From grasshoppers to cows, giant pandas and humans, nutrient dilution will have an impact. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Rising carbon dioxide levels in the air are making plants grow larger and faster, but diluting their nutritional content.
The Smithsonian Institution in the 1850s recruited hundreds of citizen scientists across the nation to track when they saw ...
The researchers suspect that long-term declines in plant quality may be a largely unnoticed factor in falling animal ...
A preprint paper published on bioRxiv shows that some living things engage in biofluorescence at a wavelength that humans can ...
The Rafflesia, known as the "corpse flower", smells and looks like rotting flesh. It has a meat-like appearance with large, ...
Omnivores, like bears, foxes, raccoons, and opossums, exemplify dietary versatility, consuming both plant and animal matter.
A collaborative study led by Piao Shilong’s team and Zhang Yao’s team from the Institute of Carbon Neutrality at Peking University reveals the distinct mechanisms by which plants and animals respond ...
Meet the leaf sheep, a cute little animal-plant hybrid that can photosynthesize to generate extra energy within its body.
Omnivores, like bears, foxes, raccoons, and opossums, exemplify dietary versatility, consuming both plant and animal matter. This adaptability allows them to thrive in varied environments.