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New study shows invasive termites threatening homes in Florida are spreading farther than predicted

February 4, 2026

Florida’s coastal and urban counties continue to see the spread of two invasive termite species beyond South Florida. The species are now threatening structures statewide, according to a new University of […]

Scientists discover chameleon’s telephone-cord-like optic nerves once overlooked by Aristotle and Newton

November 10, 2025

Chameleons’ wandering eyes have fascinated and puzzled scientists since the days of ancient Greece. Now, after millennia of study, modern imaging has revealed the secret of their nearly 360-degree view […]

Buzz Off

September 5, 2025

University of Florida researcher Daniel Swale describes his work in the simplest of terms: He studies the most lethal creature on Earth.  “Mosquitoes are a nuisance to us in the […]

XPRIZE UF

April 21, 2025

W ildfires like the ones that recently devastated Southern California burn an average of 7 million acres a year in the United States, taking dozens of lives and causing billions […]

An aerial view photo of the Whitney Laboratory old (right) and new (left) buildings in St. Augustine, Florida.

Secrets of the Seas

March 26, 2025

Whitney Lab scientists pursue ambitious marine-life discoveries

An illustration of a fully-grown male Palaeoloxodon turkmenicus wandering the Kashmir Valley, 400,000 years ago, towering over a herd of Central Asian red deer.

How a giant prehistoric elephant skull helped untangle an evolutionary mystery — Steven Zhang and Advait M. Jukar

March 6, 2025

400,000 years ago, early humans in Europe, Asia and Africa lived alongside giant straight-tusked elephants, far bigger than their modern-day cousins. Their evolution has long been a mystery to palaeontologists, […]

A photo of David Prevatt standing in front of an abstract image.

UF civil engineering professor to shape building policy as new Jefferson Science Fellow — Dave Schlenker

January 23, 2025

For three years, University of Florida engineering professor David O. Prevatt, Ph.D., has been chewing on a stubborn problem: Why are bridges and buildings still succumbing to natural hazards when […]