🛍️ Amazon Big Spring Sale: 100+ editor-approved deals worth buying right now 🛍️ By Debbie Wolfe Published Jul 6, 2024 1:03 PM EDT Add Popular Science (opens in a new tab) Adding us as a Preferred ...
A multi-year megadrought in the Western U.S. has claimed untold populations of wild plants. Amid the conditions, some have survived. Scientists have produced a stunningly complete picture about how ...
T he blooming of a titan arum, or corpse plant, is a spectacle like none other in the plant world. A pale spike resembling ...
Flowers are known for their beauty, but biologist David George Haskell argues they are also critical to the diversity of life as we know it.
On damp days in the mountains of northern Japan, one of the most remarkable flower transformations unfolds. A patch of unassuming white flowers, that you’d barely notice against the forest’s deep ...
In this week's roundup of science news, Emily Kwong and Rachel Carlson talk about a newly discovered desert flower, tasting lemonade in virtual reality and prehistoric bone tools used by early humans.
David George Haskell has a new book on the flowers that put the rain in rainforests and that challenge the teachings of Darwin ...
Easy-to-grow, sturdy petunia plants produce flowers with a great variety of spectacular colors and a captivating scent. The Maya in Mexico and Inca in Peru believed that the scent of petunias had the ...
Byproducts of car exhaust disrupt pollination by degrading the floral scents that insects use to track down their favorite plants, according to new research. By Lauren Leffer Published Feb 8, 2024 ...
Every Monday at Roadside Blooms, we have a group of regulars who come in just to treat themselves. It also happens to be the day when our single-stem bouquet bar is half off. We’ve been told time and ...
Spring is just around the corner, but it's already in full bloom at Hicks Nurseries 36th Annual Flower and Garden Show. For the past 36 years, Hicks has been able to bring spring (and summer!) color ...
It's time for our science news roundup from Short Wave, NPR's science podcast. I'm joined by two of the show's reporters, Emily Kwong and Rachel Carlson. Good to have you both back here. EMILY KWONG, ...
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