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Una "Vampira" nei nostri mari: la sfida italiana per il Mollusco dell'Anno 2026

Una "Vampira" nei nostri mari: la sfida italiana per il Mollusco dell'Anno 2026

15 Aprile 2026

L'Italia scende in campo per il prestigioso titolo internazionale di...

La Via di Vetro e Preghiera

La Via di Vetro e Preghiera

14 Aprile 2026

Oggi a Palazzo Madama si è parlato di un viaggio...

Gliomi pediatrici: creati in laboratorio "mini-cervelli" 3D per testare nuove cure

Gliomi pediatrici: creati in laboratorio "mini-cervelli" 3D per testare nuove cure

10 Aprile 2026

Un'importante sinergia scientifica tra l'Università di Trento, l'Ospedale Pediatrico Bambino...

Carcinoma mammario: identificato il "freno" molecolare che ne contrasta l'aggressività

Carcinoma mammario: identificato il "freno" molecolare che ne contrasta l'aggressività

09 Aprile 2026

Una ricerca d'eccellenza, nata dalla sinergia tra il Cnr-Ieomi di...

Alpi preistoriche: lo stambecco cacciato 13.000 anni fa era un lignaggio genetico oggi scomparso

Alpi preistoriche: lo stambecco cacciato 13.000 anni fa era un lignaggio genetico oggi scomparso

07 Aprile 2026

La ricerca, pubblicata su Scientific Reports, è frutto della collaborazione...

Il cane nasce dal lupo 15.800 anni fa: lo rivela il DNA antico

Il cane nasce dal lupo 15.800 anni fa: lo rivela il DNA antico

06 Aprile 2026

Uno studio su Nature, con la partecipazione della Sapienza, ha...

L'inganno dei grassi: come il tumore usa i lipidi per "spegnere" il sistema immunitario

L'inganno dei grassi: come il tumore usa i lipidi per "spegnere" il sistema immunitario

04 Aprile 2026

Una scoperta coordinata dall'Università di Torino rivela che il palmitato,...

L'Universo ha un'età minima: le "nonne" della Via Lattea smentiscono Hubble

L'Universo ha un'età minima: le "nonne" della Via Lattea smentiscono Hubble

03 Aprile 2026

Un team internazionale guidato dall'Università di Bologna ha misurato le...

Aprile 2026
Mercoledì, 22 Marzo 2017 15:19

Minitablets help medicate picky cats

Hautala uutiskuva_500

Of all pets, cats are often considered the most difficult ones to medicate. Very small minitablets with flavours or flavour coatings can help cat owners commit to the treatment and make cats more compliant to it, while making it easier to regulate dosage and administer medication flexibly. In her dissertation, Jaana Hautala, MSc (Pharmacy), is seeking solutions for facilitating the medication of cats. In order for the oral medication of pets to succeed, the animal must enjoy the taste of the medicine and find it appealing. Palatability is essential both in acute cases and in the treatment of chronic illnesses which require regular, constant medical treatment. Successful treatment of pets is also necessary to ensure the health and wellbeing of humans, communities and the environment.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline
Mercoledì, 22 Marzo 2017 15:10

A new web of life

Leucauge venusta suspended from its web. Photo: Dimitar Dimitrov


For the first time biologists have made a full family tree of the world's spiders, giving us knowledge about venoms that can be useful in medicine. And we might be able to develop silk just as good as the spider's. They may make you cringe in horror, or they may intrigue you. Some even have them as pets. Regardless of how you judge them, spiders are a plentiful and widespread group of animals. They have been around for 400 million years, count 45 000 species, and crawl around on nearly every terrestrial habitat in in the world. For long, researchers have tried to unlock the secrets to their evolutionary history, striking diversity and success.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Nature_ecology_Micah_Dunthorn_480


Tropical rainforests are one of the most species-rich areas on earth. Thousands of animal and plant species live there. The smaller microbial protists, which are not visible to the naked eye, are also native to these forests, where they live in the soils and elsewhere. A team of researchers formed by Micah Dunthorn, University of Kaiserslautern, examined them more closely by analyzing their DNA. They discovered many unknown species, including many parasites, which may contribute to the stability of rainforest ecosystems. These results have now been published in the scientific journal "Nature Ecology and Evolution".

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Caption: : iStock by GettyImages. Photographer: reubenheydenrych


The silence of an immense desolate land in which to search for reverberations coming from the time at which everything began. The Simons Observatory will be built in the Chilean Atacama desert at an altitude of several thousand metres for the purposes of studying primordial gravitational waves which originated in the first instants of the Big Bang. The SISSA research group led by Carlo Baccigalupi and Francesca Perrotta will take part in this prestigious international project which will lead to the realization  of an ultra-modern telescope project. Their role will involve studying and removing ‘signal contaminants’, emissions from our galaxy and other astrophysical objects which interfere with the analysis and study of primordial gravitational waves.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Artist's impression of an evaporating protoplanetary disc. Image:NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (SSC)

Stars don’t have to be massive to evaporate material from around nearby stars and affect their ability to form planets, a new study suggests. Newly formed stars are surrounded by a disc of dense gas and dust. This is called the protoplanetary disc, as material sticks together within it to form planets. Stars of different shapes and sizes are all born in huge star-forming regions. Scientists know that when a protoplanetary disc around a relatively small star is very close to a massive star, the larger star can evaporate parts of the protoplanetary disc.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

