My picks from ScienceDaily

Living Upside-down Shapes Spiders For Energy Saving:

An interdisciplinary team of researchers from Spain and Croatia led an investigation into the peculiar lifestyle of numerous spider species, which live, feed, breed and 'walk' in an upside-down hanging position. According to their results, such 'unconventional' enterprise drives a shape in spiders that confers high energy efficiency, as in oscillatory pendulums.

Space Tourism: Suborbital Vehicle Expected To Fly Within Two Years:

A small California aerospace company has just unveiled a new suborbital spaceship that will provide affordable front-seat rides to the edge of space for the millions of people who want to buy a ticket.

Primitive Mouse-Like Creature May Be Ancestral Mother Of Australia's Unusual Pouched Mammals:

They are separated by a vast ocean and by millions of years, but tiny prehistoric bones found on an Australian farm have been directly linked to a strange and secretive little animal that lives today in the southern rainforests of South America.

Red Flour Beetle's Genome Sequenced For The First Time:

An international research consortium with the participation of a research team led by Professor Cornelis Grimmelikhuijzen from the Department of Biology, has sequenced the genome from the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum. Tribolium is the first beetle and the first insect pest, whose genome has been sequenced. This research may have a big impact on agriculture.

Bear Spray A Viable Alternative To Guns For Deterring Bears, Study Shows:

Hikers and campers venturing into bear country this spring may be safer armed with 8-ounce cans of bear pepper spray than with guns, according to a new study led by a Brigham Young University bear biologist.

Categories

More like this

Tribolium castaneum - Red Flour Beetle The genome of the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum was published today in Nature. This latest insect genome is interesting not for what it says about beetles but for what it says about another model species, the venerable fruit fly. The more we learn…
Tribolium castaneum, the Red Flour Beetle Here's a beetle that the genetics-inclined entomologist will recognize.  Tribolium castaneum, the red flour beetle, was the first Coleopteran to have its genome sequenced. This small tenebrionid is native to the Indo-Australian region but has become a…
There are 28 new articles published today in PLoS ONE. You know what to do: read, rate, comment, annotate and send trackbacks! My picks for this week: Light Variability Illuminates Niche-Partitioning among Marine Picocyanobacteria: Phytoplankton are an important part of food webs in the ocean,…
Venomous Brown Widow Spiders Making Themselves Known In Louisiana: A dangerous spider is making itself known to Louisiana residents. The brown widow spider is becoming more common, according to entomologists with the LSU AgCenter. Bat Flight Generates Complex Aerodynamic Tracks: Bats generate a…