ReproductionScienceHow Supergenes Beat the Odds—and Fuel EvolutionBy Carrie ArnoldIdeasChina’s Declining Population Can Still ProsperBy Catherine Bowen and Vegard SkirbekkIdeasIt’s Time to Focus on Reproductive Longevity ResearchBy Jennifer GarrisonScienceThere’s a New Explanation for ‘Genetic’ Trait Pairs: Your ParentsBy Grace HuckinsCultureThe Future of Sex Ed Is the InternetBy Nancy JainchillScienceThe Fall of Roe Makes Complex Pregnancies Even RiskierBy Maggie Chen ScienceAfter Roe, Men Might Finally Get Better Birth ControlBy Emily MullinCultureHow to Support People in States Where Abortion Is Under ThreatBy Christina WymanSciencePermanent Birth Control Is in Demand in the US—but Hard to GetBy Grace BrowneScienceRoe Stood for 49 Years. It Revolutionized Life for WomenBy Maryn McKennaScienceDo Birth Control Pills Affect Your Mood? Scientists Can’t AgreeBy Grace BrowneSciencePregnancy Has Risks. Without Roe, More People Will Face ThemBy Michele Cohen MarillGearEverything You Should Know About Plan BBy Medea GiordanoScienceRoe’s Fall Will Limit Screening for Fatal Congenital ConditionsBy Sabrina WeissIdeasScience Is Redefining Motherhood. If Only Society Would Let ItBy Brandy SchillaceScienceAustralia Moves Ahead Cautiously With '3-Parent IVF'By Emily MullinIdeasRecreational Virginity and the False Promise of Artificial HymensBy Neda TaghinejadiIdeasLab-Grown Embryo Research Is Poised to Transform MedicineBy Naomi MorisBusinessMore Companies Offer Fertility Benefits. It’s Only the BeginningBy Megan CarnegieScienceCalifornia Condors Are Capable of Asexual ReproductionBy Sara HarrisonScienceAn Experimental Birth Control Attacks Sperm Like a VirusBy Sara HarrisonScienceAccess to Birth Control Lets More Girls Finish High SchoolBy Kasra ZareiScienceHow One Naughty Bird Cheats With Fancy Feather StructuresBy Matt SimonThe Big StoryA Genetic Curse, a Scared Mom, and the Quest to ‘Fix’ EmbryosBy Stephen S. HallMore Stories