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The experiment involved bok choy (also known as pak choi) plants, exposed to different musical environments over six weeks.
Game Rant chats with Plants vs. Zombies composer Peter McConnell about the music's quirky role in making zombies charming, ...
Stock image of a plant growing (main) and music from a speaker (inset). Researchers have found that playing noise improves the growth of a soil fungus that promotes the growth of plants.
Plant shop Plantosaurus REX in Butte is hosting its third annual REX Fest on July 6, featuring workshops, a vendor market, ...
For the first time in nearly 50 years, a brand new genus and species of plant has been discovered in a U.S. national park. Now dubbed the wooly devil (Ovicula biradiata) for its fuzzy white ...
Thursday is Native Species Day in Pennsylvania! We’ll talk with Tom Knezick, President of Pinelands Direct Native Plants and co-host of the Native Plants Healthy Planet podcast, about the importance ...
Wild flowering plants are relying more on themselves to reproduce, which could further fuel global pollinator decline in a “vicious feedback cycle,” scientists say.
Scientists found a “flower”-like sea creature with 22 tentacles and discovered a new species, a study said. Getty Images/iStockphoto Hundreds of feet below the surface of the ocean, a ...
The saguaro blossom is Arizona's state flower. The blossoms crown the iconic cactuses each spring. ... Arizona has about 51 native cactus species, ...
Chloe Flower, 37, the pianist who turned heads at the Golden Globes with a medley of film and TV theme songs, unwittingly caught heat when recorded piano music — not played by her — was used ...
Miriam Hyde: The First Boronia. Published in 1948, this song by Miriam Hyde for voice and piano describes how the Australian native flower boronia is blooming when other plants are dormant in winter.
Attendees at Saturday's festival have a choice of two tickets — general admission or general admission plus You-Pick Flowers, which is limited to 400 people this year to ensure there are enough ...