BIzarre ocean creatures

Given the extreme depths to which scientists must go to find these frightful–and tiny–fish, little is known about the hatchetfish. A prime source of worldwide model envy, the morose-looking creatures derive their name from how razor-thin they are, no extreme dieting required.

Anatomically speaking, the hatchetfish’s silver-colored thorax resembles a hatchet’s blade. Its name is somewhat deceiving, though; measuring a mere one to five inches in length, the hatchetfish is hardly imposing, let alone deadly. It’s just, well, pretty terrifying to look at…

http://bit.ly/1iHpP4q

¿Qué tanto influye el ser humano en la extinción de algunas especies? Según este estudio de la Universidad de Duke (North Carolina), la respuesta es “mil veces más rapido”. Casi nada…

According to a team led by Stuart Pimm of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina,

Human activities are driving species to extinction at roughly 1000 times the background rate

, i.e. the rate at which species would die out in the absence of humans. That’s at the upper end of a previous estimate of Pimm’s, published in Science in 1995, that not only underestimated the rate at which species are currently disappearing, but also overestimated the background rate over the last 10–20 million years…

http://bit.ly/1pAMBgf

GM mosquitoes

Miles de osquitos modificados genéticamente están siendo liberados para combatir el dengue en Brasil. Esta es la primera vez que se hace un experimento genético de esta magnitud. De acuerdo con lo que alguien comentó en la nota (irónicamente, claro): “¿Qué podría salir mal?”…

The future of public health is here, and it’s just in time for the World Cup. Scientists have developed a way to combat the spread of dengue fever by genetically modifying the mosquito through which it is spread. This is the first time that genetically modified (GM) insects are being released on this scale into the public to combat disease. Brazil, which approved a massive trial of these GM mosquitoes, may decide to permit commercial releases.

Dengue fever is prevalent in equatorial and tropical countries, which provide a perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes. CurrentlyBrazil is experiencing an epidemic of dengue fever, with approximately 1.4 million confirmed cases last year, and officials are warning that the mosquito population and the prevalence of the virus will peak during this summer’s World Cup…

http://bit.ly/1hy6J0e

GM mosquitoes

Why microbes suicide?

Estamos lejos de ser la única especie que comete suicidio. Desde los microbios hasta los mamíferos más grandes, todos llegan  a cometer este acto que aunque parece “anti-natural” no tiene otra razón que asegurar la sobrevivencia de la especie.
Así que no somos los únicos en suicidarnos, pero sí somos quienes lo hacen por las razones mas tontas…

A study on suicidal E. coli sheds light on why organisms throughout the animal kingdom, big and small, sometimes decide to do themselves in.

The good news is that suicide appears to be comparatively rare in larger animals, but more common among microscopic life forms, such as microbes, according to the study, published in the latest Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Natural selection – the process by which organisms that adapt to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring – favors suicide when the death guarantees the survival of relatives and the individual is less likely to reproduce in future.

An example of this, according to study co-author Rolf Kümmerli, is when “a parent saves his children out of a burning house. This is beneficial because the rescued relatives share many of the genes with the suicidal helper.” Many people are driven to save their kids and close loved ones, no matter what.

Other forms of suicide among humans, such as bombers on a kamikaze mission, likely have nothing to do with natural selection, and instead reflect the by-product of something else. In the case of the bomber, that could be the individual’s environment and life’s experiences. Depression or other forms of mental illness, however, could be inherited.

Kümmerli, a professor in the department of Microbial Evolutionary Ecology at the University of Zürich, and colleagues Dominik Refardt and Tobias Bergmiller investigated the suicidal behavior of E. coli. Some cells of this common bacteria will kill themselves in the presence of bacteria-killing parasitic viruses.

Kümmerli explained to Discovery News that when a protein of anE. coli cell senses viral attack, it becomes activated and, with other proteins, triggers drainage of membrane holes of the bacterial cell. It’s as though the cell biochemically stabs itself.

“Consequently, vital cell liquid and components pour out into the environment, which leads to cell death,” he said. “The dead cell is presumably like an empty perforated sack.

"Even among lowly microbes, such behavior would seem to go against survival and procreation mechanisms. Behaviors that benefit others, at the expense of the individual, however, can emerge when multiple relatives are saved. They can also emerge to benefit unrelated others when the cost of suicide is low.

In the case of E. coli cells, they would likely die from the viral attack anyway, and their death prevents parasite transmission to nearby other E. coli cells.

Suicide is also well documented in social insects that tend to live in large populations, such as ants and bees. Some ants will even explode themselves to prevent intruders from attacking their relatives.

Suicides among non-human mammals and other larger animals are mostly anecdotal, but they do tend to once again apply to social species, such as dogs and dolphins. Dolphin trainer Ric O’Barry, for example, claimed that he watched the famous TV star dolphin, Flipper, take her own life out of sheer depression due to confinement in captivity. O’Barry later became an animal activist.

Gaining a better understanding of the drivers behind suicide could lead to life-saving benefits. Researchers in future might be able to coax harmful bacteria, viruses and other microbial organisms to kill themselves, potentially saving human and other animal lives.

Stuart West, a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Oxford, commended the new research, saying the researchers "show here that if the costs of suicide are low (the individual is unlikely to reproduce anyway), then relatedness doesn’t have to be very high, although it does have to be above zero”

http://bit.ly/WRIcq3

Why microbes suicide?

La películas de Jurassic Park no eran malas. Claro, sólo por dárselas a Spielberg se esperaba que estuvieran llenas de niñerías y persecuciones “chaplinescas”, pero más allá de eso, creo que en su premisa se planteaba un conflicto científico-moral muy interesante.
Ahora que se habla tanto de “des-extinción” y veo este encabezado sobre un tal proyecto Lazarus, me queda claro que nadie aprendió nada de esas películas….

For the first time, scientists have grown the embryos of an extinct species

At yesterday’s TEDxDeExtinction event, University of New South Wales paleontologist Michael Archer announced the advance by the so-called Lazarus project. The bizarre gastric-brooding frog, the female of which incubated the prejuvenile stages of its offspring in its stomach, disappeared from the wild in 1979 and went extinct a few years later. However, Adelaide frog researcher Mike Tyler froze specimens of the frog prior to its extinction, leaving the door open for the species’ possible resurrection.

Scientists extracted DNA from a frozen frog specimen, and employed somatic-cell nuclear transfer, the same process used to clone still-living animals. The team took eggs from the distantly related great barred frog, deactivated that frog’s DNA with UV light, and inserted the gastric-brooding frog’s DNA into the eggs. The cells inside the eggs began dividing, becoming blastulas.The embryos died after a few days, long before developing into tadpoles, but DNA tests confirmed that they were gastric-brooding frog embryos, and Archer says they have high hopes for seeing this frog up and hopping soon.

Breeding programs are in place to attempt to bring certain extinct species back through selective breeding, and some selective breeding has been successful, but this is the first time that the embryo of an extinct species has been grown using this technique…

http://bit.ly/YxHFak