ClockQuotes

Spring is here once again, the time when flowers begin to bud, birds sing sweetly and primal urges send men and women searching for that elusive joy in life – tax deductions.
– Matt Wixon

Stories of and from women in science, engineering, technology and math

Scientiae #3 is up on Lab Cat

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds Vol. 3, No. 28 are now up on UroStream.

Bioinformatics Blogging of the Month

Bio::Blogs #9 is up on Public Rambling.

GenBlogging of the Month

A very fishy edition of Mendel’s Garden (#13) is up on The Daily Transcript

Suckered?

OK, admit, how many of you really got suckered? (in reference to yesterday)
Quite a lesson in credulity and perception for many…(yup, I was in on the joke from the very beginning/planning/execution stages)

Happy birthday, Anton!

37 today!

NC Blogging of the week

The Tar Heel Tavern #110 (Fun And Games edition) is up on Scrutiny Hooligans. We need hosts so e-mail me if you want to do it next weekend, or the one after, or the one after that….

Shakespeare’s Sister has moved!

One of my most favouritest blogs has moved from here to the pretty new digs here. And the name has changed to Shakesville to better reflect the fact that it is now a hustling, bustling group blog, not just Melissa’s. So, fix your blogrolls and feeds today.

Godless Blogging of the Fortnight

Carnival of the Godless: You’re Going to Hell Edition is up on Abstract Nonsense. This, if nothing changes (and these things often do) is supposed to be the very last post by Alon on his blog. Why do the best quit first?

A Circadian Clock that works in a test-tube explained

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

One of the big questions in circadian research is how does the transcription/translation feedback loop manage to get stretched to such a long time-frame: 24 hours. If one took into account the normal dynamics of transcription and translation, the cycle would last a couple of hours at best. The usual answer is that, probably, interactions with a variety of other cellular components slows down the cycle. And this may be correct in Eukaryotes, but a paper came out a couple of years ago showing that placing three cyanobacterial clock genes and some ATP into a test-tube results in a 24-hour cycle. That was quite a shocker!
Now, a new paper in PLoS-Biology (free for all to read) came out explaining how that is possible:
Elucidating the Ticking of an In Vitro Circadian Clockwork:

Circadian biological clocks are present in a diverse range of organisms, from bacteria to humans. A central function of circadian clocks is controlling the adaptive response to the daily cycle of light and darkness. As such, altering the clock (e.g., by jet lag or shiftwork) affects mental and physical health in humans. It has generally been thought that the underlying molecular mechanism of circadian oscillations is an autoregulatory transcriptional/translational feedback loop. However, in cyanobacteria, only three purified clock proteins can reconstitute a circadian rhythm of protein phosphorylation in a test tube (in vitro). Using this in vitro system we found that the three proteins interact to form complexes of different compositions throughout the cycle. We derived a dynamic model for the in vitro oscillator that accurately reproduces the rhythms of complexes and of protein phosphorylation. One of the proteins undergoes phase-dependent exchange of its monomers, and the model demonstrates that this monomer exchange allows the maintenance of robust oscillations. Finally, we perturbed the in vitro oscillator with temperature pulses to demonstrate the resetting characteristics of this unique circadian oscillator. Our study analyzes a circadian clockwork to an unprecedented level of molecular detail.

A similar mathematical model was recently published on the clock in the fungus Neurospora crassa.

ClockQuotes

The ultimate of being successful is the luxury of giving yourself the time to do what you want to do.
– Leontyne Price

