Articles by Nala Rogers

Scientists want your poop to give you more information on your gut.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Omnivores' diets may depend on the amount of salt in their environments.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
New research may explain why some cloven-hoofed animals have tusks instead of horns or antlers.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Soil bacteria often take 50 years or more to react to changes in climate.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Researchers call in feathered helpers to spread the seeds of endangered plants.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
For top scientists like James P. Allison, music and other artistic endeavors may be key to success.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Much of the world's farmland is already at risk from palmer amaranth. The threat could spread further north as the climate warms.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Scientists are finding microbes that are good for crops but bad for weeds.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Armadillos could help fill ecological voids left by the Southeast's waning gopher tortoise populations.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Alligators and Floridians have been clashing more often, and research suggests the growing human population is the cause.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Drought killed off inedible plants in Kruger National Park, making room for other plants that animals like to eat.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
Blowflies serve as natural sampling instruments to learn what is pooping and dying in an area.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer