Last update:

Endangered gazelles find Libyan 'safe haven'

Cocooned in white bags and nestled in the arms of volunteers, eight young rhim gazelles—an endangered species native to North Africa—have been transferred to an uninhabited Libyan island.

More news

Plants & Animals
Using fire management to see how ticks... tick
Ecology
Surveys reveal vast mangrove damage along Great Barrier Reef and restoration hotspots
Ecology
Clearance of deer cull carcasses is a loss to ecosystem, finds Scotland study
Ecology
How roads are reshaping and scarring our planet, and even changing animals' DNA
Ecology
Craft cider is surprisingly good for the environment
Molecular & Computational biology
Exploring cadmium-induced alterations in the expression profile of microRNAs
Evolution
Isle of Skye discovery suggests ancient mammals had longer lifespans than modern counterparts
Molecular & Computational biology
New study confirms mammal-to-mammal avian flu spread
Plants & Animals
Climate-smart coffee: Researchers explore Robusta coffee as alternative to Arabica
Plants & Animals
Size doesn't matter for mammals with more complex brains, according to new study
Evolution
A soft needle in an oceanic haystack: Scientists discover a new species of chordate
Molecular & Computational biology
AI-assisted analysis suggests elephant-like species extinction rates grew when humans arrived
Plants & Animals
New Zealand's flightless birds are retreating to moa refuges
Plants & Animals
Your world is different from a pigeon's—but a new theory explains how we can still live in the same reality
Evolution
Ancient marine animal had inventive past despite being represented by few species, new study finds
Cell & Microbiology
Deciphering the journey from stem cells to neurons: Study reveals continuous gene expression changes behind the switch
Plants & Animals
Does fertility affect a woman's body odor? Study finds no evidence
Ecology
Study reveals close host–symbiont interactions in deep-sea chemosynthetic tubeworm
Plants & Animals
Rare rodent prefers an invasive noxious weed over native vegetation, study finds
Ecology
Non-native species are threatening vulnerable Svalbard plant life, study warns

Other news

Astronomy
A cave discovered on the moon opens up new opportunities for settlement by humans
Social Sciences
Experiments reveal that image memorability can sharpen our sense of time
Other
Saturday Citations: E-bike accident spike; epigenetics in memory formation; Komodo dragons now scarier
Space Exploration
Spacecraft to swing by Earth, moon on path to Jupiter
Materials Science
New process uses light and enzymes to create greener chemicals
Soft Matter
Exploring what happens when different spherical objects hit the water
Education
Communicating numbers boosts trust in climate change science, research suggests
General Physics
Physicists introduce method for mechanical detection of individual nuclear decays
Astronomy
Study sheds more light on the nature of pulsar PSR J1227−6208
Earth Sciences
New study disputes Hunga Tonga volcano's role in 2023–24 global warm-up
Nanomaterials
Twisted carbon nanotubes could achieve significantly better energy storage than advanced lithium-ion batteries
Soft Matter
New self-powered electrostatic tweezer enhances object manipulation and microfluidics
Analytical Chemistry
Raman spectroscopy offers new insights into ionic liquid acidity
Soft Matter
Team develops novel hybrid scheme for compressible flow computations
Earth Sciences
How a warming Arctic is accelerating global climate change
Planetary Sciences
Kepler's 1607 pioneering sunspot sketches solve solar mysteries 400 years later
General Physics
Balancing instability and robustness: New mathematical framework for dynamics of natural systems
Optics & Photonics
New method for 3D quantitative phase imaging eliminates need for digital phase recovery algorithms
General Physics
ATLAS probes uncharted territory with LHC Run 3 data
Optics & Photonics
Novel tunable ultrasonic liquid crystal light diffuser paves the way for next-gen indoor lighting

Will food chains break as seasons become more unpredictable?

"There are really four dimensions," begins the narrator of The Time Machine, H. G. Wells's classic Victorian adventure novel. "Three which we call the three planes of space and a fourth, time." Humans cannot help but think ...