Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
This ‘Clock’ Could Warn of Hidden Stresses to Animals, Offering a Long-Sought Signal That a Population Is Nearing Collapse
The epigenetic clock measures biological age and could help scientists assess the health of polar bears, dolphins, baboons ...
While animal welfare has traditionally enjoyed stronger support in urban and suburban areas than rural ones, more Republicans ...
AZ Animals on MSN
Why Some Animals Can Regrow Limbs — But We Can’t
When humans lose a limb due to an injury, there are lifelong lifestyle changes that are necessary to accommodate the loss of ...
In the wild, staying safe is one of the most important ways animals survive. Some hide or blend in with their surroundings, ...
Let’s build on our strengths by prioritizing innovation that serves patients first: modern methods that reflect human biology ...
Cancer treatments don't always work as expected, leaving patients to suffer side effects of chemotherapy without gaining benefits. Now scientists are exploring whether tiny proxy organs made in the ...
Avoid inconclusive results, wasted tests, and diagnostic delays by focusing on these five practical improvements for sample ...
Paulick Report on MSN
Foxtail Woes: Small Seeds Cause Big Problems For Horses
Foxtail seeds contain microscopic barbs that can cause seeds to attach and embed into the soft tissues of animals.
New work shows that physical folding of the genome to control genes located far away may have been an early evolutionary ...
There's an old French folk adage which translates as “the best medicine is the mouth of the dog.” Is there something to that?
Veterinarian and public health leader Megin Nichols talked about the interdependence of human, animal and environmental ...
The body's tissues can get injured in many ways, but while some injuries heal perfectly, others don't heal at all. A cut in ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results