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EXPERT Q&A: Answering your questions about COVID-19 variants

With reports of new COVID-19 strains emerging in the UK, South Africa, and Brazil, an Australian expert a...

Mantis males must wrestle if they don't want to lose their heads

The praying mantis has a reputation for cannibalism because females often eat males before they get a cha...

Bee gone? A quarter of bee species haven’t been seen in 30 years

While reports and records of animal species have increased dramatically over the last few decades, the nu...

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  1. Evidence review confirms COVID-19 is generally ‘mild’ in young children

    Publicly released: Wed 6 Jan 2021 at 0922 AEDT | 1122 NZDT

    Vaccine

    Babies and asymptomatic cases account for up to half of COVID-19 infections in the under-five age group, which has implications for vaccination programs, a new UNSW study has found. A systematic review and meta-analysis of international COVID-19 Read more about Evidence review confirms COVID-19 is generally ‘mild’ in young children

    Australia; NSWThe University of New South Wales
  2. New clues to prostate cancer

    Publicly released: Wed 6 Jan 2021 at 0300 AEDT | 0500 NZDT

    Cell Reports

    Australian research has identified a new mechanism in which prostate cancer cells can ‘switch’ character and become resistant to therapy. These findings, just published in Cell Reports, are an important development in unravelling how an Read more about New clues to prostate cancer

    Australia; VIC; SAFlinders University|The University of Adelaide|University of South Australia...
  3. Almost 50 million Americans may have had COVID - but herd immunity is still a long way off

    Publicly released: Wed 6 Jan 2021 at 0300 AEDT | 0500 NZDT

    JAMA Network Open

    As of November 2020, an estimated 46. 9 million Americans, or more than 14 per cent of the US population, are likely to have had SARS-CoV-2 infections, with only around 28. 1 million of those being symptomatic, according to US research. The study Read more about Almost 50 million Americans may have had COVID - but herd immunity is still a long way off

    InternationalPfizer Vaccines
  4. Australia’s flagship STEM youth experience reinvented for 2021

    Publicly released: Tue 5 Jan 2021 at 1630 AEDT | 1830 NZDT

    A new-look National Youth Science Forum (NYSF) Year 12 Program kicks off today with a stellar line-up of speakers and an expanded program unlike ever before. The 2021 NYSF Year 12 Program features two Nobel Prize winners, over 20 top experts in Read more about Australia’s flagship STEM youth experience reinvented for 2021

    AustraliaNational Youth Science Forum
  5. Single dose of the vaccine may be better than nothing at all

    Publicly released: Tue 5 Jan 2021 at 1046 AEDT | 1246 NZDT

    Annals of Internal Medicine

    International researchers suggest, in three different papers, that the speed-versus-efficacy trade-off of administering a single dose of the COVID-19 vaccine may overrule the need for a double dose in the short-term. While the double-dose is more Read more about Single dose of the vaccine may be better than nothing at all

    InternationalYale School of Medicine, USA
  6. An insight into asthma attacks points the way to potential treatments

    Publicly released: Tue 5 Jan 2021 at 1030 AEDT | 1230 NZDT

    PNAS

    Australian researchers have studied the lung immune response during an asthma attack in a mouse model of the disease and found that a protein involved in inflammation called Interleukin-13 (IL-13) may play a key role in asthma attacks. The authors Read more about An insight into asthma attacks points the way to potential treatments

    Australia; NSWThe University of Newcastle
  7. Cities could warm by more than 4°C by the end of the century

    Publicly released: Tue 5 Jan 2021 at 0300 AEDT | 0500 NZDT

    Nature Climate Change

    Cities across the globe could warm more than 4°C under a high-emissions climate change scenario, and experience a relative humidity decrease by 2100, according to international research. Cities tend to warm more than other areas because built Read more about Cities could warm by more than 4°C by the end of the century

    InternationalUniversity of Illinois, USA
  8. Fish sex organs boosted under high-CO2

    Publicly released: Wed 30 Dec 2020 at 0600 AEDT | 0800 NZDT

    PLOS Biology

    Research from the University of Adelaide has found that some species of fish will have higher reproductive capacity because of larger sex organs, under the more acidic oceans of the future. Published in PLOS Biology, the researchers say that far Read more about Fish sex organs boosted under high-CO2

    Australia; SAThe University of Adelaide
  9. Weedy Seadragon genomics reveal highly distinct populations

    Publicly released: Thu 24 Dec 2020 at 0600 AEDT | 0800 NZDT

    PLOS ONE

    To describe weedy seadragons as unique is an understatement. With a fused, elongated jaw, body armour, leafy appendages and no pelvic fins, these fish are like no other. Found only along Australia’s temperate coast, numbers have been declining. Read more about Weedy Seadragon genomics reveal highly distinct populations

    Australia; NSW; VIC; TASUniversity of Technology Sydney (UTS)|The University of New South Wales...
  10. Focus on seasonal, not yearly, changes when considering impacts of climate change

    Publicly released: Thu 24 Dec 2020 at 0600 AEDT | 0800 NZDT

    PLOS ONE

    Results from a 40-year study of a Montana prairie say may be better to look at local and seasonal changes -- compared to yearly climate changes -- when forecasting how climate change affects ecosystems. Over the four decades, temperature increased Read more about Focus on seasonal, not yearly, changes when considering impacts of climate change

    InternationalUniversity of Notre Dame, USA

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