#CurrentBiology

2026-02-02

For some reason the posts in my slow thread don't bridge to bluesky, although the post at the top did. So I just have to toot today's feature again: proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2026-01-22

RE: biologists.social/@jekely/1159

#Tooluse in #bovids so far was underestimated until a recent #scientific #study highlighted Austrian #cow #Veronika and her #flexible #purposeful self-#scrarching tool handling. Indicating that further studies might show similar potentials also in other #Bovidae taxa.
The authors A. J. Osuna-Mascaró & Alice M.I. Auersperg (2026) published their findings in #CurrentBiology.
© This text #StefanFWirth Berlin 2026

Reference:

A. J. Osuna-Mascaró & Alice M.I. Auersperg (2026)
doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.11.

2026-01-20

yesterday's feature in is on the of feeding and ; blog entry contains magic link for free access: proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

:awesome:🐦‍🔥nemo™🐦‍⬛ 🇺🇦🍉nemo@mas.to
2026-01-11

New study reveals a primate brain circuit that keeps motivation going even under threat, via a key striatopallidal pathway 🧠⚙️ Read more in Current Biology: cell.com/current-biology/fullt #neuroscience #motivation #brainresearch #CurrentBiology

2026-01-05

my features published in this year, issue 1: Revisiting the of and pegged to the recent meeting that ramped up their protection. proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2026-01-05

The (slow) thread collecting all my features published in in 2026 starts here. The old thread for 2025 is here: mastodon.social/@proseandpassi

2025-12-15

my features published in this year, issue 24: After that climate feature, I needed something more soothing, so I wrote about species recovering after avoiding .

proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2025-12-01

my features published in this year, issue 23: Venting my rage about the by writing about the report on its effects.

proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

mouseTubemousetube
2025-11-24

Vocal repertoire expansion in singing mice by co-opting a conserved midbrain circuit node by Xiaoyue Mike Zheng, Clifford E. Harpole, Martin B. Davis and Arkarup Banerjee.

doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.10.

2025-11-04

What can algae tell us about plant evolution?

The development of land plants is deeply tied to their ancestors: simple green algae that lived hundreds of millions of years ago. This includes a group that can still be found today - Coleochaetophyceae - freshwater algae that form branching, disc-shaped structures resembling some of the building blocks of plants’ bodies.

Researchers looked at DNA and data from fossil evidence to figure out when and how this alga developed this structure: uni-goettingen.de/en/3240.html

Research in #CurrentBiology: doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.08.

This is a close-up image taken from under a microscope which shows the algae's  disc-shaped clusters. It shows algae Coleochaete which is green and very sharply in focus. Photo thanks to Tatyana Darienko.
2025-11-03

my features published in this year, issue 21: Declining on islands may be warning for the world.

proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2025-10-27

24-Oct-2025
from ’s 1812 army identifies the likely responsible for the army’s demise during their retreat from

eurekalert.org/news-releases/1

2025-10-22

this week's feature in is about the second phase of the and how it needs to build capacity in the where most of the is. proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2025-10-21

my features published in this year, issue 20: The aiming to sequence s of all due to scale up and enter phase 2: proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2

2025-10-20

I do have a feature in today's issue of but the magic link hasn't shown up yet. Suspect it may have been hit by the AWS outage, although the issue as such is online cell.com/current-biology/curre (special on brain-body interaction but my feature is unrelated to that).

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