Titre : | Science, 385(6713) - 6 September 2024 - Memory serves : chickadees with better spatial memories have longer lives |
Type de document : | Bulletin : Périodique |
Paru le : | 06/09/2024 |
Année de publication : | 2024 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Résumé : |
Sommaire :
In Depth - Hail chasers plan largest ever field campaign ICECHIP project aims to improve predictions of economically costly hailstorms - Breakthrough promises new era of ultraprecise nuclear clocks Timekeepers based on energy transitions in atomic nuclei could be stable, portable, and able to probe new physics - Genomes were ‘scrambled’ when worms left the sea Chromosomal chaos may have aided their moves to fresh water and land - NSF says tribes must OK studies that affect them Many researchers and tribes see the change as long overdue but say it means new burdens - Russia sets 25% cut to research As spending on Ukraine war surges, other areas suffer - Serbian lithium mine triggers publication dispute Mining company scientists attack paper claiming environmental contamination Feature - Indian knowledge To distance its science education systems from centurieslong British colonialism, India is leaning into its history and traditions—but at what cost? - India goes local for the language of science Insights Expert Voices - Learning from a climate disaster: The catastrophic floods in southern Brazil Perspectives - Emotional contagion builds resilience Mice that witness cage mates in distress withstand future negative emotions better - Turning tissues temporarily transparent A food dye suppresses light scattering in biological tissues to enable deep in vivo imaging - Transplanted fibroblasts take the pressure Weight-bearing skin cells show promising therapeutic potential - How young is volcanism on the Moon? Volcanic glass beads date lunar magmatism to 120 million years ago Policy Forum - The long shadow of biodiversity loss Technological substitutes are poor proxies for functioning ecosystems Letters - Sweden is shooting brown bears in the dark - Ecological restoration for China’s mines - Roots in Brazil’s Amazon mangroves Research Research Articles - The economic impacts of ecosystem disruptions: Costs from substituting biological pest control - The use of ectopic volar fibroblasts to modify skin identity - Single-cell chromatin accessibility reveals malignant regulatory programs in primary human cancers - Achieving optical transparency in live animals with absorbing molecules - Phantom energy in the nonlinear response of a quantum many-body scar state - Palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling of alcohols with olefins by positional tuning of a counteranion - Returned samples indicate volcanism on the Moon 120 million years ago - Serotonin release in the habenula during emotional contagion promotes resilience - In situ structure and rotary states of mitochondrial ATP synthase in whole Polytomella cells - Role of protein kinase PLK1 in the epigenetic maintenance of centromeres - PLK1-mediated phosphorylation cascade activates Mis18 complex to ensure centromere inheritance - Bacteria can anticipate the seasons: Photoperiodism in cyanobacteria - Spatial cognitive ability is associated with longevity in food-caching chickadees - Oxygen- and proton-transporting open framework ionomer for medium-temperature fuel cells - Organizing the coactivity structure of the hippocampus from robust to flexible memory |
En ligne : | https://www.science.org/toc/science/385/6713 |
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Article
Ashley E. Larsen, Auteur ;
Dennis Engist, Auteur ;
Frederik Noack, Auteur
Biodiversity declines are ubiquitous. Yet, their impacts on ecosystems or the services ecosystems provide to humans are poorly understood because it is hard to measure the effect of biodiversity declines separately from other changes that are sp[...]
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Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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13813 | Science | Périodique | Bibliothèque | Indéterminé | Disponible |