Archive

The Bioresearch Bulletin archive is the complete back catalogue of peer-reviewed research published in this open-access journal. It is the entry point for readers, librarians, students, and life-science professionals who want to browse our full body of biology and biotechnology research. Every paper indexed here was independently reviewed by our editorial board and external experts before publication, then released under a Creative Commons license so it can be downloaded, cited, and reused freely. Each volume groups together work from a particular publication cycle, and individual issues collect related studies into a coherent reading experience.

The work in our archive spans a wide cross-section of the biological sciences. Readers will find primary research in molecular biology, genetics, genomics, cytogenetics, karyomorphology, and population genetics, including studies that use RAPD, RFLP, microsatellite and ISSR markers to assess genetic diversity in plant and animal taxa. Several papers focus on plant biology, plant taxonomy, vascular cambial activity, phytochemistry, phytoliths, tissue culture, and the role of nitrogen-fixing trees in agroforestry systems. Others document microbial ecology, antimicrobial activity, quorum sensing, biofilm behaviour, and the antibiotic resistance of clinically relevant pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Aeromonas hydrophila, Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli.

Animal and aquatic biology is represented by studies of fish toxicology, haematology, karyology, and oxidative stress in species such as Esomus danricus, Catla catla, Labeo rohita, Channa striatus, and Ctenopharyngodon idella, alongside investigations of organophosphate and monocrotophos exposure, LC50 determinations, and the broader impact of agricultural pollutants on aquatic ecosystems. Mammalian and human-health-relevant work covers antioxidant activity in wild mushrooms, flavonoids in Garcinia kola, the cardioprotective effects of plant extracts, streptozotocin-induced diabetes models, free radical scavenging by Salacia chinensis, and medicinal plant phytochemistry from Albizia lebbeck, Cochlospermum planchonii and other taxa.

The archive also reflects a strong engineering and computational dimension to modern life-science research. Multiple papers apply bioinformatics, homology modelling, in silico structural analysis and molecular docking to drug-target proteins such as the multidrug-resistant pmpM efflux pump and cyclooxygenase (COX) from fish. Other studies use nanotechnology and silver nanoparticles to potentiate antibiotics like cephalexin, while applied work covers bioremediation, biosorption, heavy metal contamination of water and sediment, bioprocess engineering, smoking-kiln design for fish preservation, and the deployment of RAPD markers as low-cost biotechnology tools in resource-constrained labs. Together these contributions show how engineering, mathematics, chemistry and physics now feed directly into bioscience research.

For researchers, the archive is intended to be useful as a citation source. All papers carry stable URLs, downloadable PDFs, and full reference lists, and they can be referenced in systematic reviews, meta-analyses, dissertations, grant applications and follow-on experimental work. Educators are welcome to use these articles in coursework on cell biology, microbiology, biochemistry, ecology, aquaculture, fisheries science, agronomy, plant pathology, environmental science, and computational biology. Industry readers in biotechnology, pharmaceutical research, agritech and medical device development will find primary data and applied case studies that can inform formulation, screening and regulatory submissions.

To get the most out of the archive, browse by volume below. Each volume page lists the articles included in that issue with brief descriptions and links to the full text. From an article page you can access the abstract, full HTML version, downloadable PDF and reference list. If you find a study you would like to cite, follow our author guide for citation conventions, or read about our aims and scope to understand the editorial focus that shaped the collection. The archive is updated as new issues are released