk

Froggy goes a-courting: Chemical in frog eggs lures males to mate

In frogs, a chemical called Allurin acts like designer perfumes. Males are lured to the right spot to meet Princess Froggy. If it's good enough for frogs, what about humans? --by Margaret Coulombe

Warmer at the bottom of the world

Antarctica is one of the most rapidly warming regions on Earth. ASU's Tad Day studies the dance of tundra and ice as they move across the landscape in response to the accelerating beat of warming temperatures. --by Adelheid Fischer

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