“Conservation genomics to the rescue, saving the pink pigeon #seqthepinkpigeon” is a research project led by the Earlham Institute (EI) and the University of East Anglia in partnership with PacBio. By voting to save the pink pigeon – we also hope to increase survival for other threatened species. Earlham Institute is one of just five finalists and only UK entry selected by a scientific committee to win a PacBio SMRT Sequencing grant. As part of the 2017 Plant and Animal SMRT Programme. EI, in collaboration with the UEA, EnvEast and partners are aiming to save the pink pigeon from its diminishing population on the island of Mauritius. This would be the first endangered bird species to be sequenced by the Pacific Biosciences Iso-Seq method; the potential project will identify immune system genes and their variants which enable the unique species’ survival from a disease humans unwittingly introduced to the island.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Anyone watching the question hour in the Lower House on Tuesday afternoon will regularly hear MPs referring to news articles. Media attention is often the direct cause of questions to ministers or state secretaries, and often the reason for putting topics on the political agenda. If we look only at the course of legislative processes, the influence of the media is much less. PhD research by Lotte Melenhorst has led to this conclusion. The positions of politicians and their parties change little or not at all as a result of media attention. Melenhorst reaches this conclusion after studying three recent proposals for legislation, each of which received a lot of media attention: the Executives’ Pay (Standards) Act, the Law on Work and Social Security, and the Law on Tuition Fees Loans in Higher Education.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Researchers at TUM

 

Combining high pressure and temperature for food processing could produce high quality products that stay fresh for weeks. But can it safely tackle deadly food borne illnesses such as botulism? Food borne botulism is a rare, but potentially fatal disease. According to the World Health Organisation the toxins that cause the illness are some of the most lethal substances known. Patients die in 5% to 10% . We spoke to Rudi Vogel, a microbiologist and food technology researcher at the Technical University of Munich, about a new technique, which he has recently tested on the bacteria that cause botulism. He is collaborating with the European HIPSTER project, which is developing a new food processing technology that combines high pressure with temperature to produce high quality, safe food products with a long shelf life.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Thomas and Kutuzov the cats with artificial feet

Veterinaries successfully apply Tomsk Polytechnic University’s developments for implantology. Now titanium implants with bioactive coatings are already used to treat pets in BEST vet clinic, Novosibirsk, Russia. Tomas and Kutuzov the cats were the first patients to apply the Tomsk development. A scientific team led by associate professor Sergey Tverdokhlebov, the TPU Department of Experimental Physics, is engaged in the property modification of materials used in implant manufacturing. Tomas and Kutuzov the cats were the first patients to test the innovation. “One cat was missing a front foot, another – a back foot. Their owners addressed the clinic and doctors suggested implants with our coatings. The owners agreed and the pets were operated. Now the two are under observation and veterinaries systematically do them radiograph and tomography. Results show the implants have taken roots well. According to the doctors the four-leg patients feel themselves with artificial feet as comfortable as with their native ones,” says Sergey Tverdokhlebov.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

 

A mental hospital-based study in Hanoi, Vietnam looked at if there is a relationship between heat exposure and mental health problems. The results showed significant increase in hospital admissions for mental illnesses during periods of heatwaves, especially during longer periods of heat exposure. This is according to a doctoral thesis from Umeå University. The study, which looked at admissions data from the Hanoi Mental Hospital during a 5 year period (2008 – 2012), also found that factors including old age, gender and rural-dwelling contributed to more mental illness among vulnerable and susceptible groups during heat or extreme heat exposure.

Pubblicato in Scienceonline

Medicina

Gliomi pediatrici: creati in laboratorio "mini-cervelli" 3D per testare nuove cure

Gliomi pediatrici: creati in laboratorio "mini-cervelli" 3D per testare nuove cure

10 Aprile 2026

Un'importante sinergia scientifica tra l'Università di Trento, l'Ospedale Pediatrico Bambino...

Paleontologia

Alpi preistoriche: lo stambecco cacciato 13.000 anni fa era un lignaggio genetico oggi scomparso

Alpi preistoriche: lo stambecco cacciato 13.000 anni fa era un lignaggio genetico oggi scomparso

07 Aprile 2026

La ricerca, pubblicata su Scientific Reports, è frutto della collaborazione tra Università di Bologna,...

Geografia e Storia

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

Dagli Ipogei del Tepui venezuelano ai terreni marziani: un protocollo innovativo per l'indagine di siti estremi

15 Dicembre 2025

Un team internazionale ha applicato metodologie analitiche portatili avanzate per esaminare in situ le...

Astronomia e Spazio

L'Universo ha un'età minima: le "nonne" della Via Lattea smentiscono Hubble

L'Universo ha un'età minima: le "nonne" della Via Lattea smentiscono Hubble

03 Aprile 2026

Un team internazionale guidato dall'Università di Bologna ha misurato le stelle...

Scienze Naturali e Ambiente

Una "Vampira" nei nostri mari: la sfida italiana per il Mollusco dell'Anno 2026

Una "Vampira" nei nostri mari: la sfida italiana per il Mollusco dell'Anno 2026

15 Aprile 2026

L'Italia scende in campo per il prestigioso titolo internazionale di "Mollusc...

 

Scienzaonline con sottotitolo Sciencenew  - Periodico
Autorizzazioni del Tribunale di Roma – diffusioni:
telematica quotidiana 229/2006 del 08/06/2006
mensile per mezzo stampa 293/2003 del 07/07/2003
Scienceonline, Autorizzazione del Tribunale di Roma 228/2006 del 29/05/06
Pubblicato a Roma – Via A. De Viti de Marco, 50 – Direttore Responsabile Guido Donati

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