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5 things we still get wrong about human reproduction
You'd think we'd know everything there is to know about sexual reproduction. But as it turns out, there are still quite a few ...
A new study has uncovered a hidden step that helps the deadliest malaria parasite survive and multiply inside the human body.
Welcome back to the Daily Aviation, as we explore the world’s heaviest helicopters and airlift aircraft, from Mi-26 to the ...
Radiation and microgravity are two of the greatest hazards to astronauts’ reproductive health. “Space radiation can damage ...
Thailand’s oil painting reproduction industry is gaining international recognition as demand rises for handcrafted art alternatives. Supported ...
A bench of Chief Justice D K Upadhyaya and Justice Tejas Karia issued notice to the parents on Centres appeal assailing the 2024 verdict of a single judge which held that there was no prohibition ...
The Surinam toad has an unusual trick for reproduction: instead of leaving their spawn in water to develop, once the eggs are laid, the male presses them into the female's back.
These “walking sharks” can lay eggs without spending extra energy, rewriting what scientists thought they knew about reproduction.
New research shows that epaulette sharks, often called “walking sharks,” can produce eggs without increasing their overall energy use.
The findings shed new light on human reproduction and suggest pathways for developing treatments to lower the risk of ...
Epaulette sharks can reproduce without any measurable increase in energy use, stunning researchers who expected egg-laying to ...
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