Interesting Engineering on MSN
Orbit to offspring: China’s ‘space mouse’ gives birth to nine pups after return
As part of the Shenzhou-21 mission, the four mice were sent to Tiangong Space Station on October 31. Soon after returning on ...
Green Matters on MSN
A Space-Traveling Mouse Just Gave Birth—Here's Why This Could Be a Big Deal for Future Exploration
The fact that the mouse got pregnant marks a breakthrough in space reproduction research and unlocks a set of exciting ...
OhmBody is the first consumer wearable designed to simultaneously engage two cranial nerve pathways — the vagus and trigeminal nerves — reflecting growing scientific understanding that menstruation is ...
AZ Animals on MSN
The Hidden Process Behind Species Extinction
The tragic news of the loss of the world's last remaining northern white rhino begs the question: Can it be brought back?
Dr. Gil Mor discusses sex-specific placental responses and long-term immune alterations from prenatal virus exposure.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Strange parasitic 'mushroom' plant abandoned photosynthesis and somehow flourished
In the damp understory of forests in Taiwan, mainland Japan, and Okinawa, a plant called Balanophora can fool you at first ...
In 1987, wildlife veterinarian Mark Pokras was in his office at Tufts University in Massachusetts when a colleague from New ...
Two genetic innovations could address major welfare and productivity issues within the broiler and layer industries.
Morning Overview on MSN
Microplastics invade blood vessels and may drive heart disease
Scientists are finding tiny fragments of plastic lodged in the very blood vessels that keep the heart alive, and the pattern ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Night shifts may be quietly raising cancer risk, researchers suggest
Night work keeps hospitals open, factories humming and deliveries moving while most people sleep, but a growing body of ...
Understanding the evolution of insect mating behavior is essential for explaining how early insects adapted to life on land.
About 3 to 5% of mammals are known to be monogamous, meaning they select one mate for life. Still, many monogamous species ...
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