The majority of these boats in Nouadhibou target octopus, Mauritania’s second-largest export by value, and overharvesting has forced the government to shut down fishing for 2 months each year. The octopus exports are one strand in the burgeoning global food trade, which enriches diets and exporting nations but is vulnerable to disruption. Learn more in this week's issue of Science: https://bit.ly/3B1rgK0
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Founded in 1880 on $10,000 of seed money from the American inventor Thomas Edison, Science has grown to become the world's leading outlet for scientific news, commentary, and cutting-edge research, with the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general-science journal. Through its print and online incarnations, Science reaches an estimated worldwide readership of more than one million. In content, too, the journal is truly international in scope; some 35 to 40 percent of the corresponding authors on its papers are based outside the United States. Its articles consistently rank among world's most cited research.
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Updates
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Researchers discover that using foldable bottlebrush polymers as network strands provides a strategy to decouple the tradeoffs between stiffness and extensibility. Learn more in this week’s issue of #ScienceAdvances: https://bit.ly/414ndr6
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Science Magazine reposted this
“America’s scientific success is no accident. … Yet what got America to this point will not get the country to where it needs to go.” Check out the editorial from Sudip Parikh, Marcia McNutt, and Dario Gil on the Vision for American Science & Technology in this week’s Science Magazine. Science & Technology Action Committee
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Pollution from industrial hotspots can trigger ice formation in supercooled clouds, altering their reflective properties and increasing regional snowfall, according to a Science new study. https://bit.ly/414w4Js
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Science Magazine reposted this
Chelsea L. Wood's new kid's book Power to the Parasites is "grool" (gross + cool), according to my new favorite media critic (I'm only a little biased). That and other reviews from Science Magazine staff and the Books et al. section in this edition of #ScienceAdviser: https://lnkd.in/gTWQzR-U
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For the first time, scientists have directly measured the hearing range of minke whales, discovering that the species can detect high-frequency sounds as high as 90 kHz, according to a new Science study. 📄: https://bit.ly/3AN3Jwt
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"We are thankful for the metric system. There, I said it." https://bit.ly/3AZavza #Thanksgiving
What scientists can be grateful for on Thanksgiving
science.org
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Science Magazine reposted this
It's Thanksgiving in the U.S., and today, I'm especially thankful for my incredible Science Magazine colleague (and friend!) Phie Jacobs, who penned the wonderful essay for this holiday edition of #ScienceAdviser: https://lnkd.in/gzE2rvxr
ScienceAdviser: Giving thanks for the sometimes ugly, sometimes delightful, always necessary truth
science.org
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This week's new issue of Science Translational Medicine has arrived! A high-capacity microneedle patch lays the road to efficient and painless drug delivery, a human study unveils differences in brain aging between men and women, and more. https://bit.ly/3ZmFxdD
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Researchers have developed a cutting edge tissue preparation and microscopy technique for mapping #RNA in an entire mouse brain, no cuts required. Learn more in #ScienceAdviser: https://bit.ly/3Z7pxe3 📩 Sign up for the free #newsletter: https://bit.ly/4eRy5N4