Anything Goes When You Live in a Crack
New research shows that the plants thriving in parking lots succeed not just because they are tough, but because they spread their pollen and seeds in many different ways.
New research shows that the plants thriving in parking lots succeed not just because they are tough, but because they spread their pollen and seeds in many different ways.
An invasive ant disrupts a partnership between trees and insects, reshaping the way lions hunt zebras in Africa’s savanna
Flowers use subtle cues and steady resource release to maximise reproduction over their short lifespan.
Common plants and abandoned lots turn urban spaces into vital feeding grounds for butterflies.
Inside the flower, two types of nectaries work in harmony, attracting pollinators and plant defenders.
New research reveals how ant bodyguards can scare off pollinators yet still sustain plant reproduction.
Wild plants in city gardens are defying expectations and keeping urban biodiversity alive and surprising.
As the wildfire burns and sunlight fades, nature’s duet between bees and flowers is starting to sound like a breakup song.
The exception that proves the rule: Cryptanthus bahianus takes the sweet route, not the aromatic one
Individual trees carry their own chemical signatures and they may be rewriting the rules of how ecosystems work.
Recent research using Chinese plants reveals why some flowers have giant petals while others barely show theirs.
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