Surely someone has asked the question whether the attractive cherries we eat come from the cherry trees blooming beautifully on the streets of many countries around the world?
Half a year after being cut down, only the stump remained, a 300-year-old sycamore tree recognized by UNESCO as a heritage site has just been recognized by scientists.
This tree is grown as an ornamental plant in many parts of the world because of its striking copper-red bark, rare in woody plants.
Blue is a rare color in nature and very few naturally occurring organic compounds impart this color to living organisms.
A giant blueberry weighing up to 20.4 grams grown in Australia was officially recorded in the Guinness Book of Records this week.
Scientists have discovered that when faced with danger such as pests, plants have the ability to spread a volatile compound around to warn healthy plants to activate defense
All over the world, people regularly produce genetically modified soybeans, corn, cotton, alfalfa, canola, apples, papayas, potatoes, summer squash, and sugar beets.
Paris authorities are taking many measures to treat and eradicate mosquitoes that spread infectious diseases before the Summer Olympics begin.
In science, even the smallest and seemingly insignificant creatures can create great technological innovations, like the hopper.
New research from the Japan Meteorological Agency shows that climate change causes the iconic Somei-Yoshino cherry variety to become extinct in many regions of Japan.
La Crosse virus is trending to spread quickly and become popular in the US recently.
More and more people are aware that the cost of a plate of meat on the table is a large amount of greenhouse gas emissions, affecting not only the air and water but also future
Recently, an Instagram account surprised when sharing a clip of a special fruit picked from black mud, inside there are many beautiful seeds like pomegranate seeds.
A pair of yellow-spotted swordtail butterflies - one of the rarest phoenix butterflies in the world - were born in Jiangxi Jiangxi National Nature Reserve in early August.
Poison Garden in the city of Northumberland, England, is home to more than 100 different poisonous, hallucinogenic and anesthetic plants. And now it is open to the public.