Showing 20 articles starting at article 1321
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Categories: Engineering: Biometric, Environmental: Ecosystems
Published Illuminating invisible bloody fingerprints with a fluorescent polymer
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Careful criminals usually clean a scene, wiping away visible blood and fingerprints. However, prints made with trace amounts of blood, invisible to the naked eye, could remain. Dyes can detect these hidden prints, but the dyes don't work well on certain surfaces. Now, researchers have developed a fluorescent polymer that binds to blood in a fingerprint -- without damaging any DNA also on the surface -- to create high-contrast images.
Published Climate change is making Indian monsoon seasons more chaotic
(via sciencedaily.com) 
If global warming continues unchecked, summer monsoon rainfall in India will become stronger and more erratic. This is the central finding of an analysis by a team of researchers that compared more than 30 state-of-the-art climate models from all around the world. The study predicts more extremely wet years in the future - with potentially grave consequences for more than one billion people's well-being, economy, food systems and agriculture.
Published Ozone pollution harms maize crops, study finds
(via sciencedaily.com) 
A new study has shown that ozone in the lower layers of the atmosphere decreases crop yields in maize and changes the types of chemicals that are found inside the leaves.
Published Low risk of researchers passing coronavirus to North American bats
(via sciencedaily.com) 
A new study finds that the risk is low that scientists could pass coronavirus to North American bats during winter research.
Published Study finds microbial-plant interactions affect the microbial response to climate change
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Biologists have discovered that plants influence how their bacterial and fungal neighbors react to climate change. This finding contributes crucial new information to a hot topic in environmental science: in what manner will climate change alter the diversity of both plants and microbiomes on the landscape?
Published The persistent danger after landscape fires
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Every year, an estimated four percent of the world's vegetated land surface burns, leaving more than 250 megatons of carbonized plants behind. A study has now recorded elevated concentrations of environmentally persistent free radicals (EPFR) in these charcoals - in some cases even up to five years after the fire. These EPFR may generate reactive substances, which in turn harm plants and living organisms.
Published Ancient megafaunal mutualisms and extinctions as factors in plant domestication
(via sciencedaily.com) 
The development of agriculture is often thought of as a human innovation in response to climate change or population pressure. A new manuscript challenges that concept, suggesting that plants that had already evolved adaptive traits for life among large-bodied grazing and browsing animals were more likely to prosper on a highly disturbed anthropogenic landscape.
Published Greenland caves: Time travel to a warm Arctic
(via sciencedaily.com) 
An international team of scientists presents an analysis of sediments from a cave in northeast Greenland, that cover a time period between about 588,000 to 549,000 years ago. This interval was warmer and wetter than today, the cave deposits provide an outlook in a possible future warmer world due to climate change.
Published How grasslands respond to climate change
(via sciencedaily.com) 
The rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and concurrent climate change has led to yield reductions of grass-rich grassland vegetation in the past century.
Published Last Ice Age: Precipitation caused maximum advance of Alpine Glaciers
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Geologists unexpectedly found mineral deposits in former ice caves in the Austrian Alps dating back to the peak of the last ice age. These special calcite crystals demonstrate that intensive snowfall during the second half of the year triggered a massive glacier advance leading to the climax of the last ice age.
Published Identifying banknote fingerprints can stop counterfeits on streets
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Since the introduction of plastic (polymer) banknotes in 2016, the number of counterfeit notes on the streets has increased, however, researchers have developed a novel technique called Polymer Substrate Fingerprinting, which identifies every banknote's fingerprint which is unique and unclonable.
Published Whooping cranes steer clear of wind turbines when selecting stopover sites
(via sciencedaily.com) 
An article reports that whooping cranes migrating through the U.S. Great Plains avoid 'rest stop' sites that are within 5 km of wind-energy infrastructure.
Published Rarest seal breeding site discovered
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Scientists have discovered a previously unknown breeding site used by the world's rarest seal species.
Published Metal whispering: Finding a better way to recover precious metals from electronic waste
(via sciencedaily.com) 
With a bit of 'metal whispering,' engineers have developed technology capable of recovering pure and precious metals from the alloys in our old phones and other electrical waste. All it takes is the controlled application of oxygen and relatively low levels of heat.
Published Dingo effects on ecosystem visible from space
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Satellite images taken over three decades show that keeping dingoes out comes at a price.
Published Scientists use DNA origami to monitor CRISPR gene targeting
(via sciencedaily.com) 
The remarkable genetic scissors called CRISPR/Cas9, the discovery that won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, sometimes cut in places that they are not designed to target.
Published Impacts of climate warming on microbial network interactions
(via sciencedaily.com) 
A new study explores the impacts of climate warming on microbial network complexity and stability, providing critical insights to ecosystem management and for projecting ecological consequences of future climate warming.
Published Ancient seashell resonates after 18,000 years
(via sciencedaily.com) 
Almost 80 years after its discovery, a large shell from the ornate Marsoulas Cave in the Pyrenees has been studied by a multidisciplinary team: it is believed to be the oldest wind instrument of its type.
Published Early Indian monsoon forecasts could benefit farmers
(via sciencedaily.com) 
First ever in-depth analysis of ECMWF's latest seasonal forecasting system shows it accurately predicts Indian monsoon onset and rainfall, and could be used to avoid crop losses.
Published Study challenges ecology's 'Field of Dreams' hypothesis
(via sciencedaily.com) 
A new study challenges the 'Field of Dreams' hypothesis in restoration ecology, which predicts that restoring plant biodiversity will lead to recovery of animal biodiversity. The study of restored tallgrass prairie found the effects of management strategies (specifically controlled burns and bison reintroduction) on animal communities were six times stronger on average than the effects of plant biodiversity.