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Environment - 20.03.2026 - Today
Europe's ecosystems do not keep pace with climate warming at the same speed
Europe’s ecosystems do not keep pace with climate warming at the same speed
Biological communities in Europe are responding to climate change in markedly different ways, with clear contrasts between ecosystems, according to a new study published in Nature. Cold-adapted plant species in mountain regions are declining especially quickly, while plant communities in forests and grasslands are changing more slowly.

Computer Science - Microtechnics - 16.03.2026
Independent navigation of microrobots in complex flows demonstrated for the first time
Independent navigation of microrobots in complex flows demonstrated for the first time
Researchers at Leipzig University have achieved a success in microrobotics. They were able to show for the first time that tiny, synthetic microswimmers perceive their environment directly via their own body shape and adapt autonomously in strongly changing fluid currents. The work now published in Science Advances thus establishes a new paradigm for autonomous microsystems whose control functions in difficult environments where conventional sensors fail.

Microtechnics - Computer Science - 16.03.2026
Autonomous navigation of microrobots in complex flows demonstrated for the first time
Autonomous navigation of microrobots in complex flows demonstrated for the first time
Researchers at Leipzig University have achieved a breakthrough in microrobotics. For the first time, they have shown that tiny synthetic microswimmers can perceive their surroundings directly through their own body shape and autonomously adapt to rapidly changing fluid flows. The study, now published in Science Advances, establishes a new paradigm for autonomous microsystems whose control functions reliably in challenging environments where conventional sensors fail.

Chemistry - Physics - 16.03.2026
Molecular chains with bite: Breakthrough in polymer research
Molecular chains with bite: Breakthrough in polymer research
Researchers have produced exceptionally long chains of an electrically conductive polymer known as poly(p-phenylene) (PPP). The longest of these chains measure almost one micrometre in length - roughly one thousandth of a millimetre. This makes them nearly ten times longer than chains previously achieved.

Health - Life Sciences - 11.03.2026
The human metaorganism: understanding obesity individually
The human metaorganism: understanding obesity individually
News from At Leipzig University Medicine, scientists are researching how bodies, organs, cells and microbes talk to each other. In an article in the newspaper "Die WELT", Dr. Rima Chakaroun and Veronica Witte, among others, show how close laboratory and life, molecules and people, stomach and brain really are - and what all this reveals about our health and the possibility of personalized therapies.

Environment - Astronomy & Space - 27.02.2026
Study enables first global assessment of the cooling effect of aerosols
Study enables first global assessment of the cooling effect of aerosols
Particles in the atmosphere, known as aerosols, cool the climate by acting as cloud condensation nuclei. The more cloud droplets form around these particles, the less sunlight penetrates a cloud. This cools the climate, although this process is outweighed by the much stronger greenhouse effect. Until now, it has been difficult to provide a reliable global assessment of this impact on the climate and to measure the number of cloud condensation nuclei.

Pharmacology - Health - 26.02.2026
Spotlight on therapeutic potential
Spotlight on therapeutic potential
Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are implicated in numerous human diseases. However, to date, no medicinal product has been approved that specifically targets these signalling molecules. Researchers at Leipzig University and Shandong University have summarised the therapeutic potential of these receptors in a high-profile study.

Environment - 24.02.2026
Global greening: The Earth's green wave is shifting
Global greening: The Earth’s green wave is shifting
A team of scientists led by the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), and Leipzig University has developed a new method to track the Earth's greenness - a key indicator of vegetation health and activity - by calculating its centre of mass.

Environment - 16.02.2026
Heavy grazing and soil fertility favor the growth of non-native plants
Heavy grazing and soil fertility favor the growth of non-native plants
In a global study, researchers have discovered the conditions under which non-native plants thrive particularly well in the world's many arid regions and what inhibits their spread. Using data from 98 study areas in 25 countries on six continents, they showed that these plants usually grow faster than native species and are particularly successful where soils are heavily grazed and richer in nutrients.

Environment - 16.02.2026
Intensive Grazing and Soil Fertility Favour the Growth of Non-native Plants
Intensive Grazing and Soil Fertility Favour the Growth of Non-native Plants
A global study has revealed the conditions under which non-native plants thrive in the world's many dryland regions and the factors that limit their spread. Using data from 98 study sites across 25 countries on six continents, researchers found that non-native plants often grow faster than native species and are particularly successful in areas with intensive grazing and nutrient-rich soils.

