Mirrors, migration and a viral aphrodisiac
22 August, 2014 | Samuel Winthrop |
|
|
.enorepahc ralucelom sti yb emyzne egami-rorrim a fo gnidlof tcerroc eht :ssalg gnikool eht hguorhT https://t.co/flYOFSyqIT
— F1000Prime (@F1000) August 19, 2014
Spread the love: a cricket pathogen encourages its infected, therefore sterile, hosts to mate, enabling its spread. https://t.co/pSLI4szgdS
— F1000Prime (@F1000) August 21, 2014
Kids these days: earlier bird migration is driven by the new recruits arriving at the breeding grounds early. https://t.co/TRLtnWZ1kC
— F1000Prime (@F1000) August 22, 2014
Whilst elsewhere on Twitter…
Part moth, part machine: Meet the cyborg moth: https://t.co/3ectw5jz3H pic.twitter.com/uA53TKvJpb
— Discover Magazine (@DiscoverMag) August 22, 2014
Haeckel's sea anemones set within an underwater seascape. To brighten a bank holiday weekend https://t.co/cHV9b0VN37 pic.twitter.com/krWmwx8SyF
— The Royal Society (@royalsociety) August 22, 2014
Antarctic lake is full of microbes that live below freezing, without light or normal food. https://t.co/VjI8fw4Fo5 pic.twitter.com/mFdMJ7qpSq
— Corey S. Powell (@coreyspowell) August 22, 2014
|