Trojan horses, fountains of joy, and Dracula bugs: the weekly round up
6 February, 2015 | Adie Chan |
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Trojan horse: Mycobacterium leprae harness acanthamoebae to persist and remain infectious in the environment. https://t.co/mpWATncPU2
— F1000 (@F1000) February 4, 2015
Thar she blows! Is "squirting" in females during sex simply orgasmic urinary incontinence? https://t.co/FjBM6KzoBl
— F1000 (@F1000) February 3, 2015
"The taste of Dracula: what do blood-sucking bugs taste when deciding to feed?" Bitter stimuli play a role. https://t.co/51VhfHBZ8n #QOTD
— F1000 (@F1000) February 4, 2015
And elsewhere on Twitter…
Don't mess with the lemmings https://t.co/Ba5WSg44o1 pic.twitter.com/tkHUI0QcdU #Horrorlemming
— New Scientist (@newscientist) February 6, 2015
Sometimes, tumors can be cute: https://t.co/5y422njKTs by @srslyscience pic.twitter.com/TX6bwHfAQ7
— Discover Magazine (@DiscoverMag) February 6, 2015
Why Pets are Good for Your Health: https://t.co/9XBeihgI5M #HealthyAging pic.twitter.com/Qpyb4tvSHT
— JohnsHopkinsMedicine (@HopkinsMedicine) February 6, 2015
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