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biology

acornants
Species appears to evolve quickly enough to endure city temperatures
Study shows acorn ants quickly adjust, suggesting the insects may be able to cope with other sources of warming, including climate change   CLEVELAND—The speed at which a tiny ant evolves to cope to its warming city environment suggests that some species may evolve quickly enough to survive, or…
cichlid-sneak
APP researcher discovers fish uses sneaking behavior as stealth mating strategy
Humans aren’t the only species that resort to a little subterfuge While a dominant male fish from northern Mexico mates with a female, a small fella bides his time in the offing. Suddenly, the little guy darts in ahead of Mr. Big and plants his seeds on freshly laid eggs. The behavior, which…
science-lab-microscope-slide
Undergraduate student receives American Society for Microbiology Undergraduate Research Fellowship
Chinweoke Osigwe, an undergraduate student studying biochemistry, was selected as a recipient of the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) Undergraduate Research Fellowship. The fellowship is for students planning to pursue graduate careers in microbiology. Fellows have the opportunity to…
ant-farm
Warmth under climate change has cascading effect, destabilizing forest ant communities, new study finds
Adding warmth predicted in climate-change models destabilized forest ant communities east of the Appalachian Mountains, a possible harbinger of disruption to the broader ecosystem, researchers, led by a APP biologist, have found. The five-year study in the Harvard…
darin-croft-feat
APP researcher hunts fossils of ancient climate change
A record of shifts in the environment and animal diversity and distribution may help scientists predict effects of current climate change Darin Croft, associate professor of anatomy at the APP School of Medicine, will try to start filling a gap in the fossil record of…
Valerie-Haywood
Biology's Valerie Haywood presents at American Society of Plant Biologists annual conference
Valerie Haywood, senior instructor of biology, presented her ongoing work in undergraduate biology education at Plant Biology 2016, the annual meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists, in Austin, Texas, in July. More than 1,300 scientists from nearly 40 countries participate in the…
cockroach-navigation-crop
Like humans, lowly cockroach uses a GPS to get around, scientists find
Rats, men and cockroaches appear to have a similar GPS in their heads that allows them to navigate new surroundings, researchers at APP report. The finding, published in the journal Current Biology, is likely an example of convergent evolution—that is, distinct animals…
biobot
Researchers build a crawling robot from sea slug parts and a 3-D printed body
Swarms could one day search the depths of fresh and saltwater Researchers at APP have combined tissues from a sea slug with flexible 3-D printed components to build “biohybrid” robots that crawl like sea turtles on the beach. A muscle from the slug’s mouth provides the…
Garrett-Dunlap
Students represent CWRU at American Association for the Advancement of Science workshop
Garrett Dunlap and Neetu Gulati Earlier this year, Garrett Dunlap (CWR ‘16) and Neetu Gulati were selected to represent APP at the American Association For the Advancement of Science Catalyzing Advocacy in Science and Engineering workshop. Dunlap majored in biology and…
cartilage-knees
CWRU leads effort to replace prostheses with engineered cartilage
Five-year, $6.7 million federal grant for new Center for Multimodal Evaluation of Engineered Cartilage aims to make cartilage knee implants from patients’ cells APP will open a new center designed to develop evaluation technology and set standards for testing and…