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Showing 1–50 of 61 results
Advanced filters: Author: Henry Nicholls Clear advanced filters
  • Composer and string musician, turned award-winning environmentalist, Aubrey Meyer tells Nature Climate Change why he is campaigning for countries to adopt his 'contraction and convergence' model of global development to avoid dangerous climate change.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 2, P: 17-18
  • Henry Nicholls examines a clear appraisal of what it would really take to resurrect extinct species.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 521, P: 30-31
  • With the yearly exodus from labs and lecture theatres imminent, Nature's regular reviewers and editors share some tempting holiday reads.

    • David Katz
    • Jim Bell
    • María Luisa Ávila-Jiménez
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 499, P: 150-153
  • Henry Nicholls reflects on how the 'phenotypes' of natural history museums are adapting to change.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 484, P: 36
  • Henry Nicholls wonders how things would be different had Charles Darwin given in to pressure from his publisher to rewrite Origin of Species into a popular book about pigeons.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 457, P: 790-791
  • Henry Nicholls relishes the history of the 'ape man' who braved the dangers of Gabon — and of Victorian England.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 495, P: 310-311
  • No one has seen a dodo in three and a half centuries, but that hasn't stopped the bizarre speculation about this extinct bird. Henry Nicholls investigates whether recent excavations in Mauritius could reveal the real creature.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 443, P: 138-140
  • Henry Nicholls relishes a book on how the biologist's home became a lab for dazzling experimentation.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 548, P: 389-390
  • Henry Nicholls talks to pioneering field biologist George Schaller — still studying iconic species at 82.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 528, P: 474-475
  • Henry Nicholls savours the posthumous autobiography of the pioneering conservationist Alison Jolly.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 519, P: 412-413
  • Henry Nicholls relishes a brace of chronicles on how zoos on both sides of the Atlantic came to be.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 539, P: 29-30
  • Although Linnaeus is best known for his botany and taxonomy, he was also an anatomist — and a keeper of pets. Henry Nicholls tells the story of Sjupp the raccoon.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 446, P: 255-256
  • Lonesome George is probably the last giant tortoise of his type. But are scientists doing all they can to find him a partner, boost his sex drive and save his subspecies? Henry Nicholls finds out.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 429, P: 498-500
  • Evolution assumes that extinction is forever. Maybe not. Henry Nicholls asks what it would take to bring the woolly mammoth back from the dead.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 456, P: 310-314
    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 451, P: 129
  • As the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) turns 50, Henry Nicholls traces how the evolution of conservation practice has been echoed in the various incarnations of WWF's iconic pandas, and other conservation logos.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 472, P: 287-289
  • A combined sequencing technique assesses 18 patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer over a multi-year period from diagnosis to recurrence and shows drug resistance typically arises from selective expansion of one or a few clones present at diagnosis.

    • Marc J. Williams
    • Ignacio Vázquez-García
    • Sohrab P. Shah
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 647, P: 757-765
  • Allelic variants for the HIV-1 co-receptors chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) and CCR2, as well as the ligand for the co-receptor CXCR4, stromal-derived factor (SDF-1), have been associated with a delay in disease progression. We began this study to test whether polymorphisms in the CCRS regulatory regions influence the course of HIV-1 disease, as well as to examine the role of the previously identified allelic variants in 1,090 HIV-1 infected individuals. Here we describe the evolutionary relationships between the phenotypically important CCRS alleles, define precisely the CCR5 regulatory sequences that are linked to the CCR5-Δ32 and CCR2-64I polymorphisms, and identify genotypes associated with altered rates of HIV-1 disease progression. The disease-retarding effects of the CCR2-64I allele were found in African Americans but not in Caucasians, and the SDF1-3′A/3′A genotype was associated with an accelerated progression to death. In contrast, the CCR5-Δ32 allele and a CCR5 promoter mutation with which it is tightly linked were associated with limited disease-retarding effects. Collectively, these findings draw attention to a complex array of genetic determinants in the HIV-host interplay.

    • Srinivas Mummidi
    • Seema S. Ahuja
    • Sunil K. Ahuja
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 4, P: 786-793
  • Hagfish and lampreys are the only surviving fish without jaws. And they could solve an evolutionary mystery, finds Henry Nicholls.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 461, P: 164-166
  • Darwin is the latest eminent scientist to get an online archive. How do these undertakings change our understanding of history, asks Henry Nicholls.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 443, P: 746-747
  • Can an ambitious plan to protect unique marine habitats in the open ocean turn the tide of destruction? Henry Nicholls plunges in.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 432, P: 12-14
  • Conservationists are taking heroic measures to restore the fertility of a three-footed Sumatran rhino. But some ask whether this is the right way to save an endangered species.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 485, P: 566-569
  • A single-cell sequencing study using more than 30,000 tumour genomes from human ovarian cancers shows that whole-genome doubling is an ongoing mutational process that drives tumour evolution and disrupts immunity.

    • Andrew McPherson
    • Ignacio Vázquez-García
    • Sohrab P. Shah
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 644, P: 1078-1087
  • A study shows that clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential is associated with an increased risk of chronic liver disease specifically through the promotion of liver inflammation and injury.

    • Waihay J. Wong
    • Connor Emdin
    • Pradeep Natarajan
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 616, P: 747-754
  • Petrels are wide-ranging, highly threatened seabirds that often ingest plastic. This study used tracking data for 7,137 petrels of 77 species to map global exposure risk and compare regions, species, and populations. The results show higher exposure risk for threatened species and stress the need for international cooperation to tackle marine litter.

    • Bethany L. Clark
    • Ana P. B. Carneiro
    • Maria P. Dias
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-14
  • Of hearts, and myriad other ways natural selection has hit on to sustain multicellular life.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 597, P: 472-474
  • With urban areas expanding and climate change shrinking bears’ habitats, the animals’ interactions with humans will make — or break — efforts to preserve their populations.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 619, P: 459-460
    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature Biotechnology
    Volume: 26, P: 597
    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature Biotechnology
    Volume: 26, P: 599
    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 450, P: 1161
  • Ecuador has successfully eradicated invasive pigs and goats from most of the Galapagos archipelago. Now it is taking on the rats.

    • Henry Nicholls
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 306-308
  • A Natural History Museum researcher unlocks its cluttered store rooms to expose an extraordinary past.

    • Henry Nicholls
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 451, P: 400
  • Multi-modal analysis of genomically unstable ovarian tumours characterizes the contribution of anatomical sites and mutational processes to evolutionary phenotypic divergence and immune resistance mechanisms.

    • Ignacio Vázquez-García
    • Florian Uhlitz
    • Sohrab P. Shah
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 612, P: 778-786