Scientists have revealed that queen ants in southern Europe can produce male clones of a completely different species.
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
These Ant Queens Seem to Defy Biology: They Lay Eggs That Hatch Into Another Species
Iberian harvester ant queens produce offspring of their own species and of the builder harvester ant, seemingly by cloning ...
Science Unbound on MSN
Is Human Cloning Possible with Today’s Science?
Is human cloning science fiction or a near reality? In this video, we explore the current state of cloning technology, from the successes in animals to the challenges of applying it to humans.
Queen Iberian harvester ants are capable of storing and cloning the sperm from a cousin species, spawning hybrid offspring to ...
It might sound like a lab experiment, one of those ethically questionable studies where researchers toy with cloning and crossbreeding different species to ...
Live Science on MSN
'Almost like science fiction': European ant is the first known animal to clone members of another species
A species of ant found scurrying across southern Europe is the first animal found that clones males of another species.
Larry Mantle talks with Greg Stock, best-selling author, and reproductive biology expert about his new book, Redesigning Humans (Houghton Mifflin). Stock considers how the human race is likely to ...
Hosted on MSN
Resurrecting the Dodo? A Recent Breakthrough Could Bring Extinct Birds Back from the Dead
Illustration of a dodo, which went extinct in the 1700s. A recent breakthrough could help bring them back. Photo of a ...
SEOUL, South Korea — An already disgraced scientist lied about all of the stem cell lines he claimed were matched to different patients through cloning, investigating researchers said in a new jolt to ...
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