by Chris Tachibana | Aug 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
While reporting on the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement, Wudan Yan made a personal decision. She’s signing up. Read Wudan’s Medium story to learn how talking to the founder of VHEMT convinced her, a young woman with a mother who wants grandchildren, to never have...				
					
			
					
											
								
							
					
															
					
					 by Chris Tachibana | Aug 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
You wouldn’t mistake it for a bluebottle or Drosophila, Sarah McQuate says, but robofly flaps like the real thing. In UW News, Sarah writes about a wireless, housefly-sized, laser-beam-powered robotic insect created by University of Washington engineers. Read the...				
					
			
					
											
								
							
					
															
					
					 by Chris Tachibana | Aug 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
They’re pyrosomes, aka sea pickles, writes Jim Barlow for Around the O, the University of Oregon’s news hub. These colonies of small organisms—which can be more than 2 feet long—might not seem so exotic to Oregonians in the future. To find out why, read Jim’s story...				
					
			
					
											
								
							
					
															
					
					 by Chris Tachibana | Aug 1, 2018 | ScienceWire, Uncategorized
Sixteen years after donating bone marrow to a child with cancer, Susan Keown writes a richly detailed profile of a scientist whose work made transplants possible. Susan is a science writer and editor for Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and profiles John Hansen,...				
					
			
					
											
								
							
					
															
					
					 by Chris Tachibana | Aug 1, 2018 | ScienceWire
Writing in The Atlantic and Undark, James Gaines tracks the fate of contraband taxidermied animals. Some have an educational function at Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo. Others are used in basic research. A few end up in court—on the side of law enforcement, of course....