Seeking the light and snails that smell
7 November, 2014 | Samuel Winthrop |
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Thinking with your stomach: a pioneering study looks at the microbiota-gut-brain axis and alcohol dependence. https://t.co/dqXxFkbpEn
— F1000 (@F1000) November 4, 2014
Seeking the light: in plants, shade avoidance and neighbor-detection are controlled by different pathways. https://t.co/jL8eTCUcdP
— F1000 (@F1000) November 3, 2014
Snails – just very slow bloodhounds? The ability of slow-moving animals to distinguish food quality by smell https://t.co/2SCgfmtcgs
— F1000 (@F1000) November 5, 2014
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Bats jam each other's echolocation signals in battle for food https://t.co/VnDTQNs3BC pic.twitter.com/tOzpTeBqYW
— Mo Costandi (@mocost) November 7, 2014
Children's attention deficit is linked to air pollution. https://t.co/vVXufea9Ud #attentionissues #science pic.twitter.com/rmpUvfZ4uc
— Scientific American (@sciam) November 7, 2014
How #WW1 changed global attitudes to war and infectious diseases https://t.co/JFd0bxnMIe pic.twitter.com/NhbP5DjRjW
— The Lancet (@TheLancet) November 7, 2014
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