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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

    • Fluctuating oestrogen levels may alter how drugs enter women's brains
      Oestrogen levels fluctuate throughout a woman's menstrual cycle, which may impact how efficiently a drug that targets the brain can reach its destination
    • Hidden black hole could explain mystery at the heart of our galaxy
      The area surrounding our galaxy’s central supermassive black hole contains three strangely different populations of stars – but one hidden black hole could explain all of them
    • You should turn off fans when it's too hot – but how hot is too hot?
      Fans can make you hotter rather than cooler, but the temperature at which you should turn them off depends on several factors, including your age and the humidity level
    • Huge crater in Australia may be the oldest impact structure on Earth
      A study claims that the North Pole Dome crater in Western Australia was caused by an asteroid strike 3 billion years ago, but other researchers dispute the proposed age
    • Elite Maya people had teeth placed in a cave far from their tombs
      A cave in Belize contains teeth from dozens of important Maya people buried elsewhere, which may attest to a ritual intended to ensure their passage to the underworld
  • Scientific American

    • Top quantum computer expert claims Microsoft’s ‘topological qubit’ doesn’t hold up

      The company has been touting its quantum technology for years, but some experts say these claims just don’t pass muster

    • Extreme heat is muddling animals’ brains—and even triggering aggression

      As temperatures rise, some creatures pick fights while others struggle to learn

    • How underappreciated mathematician Emmy Noether helped prove physics' most fundamental theories

      Noether's work helped prove the conservation of energy in physics, a key foundation for Einstein's theory of relativity

    • The first ticking ‘nuclear clocks’ are here

      These radical new devices keep time using fluctuations in the energy states of an atom’s nucleus, rather than those of its electrons, which atomic clocks currently use to define the length of a second

    • Why the paint is peeling off the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool—experts explain

      Poor preparation and a failure to properly apply the coating may be just a few of the reasons why the Reflecting Pool’s new paint job appears to be peeling off

  • Science News

    Science News
    • A potential hindrance to fusion power may help instead
      Researchers were unsure whether alpha particles would aid or hinder fusion. Simulations suggest they help, by dampening turbulence.
    • The world’s largest scorpion lived 415 million years ago
      A prehistoric scorpion was the largest ever to exist, and it may have preyed on land and freshwater species.
    • The ‘little brain’ may give the aging mind a big boost
      Most known for its role in movement, the cerebellum could compensate for flagging mental functions elsewhere in the brain.
    • Even ‘safe’ air pollution levels may affect heart health
      An imaging study found early signs of coronary artery disease in people in Canada breathing air that regulators consider clean.
    • A new dino fossil may solve an ancient murder mystery
      A newly-described dinosaur, Jian changmaensis, may have glided through northwestern China about 120 million years ago, wreaking havoc on birds.
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