Seabed microbe study leads to low-cost power, light for the poor

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A Harvard biology professor’s fascination with seafloor microbes has led to the development of a revolutionary, low-cost power system consuming garbage, compost, and other waste that could provide light for the developing world.


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All News summaries for December 19, 2007

Sweet sorghum, clean miracle crop for feed and fuel

14 minutes ago | User rating: not rated yet
The hardy sweet sorghum plant could be the miracle crop that provides cheap animal feed and fuel without straining the world's food supply or harming the environment, said scientists working on a pilot farming ...

Researchers find natural section favors parasite fitness over host health

May 12, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
Why do parasites harm their hosts? Classic evolutionary theory predicts that parasites become more virulent because they must transmit themselves between hosts, yet scientists have found little data to support this idea, ...

When following the leader can lead into the jaws of death

May 12, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
For animals that live in social groups, and that includes humans, blindly following a leader could place them in danger. To avoid this, animals have developed simple but effective behaviour to follow where ...

Mo. biologists to study snake movement, mortality

May 12, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- Snakes wouldn't be at the top of most people's favorite critter list. They're feared and misunderstood and often, killed. That's a shame, said Jason Lewis, a wildlife biologist at Mingo National Wildlife Refuge near ...

Scientists probe recent coyote attacks in California

May 12, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
(AP) -- The coyote was limping as it approached a girl in a sand box at a public park - but it was still dangerous. It snapped its jaws on the girl's buttocks and her nanny had to pry the toddler from the ...