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July 23, 2007, 6:25 PM CT

Steroids, not songs, spur growth of brain regions in sparrows

Steroids, not songs, spur growth of brain regions in sparrows
Neuroresearchers are attempting to understand if structural changes in the brain are correlation to sensory experience or the performance of learned behavior, and now University of Washington scientists have found evidence that one species of songbird apparently has something in common with a few baseball sluggers. Both rely on steroids, birds to increase the size of song production areas of their brain and some players, apparently, to knock a fastball out of the park.

Writing last month in the Journal of Neuroscience, Eliot Brenowitz and colleagues showed that the Gambels white-crowned sparrow uses testosterone, a naturally occurring steroid, to trigger the seasonal growth of these brain regions. Birds use song to attract mates and mark their territory.

Their finding is counter to some prior work with other birds and rodents that indicated environmental factors can influence brain development and create more neuronal connections.

We would like to believe that if we shape the environment we can guide the brains structure, said Brenowitz, a UW professor of psychology and biology. But the idea that experience can drive growth of the brain regions that control song behavior in birds was disproved by this study. You can change the experience and the behavior, but you dont change the structure of the brain.The UW researchers observed that the three brain regions in white-crowned sparrows that had been deafened were just as large as those regions in normal sparrows. However, the deafened birds only sang one-eighth the number of songs that the hearing birds sang.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


July 23, 2007, 6:00 PM CT

Limpets reveal possible fate of cold-blooded Antarctic animals

Limpets reveal possible fate of cold-blooded Antarctic animals
A limpet no bigger than a coin could reveal the possible fate of cold-blooded Antarctic marine animals as per new research published this week in The Journal of Experimental Biology.

In comparison to their temperate and tropical cousins, cold-blooded polar marine animals are incapable of fast growth. Until now researchers assumed that a lack of food in winter was the major limiting factor. Studies of the protein-making abilities of limpets in both the sea around the British Antarctic Surveys (BAS) Rothera Research Station and in the laboratory aquarium reveal that these animals cannot make proteins the building blocks of growth - efficiently.

Lead author Dr Keiron Fraser from BAS says, This is an important step forward in our understanding of the complex biodiversity of Antarcticas unique ecosystem. Sea temperature is predicted to increase by around 2C in the next 100 years. If cold-blooded Antarctic animals cant grow efficiently, or increase their growth rates, they are unlikely to be able to cope in warmer water, or compete with species that will inevitably move into the region as temperatures rise.

Growth in animals occurs primarily by making and retaining proteins. While tropical water limpets typically retain 70% of the proteins they make, those in the Antarctic appear only to retain about 20%.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


July 23, 2007, 5:09 PM CT

Killing only a few animals won't do any harm - or will it?

Killing only a few animals won't do any harm - or will it?
Three Eurasian perch (Perca fluviatilis) of approximately equal age. The large individuals are "giant cannibals," the appearance of which can be induced by size-selective mortality.
Credit: photograph by P. Bystrom
Using advanced mathematical modeling, scientists from Sweden and The Netherlands show in an article in the recent issue of the American Naturalist that this statement is sometimes true.

Sometimes though, killing even a few individuals can have dramatic consequences, causing populations to fluctuate wildly. The important question is: who gets killed" The effects of killing individuals crucially depend on the size of the victims, says Tobias van Kooten, assistant professor at Ume University in Sweden. The regulation of populations is commonly determined by the properties of one specific size class of individuals. In some species, this crucial stage consists of small individuals that can monopolize the available food, denying it to all other individuals.Alternatively, particularly in fish populations, large individuals can limit the abundance of smaller individuals through cannibalism. It is when such a crucial size class is the target of mortality that unexpected things may happen. Van Kooten and co-workers predict for example that in harvested cannibalistic fish populations, individuals may reach giant sizes, more than double the size of those in unharvested population. Indeed, such giant cannibals seem to occur frequently in heavily fished lakes. Our results are directly applicable to conservation and management, since almost all human-induced mortality is size-selective, van Kooten states. Fishermen select gear to catch large fish, while deer hunters prefer the tender meat of calves. Unexpected effects of mortality have been reported before, but this systematic study, would be published in The American Naturalist, unravels the mechanisms behind the effects. Such deep understanding makes it possible to predict effects of size-dependent mortality for a wide range of species.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


July 23, 2007, 4:54 PM CT

Why Humans Walk on Two Legs

Why Humans Walk on Two Legs
This trained chimp works out to help answer why humans walk on two legs. The face mask measures oxygen consumption. The paint spots on the chimp's joints aid in video-assisted biomechanical analysis. (Photo copyright Cary Wolinsky)
A team of anthropologists that studied chimpanzees trained to use treadmills has gathered new evidence suggesting that our earliest apelike ancestors started walking on two legs because it mandatory less energy than getting around on all fours.

