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Davis, California

Friday, January 16, 2026

Science & Technology

Column: Exploring Google Earth

Four weeks ago, Brian Fisher was flying in a helicopter high over the jungles of Madagascar. Fisher, an entomologist at the California Academy of Sciences and Ph.D. graduate of UC Davis, is working to take pictures of all ant species on Earth. There are about 14,000 described species of ants, so Fisher's got a huge task ahead of him.

A laboratory in your hands

A new, ubiquitous and simple-to-use technology in the field of microfluidics - scientific experimentation dealing with small and precise amounts of liquids - may soon be available to researchers thanks to the work of UC Davis scientists.

Mistletoe: the kiss of death?

On a busy weekend in December, Jerry Seifert, owner of the Silveyville Pumpkin and Christmas Tree Farm, can sell up to 75 bunches of mistletoe a day. Families drive out to Seifert's farm in the country to pick up a bushy Christmas tree and a bunch of mistletoe, a bright green sprig of cheer to combat the gloomy days of winter.

Seeing beyond

Telescopes allow us to see many cool and interesting things, but how exactly do they work? There are many types of telescopes, each useful for different types of astronomers.

Column: The two faces of fusion

Clean energy is a term bandied about quite a bit these days. We think of Al Gore and Toyota hybrids, solar power and biking to school or work (which most of you do anyway).

Science of the Week: Gliding snakes

Imagine hiking in a South Asian forest when you see something float slowly past you out of the corner of your eye. You turn to look; what do you expect to see? A large insect, a bird…

HPV recently discovered as a cause of head and neck cancers

It's long been thought by scientists that carcinogens in tobacco were the main cause of head and neck cancer. Only smokers had to worry about getting this type of cancer.

The civil war inside you

Most people understand, or at least loosely grasp the idea of our brains' functions in everyday life. The brain regulates our heartbeat, our breathing, pain and emotional responses and contains the genetic blueprint for our personalities - the "nature" that determines how "nurture" is interpreted.

Column: Wild blue yonder

One of my favorite stories about scientific mystery involves a flock of pigeons. Pigeon poop, to be exact.

Geneticist harvests secrets of corn

The first thing to greet a visitor to Jeff Ross-Ibarra's office is the corn. Ross-Ibarra, a plant geneticist at UC Davis, keeps 50 or so dried corncobs on a shelf by the door, arrayed in a neat grid that stretches from wall to wall. But what's more impressive than the quantity is the variety: there are long cobs, short ones, red, pink, black, white, pointy, smooth, pinecone-shaped and log-shaped ones, a popcorn cob and even some grassy stalks that look like weeds with tiny kernels buried in hard shells. And these stunningly diverse ears all belong to a single species. All of them, even the round black ear and the popcorn, could interbreed.

Meditation linked to longer cell life

Take a minute, breathe deeply and clear absolutely everything out of your mind. Breathe in. Breathe out. Feel the breath as it passes through your nostrils and ascends into your nose.

Collider smashes apart a “particle soup”

In new experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Switzerland, researchers work to recreate the first microseconds after the Big Bang. They want to see how the energy of particles are distributed around the universe. These particles make all matter we see - from the solar system to deli sandwiches.

Genes and political orientation

Never known why you were so inclined to liking those red state Republicans or those blue state Democrats? Well, the answer could be in your genes.

Column: Butt-ugly science

U-G-L-Y? Science can fix that.

Science of the week

The system that produces stress-managing hormones in young rats is easily disrupted with binge doses of alcohol, finds a new study from Loyola University of Chicago. In rats, too much booze caused hormone disruptions and led to "behavioral and/or mood disorders in adulthood," stated the report.