Genetically engineered crops are nothing new. But emerging technology that allows scientists to alter plants more precisely and cheaply is taking genetically engineered plants from the field to the kitchen.
Category: Entomology
‘Ovation worm’: Bizarre new Burgess Shale species detailed in journal
The Ovatiovermis is shown in a handout photo from the Royal Ontario Museum. Researchers with the Royal Ontario Museum have for the first time identified an 18-limbed worm that lived some 500 million years ago.
Press release distribution, EDGAR filing, XBRL, regulatory filings
Books-A-Million to celebrate new President’s Pick: Amy Gary’s “In the Great Green Room” with FREE event on Thursday, January 26 )–Books-A-Million to celebrate new President’s Pick: Amy Gary’s “In the Great Green Room” with FREE event on Thursday, January 26 at the Brookwood Village Books-A-M… United Arab Emirates Prepaid Cards Business and Investment Opportunities, Market Size and Forecasts 2011-2020: Consumer Attitude & Behaviour, Retail Spend, Market Risk – Research and Markets )–Research and Markets has announced the addition of the “United Arab Emirates Prepaid Cards Business and Investment Opportunities – Market Size and Forecas… )–Freeman Freeman & Smiley LLP is pleased to announce that Richard A. D’Amura has joined its Financial Services, Securities Regulation and Litigation practice as a partn… )–The Western Union Company announced today that Hikmet Ersek, President and … (more)
Another good target for EPA reform
With reform-minded folks in charge of the Executive and Legislative Branches, unelected, unaccountable, un-removable bureaucrats may soon be exerting far less power over our policies, regulations, lives and livelihoods. Energy and climate are high on the fix-it list.
‘Designer’ ecosystems could boost river clean-ups
A new project aims to reveal what delays recovery of degraded rivers and streams – why waterways themselves can prove resistant to attempts to replenish them. Photo / File A new project, led by a team of scientists at the University of Canterbury, aims to reveal what delays recovery of degraded rivers and streams – and why waterways themselves can prove resistant to attempts to replenish them.