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Sciworthy

Sciworthy

The Encyclopedia of Science's Frontier

Category: Biology

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Hawaiian Fishes Like it Deep

Posted on April 8, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

As if Hawaii didn’t already have enough to boast about – beautiful beaches, luscious green mountains, and lava – it now also wears…

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    How to Find Large Animals by Tracking Dung Beetles

    Posted on April 2, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

    Big animals make lots of dung. And where there’s dung, there’s dung beetles. Researchers counted fossilized dung beetles to figure out…

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      Who’s the Living Fossil? The genus Crocodylus is Younger Than We Think!

      Posted on April 2, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

      What comes to mind when you think of crocodiles? You might think of ancient reptiles, or “living fossils,” that have been…

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        One tree likes seabird poop, the next prefers fresh air.

        Posted on February 20, 2014June 25, 2025 by Sciworthy

        Off the west coast of Peru, seabirds deposit thick layers of guano that accumulates on the ground because of the lack of rain. Guano has…

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          Hitting the jackpot — a new vertebrate family endemic to West Africa

          Posted on February 19, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

          Biological classification arranges taxa according to their degree of relationship; several species may be grouped in a genus, several…

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            Environment-related morphological changes can confuse scientists

            Posted on February 14, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

            For many years, morphology-based classification has served us so well, and still forms a basis of what we are viewing the biological world…

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              The never before revealed history of the Mediterranean pipefish Syngnathus abaster: secrets found in its maternal inherited DNA.

              Posted on February 6, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

              Mitochondrial DNA studies shows the occurrence of three well-defined groups of pipefish populations – which independently evolved in a…

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                Tropics are main source of global mammal diversity

                Posted on January 29, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                Ever since the nineteenth century scientists have recognised that some regions contain more species than others, and that the tropics are…

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                  DNA Barcoding unveils a “ray of sunshine” in products sold to consumers

                  Posted on January 28, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                  “Ray” or “Skate” is the common name under which a number of different species of rays (cousins to sharks) fished from the Northeast…

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                    Lost world discovered in Australia

                    Posted on January 20, 2014October 24, 2022 by Sciworthy

                    A James Cook University-National Geographic expedition to Cape Melville in north-east Australia has found three vertebrate species new to…

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                      Artist's impression of the planetary system around the red dwarf Gliese 581. Credit: ESO

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