News

“We do have a couple of cone snails in North Carolina,” Young said. According to "The Seashells of North Carolina", there are ...
Cone Snails have an arsenal of tools and weapons under their pretty shells. These reef-dwelling hunters nab their prey in microseconds, then slowly eat them alive.
This toxin is surprisingly similar to venom found in spiders and cone snails, according to the researchers. These trees grow in eastern Australia, particularly along the slopes and gullies of ...
Scientists in Australia and the United States have unlocked the structure of an insulin that cone snails use to stun their prey. Understanding how this sea snail venom works so quickly may inspire ...
All the latest science news on cone snails from Phys.org. Find the latest news, advancements, and breakthroughs.
Our story begins last year, when researchers in Utah and Australia took a look at two specific snails, including the geographic cone snail Conus geographus. They noticed that the snails’ venom ...
Some cone snail species, such as Conus geographus and Conus tulipa, release a venom that paralyzes their prey. And then the snail will devour those fish whole, using its elastic, tube-sock-shaped ...
Cone snails are normally stealthy hunters, but they become clumsy and unfocused in water with increased levels of carbon dioxide. Oceans absorb CO 2 from the atmosphere. As atmospheric CO 2 levels ...
Cone snail-inspired insulin, although "still not as good as we want for human use," Chou says, could replace the current fast-acting insulin used in artificial pancreas development.
Cone snail-inspired insulin, although "still not as good as we want for human use," Chou says, could replace the current fast-acting insulin used in artificial pancreas development. Bio-inspiration ...
University of Utah researchers have found that the structure of an insulin molecule produced by predatory cone snails may be an improvement over current fast-acting therapeutic insulin. The finding ...