BioScience News and Advocate Daily Highlights 11/3
Daily Highlights
1. Business giant predicts longer
lives
2. NZ reaping rewards of R&D, Minister says
3.
Destructive starfish thrives on nutrient run-off
4.
Rainforests absorbing less carbon dioxide
5. Scientists
grow stem cells from fat
6. Kyoto Protocol now legally
binding
7. Bulgaria to allow biotech production &
trade
Business giant predicts longer lives
One of
the world's biggest companies forecasts that medical
advances will extend the average human lifespan to 120
during the next 20 years. Yoshio Matsumi, the general
manager of innovative techn...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6727
NZ
reaping rewards of R&D, Minister says
New Zealand is
reaping the benefits of increased investment in research and
development, Research, Science and Technology Minister Pete
Hodgson says. The minister was speaking at the
Asia-Pacifi...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6723
Destructive
starfish thrives on nutrient run-off
Scientists say they
have assembled the proof that nutrient run-off along the
north Queensland coast causes outbreaks on the Great Barrier
Reef of the destructive crown-of-thorns starfish. A reef
w...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6721
Rainforests
absorbing less carbon dioxide
Scientists from Brazil and
the United States say they have found worrying new evidence
that tropical rainforests are becoming less able to absorb
the carbon dioxide emissions blamed for global
warning...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6730
Scientists
grow stem cells from fat
After successfully turning cells
taken from human fat into different cell types, Duke
University Medical Center researchers have now demonstrated
that these specific cells are truly adult stem cells
w...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6717
Kyoto
Protocol now legally binding
As of 10 March 2004, a
Decision of the European Parliament and the Council enters
into force, which makes all the remaining requirements under
the 1997 Kyoto Protocol legally binding in all Member
Sta...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6712
Bulgaria
to allow biotech production & trade
Bulgaria shall permit
the production, sales, imports and exports of genetically
modified organisms (GMO) and foods, the Bulgarian Parliament
decided when passing in first reading the GMO Bill.
...
More...
http://www.BioSciNews.com/files/news-detail.asp?newsID=6708
From
the BioScience News Team
BioScience Communications
Limited
Editor: Christine
Ross