History Blogging of the Month

History Carnival #51 is up on A Don’s Life

Obama wins the First Quarter financial race

What? All the media report that Hillary Clinton raised a record amount and is clearly in the lead? Oh, who ever said that journalists know how to calculate? You know, math is hard. But let me explain. Point by point.
This, the first quarter, is absolutely the most important because it is the ONLY one that gets reported by the media. All the money that comes in later is important for the functioning of the campaign, but if the 1st quarter brings in a lot of media attention that emboldens more donors to give more money – it is a feed-forward system. Those who underperform in the 1st quarter cannot sustain their campaigns (unless they run vanity campaigns with no real effort).
Of course, the financial pictures will change over the next year or so, but really say nothing about who the eventual nominee will be. The whole 1st quarter hullabaloo of reporting is meant just to weed out the non-contenders. The top 3-4 will be able to continue fundraising and campaigning unencumbered and will be able to pay for their staff, travel, advertising, ground organization, etc., thus getting their message out.
The media reports ONLY ONE number for each candidate. According to that calculation, Hillary Clinton is first with $26 million, Barack Obama second with around $22 million, and John Edwards third with $14 million, while others are pretty much nowhere (to the point some may be forced to quit as they will not have enough dough – or chances of getting any in the future – to actually pay staffers, travel, etc): for instance Richardson $6 million, Biden $1.5 (?) million, I don’t have the numbers for Dodd, Kucinich and Gravel, but those are likely to be even smaller.
However, and this is IMPORTANT, that one number is misleading as it is composed of three very different kinds of money:
a) primary election money
b) general election money
c) additional money
Primary money – up to $2300 per donor can be used immediatelly and all the way up to the Convention. This is the first fund that donors give to.
General money – additional $2300 per donor can be used ONLY by the eventual nominee and ONLY after the Convention. Until then, it is in an escrow account, useless, yet it can be used to make the 1st quarter number look (inflatedly) bigger. All the non-nominees have to return these funds to the donors. They cannot pocket them, invest them, donate to charity, give to the nominee, give to the DNC or anything else – every check goes back to the individual donor who sent it.
Additional money – this time around only Hillary has it – about $11 million left over from her Senate campaign. Nobody else in the field has any leftovers from other campaigns and, as far as I know, no other candidate intends to put in personal money into it. I think that they are all refusing matching public funds as well.
A few days ago, in an e-mail, I wrote:

Thus, even if all three top-tier candidates collect the same amount right now, Hillary will look much more impressive with that additional $11mil. and will be touted by the media as a big winner and “frontrunner”.

And I think I was right, but it is unclear if the Clinton campaign included the $11mil in the total or not. Even when an article is specifically about the Edwards fundraising it touts Clinton as the big winner.
But, according to some back-of-the-envelope calculations, she did even worse. As much of her fundraising was from Big Donors who attended the fundraising dinners for a ticket-price of $46,000 (primary + general maximum), a huge proportion of that $26 mil is in the escrow account that she can use ONLY if she becomes the nominee and only after the Convention. That diarist estimates that only about $14.5 million of the money she has is from the Primary donations.
In contrast, less than $1 million of Edwards’ donations are for the General, which leaves him with $13 in Primary donations (and yes, he does not have the additional $11 mil HIllary has, but $13 is still $3mil more than his budget and $6mil more than the expectations that he’d be only able to repeat his 2003 fundraising numbers).
This also means that Hillary’s big donors have now maxed out and she cannot expect much more money to come from them any more. And the netroots despise her, so she is unlikely to come anywhere close to the amounts that Obama and Edwards have raised so far and will continue to raise in small donations, especially online small donations.
Edwards raised almost $3.3million online! He got donations from more than 40,000 contributors from across the country and 80 percent of contributions were $100 or less. Obama’s campaign has not yet released the detailed numbers, but it is expected that his online contributions will be quite big as well, although his General election fund will also be bigger due to his numerous Hollywood fundraisers.
These numbers are huge! This shows that Internet is becoming a much greater force in campaigning than even the last time around. In 2003 Edwards was in top three in fundraising (#1 in the first quarter, sliding down a bit later in the year) and on the day before Iowa caucuses he only had about $100,000 collected from online donors, raking in about $200,000 per day over the next few days after his surprising surge into the second place there. We are now talking about millions raised online by three candidates a year ahead!
This means the top three candidates have each raised about fourteenish million in the first quarter for the primary run and have clearly ran away from the second tier of candidates. But this also means that Clinton is in the worst position regarding her ability to sustain those fundraising levels for the remainder of the year.

Suckered

Suckered
Suckered!
Suckered?

BREAKING: G.W.Bush apologizes for everything, quits his job and the Republican Party and sends in a donation to MoveOn.org

….

