ST. PAUL -- As a boy, John Barcay used his grandfather's insect net to capture hundreds of beetles, butterflies, dragonflies and fireflies, which he then stored in the freezer of his parent's Maryland ...
The Takeout on MSN
Cockroaches in your coffee? It's more likely than you think
Cockroaches in your coffee sounds gross, but it's more common than you think. Here's why it happens and what it means for your morning brew.
Hidden behind stacks of cardboard across factories in China, billions of cockroaches are quietly fueling a multi-million-dollar revolution that could change the way we eat and live. Humans may be ...
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