Key Highlights
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A study of over 136,000 trees on the Tibetan Plateau found that planted forests are much more vulnerable to drought than natural forests, with a lower tolerance threshold. This means that to survive future droughts, we need to manage tree farms differently, by thinning dense areas and planting a mix of 3-5 tree species to build resilience.
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Researchers discovered that the yellow fever mosquito adapts to insecticides not through rare new mutations, but more often through common genetic variations already present in the population. This “soft sweep” adaptation means the mosquito can evolve resistance faster, making insecticide-based control strategies more challenging.
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In alpine ecosystems, plants and their root microbes work together differently across seasons, with some plants even interacting with microbes to get nutrients during the snow-covered winter. This shows that to understand an ecosystem’s health and stability, we must consider these seasonal partnerships, not just what happens during the summer.
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A new analysis of rocky reef food webs reveals that even when overgrazing by sea urchins destroys seaweed forests and creates “barren” zones, the large animals living on the seafloor help keep the ecosystem stable. This finding challenges the idea that these barrens are simple, degraded systems and shows they have their own complex balance.
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Scientists have mapped the exact spot on a specific long non-coding RNA molecule where a key protein, MLE, binds. Pinpointing this interaction site is a crucial step in understanding how genes on the X chromosome are regulated, a fundamental process in molecular biology.
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