Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
By collecting whale breath, researchers detected a deadly virus in the Arctic for the first time
A deadly pathogen known as cetacean morbillivirus has been detected in Arctic waters for the first time. Researchers found it ...
The drones carry Petri dishes and hover over the blowholes of northern whales. Droplets of their respiratory fluid land on ...
Americans are being urged to be extra vigilant this winter, as a suite of influenza A mutations has created a dominant virus ...
Scientists took samples from whale blow, identifying possible disease risks for marine mammals in northern seas.
Arctic marine life is notoriously difficult to study because of its remoteness. But drones have enabled whales to be monitored and diagnosed while being minimally invasive, according to a new study.
The Mirror US on MSN
Four deadly diseases top doctors fear most in 2026 as flu spreads
As the U.K. battles a super flu outbreak and measles cases rise, health experts have identified four diseases - including ...
Influenza A, B, C Or D? Flu spreads easily in winter due to crowded indoor spaces, low humidity, and reduced immunity.
Scientists used drones to collect whale breath and detect harmful viruses early, helping protect whales in Arctic waters.
Dr. Tsion Firew at her home in Kigali, Rwanda, on Oct. 3. A year ago, Rwanda announced the country's first Marburg outbreak — a deadly virus that's a cousin to Ebola. Firew, who is chair of emergency ...
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