Life in the ocean runs on light. It fuels photosynthesis, shapes food webs and determines where many marine species can live.
By the late 1990s, scientists realized that virus activity was likely shaping how carbon and nutrients cycled through ocean ...
The work, published in the journal Plant Physiology, describes a new system called “Stomata In-Sight.” The technology addresses a persistent challenge in plant science by making it possible to track ...
In a new study, we and an international team scientists examined the behavior of marine viruses in a large band of oxygen-rich water just under the surface of the Atlantic Ocean. What we discovered ...
Analysis - Virus. The word evokes images of illness and fears of outbreaks. Yet, in the oceans, not all viruses are bad news.
Life in the ocean runs on light. It fuels photosynthesis, shapes food webs and determines where many marine species can live. Gradually, that light is fading. Since the early 2000s, more than ...
Here’s how Artificial Intelligence (AI) is helping students study better, score higher, and build skills that actually matter in today's job market.
When students engage with visual guides by annotating them, revisiting them, or explaining them to peers, learning becomes ...
For 450 million years, plants and soil fungi have been trading partners. The fungi weave through plant roots, delivering ...
A hidden pigment helps ocean algae harness sunlight without getting burned—and it may hold clues for better solar tech.
Microscopic ocean algae produce a huge share of Earth’s oxygen—but they need iron to do it. New field research shows that when iron is scarce, phytoplankton waste energy and photosynthesis falters.
Genlisea, or the “corkscrew” carnivorous plant, doesn’t wait above ground to hunt. Here’s how it traps tiny prey right ...