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    • Agriculture
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  • More Than Ruffled Feathers: Mockingbirds Show Heightened Aggression After Lead Exposure

    Mockingbirds exposed to sub-lethal levels of lead in urban areas display significantly heightened aggression, said Morris Animal Foundation-funded researchers at Tulane University. 

  • An Icy Forecast for Ringed Seal Populations

    Arctic sea ice is now declining at a rate of 12.8 percent per decade – 2012 had the lowest amount of summer ice on record. 

  • Conservation Efforts Help Some Rare Birds More Than Others, Study Finds

    Land conservation programs that have converted tens of thousands of acres of agricultural land in Illinois back to a more natural state appear to have helped some rare birds increase their populations to historic levels, a new study finds. 

  • Plants Can Smell, Now Researchers Know How

    Plants don't need noses to smell. The ability is in their genes. Researchers have discovered the first steps of how information from odor molecules changes gene expression in plants. 

  • Copy Cats: When is a Bobcat Not a Bobcat?

    Two UBC Okanagan biologists, who have publicly solicited images of wild cats for their research, say telling the difference between a bobcat or a lynx can be difficult.

  • New Study Establishes Causal Link Between Climate, Conflict, and Migration

    IIASA-led research has established a causal link between climate, conflict, and migration for the first time, something which has been widely suggested in the media but for which scientific evidence is scarce.

  • How Male Dragonflies Adapt Wing Color to Temperature

    New research from Case Western Reserve University in how dragonflies may adapt their wing color to temperature differences might explain color variation in other animals, from lions to birds.

  • Dog Saliva Study Helps Dentistry Students Make Connections

    Second-year dentistry students Jessa Drury, Lisa Bachiu and Susanne Skulski were sitting in their endodontics class when they came up with the idea of how they could connect their schooling at the College of Dentistry with veterinary medicine.

  • What Makes A Species Different?

    Most evolutionary biologists distinguish one species from another based on reproductivity: members of different species either won’t or can’t mate with one another, or, if they do, the resulting offspring are often sterile, unviable, or suffer some other sort of reduced fitness.

  • Unique Camera Enables Researchers to See the World the Way Birds Do

    Using a specially designed camera, researchers at Lund University in Sweden have succeeded for the first time in recreating how birds see colours in their surroundings.

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