Article Highlights
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 11-May-2026 20:15 ET (12-May-2026 00:15 GMT/UTC)
Traditional Chinese medicine protected chickens from Mycoplasma gallisepticum
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) improved body weight gain, feed conversion, survival rate, and immune organ index in MG-infected chickens. TCM reduced MG-induced inflammation and tissue damage by lowering pro-inflammatory cytokines and downregulating pro-apoptotic genes. TCM inhibited the MAPK/ERK/JNK signaling pathway, protecting against MG-induced immunosuppression.
- Journal
- Journal of Integrative Agriculture
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China, National Key Research and Development Program of China
Many children seem on track—but struggle with motor skills
University of Texas at ArlingtonA University of Texas at Arlington study reveals that even children who meet standard developmental milestones may be falling behind in age-appropriate motor skills. Priscila Tamplain, UT Arlington associate professor of kinesiology and director of the Motor Development Lab, has published multiple articles on the topic and cautions parents not to overlook the issue.
- Journal
- Journal of Motor Learning and Development
3D modeling reveals strategies to boost greenhouse tomato photosynthesis
Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of ScienceA research team has demonstrated that greenhouse tomato productivity can be significantly improved by targeting leaf-level efficiency and plant layout strategies.
- Journal
- Plant Phenomics
Biomateriomics is even more interdisciplinary now
Intelligent ComputingEngineers and scientists, as well as artists, have long been inspired by the beauty and functionality of nature’s designs. Japan designed high-speed trains to cut through the air as smoothly as the kingfisher cuts through water, for example, but useful designs can also be found at a microscopic level. The study of biology in combination with materials science is called biomateriomics. An Italian research team sees great potential in the application of generative artificial intelligence to this already interdisciplinary field. They have described this potential, and the associated limitations and challenges, in an open access review article titled “Generative Artificial Intelligence for Advancing Discovery and Design in Biomateriomics,” published May 1 in Intelligent Computing, a Science Partner Journal.
- Journal
- Intelligent Computing
- Funder
- PR MARCHE FESR
Successful hatching for endangered giant tortoises with artificial incubation
University of Sheffield- Journal
- Animal Conservation
FITSA: A new method to solve 50-year-old problem in molecular analysis
Estonian Research Council- Journal
- Science Advances
- Funder
- Estonian Research Council
New international study: Which country has higher rates of involuntary childlessness — Israel or the US?
Reichman UniversityEvery Rosh Hashanah, annual reports are released focused on birth rates, the average number of children per family, and other population growth data. However, there’s another side to these statistics: experiences of involuntary childlessness, in which people who wish to be parents are unable to for medical, social, or institutional reasons. A new study reveals that these experiences are far more widespread than commonly thought, especially among the LGBTQ+ community. The researchers note that an international comparison of this phenomenon is important, as countries vary widely in the degree of encouragement they offer for childbearing, the assistance they provide to prospective parents, and the barriers they place that can impede the path to parenthood. The current study compared responses from participants in the United States with those in Israel.
- Journal
- Journal of Marriage and Family
Expanding the reach of leaf spectroscopy: Toward universal models for plant trait prediction
Nanjing Agricultural University The Academy of ScienceA research team has demonstrated that spectroscopy combined with partial least squares regression (PLSR) can accurately estimate plant leaf traits, but models built at one site often fail elsewhere.
- Journal
- Plant Phenomics