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Climate variability poses a threat to cold blooded animals
Medicine 2026-03-20

Climate variability poses a threat to cold blooded animals

A new Murdoch University study has found that cold blooded animals (ectotherms) are unable to adjust physiologically to daily temperature fluctuations, a limitation that could leave them increasingly vulnerable as climate change drives even greater temperature variability. Daily temperature variations are a common feature in natural environments, ranging from subtle to extreme depending on the geographic location, season, and local climate patterns. Ectotherms, which includes almost all fish, reptiles, and invertebrates, rely on external sources to regulate their body heat. Their internal temperature closely mirrors the temperature of their environment, ...
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Queensland GPs face barriers in supporting VAD: QUT study
Science 2026-03-20

Queensland GPs face barriers in supporting VAD: QUT study

Queensland general practitioners provide compassionate, holistic care to patients seeking voluntary assisted dying (VAD), but many face significant hurdles that limit their capacity to participate, new QUT‑led research has found. Published in the Australian Journal of General Practice, the study explored the experiences of 12 Queensland GPs during the first year of the state’s VAD legislation. Researchers identified wide variation in GP involvement - from no participation to more than 50 cases - and highlighted the need for improved remuneration, streamlined processes, and broader education to support safe ...
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Teaching AI to see molecular electrostatics could accelerate battery electrolyte discovery
Technology 2026-03-20

Teaching AI to see molecular electrostatics could accelerate battery electrolyte discovery

Electrolytes sit at the heart of modern electrochemical energy storage. They control how ions move, how interfaces form, how stable a battery remains over time, and ultimately how safe and efficient the device can be. Yet discovering better electrolyte molecules remains a very challenging problem. The relevant behavior depends on subtle intermolecular interactions, solvation effects, and charge distributions, which are often expensive to resolve with quantum-chemical calculations at the scale needed for materials discovery. This is where artificial intelligence (AI) has ...
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Science 2026-03-20

Sulfuric acid method improves accuracy of nitrogen isotope tracking for atmospheric ammonia

By comparing sulfuric and boric acid absorption systems, they found sulfuric acid delivers higher recovery rates and reduces isotope fractionation, even at low concentrations. Field applications successfully distinguished emissions from cropland, livestock, orchards, and vegetables, improving the accuracy of ammonia source identification. NH₃ is the most important alkaline gas in the atmosphere and a major contributor to air pollution. It reacts with sulfur dioxide (SO₂) and nitrogen oxides (NOₓ) to form ammonium sulfate and ammonium ...
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Science 2026-03-20

Largest study of its kind tests hydration strategy for kidney stones

DURHAM, N.C. – Kidney stones can cause some of the most intense pain people ever experience, affecting daily life and leading many to hospital emergency visits. It affects 1 in 11 people in the U.S., and almost half will experience a recurrence. A major new study from the Urinary Stone Disease Research Network, coordinated by the Duke Clinical Research Institute, tested whether a behavioral program could help people drink enough fluids to prevent stones from coming back. The study, published in The Lancet on March 19, ...
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Biochar from energy crops could remove CO2 at $9.60 per ton in China
Energy 2026-03-19

Biochar from energy crops could remove CO2 at $9.60 per ton in China

A new study calculates that biochar produced from bioenergy crops grown on China's abandoned farmland could remove atmospheric CO2 for roughly $9.60 per ton, compared to about $91 per ton for bioenergy with carbon capture and storage. The approach could scale to 1.88 billion tons annually under optimized conditions.
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A $240,000 bet on diversifying neuropsychiatry clinical trials
Medicine 2026-03-19

A $240,000 bet on diversifying neuropsychiatry clinical trials

The Robert A. Winn Career Development Award has expanded beyond oncology and cardiology for the first time, offering two-year $240,000 grants to early-career neuropsychiatry physician-scientists committed to running inclusive clinical trials. Applications for Cohort 6 close May 4, 2026.
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