News
In the vast and often unseen world of microscopic life, a recent discovery may force scientists to rethink what it means to ...
The being in question is a microbe called Sukunaarchaeum mirabile. Preliminary research says it stretches the definition of ...
11d
Discover Magazine on MSNThe World's Largest Organism Is a 35,000-Ton Fungus – At Least, For NowWhat is the largest organism? Until a few years ago, Oregon's "humongous fungus" was considered the world's largest organism.
2d
ZME Science on MSNThe Strangest Microbe Ever Found Straddles The Line Between Life and Non-LifeIt has genes for ribosomes, tRNAs, and mRNAs. These components are the scaffolding of life: the tools by which cells read ...
11d
IFLScience on MSNEvolution Running Backwards? That's What This Unlikely Organism Appears To Be DoingWe typically think of evolution as progressing in one direction, with a species getting “better” and “better” as it goes. But ...
Worms offer a simple yet powerful whole-organism model for studying senescence, mirroring mammalian aging processes and ...
This newly found organism doesn’t act like a virus or a cell, and that could change everything we know about biology.
A single organism. The mass of all the genetically identical trees weighs around 6,000 tons, which makes it, in terms of mass, the largest living thing on Earth.
Scientists have discovered the organism with the largest known genome. At 160 billion base pairs, it's 50 times bigger than the human genome, and the organism it’s describing is a tiny fern you ...
Ctenophores are one of, if not the, oldest animals on Earth — quite possibly a sister to all other animals in the tree of life, so “they provide a really unique opportunity to study ...
But now this algal ecosystem—like literally everywhere else on the planet—is thoroughly infested with microplastics, which ride on currents and blow in from faraway metropolises to settle on ...
A tough, bell-shaped fungus that grows on the rotting bark of trees has been used as a fire starter for centuries, earning it the nickname “tinder fungus.” Now, researchers are taking a closer ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results