Studying how seals adapt to extreme environments could lead to benefits in human reproductive health
Wild animals that have acquired adaptions to maximize their reproductive output in some of the world's most extreme conditions may provide answers to some of the most pressing problems in the field of ...
Declining female fertility is a health issue that has received broad global attention. Oocyte quality is the key limiting factor of female fertility, and factors affecting oocyte quality involve the ...
Dr. Camille Hoffman, a professor of maternal fetal medicine in the University of Colorado Anschutz’s School of Medicine’s ...
Microplastics are everywhere - in the air you breathe, the water you drink, food you eat. It has even entered the living tissue. Scientists have discovered microplastics in human reproductive fluids.
Microplastics have been found in human reproductive fluids, according to new research. They were found in more than two-thirds of women (69%) and over half of men (55%) participating in the study. The ...
Reproductive health privacy is once again in the legal spotlight with a recent federal district court decision that struck down nearly all of a recent rule under the Health Insurance Portability and ...
Studying how seals adapt to extreme environments could lead to benefits in human reproductive health
A female grey seal tending to her pup on the beaches of Sable Island, Nova Scotia. Gray seals only nurse their pups for 15-20 days before the female leaves and the pup must learn to forage on its own.
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