Meet the First U.S. Species to Go Extinct from Sea-Level Rise
A tall cactus found only in Florida’s Key Largo is the U.S.’s first species to go extinct from sea-level rise
Meet the First U.S. Species to Go Extinct from Sea-Level Rise
A tall cactus found only in Florida’s Key Largo is the U.S.’s first species to go extinct from sea-level rise
Meet the Unknown Female Botanists Who Established the Field of Ecological Restoration
Historian and ecologist Laura J. Martin rediscovers the female scientists who established ecological restoration in her book Wild by Design
Sign up now to get 60 days of digital access
Do Plants ‘Think’? We Might Not Know Enough about Consciousness to Be Certain
Zoë Schlanger’s new book The Light Eaters explores the surprising science of plant intelligence.
Tiny Fern Has World’s Largest Genome
A small South Pacific fern boasts more than 50 times as many base pairs as the human genome
Why Seasonal Allergies Are So Miserable
Plants are just trying to reproduce; immune systems are just trying to keep us safe
How Plant Intelligence Can Soothe Climate Anxiety
In a new book, the wisdom of plants is a balm for our changing planet
The Forgotten Sisters Who Transformed Early American Science
The Morris sisters made significant contributions to botany and entomology, but their stories were erased from the history of early American science, both accidentally and by design.
This Flower Refrigerates Itself to Survive Scorching Summers
A humble thistle blossom in southern Spain somehow keeps itself up to 18 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than the surrounding air
This Genetically Engineered Petunia Glows in the Dark and Could Be Yours for $29
The engineered “firefly petunia” emits a continuous green glow thanks to genes from a light-up mushroom
Cranberries Are a Scientific Delicacy
From self-pollination to bogs, cranberries are a Thanksgiving classic with many fascinating botanical and genetic features
This Fall Is Full of Acorns—Thanks to a ‘Mast’ Year
Trees can outsmart animals such as squirrels and birds by synchronizing their seed production
How Hot Is ‘Pepper X’? Its Creator Spent 6 Hours Recovering from Eating It
“Pepper X” is officially the hottest pepper in the world, weighing in with 2.693 million Scoville heat units. The creator reveals his process and experience tasting the pepper