• How HIV Builds its Suit of Armor

    Updated: 2012-11-26 19:13:19
    Reblogged from ScaleOut: (L to R) The coarse-grained model of the viral capsid; Example results of lattice assembly simulations; Simulation detail showing the characteristic hexagonal lattice structure. (Image by John Grime) At the molecular level, science is often a series of snapshots. With the most advanced imaging techniques, researchers can magnify targets over a million [...]

  • Titles in Evolution overload

    Updated: 2012-11-17 16:58:00
    : FS AA AbC AL AS BF C6 CC CH CO VL CW DM EP GEP GW HG IF LA MDB MPM PEM PX PY R6 RRR SW TPP VM Field of Science Botany and Art 3 hours ago in The Phytophactor The Shambulance : Copying Roger Clemens Won't Help You Lose Holiday Pounds 1 day ago in inkfish Powerball drives traffic to AbC : a Repost 1 day ago in Angry by Choice I say uncle you say DaJiu 2 days ago in Games with Words Why not to do a PhD if you want to become a writer 3 days ago in The Allotrope Gender and Academic Publishing 3 days ago in Moss Plants and More Maryland puts football ahead of academics again 6 days ago in Genomics , Evolution , and Pseudoscience The network of scientific journals 6 days ago in Doc Madhattan Postcranial Anatomy of a Late Triassic Sauropodomorph from Argentina 1 week ago in Chinleana I'm gonna

  • My Research: Biomechanics of insect sex

    Updated: 2012-11-13 15:21:08
    Mammalian sex that we’re all familiar with is amazingly simple. You have a gaping vagina to be penetrated by a shaft-shaped penis. Sure, there are variations on the theme, but it all boils down to that. On the other hand, the mechanics of most insect sex is more complicated, since the penile and vaginal apparatuses [...]

  • Wallace Centenary Project Brochure

    Updated: 2012-11-08 10:56:08
    Wallace Centenary Project Brochure, Milner, Richard , (2012)

  • New on AAAS: Why We Need Insects

    Updated: 2012-11-06 22:14:46
    Insects – even ones we consider “pests” – are an important driving force behind rapid shifts in plant ecology and evolution. A new five-year study shows plants quickly lose defensive traits through evolution when plant-eating insects are removed from the environment. Check it out! (pdf or link)

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