Continue reading

ClockQuotes

I love sleep. My life has the tendency to fall apart when I’m awake, you know?
– Ernest Hemingway

Bosnian Pyramid Update

I really did not have time to follow up on the whole case, but Alun has so check out his latest…. And you can always be up to date by following the postings on the APWR Central blog. I wish the whole thing was just an April’s Fool joke, but unfortunately, it is just one’s fool’s joke that threatens to destroy some real archeological treasures in the region.

Blogrolling for today

Pursuing praxis

Chaos Theory

Fish Feet

Science After Sunclipse

Barbara’s Blog (Barbara Ehrenreich)

Eleblog

Mass Eyes & Ears

Uri Kalish – Urikalization

Mythusmage Opines

Squid Drawing

Jenna drew a squid. Perhaps if I post it here, PZ will see it and post it as well, and send Jenna a Pharyngulanche of visitors to her blog.
jenna%27s%20squid.JPG

Evo-Devo: what new animal models should we pick?

A review of evo-devo (Jenner, R.A., Wills, M.A. (2007) The choice of model organisms in evo-devo. Nat Rev Genet. 8:311-314. Epub 2007 Mar 6.) is starting to make rounds on the blogs. I cannot access the paper (I’d like to have it if someone wants to e-mail me the PDF), but the press release (also found here) is very vague, so I had to wait for some blogger to at least post a summary.
This is what the press release says (there is more so click on the link):

The subject of evo-devo, which became established almost a decade ago, is particularly dependent on the six main model organisms that have been inherited from developmental biology (fruit fly, nematode worm, frog, zebrafish, chick and mouse).
To help understand how developmental change underpins evolution, evo-devo researchers have, over recent years, selected dozens of new model organisms, ranging from sea anemones to dung beetles, to study.
One of the selection criteria deemed most crucial is the phylogenetic position of prospective model organisms, which reflects their evolutionary relationships.
Phylogenetic position is employed in two common, but problematic, ways, either as a guide to plug holes in unexplored regions of the phylogenetic tree, or as a pointer to species with presumed primitive (ancestral) characteristics.
Drs Ronald Jenner and Matthew Wills from the Department of Biology & Biochemistry at the University of Bath (UK), call for a more judicious approach to selecting organisms, based on the evo-devo themes that the organism can shed light on.

Larry Moran and PZ Myers went into a completely different direction which I find quite uninteresting: evo-devo was and currently is a study of animals and if people who study other organisms want to make their own equivalents, good for them, more the merrier, hi-ho-hi-ho, etc.
I have no problem with the idea that Earth is a planet dominated by bacteria and that the animals are a recent afterthought. I sympathize with those who lament the lack of interest, funding and teaching in the ares of plant, protist and fungal biology. But evo-devo is currently an area of Zoology, so the search for new animal models, as opposed to plant models, is a perfectly appropriate question. We want to know how animals develop and evolve and evo-devo tries to put those two questions together. I am sure botanists, mycologists, microbiologists are working on their own version within their own domains – and hopefully the groups will read each other and learn – but that is outside the realm of this particular review paper.
What bothers me about the press release is its vagueness. Different people have different definitions of the terms “development”, “evolution” and “evo-devo”. Different people have different evo-devo questions they deem important and the review appears to reflect the biases of the authors (and so do posts by Larry and PZ).
Development
Some people focus on the early embryos and things like pattern formation, determination of dorso-ventral axis, or limb development. Others consider the entire life-cycle, including growth, maturation and senescence, to be parts of development. Some focus on patterns of expression of developmental genes. Others are more interested in phenotypes. Some focus entirely on the development of anatomical structures, while others are more interested in the development of biochemical, physiological and behavioral traits and how they evolved. Obviously, people with different focus in development will ask evo-devo to pursue different questions.
Evolution
Again, some people are interested in genotypic evolution. They use the population-genetic definition of evolution as “change in frequency of alleles in a population over time”. Their models can detect some things (e.g, type, strength and direction of selection), but not others (levels/units of selection, effects of population structure, etc.), so they focus on the former and the latter is ignored, or given lip-service, or even deemed unimportant (or even non-existent!).
Others are interested in phenotypic evolution. After all, genes are invisible to selection – it is organisms that get selected and the changes in gene frequences are a downstream result of that process. They have different aims and goals for evo-devo as a discipline.
Using the broadest definitions of both development and evolution, the classical studies of imprinting, developmental ‘windows’ for learning birdsong, and organizing vs. activating effects of hormones are smack in the middle of evo-devo research – the mainstream onto which some genetic stuff has been added lately.
Evo-devo
Evo-devo is short for “evolution of development”. But, it actually asks three distinct questions:
How animal development evolved
Trying to trace and document how various developmental mechanisms evolved over time, in essence building a phylogenetic tree of developmental changes in animals on this here planet Earth since the apperance of first animals until today.
How animal development evolves
Figuring out generalizations, hopefully rules, and perhaps even laws, about the ways different evolutionary mechanisms affect different developmental mechanisms.
How animal development affects animal evolution
Figuring out the way different developmental mechanisms affect the way evolution can proceed, i.e., developmental constraints in the positive sense of ‘funneling’ evolutionary direction by making some directions more likely than others. From the very inception of the field, fueled by the publication of Stephen Jay Gould’s “Ontogeny and Phylogeny” (his by far the most influential book, though ALL the others are more popular), the focus has been on things like allometry, heterochrony, heterotopy, etc. This paper appears to be focused on this goal as all the suggestions appear to have such processes in mind:

