Friday, August 5, 2022

Extinction Risk May Be Much Worse Than Current Estimates

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August 04, 2022

Endangered Species

Extinction Risk May Be Much Worse Than Current Estimates

A machine-learning algorithm predicts that more than half of the thousands of species whose conservation status has yet to be assessed are probably in danger of disappearing for good

By Rachel Nuwer

Astronomy

The Webb Telescope Captures a Stunning View of the Cartwheel Galaxy

Webb sees through dust and gas into regions out of reach of optical telescopes such as Hubble, revealing new galaxy views.

By Tereza Pultarova,SPACE.com

Climate Change

Unprecedented, Climate-Driven Disasters Are Stymieing Preparation Efforts

Disasters so extreme that communities have not experienced anything like them before show the shortcomings of current preparedness plans

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Vaccines

A Staph Vaccine Trial Failure Shows Challenges of Stopping Common Bugs

Learning from past failures in the development of staph vaccines may inform how other vaccines for common bugs should be developed

By Fionna M. D. Samuels

Astronomy

Planetary Debris Disks Discovered with Citizen Scientists and Virtual Reality

Members of the public are helping professional astronomers identify nascent planetary systems

By Briley Lewis

Epidemiology

The Risk of Heart Disease after COVID

Some studies suggest that the risk of cardiovascular problems, such as a heart attack or stroke, remains high even many months after a SARS-CoV-2 infection clears up

By Saima May Sidik,Nature magazine

Reproduction

A Proposed Antiabortion Law Infringes on Free Speech

A law would make it illegal to share abortion information on the Internet and raises serious concerns about freedom of speech nationwide

By Hayley Tsukayama

Climate Change

Three Reasons Appalachia's Risk of Deadly Floods Keeps Rising

A warming climate, a unique topography and the legacy of coal mining have increased the odds of extreme flooding in Appalachia

By Chelsea Harvey,E&E News

Reproduction

Genetic Counselors Scramble Post-Roe to Provide Routine Pregnancy Services without Being Accused of a Crime

The Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade means that prenatal advice to patients can suffer and that counselors can face lawsuits and criminal charges

By Laura Hercher

Extraterrestrial Life

With New Study, NASA Seeks the Science behind UFOs

Although modest in scope, a NASA research project reflects shifting attitudes toward the formerly taboo subject of UFOs

By Adam Mann
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Today in Science: Hidden patterns in songs reveal how music evolved

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