Fungi arose long before plants, shaping Earth with early soils and nutrient cycles. Their hidden legacy shows they may have prepared the world for life to flourish on land.
Wondering if raking leaves is a waste of time? Discover expert tips on why leaving leaves helps soil, grass, and wildlife ...
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Microplastics reduce soil fertility and boost production of a potent greenhouse gas, study shows
More than 90% of plastic waste ends up in the soil, where it breaks down into microplastics that are invisible to the naked ...
Don’t drink the lake water. The number of Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) advisories at Hayden Lake have been a growing concern ...
As the weather cools, Midwest ranchers have several options to consider for extending their grazing season, according ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Fungi’s ancient origins: How they shaped life on Earth a billion years ago
The findings show that the common ancestor of the extant fungi was about 1.4 to 900 million years ago. That is far earlier ...
Whales fertilize the ocean with vital nutrients; their excrement stimulates phytoplankton, oxygen, and carbon capture in ...
What processes have regulated climate over the course of Earth’s history? Researchers are addressing this question in the ...
Researchers using museum specimens uncovered alarming population declines in unique Fijian ants tied to human impacts.
A team of researchers from the Bhatnagar Lab at Boston University recently published a paper in Nature Cities that studied the difference in microbial communities of street trees and non-urban forest ...
A giant pumpkin starts off as the perfect seed. Growers choose seeds that have yielded large pumpkins in the past or test new ...
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