Developmental programming. Allometry of horns in the beetle Onthophagus nigriventris.
Developmental bias. Variation in body size in C. elegans.
Developmental constraint. Shell morphology in the gastropod Cerion.
Redundancy. Anterior-posterior axis development in Drosophila melanogaster.
Modularity. Sense organs in the cavefish Astyanax mexicanus.
Evolvability. In silico cell-lineage evolution.
Origin of evolutionary novelties. The sea anemone Nematostella vectensis (bilateral symmetry, triploblasty).
Relationship between micro- and macroevolution. The three-spined stickleback and Heliconius butterfly wing patterns.
Canalization and cryptic genetic variation. D. melanogaster phenotypic variation increase during HSP90 impairment.
Developmental and phenotypic plasticity, polyphenism. Ant caste polyphenism and caste determination by primordial germ cells in the parastic wasp Copidosoma floridanum.

Frankly, ALL of these topics I find immensely exciting and, sure, I’d love to see these ideas implemented and these models adopted, and this research done. But what bothers me is that this list just enlarges the Big Six list into a Big Many list. It does not do what it is purported to do – move from separate studies of devo and evo to an evo-devo research program.
You can study development in an organism, but to study evolution of development you HAVE to do comparative work. This means that choices of single species miss the mark completely. If I have written this paper I would have suggested pairs and groups of species, not single species.
For some questions, one wants to compare closely related species, perhaps all in the same genus, e.g., Drosophila (D. melanogaster, D. pseudoobscura, D. yakuba, etc.). Rudolf Raff made great strides early on in the field of evo-devo by comparative studies of two closely related species of sea-urchins, one of which undergoes metamorphosis (i.e., goes through a larval stage) and the other one skips it and develops directly from an egg to an adult.
For other questions, one may want to look at somewhat less related species that cover a greater spread of evolutionary relationships. Perhaps a bunch of different insects: fruitlies, house flies, mosquitoes, cockroaches, termites, beetles, butterflies, moths, sandflies, wasps, honeybees, etc. (like this paper does, for instance), or a bunch of different fish, e.g., zebrafish, medaka and fugu, or comparing chicken to quail to turkey to ostrich.
For yet other questions, looking at the philogenetic depth is quite fine. It is exciting what we are learning about the origin, evolution and development from the studies of Cnidaria (see this, this and this for an example), or about the origin of Vertebrates from the comparative studies of echinoderms, hemichordates, urochordates, cephalochordates, agnathans and fish (check out this and this).
So, if you had unlimited space, time, manpower, money and freedom, tell me what pairs or groups of animals you’d choose as new evo-devo models, not individual species, and what would you study with them? What for? Which of the defintions of development and evolution you ascribe to? Which of the three evo-devo questions excite you personally?

“Post-human”

The best way to make it easy for the low-brow followers to kill the enemy is to dehumanize it. That is what right-wing talking-heads have been doing for a while. Of course, if someone actually gets killed, they did not do it – they were just telling “jokes” on radio or TV.

