Welcome a new SciBling

I went a little too fast a couple of days ago, but now it is true – Neurontic is on board! Go say Hello to Orli, our newest SciBling!

Support the Honolulu Marathon in Iraq

Yes, you read that right. Our soldiers in Iraq will run the marathon at the same time as the Honolulu race and will be considered to be contestants in the Honolulu marathon. But the whole thing is not just for fun – there is something much more inportant going on here and something you can help with. All the proceeds from the donations for the race go, through TAPS, to the families of the soldiers we lost in Iraq and other military conflicts. So, if you can, please donate for a good cause.
Mike has the background and can answer any questions you may have about the details.
My SciBlings Afarensis, Ed,Revere, Janet, Abel, Orac and Razib have more.

Cephalopods don’t need a mirror test – they are mirrors themselves .

PZ probably already knows about this, but I found this discovery of super-reflective skin cells in squid, cuttlefish and octopus quite amazing!

Hanlon’s team discovered that the bottom layer of octopus skin, made up of cells called leucophores, is composed of a translucent, colourless, reflecting protein. “Protein reflectors are very odd in the animal kingdom,” says Hanlon, who is a zoologist. What’s even more odd is just how reflective these proteins are — they reflect all wavelengths of light that hit at any angle. “This is beautiful broadband reflection,” Hanlon told the Materials Research Society at their meeting in Boston last month. The result is a material that looks startlingly white in white light, and blue in the bluish light found beneath the waves. “These cells also match the intensity of the prevalent light,” says Hanlon’s research associate Lydia Mathger. All this helps the creatures to blend into their surroundings.

Hat-tip: Matt Dowling

Verizon reps never graduated from the 5th grade of elementary school – they failed the math

Mark points out to this amazing example of innumeracy:

Yup, it is 25 minutes long and it is frustrating as hell. And there is no resolution in the end.
To make a long story short, the guy went to Canada and before the trip he asked Verizon what his charge would be while there. He was quoted 0.002 cents per kilobyte. When he came back, he found out he was charged at the rate of 0.002 dollars instead. A nice, clean 100-fold difference.
He got on the phone (and recorded these 25 minutes of the conversation) and went through one rep to another, tryng, in vein, to get them to understand that there is a difference between the two numbers! The basic incomprehension is stunning – they do not see the difference between the two numbers. When presented with large numbers, e.g., 1 dollar or 100 cents, they get it, but once a decimal point starts figuring in, they get lost in the math! They do the calculation in cents and proclaim the final result to be in dollars! The last rep was the most infuriating – she actually said that there is NO SUCH THING (as in a “physical object”) as 0.002 dollars (or cents, for that matter) so it is impossible to charge that little! In the end she asserted that this was a difference in OPINION!!!!!
And then we wonder why people don’t get evolution or global warming or simple economics of the effects of slashing taxes…

Tweety in Chapel Hill – let’s play Hardball!

As a part of the Hardball College Tour, Tweety will be in Chapel Hill on Tuesday at the Memorial Hall, chatting for an hour with John Edwards. Tickets are free if you can come, or just watch on Tuesday night.
Though likelihood is small, it is not totally impossible Edwards may use this opportunity to announce his Presidential run.
But, what does it mean to announce? This is such a drawn-out ceremony. First you go on TV and, when asked, respond it is too early to even think about it. Later, you go on TV and say you have not ruled it out. Then, you go on TV and say that you have not made the decision yet. Then, you say that you are thinking about it. Later, you go on TV and say that you are considering forming an exploratory committee. Then you announce that you have formed an exploratory committee. Then you announce who will run your campaign. Then you reveal the address of your HQ. Then you go on TV on a less-serious show (like Edwards did on Daily Show in 2003) to announce the run. Then you repeat that on several other, more serious shows. Then you organize a meeting in your hometown where you give a Big Announcement Speech.
So, at which stage of the process is Edwards right now? I’ve been watching every night that workers are busily readying the office space above Town Hall Grill in Southern Village – the spot where the HQ will supposedly be. So, the announcement cannot be that far in the future.

Great Country Song Lyrics – Weekend Edition

Drop Kick My Big Balls While She’s Gettin’ Nailed mixed by Jeff Hebert of A Nerd’s Country Journal.

New Cool Local Blogs

Go check out The Mill and Carrboro Commons.
The Mill Editor did some digging and found that a lot of cool scientific research on climate is being done locally.

