Birds can spread dangerous pathogens between domestic and wild animals. The avian influenza virus (AIV), for example, prefers to live in waterbirds, often as variants of low pathogenicity. However, ...
E. coli can linger in animal droppings, allowing it to be spread by weather and animal movement, according to initial findings from a multi-year Food and Drug Administration study of a major ...
Researchers at TU Delft have discovered that E. coli bacteria can synchronize their movements, creating order in seemingly random biological systems. By trapping individual bacteria in ...
An audience clapping in rhythm, fireflies flashing in unison, or flocks of starlings moving as one – synchronisation is a natural phenomenon observed across diverse systems and scales. First described ...
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