Life Sciences - Chemistry - 23.01.2026
Stimulating biological processes with light
Stimulating biological processes with light
Researchers at Leipzig University and TU Dresden have succeeded in developing biological switches that can selectively turn ion channels on and off using light pulses. Initial applications show that it is possible, for example, to stimulate nerve cells in the brain or to control the release of adrenaline from cells of the adrenal gland and the movement of the small intestine using light stimuli.

Pharmacology - Life Sciences - 19.01.2026
Study in living cells reveals new insights into membrane receptors
Study in living cells reveals new insights into membrane receptors
Researchers from the Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) 1423 have, for the first time, investigated directly in living cells how a key membrane receptor - which, among other functions, helps regulate heart activity - interacts with its signalling partners. Depending on the drug applied, this receptor adopts different conformations and operates at different speeds, which in turn influences which signals are passed on within the cell.

History & Archeology - Earth Sciences - 13.01.2026
Leipzig research team discovers possible Black Death mass grave near Erfurt (Germany)
Leipzig research team discovers possible Black Death mass grave near Erfurt (Germany)
An interdisciplinary research team from Leipzig has discovered strong evidence of a Black Death mass grave near the deserted medieval village of Neuses, outside Erfurt. It represents the first systematically identified burial site associated with plague burials in Europe. The study, conducted primarily by Leipzig University, the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO), and the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), has just been published in the scientific journal PLOS One.

Environment - Earth Sciences - 05.01.2026
Sediments of the Ahr bear witness to recurring, extreme flood events
Sediments of the Ahr bear witness to recurring, extreme flood events
Recurring high-energy flood events are not the exception in the Ahr valley, but the rule - over periods of centuries to millennia. This is shown by a study just published in the scientific journal "Earth Surface Processes and Landforms" under the leadership of the University of Leipzig. The river sediments examined document the summer flood of 2021 as well as at least three other flood events in the past 1,500 years, which - measured by sedimentological parameters - were of comparable magnitude.

Life Sciences - Social Sciences - 17.12.2025
How people see animals: They think and feel - but not like us
Do animals think and feel? How this question is answered has a direct bearing on how empathetically and considerately people treat animals.

Life Sciences - 16.12.2025
Observing how brain cells behave during learning
Observing how brain cells behave during learning
Researchers at Leipzig University's Carl Ludwig Institute for Physiology, working in collaboration with Johns Hopkins University in the US, have achieved an important breakthrough in brain research. The so-called zap-and-freeze technique, which allows processes of signal transmission between nerve cells to be visualised within milliseconds, has now been successfully applied for the first time to acute brain slices from both mice and humans.

Environment - Transport - 12.12.2025
'Hidden' contrails in cirrus clouds contribute to climate warming
’Hidden’ contrails in cirrus clouds contribute to climate warming
Researchers at the Institute for Meteorology at Leipzig University have, for the first time, determined the climatic impact of contrails that form within natural cirrus clouds. Contrails account for the largest share of aviation's climate impact beyond carbon dioxide emissions. The Leipzig researchers have now shown that "hidden" contrails - previously not factored into such assessments - contribute up to ten per cent of the warming effect of normal, freely visible contrails.

Environment - 13.11.2025
Diverse forests are more resistant to climate change
Diverse forests are more resistant to climate change
Droughts are having a major impact on Europe's forests - and climate change could make them even more frequent. But diversity helps: a new study led by the German Center for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) and Leipzig University shows that forests are more resistant to drought when trees employ different strategies for using water.

Environment - 11.11.2025
Non-native plant species adapt to natural ecosystems faster than expected
Non-native plant species adapt to natural ecosystems faster than expected
Over time, non-native plant species increasingly integrate into native food webs. Their region of origin or relatedness to native plants plays only a minor role. Far more decisive is how widely they have spread and how long they have been growing in Europe. The longer they have been established and the wider their distribution range, the more they are used by microherbivores such as leaf miners, gall midges and aphids - leading to similarly diverse interactions as with native plants.

Environment - 17.10.2025
Extreme and prolonged drought causes unprecedented productivity loss
Extreme and prolonged drought causes unprecedented productivity loss
A global research effort involving 170 researchers across six continents shows that extreme, years-long drought conditions significantly reduce the long-term health of grasslands and shrublands - ecosystems that cover nearly half the planet's landmass and store over 30% of global carbon. Until now, due to the historic rarity of extreme droughts, researchers have struggled to estimate the actual consequences of these conditions in both the near and long-term.
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