
Giant snails and tiny insects threaten the South's rice and crawfish farms
KAPLAN, La. (AP) — Josh Courville has harvested crawfish his whole life, but these days, he's finding a less welcome catch in some of the fields he manages in southern Louisiana. Snails. Big ones. For every crawfish Courville dumps out of a trap, three or four snails clang onto the boat’s metal sorting table. About the size of a baseball when fully grown, apple snails stubbornly survive all kinds of weather in fields, pipes and drainage ditches and can lay thousands of bubblegum-colored is...
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- Giant snails and tiny insects threaten the South's rice and crawfish farms
- Savannah Guthrie's demand for mom's 'proof of life' is complicated in this era of AI and deepfakes
- Analilia Mejia, Tom Malinowski race in New Jersey's special Democratic primary too early to call
- Savannah Guthrie's family renews plea to mother's kidnapper, while sheriff says they have no suspect
- 3 dead, 6 hurt after 92-year-old driver hits bicyclist and crashes into Los Angeles grocery store
Analilia Mejia, Tom Malinowski race in New Jersey's special Democratic primary too early to call
TRENTON, N. J. (AP) — The race in New Jersey between a onetime political director for Sen. Bernie Sanders and a former congressman was too early to call Thursday, in a special House Democratic primary for a seat that was vacated after Mikie Sherill was elected governor. Former U. S. Rep. Tom Malinowski started election night with a significant lead over Analilia Mejia, based largely on early results from mail-in ballots. The margin narrowed as results from votes cast that day were tallied. 1...
Read MorePolitics
- Analilia Mejia, Tom Malinowski race in New Jersey's special Democratic primary too early to call
- US strikes another alleged drug-trafficking boat in Eastern Pacific
- Trump administration launches TrumpRx website for discounted drugs
- Republicans reject complaint about Gabbard as Democrats question time it took to see it
- Census Bureau plans to use survey with a citizenship question in its test for 2030, alarming experts
Can apes play pretend? Scientists use an imaginary tea party to find out
NEW YORK (AP) — By age 2, most kids know how to play pretend. They turn their bedrooms into faraway castles and hold make-believe tea parties. The ability to make something out of nothing may seem uniquely human — a bedrock of creativity that's led to new kinds of art, music and more. Now, for the first time, an experiment hints that an ape in captivity can have an imagination. “What’s really exciting about this work is that it suggests that the roots of this capacity for imagination a...
Read MoreScience News
- Can apes play pretend? Scientists use an imaginary tea party to find out
- Companies can now claim 'no artificial colors' if they add plant-based color to food
- Pandemic disruptions to health care worsened cancer survival, study suggests
- Musk vows to put data centers in space and run them on solar power but experts have their doubts
- Experimental cholesterol-lowering pill may offer new option for millions

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