When Yes means No.

When I ask a guy for something, I may get Yes as an answer half the time and No half the time. Yes mostly means Yes and No means No. If the answer is “Let me think about it”, that means usually that within 24 hours or so I will get a definitve Yes or No answer.
If I ask a woman for something, I rarely ever get a No. I may get Yes half the time and “Let me think about it” the other half. And moreover, Yes need not necessarily mean Yes, and “Let me think about it” ALWAYS means No – as in: I never hear about it again from that person.
On the surface, that sounds like dishonesty and playing games, and sure is inconvenient not to know what the real answer is. But I am aware of the deeper psychological reasons for not being able to say No to anyone, as I was once like that (and learned through persistence and hard work not to be). It is a matter of politeness mixed with a dose of fear (of being ostracized or something).
And it is certainly much more ingrained in – or inculturated into – women than men. How? Check this post and the 85 comments in the thread under it.

At an IDC conference – Jason reports

Jason drove down to Knoxville and attended an ID-Creationist “conference” and lived to tell about it. And tell he did, in five installments:
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
All the usual suspects were there and all the usual nonsense was spouted, but the most interesting part was the Subway-line conversation Jason had (in Part Four), debating a handful of attendees and noticing age-difference in their thought-processes and debating strategies.

Invertebrate Blogging of the Month

Circus of the Spineless #19 is up on Burning Silo

Physics Blogging of the Week

Philosophia Naturalis #8 is up on Metadatta.

Publishing on blogs in social sciences

Alun Salt will be leading a session about the Peer-to-peer publishing and the creative process, i.e., publishing papers on blogs at the Classical Association conference at Birmingham so he has written a post on things he wants to say there – quite an excellent summary of pros and cons of the idea and clearing away some common misperceptions.

ClockQuotes

Time has convinced me of one thing: Television is for appearing on – not for looking at.
– Noel Coward

Barbara Ehrenreich endorses John Edwards

On her blog, of course:

For my money, John Edwards is the best candidate out there. Clinton has Iraqi and American blood on her hands; Obama has yet to lay out clear economic alternatives; and, although they might once have been Republican moderates, McCain and Giuliani are shamelessly snuggling up to the Christianist Right. I like Edwards because he’s taken up the banner of the little guy and gal in America’s grossly one-sided class war. He’s laid out a plan for universal health insurance; he wants to repeal Bush’s tax cuts for the rich; he shows up at workers’ picket lines.
I met him on a panel last fall, he is good-looking enough to merit Coulter’s suspicion that he can’t possibly be straight (though, really, Ann, if you want to crank up your “gay-dar,” you should get away from those pimply right-wingers and meet some new guys.) He’s modest, low-key, friendly, and, although he’s wealthy now, he spoke movingly from his family’s experience of poverty.

Read the rest – quite moving about Elizabeth Edwards from one cancer-survivor to another.
Hat-tip: TomP (if you are a DK user, please recommend this Diary).

Save the Mountain Walrus

First, there was a Tree Octopus, but now, there is an even more endangered animal – the Mountain Walrus:
mountain%20walrus.gif

Having just eaten a substantial meal, this herd will not have to hunt again for many days. For now, these mustangs are safe from the satiated walruses. Mountain walruses are carnivorous animals. They eat many species of animals, from mice to horses and elk. The cows will venture forth in small groups and hunt for the entire herd. They will bring whatever meat they were able to find back to the dens and all will partake. The younger cows are in charge of looking over the calves while the bulls protect the herd. The hunting cows can bring back enough food to last for a week before having to hunt again. They may travel as far as 10 miles to find food.

Mythusmage has more.
…hmmmm….should have saved this post for April First and written it seriously….