"When our earliest ancestors started walking on two legs, they took the first steps toward becoming human," said lead researcher Michael Sockol of UC Davis. "Our findings help answer why".

The research appears this week in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It will appear in the July 24 print edition.

"This is the first time anyone has succeeded in studying energetics and biomechanics in adult chimps," said Sockol, who worked for two years to find an animal trainer willing to coax adult chimps to walk on two legs and to "knucklewalk" on all fours on the sort of treadmill found in most gyms. The five chimps also wore face masks used to help the scientists measure oxygen consumption.

While the chimps worked out, the researchers collected metabolic, kinematic and kinetic data that allowed them to calculate which method of locomotion used less energy and why. The team gathered the same information for four adult humans walking on a treadmill.

The scientists observed that human walking used about 75 percent less energy and burned 75 percent fewer calories than quadrupedal and bipedal walking in chimpanzees. They also observed that for some but not all of the chimps, walking on two legs was no more costly than knucklewalking.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


July 23, 2007, 3:16 PM CT

Fruit fly gene from 'out of nowhere'

Fruit fly gene from 'out of nowhere'
Drosophila melanogaster
Researchers thought that most new genes were formed from existing genes, but Cornell scientists have discovered a gene in some fruit flies that appears to be uncorrelation to other genes in any known genome.

The new gene, called hydra, exists in only a small number of species of Drosophila fruit flies, which suggests it was created about 13 million years ago, when these melanogaster subgroup species diverged from a common ancestor.

And early evidence indicates that the new gene is functional (as opposed to being nonfunctional "junk" DNA) and is likely to express a protein involved in late stages of sperm cell development (spermatogenesis). This finding is consistent with work of other researchers who are discovering that a number of of the most recently formed functional genes in any species also are expressed in male testes and appear correlation to spermatogenesis.

"This is a de novo -- 'out of nowhere' -- gene," said Hsiao-Pei Yang, a senior research associate in Cornell's Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and senior author of a paper reported in the July 6 issue of the online journal PLoS Genetics (Public Library of Science Genetics). "People used to believe that new genes were always formed from tinkering with other genes, but with this gene we can find no homologues [genes with a similar structure]. You cannot find any related genes in the fly genome or any species' genome, and that is what is unique".........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


Sat, 21 Jul 2007 00:43:23 GMT

Cultural Traditions Threaten Echidnas Existence

Cultural Traditions Threaten Echidnas Existence
Feared to have gone extinct since it is last seen around 60 years ago, the primitive mammal has brought back enough reasons for the conservationists to rejoice. Im talking of the — the native to the island of New Guinea in the South Pacific — one of the world’s rarest creatures.

With its meat found to be very greasy and extremely tasty, the egg-laying, spiny mammal proves not just its being alive but also well and healthy. This is perhaps for the first time any scientist is seeing one alive.

The mammal closely related to the platypus, is thought to live on only one mountain peak in New Guinea’s Cyclops Mountains. The one specimen of the mammal that was believed to exist, was last seen in 1961, now a show-piece in a Netherlands museum.

What provided the researchers with the clue of its existence are their feeding holes or nose-pokes which they create hunting for worms — at altitudes of only 985 feet. The large number of their presence assured of the mammals thriving.

Excited about the finding, Jonathan Baillie, a conservationist with the Zoological Society of London and who led the expedition said,

It gives us hope that many more echidnas live higher up the mountain.

But, the challenge of assuring their future existence lies with the scientists successful convincing of the villagers, to let go with their cultural traditions of catching an echidna and sharing its meat with a rival in a bid to restore peace.

Image

Posted by: Irani      Read more     Source


July 19, 2007, 9:43 PM CT

Ice Age survivors in Iceland

Ice Age survivors in Iceland
Crymostygius thingvallensis, the only species in a recently described family of groundwater amphipods Crymostygidae.

Credit: (photograph by Thorkell Heidarsson)
A number of researchers think that the ice ages exterminated all life on land and in freshwater in large parts of the Northern Hemisphere, particularly on ocean islands such as Iceland. Researchers at Holar University College and the University of Iceland have challenged that belief, at least when looking at groundwater animals. They have discovered two species of groundwater amphipods in Iceland that are the only animals species found solely in Iceland. These finding can only be explained by these animals surviving glaciations in some kind of refugium under the glaciers, says Bjarni K. Kristjnsson, the scientist who found the species.

