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Mitotype PCR genetic test results of bee specimens (feral and managed hives) are updated weekly.
Target goal of 1,000 hives to be tested in 2024.
  • New Scientist

    • Coral reefs on a remote archipelago shrugged off a massive heatwave
      Scientists were shocked to find that the Houtman Abrolhos Islands’ coral reefs survived a prolonged extreme heatwave in 2025 virtually unharmed, which may reveal how to protect corals elsewhere
    • Giant Arctic continent launched dinosaurs to world domination
      Coincident with the rise of the dinosaurs, a large landmass filled most of the Arctic circle, potentially contributing to global cooling that advantaged the famous reptiles
    • 10,000 new planets found hidden in NASA telescope data
      NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite has been searching for exoplanets since its launch in 2018, and it turns out it may have found plenty more of them than we had thought
    • Why your opinion of used electric vehicles is probably wrong
      The idea that EV batteries age poorly is a misconception – and a new report has found they often outlive the cars themselves
    • 100-year-old assumption about the universe may soon be overturned
      Physicists have long assumed that the universe is uniform at very large scales, but evidence is emerging this is wrong and suggests a way to resolve some of the biggest cosmological mysteries
  • Scientific American

    • War in Iran spotlights the risk to drinking water for millions in the Persian Gulf

      Direct attacks, oil spills and the threat of nuclear waste are putting the Gulf region’s desalination plants at risk—here’s why that matters

    • The science behind the Adidas shoes that helped two marathoners break the two-hour mark

      A sub-two-hour marathon has long been seen as a tantalizing benchmark for elite runners—and shoemakers have been in a race to design footwear that can help them get there

    • Iconic Sombrero Galaxy captured in incredible detail, revealing its enormous glowing halo

      This galaxy, also known as Messier 104, gets its nickname from its central bulge and outer dust trail, which give it a sombrerolike appearance from our vantage point

    • People trust vaccine scientists as much as other researchers, poll shows

      Roughly seven in 10 people still trust vaccine researchers, a new poll finds. The number is in line with trust for other scientists

    • Blood filtering could help treat preeclampsia, pilot study suggests

      Preeclampsia can be deadly in pregnancy, and aside from delivering the baby, the condition has no targeted treatment. A new study suggests blood filtering with antibodies could help

  • Science News

    Science News
    • This dangerous pregnancy complication is common. A new treatment might help
      Preeclampsia complicates 3 to 8 percent of pregnancies. In a recent trial, a blood filter lowered blood pressure and helped prolong some pregnancies.
    • The earliest evidence of the first stars may lie in a distant gas clump
      James Webb data reveal pristine gas irradiated by energetic light some 450 million years after the Big Bang — a sign it may house primordial stars.
    • Ancient DNA tests the notion that allergies are due to our dirtier past
      An analysis of ancient DNA and modern disease risk suggests some immune genes may reduce allergy risk rather than increase it.
    • The secret to perfect espresso? It’s physics
      Inspired by gas and liquid flow in earth science, researchers brewed an equation to calculate the speed of water percolation through ground coffee.
    • Giant, kraken-like octopuses may have ruled the Cretaceous deep
      Some octopuses that lived over 72 million years ago were as long as whales. These huge predators may have been the largest invertebrates ever.
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