Sharks down => Rays up => Scallops down

In today’s issue of Science, there is a study showing that hunting of sharks, by eliminating the main predator of rays, leads to a decline in the ray’s – and ours – food: the scallops:

A team of Canadian and American ecologists, led by world-renowned fisheries biologist Ransom Myers at Dalhousie University, has found that overfishing the largest predatory sharks, such as the bull, great white, dusky, and hammerhead sharks, along the Atlantic Coast of the United States has led to an explosion of their ray, skate, and small shark prey species.
“With fewer sharks around, the species they prey upon — like cownose rays — have increased in numbers, and in turn, hordes of cownose rays dining on bay scallops, have wiped the scallops out,” says co-author Julia Baum of Dalhousie.

sharks.jpg
Here is a local North Carolina angle:

Too many sharks have been killed, so they’re no longer devouring a voracious predator that feasts on bay scallops, marine researcher Charles “Pete” Peterson concludes. As a result, North Carolina’s bay scallops fishery, once worth $1 million a year, has been wiped out.
The finding, reported today in the journal Science, is evidence that harm to one creature in an ecosystem can unexpectedly injure another, Peterson said.
“The marine environment is so vast and three dimensional, there are many linkages,” he said. “There are cascading and domino effects.”
Sharks don’t eat scallops. But the top predators do feast on cownose rays — kite-shaped creatures that migrate through North Carolina waters. And the rays eat scallops, hordes of them, as they make their late-summer and early-fall travels south.
The timing of the cownose trip past North Carolina is particularly harmful to scallops, Peterson said. The rays arrive from from mid-August to mid-September. Scallops, which live about 18 months, don’t start spawning until September. So the rays eat them before they can reproduce.

Learn more about the Cownose Ray.
Craig has some more (and may write even more later so check his blog again).

Science Labs

There is a growing, glowing discussion about the usefulness of college science labs that was started with an anti-lab post by Steve Gimbel and responded to, with various degrees of pro-lab sentiment by Janet Stemwedel, Chad, Chad again, Chad yet again, Razib, Jeremy and RPM and numerous commenters on all of their posts (also check older posts on the topic by Sean Carroll and Janet). Of course, I felt a need to chime in. I teach labs, after all (and I took many as a student as well).
The core of the problem is the very existence of the institution we call ‘college’.
Let me explain.

Continue reading

My picks from ScienceDaily

Overfishing Large Sharks Impacts Entire Marine Ecosystem, Shrinks Shellfish Supply:

Fewer big sharks in the oceans mean that bay scallops and other shellfish may be harder to find at the market, according to an article in the March 30 issue of the journal Science, tying two unlikely links in the food web to the same fate.

Continue reading

ClockQuotes

Love is space and time measured by the heart.
– Marcel Proust

Help prevent natural gas drilling in Chaco Canyon

I guess some people have no sense of aesthetic pleasure, no personal connection to nature, and no ability to think beyond money, money, money. They want to drill in Chaco Canyon, of all places! Apparently, there is more time to act, as the drilling is being assessed. During that brief respite, we can try to tip the scales by peititoning people whose job is to make the final decision. Afarensis has all the details, additional information about the case, and the contact information for you to use to try to prevent this disaster.

The Tar Heel Tavern – call for submissions

The April Fool’s Day edition of the Tar Heel Tavern will appear on Sunday, April 1st, on Scrutiny Hooligans, so send your entries by Saturday at midnight to: scrutinyhooligans AT yahoo DOT com

Heureka!

Heureka is an online popular science magazine in Austria which you should check out, especially if you can read German. But some things are in English, including this interview with yours truly…
There also blurbs about it (in German) in derStandard online and hardcopy, as well as on their science blog Sciblog.

Skeptical Blogging of the fortnight

Skeptics’ Circle #57 (The Zebra Spilled its Plastinia on Bemis!) is up on Aardvarchaeology

Stem Cell Experiment in The Scientist

On The Scientist website you can find their new experimental feature – an article with questions to the public that will be used in forming the articles for the print version of the magazine next month. Go see Special Feature: Stem cell cloning needs you: In a unique experiment we’re inviting you to participate in a discussion that will help shape our next feature on stem cell research and post comments:

We’re inviting people to give us their thoughts and questions on whether we need to rethink the scientific and ethical approach to stem cell cloning to help shape a feature that we’ll be running in the June issue of the magazine. […] we’re treating this more as an experiment in user participation, which we’d love to do for more articles in future if people respond to this.

The three main questions are:
Is the nuclear transfer challenge one of understanding or technique?
Is it time to reevaluate the ethics of stem cell cloning?
Does stem cell cloning need new terminology?