In an article in the recent issue of The American Naturalist, they put forward strong support for their theory. Groundwater amphipods are poor at dispersal, and can not be transported with birds or humans, says Jrundur Svavarsson. One of these new species falls within a new family of amphipods, which indicates that the species has been a long time in Iceland. The time since the end of the last glaciation is not enough for a family to evolve, says Svavarsson. Kristjansson and Svavarsson find it likely that the amphipod came to Iceland as early as 30-40 million years ago, when the volcanic island was being formed. If our theory is right, we have discovered the oldest inhabitants of Iceland, and that can help us further understand how Iceland was formed, says Kristjansson.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


July 19, 2007, 9:36 PM CT

Mystery Of Wanton Queen Honeybees

Mystery Of Wanton Queen Honeybees
Worker honeybees construct a new comb, an important part of colony founding. Colonies of promiscuous queens tend to be far more successful in such chores and in surviving their first winter than colonies produced by monogamous queens.
Why do queen honeybees mate with dozens of males? Does their extreme promiscuity, perhaps, serve a purpose?

An answer to this age-old mystery is proposed in the July 20 issue of Science magazine by Cornell scientists: Promiscuous queens, they suggest, produce genetically diverse colonies that are far more productive and hardy than genetically uniform colonies produced by monogamous queens.

"An intriguing trait of honeybee species worldwide is that each honeybee queen mates with an extraordinarily high number of males," said Heather R. Mattila, a Cornell postdoctoral fellow in neurobiology and behavior and co-author of the article with Thomas D. Seeley, Cornell professor of neurobiology and behavior.

In every honeybee species, say the researchers, queens mate with multiple males. The European honeybee -- the common species in North America -- mates with from six to 20 mates on average, for example, while the giant honeybee in Asia has a reported record of 102 mates.

To study the reasons for honeybees' promiscuity, the Cornell biologists inseminated 12 queens with sperm from 15 drones (a different set for each) and nine additional queens with sperm from a single drone (but a different one in each case). They then prompted the hives to swarm in early June to form new colonies.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source


Thu, 19 Jul 2007 00:39:22 GMT

Suitable Habitat Helps in Comeback of Woodlark

Suitable Habitat Helps in Comeback of Woodlark
The sight of woodlark in England has brought back smiles on the environmentalists and bird lovers as they are returning to the countryside. Once declared most critically endangered birds of the region the bird is now seeing its comeback with its number going up to 3,084 pairs from 1,633 pairs in ten years.

Though it is great news but conservationists also fear that this comeback may be short lived as the birds nest on the ground and lay upto 6 eggs at a time. But the ground that is also the birds invaluable source of food and nesting sites may now be used to increase the production of biofuels.

Sue Armstrong-Brown, the RSPB’s (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) head of conservation has welcomed the return of the woodlark and has also cautioned that the wastelands should be restored and managed so as to provide right conditions for nesting the birds.

The bird became a matter of concern in the area, during 1980s when its number went down drastically in previous 20 years. The survival became even tough in 1986, as only 241 breeding pairs were left in the region.

Traditional farmland in the south west of England and Wales, and the loss of heath land across the UK also added to the decline of the woodlarks despite the introduction of the European agricultural policy that proved savior for the birds in 1990.

The ornithologists have credited the comeback to the maintenance of heaths and forests as it has helped the bird to breed successfully.

Image

Source: BBC

Posted by: Fineblog      Read more     Source


July 17, 2007, 10:26 PM CT

Monkeys don't go for easy pickings

Monkeys don't go for easy pickings
Animals' natural foraging decisions give an insight into their cognitive abilities, and primates do not automatically choose the easy option. Instead, they appear to decide where to feed based on the quality of the resources available and the effect on their social group, rather than simply selecting the nearest food available. These findings¹ by Elena Cunningham and Charles Janson, respectively from the New York University College of Dentistry and the State University of New York, have just been published in a special issue of the journal Animal Cognition². The articles in the issue look at the interaction of social and ecological factors and their influence on the evolution of primate intelligence.

The authors investigated whether a group of six white-faced saki monkeys, living on an island in Venezuela, used memory to travel to select feeding resources during a period of fruit abundance. The study looked at the resources available to the sakis and compared the observed distances traveled with predicted distances, using a combination of statistical analyses and computer models.

The monkeys' daily foraging pattern consisted of frequent short feeding bouts and a few long feeding bouts. Surprisingly, the sakis traveled four times further than the predicted distances, suggesting that the sakis were extremely selective about the food they ate. The sakis preferred trees with abundant fruit and trees with water holes. When fruiting trees were abundant, the sakis traveled efficiently to the trees with the most fruit, ignoring closer, less productive ones.........

Posted by: Kelly      Read more         Source

   

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