<p> </p>
<ul> <li>Big evolutionary changes happen gradually and not in giant leaps, a team of biologists led by the University of Sheffield have discovered<br /> </li> <li>Using new methodology to study an evolutionary shift in the birthing style of marine snails, experts have been able to answer the long-debated question as to how game-changing innovations like flight, vision, and the bearing of live offspring happened<br /> </li> <li>Understanding the evolutionary origin of these developments is important because they can dramatically change the course of evolution, such as when live-bearing led to the diversification of mammals or feathers helped birds to evolve flight <br /> </li> <li>Biologists will now be able to apply these new methods to other types of adaptation, including thermal tolerance, which must evolve if some species are to survive clima
Community members are continuing to work together to make sure dialysis patients have rides to treatment outside the area after the closure of Fresenius Medical Care in November. Kirsten Stratton, the Senior Media Relations Manager for Fresenius Medical Care, in an email to the Daily Record, said like most healthcare providers in the U.S., they […]
Barry Callebaut’s new CEO Peter Feld outlined his strategic vision for the world’s largest chocolate and cocoa supplier after shares in the Group have fallen 22% in the past 12 months.
Night-time pollinators such as moths may visit just as many plants as bees, and should also be the focus of conservation and protection efforts, a new study from the University of Sheffield suggests.
The agreement between the Germany-based specialist for high-efficient water electrolysis, thyssenkrupp nucera, and the Swedish industrial start-up H2 Green