Fungal clocks, oysters and the role of ghrelin in epileptic activity
24 July, 2015 | Eva Amsen |
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Have a great weekend!
Botrytis cinerea's fungal clock determines how much damage it can do in plants https://t.co/LYfGAVE5cI https://t.co/l40UBDNIsb
— F1000 (@F1000) July 23, 2015
Oysters with a side of true grit: oyster larval adaptation to ocean acidity persists into adulthood & offspring https://t.co/1yIHPeEiYA
— F1000 (@F1000) July 21, 2015
Shaking it up: ghrelin does more than control metabolism, it may also play a role in controlling epileptic activity https://t.co/69EPttZqFJ
— F1000 (@F1000) July 20, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
We've found an Earth-like planet – and it might have liquid water https://t.co/mhCIbcohBb pic.twitter.com/VEeh1InZkr
— New Scientist (@newscientist) July 24, 2015
These fish are blind, fat and insatiable. And they might teach us things about human obesity https://t.co/Hu4QJxvxAP pic.twitter.com/nk9kAfTo5y
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) July 24, 2015
So impressed by Micropia, Amsterdam's microbe museum. We've come a long way since Leeuwenhoek pic.twitter.com/Up7xprpyf4
— Ed Yong (@edyong209) July 23, 2015
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