716 search results for “biology” in the Student website
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Rutger VosFaculty of Science
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Anne SchulpFaculty of Science
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Borah SpoorenbergFaculty of Science
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Susanne MastersFaculty of Science
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Wesley PostFaculty of Science
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Christina KamermanFaculty of Science
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Amber VerhaarFaculty of Science
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Jeroen AppelboomFaculty of Science
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Julia de JongFaculty of Science
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Antonio KamerlingFaculty of Science
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Renske OnsteinFaculty of Science
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Maribel Adame ValeroFaculty of Science
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Frietson GalisFaculty of Science
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Leo KriegsmanFaculty of Science
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Aileen KrügerFaculty of Science
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Chao DuFaculty of Science
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Tom van der WelFaculty of Science
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Eva PutriFaculty of Science
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Eva George MatlalcuatziFaculty of Science
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Yixuan WangFaculty of Science
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Tijn VleeshouwerFaculty of Science
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Jessica HoangFaculty of Science
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Tessa VergroesenFaculty of Science
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Nora BrüchleFaculty of Science
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yangli zhouFaculty of Science
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Kim BongerFaculty of Science
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Erdem Kerem TirasFaculty of Science
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Kanwal KayasthaFaculty of Science
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Alexandra VelthuijzenFaculty of Science
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Luuk ReinaldaFaculty of Science
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Kas SteutenFaculty of Science
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Maurijn van der ZeeFaculty of Science
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Jonathan BenichovFaculty of Science
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Fred JanssenICLON
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Embryos of the bitterling perform a somersault. This teaches us something new about natural selection
Even embryos can become embroiled in an evolutionary arms race with another species. Leiden biologists demonstrate this with larvae of the rosy bitterling that parasitize the gills of freshwater mussels. They published their research on February 19 in PNAS.
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What DNA in droppings can reveal about an animal’s diet
Imagine scanning lion dung or a mouse dropping and instantly knowing exactly what and how much the animal has eaten. Thanks to new DNA techniques, this is becoming increasingly feasible. PhD student Kevin Groen tested how effective these techniques are at unraveling the diets of wild animals.
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How touchscreens and eye trackers can tell us something about the dating life of orangutans
Aesthetic attraction plays a big role in orangutans’ mate choice, behavioural biologist and PhD candidate Tom Roth has observed. But to discover just how big that role is, more research is needed into the emotions of the great apes.
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Human noise makes cod inactive. When it gets quiet again, they take off
She narrowly defied bureaucracy and spent days angling for cod. In the North Sea, marine biologist Inge van der Knaap discovered that noise significantly disturbs fish behaviour. ‘There is now a lot of attention for underwater noise.’
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Débora Almeida PiraniFaculty of Science
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Zoe ZengFaculty of Science
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Paco Barona GomezFaculty of Science
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Vera MeyerFaculty of Science
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Auke-Florian HiemstraFaculty of Science
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Sasha ChikunovaFaculty of Science
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Marian WetermanFaculty of Science
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Sandra van der GeerFaculty of Science
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Alicia Rodríguez MolinaFaculty of Science
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Chuannan FanFaculty of Science
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Andrea Del RioFaculty of Science
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Yi DingFaculty of Science