So, go there and post comments. So far, there are only 17 comments and the thread has already been hijacked by embryo-worshippers. It would be really nice if people could go there and actually address the issue and try to answer the questions. Adding a comment is easy with no special registration hoops to go through. Hey, if you don’t have time to write multiple long comments, you can always blogwhore: post links to your posts in which you have already answered these quesitons in the past.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Ewwwww! UCLA Anthropologist Studies Evolution’s Disgusting Side:

Behind every wave of disgust that comes your way may be a biological imperative much greater than the urge to lose your lunch, according to a growing body of research by a UCLA anthropologist.

The Delayed Rise Of Present-day Mammals:

It took 10 to 15 million years after the dinosaurs were wiped out before modern mammals – including our ancient human ancestors – were able to diversify and rise to their present-day prominence across the globe, a landmark new study has found. The surprise finding overturns the widely held belief that the ancestors of modern mammals were able to quickly evolve and spread to fill many of the empty niches left behind following the mass extinctions of dinosaurs and many other large animals when a huge asteroid crashed into the Earth about 65 million years ago.

A High Beef Diet During Pregnancy Linked To Lower Sperm Counts In Sons:

A mother’s high beef consumption while pregnant was associated with lower sperm counts in her son, according to a study led by researchers at the University of Rochester.

Transplanting Organs From Animals To Humans: What Are The Barriers?:

Given the huge shortage of donor organs, researchers have been trying to find ways to transplant animal organs across different species (known as “xenotransplantation”), with the eventual aim of transplanting animal organs into humans. The major stumbling block, says Dr Muhammad Mohiuddin (US National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute) in a paper in PLoS Medicine, is that the immune system in the animal receiving the organ tends to reject the transplant.

ClockQuotes

If time were the wicked sheriff in a horse opera, I’d pay for riding lessons and take his gun away.
– Wystan Hugh Auden

Who gets whose Last Name at the Wedding?

Times are changing and the variety is endless. See what Anton and Erin, The Woomers and Jenny F. Scientist ended up doing and why.
Then, read the posts and comment threads by Amanda and on Chaos Theory.

AnthropoBlogging of the Week

The latest edition of The Four Stone Hearth is up on Afarensis

Open Science On Marketplace

And in the marketplace. Jean-Claude Bradley was one of the people interviewed for a segment on Open Science on NPR’s Marketplace this morning. You can read the transcript and hear the podcast here. Thanks Anton for the heads-up.

EduBlogging of the Week

Carnival of Homeschooling #65 is dedicated to Charles Darwin and Evolution, up on Alasandra.
112th Carnival of Education is up on Education Wonks.

Liberal Blogging of the Week

Carnival of the Liberals #35 is up on Framed.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Migratory Birds: Innocent Scapegoats For The Dispersal Of The H5N1 Virus:

A review to be published shortly in the British Ornithologists’ Union’s journal, Ibis, critically examines the arguments concerning the role of migratory birds in the global dispersal of the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1. Ecologists of the Station Biologique de la Tour du Valat and of the GEMI-CNRS in the Camargue (France), Michel Gauthier-Clerc, Camille Lebarbenchon and Frédéric Thomas conclude that human commercial activities, particularly those associated with poultry, are the major factors that have determined its global dispersal.

Common Fungicide Causes Long-term Changes In Rats’ Mating Behavior:

Female rats avoid males whose great-grandfathers were exposed to a common fruit crop fungicide, preferring instead males whose ancestors were uncontaminated, researchers from The University of Texas at Austin have discovered. Their research shows that environmental contamination could affect the evolution of wildlife through changes in mating behavior.

Dark Chocolate, Nicotine Patches Examined For Impact On Heart Function:

Genetics and family history play a large role in a person’s risk for heart disease, but factors in diet, lifestyle and the environment are also thought to influence susceptibility to the disease. A number of studies presented recently at the American College of Cardiology’s 56th Annual Scientific Session look at how health-related behaviors can influence a person’s risk for cardiovascular disease.

ClockQuotes

Times change and men deteriorate.
– Gesta Romanorum

Science Blogging of the Fortnight

Tangled Bank #76 is up on Balancing Life.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds Vol. 3, No. 27 are up on MedViews