Article Highlights
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 28-May-2026 13:15 ET (28-May-2026 17:15 GMT/UTC)
9-Jun-2023
Reproduction of deep-sea worms provides clues to evolutionary mystery
University of Tsukuba
Researchers led by the University of Tsukuba have found that adult Xenoturbella bocki release gametes through ruptures in their body wall. The adult worms were induced to spawn in the laboratory. Observations and morphological analysis revealed that spawning occurs in the winter and that gametes likely begin to mature on the gut before release into the water through newly opened ruptures. These findings provide a basis for developmental studies that could elucidate the evolutionary history of Xenoturbella species.
- Journal
- Communications Biology
7-Jun-2023
Don't follow the leader
University of Tsukuba
University of Tsukuba researchers compute the information flow between subgroups of simulated flocking birds. They demonstrated “nested criticality,” in which there is scale-free behavior at both the individual and group levels. This work can be applied to many biological systems that self-order to maximize efficiency.
- Journal
- PLOS Computational Biology
5-Jun-2023
Study highlights the links between air quality and COVID-19 severity
Pennington Biomedical Research Center
Epidemiological studies have linked lower air quality to increased incidence and severity of COVID-19; however, how this link operates was previously unclear. A recently published article in Experimental Biology and Medicine addresses the mechanisms by which air pollution worsens COVID-19, highlighting the apparent protection offered by a dietary antioxidant, astaxanthin.
- Journal
- Experimental Biology and Medicine
- Funder
- National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Health and Medical Research Council
5-Jun-2023
Not all snails of a feather
Kyoto University
Kyoto University researchers have identified two new extant species of Semisulcospira, a highly divergent freshwater snail endemic to Japan's largest body of fresh water. Their findings come about despite a discordance between the shell morphology and the current definition of the species Semisulcospira decipiens.
2-Jun-2023
Thoughts on the planning and design of environmental education sites from the perspective of pro-environmental behavior intervention
Higher Education Press
Pro-environmental behavior (PEB) can help facilitate sustainable development, and PEB intervention strategies are developed to guarantee PEB effects. However, in most cases PEB intervention is attached less importance than environmental education. There is no specific programming for PEB intervention, and a full-cycle framework for planning and design that includes site operation and maintenance stages is still absent. Based on literature review and the authors’ experience on environment education activities, this article summarizes the PEB intervention strategies applicable to landscape planning and design, and comes up with a planning and design framework for environmental education sites, which consists of stages of site investigation, PEB intervention planning, development of design briefs, facility planning and design, maintenance and management programming, post-occupancy evaluation, and adjustment. The framework would provide guidance for the landscape planners and designers to improve PEB intervention effects, and offer new insights and tools for site operators and researchers.
- Journal
- Landscape Architecture Frontiers
1-Jun-2023
Interspecies research identifies important neurons for visual perception
University of Tsukuba
Researchers led by the University of Tsukuba have found that specific neurons in the macaque monkey brain respond to pictures of figures on backgrounds in ways that reflect the ease of figure perception in human subjects, suggesting that these neurons are involved in the brain’s separation of figures from backgrounds. These findings may provide future therapeutic options for people with perceptual difficulties resulting from brain injury or stroke.
- Journal
- Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
31-May-2023
Could this explain why childhood obesity leads to early puberty?
University of Copenhagen - Faculty of Science
Puberty often begins early for children who are obese. While there is nothing new about this fact, a scientific explanation has been elusive. Now, a team of scientists at the University of Copenhagen offers what may be a partial explanation.
- Journal
- Current Biology
16-May-2023
Scientists use X-ray beams to determine role of zinc in development of ovarian follicles
DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
Researchers from Argonne, Michigan State University and Northwestern University used Argonne’s Bionanoprobe beamline to look at the concentration of zinc in egg cells.
- Journal
- Journal of Biological Chemistry