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Mouse pain study stirs debate
Canadian scientists vindicated after being accused of mistreating laboratory animals.
US charges scientist with economic espionage
Could publishing a paper make you a spy?
Food: Inside the hothouses of industry
Feeding the world is going to require the scientific and financial muscle of agricultural biotechnology companies. Natasha Gilbert asks whether they're up to the task.
Consumer gene testing in the hotseat
A week of hearings sows uncertainty for the fledgling consumer genomics industry.
Ocean greenery under warming stress
A century of phytoplankton decline suggests that ocean ecosystems are in peril.
Food: An underground revolution
Plant breeders are turning their attention to roots to increase yields without causing environmental damage. Virginia Gewin unearths some promising subterranean strategies.
Food: The growing problem
World hunger remains a major problem, but not for the reasons many suspect. Nature analyses the trends and the challenges of feeding 9 billion by 2050.
Food: The global farm
With its plentiful sun, water and land, Brazil is quickly surpassing other countries in food production and exports. But can it continue to make agricultural gains without destroying the Amazon? Jeff Tollefson reports from Brazil.
Retraction recommended for enzyme-chip paper
Reactome array study should not have been published, says ethics committee.
News briefing: 23–29 July 2010
The week in science.
Freedom of spill research threatened
Scientists call for impartial funding and open data as BP and government agencies contract researchers.
Photons meet with three-way split
Method that generates photon triplets could be a boon for quantum information.
Notes from an excavation
Russell L. Ciochon and his team are in Indonesia investigating the geological source and age of one of the world's biggest caches of Homo erectus.
Corrections
Fears over Europe's GM crop plan
A proposal to let nations opt out of growing European-approved GM varieties is under fire from all sides.