Question Mark

Question%20Mark%20Biscuit.JPG
Biscuit

Blogrolling: P

P is a popular letter so the list is longish. As always, check it out: bad links? Let me know. A super-find you are very happy to discover? I’d like to know. A grave omission? Tell me in the comments…

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SBC – NC’07

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Ouida Myers is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Welcome a New SciBling!

Pacific Institute Integrity of Science Blog has just moved from the old place to a shiny new blog here at scienceblogs.com. Go say Hello.

Mammoth Behavior and Bear Taxonomy

Did mammoths scratch themselves against rocks?

Parkman believes, and he has a growing body of evidence to prove that mammoths and other large Ice Age creatures once used these very rocks near Duncan’s Landing, along the Sonoma Coast State Beach, to scratch their backs. He claims the giant mammals rubbed so much that large swaths of rock have been buffered smooth.

Bears scratch against the trees, but which species is which? Lumpers vs. Splitters.

Science Books

Douglas Erwin reviews “The Making of the Fittest: DNA and the Ultimate Forensic Record of Evolution” by Sean B. Carroll.
Wallace Arthur talks about his favourite books.

200,000

According to Sitemeter (and its proverbial undercount), the 200,000th visitor is currently on this site. He or she is in Petaluma, California and came to this post from the Last-24Hours page. Why don’t you leave a comment?

Nationalism is not Patriotism

Nationalism is not PatriotismHere’s another topic seen through the Lakoffian looking glass (July 23, 2005):

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Physics of Oscillations and the Choice of the Just-Right Bed Mattress

This does not have much to do with circadian oscillations, or even the daily rhythms of human mating, but a much faster rhythm of human mating – you know what I’m talking about…
The fascinating new blog, The Physics of Sex, explains the physics in great detail and gives you ideas for your own home science experiments.

Looking for a present for a budding entomologist?

I mean, er, an entomologist with a keen interest in insect sex? If so, you can buy this cool poster (pdf). More info on the poster is here. Shopping info is here.

Alex and the Greys

Shelley scored quite a blogospheric scoop today – an exclusive interview with Irene Pepperberg.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Sea Urchin Genome Suprisingly Similar To Man And May Hold Key To Cures:

Sea urchins are small and spiny, they have no eyes and they eat kelp and algae. Still, the sea creature’s genome is remarkably similar to humans’ and may hold the key to preventing and curing several human diseases, according to a University of Central Florida researcher and several colleagues.

Evolution Of The Penis Worm: Research Reveals Embryos More Than Half A Billion Years Old :

Images of the developmental stages of embryos more than half a billion years old were reported by a University of Bristol researcher.

From A Lowly Yeast, Researchers Divine A Clue To Human Disease:

Working with a common form of brewer’s yeast, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have uncovered novel functions of a key protein that allow it to act as a master regulatory switch — a control that determines gene activity and that, when malfunctioning in humans, may contribute to serious neurological disorders.

Stretch A DNA Loop, Turn Off Proteins:

It may look like mistletoe wrapped around a flexible candy cane. But a new molecular model shows how some proteins form loops in DNA when they chemically attach, or bind, at separate sites to the double-helical molecule that carries life’s genetic blueprint. Biologists have discovered that the physical manifestation of DNA loops are a consequence of many biochemical processes in the cell, such as the regulation of gene expression. In other words, these loops indicate the presence of enzymes or other proteins that are turned on. Now physicists at the University of California, San Diego have discovered that stretching the DNA molecule can also turn off the proteins known to cause loops in DNA.

Study Looks At Effects Of National Trauma On Americans’ Health:

A study by psychologists at the University at Buffalo and the University of California, Irvine, has found that people’s gender and ethnicity predicted their immediate response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks and their general state of health over the next two years.

SBC – NC’07

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Ifeoma Ndefo is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Wii not for Hyperactive people

Once you get your new Nintendo console, make sure you are calm while playing. Otherwise, you are bound to break something.

Running out of ideas for a post for the next Skeptic’s Circle?

Or the Carnival of the Godless? You can mine this site for ideas. Ooooh, scientific materialism! Scary! Papa Jeebus, protect me, please, because I am a coward!

H-Index

A few days back, Alex posted about a new, easy way to calculate one’s Hirsch Number (“H-Index”), a widely used measure of one’s publications’ worth. Yup, I did it for me and no, I am not telling you my number….
The site that published this, The Epidemiologic Enquiry, now that I had some time to take a longer look, has a bunch of other interesting things posted about scientific/medical publishing and the methods of epidemiological research. Worth a look.

Publishing company releases first comprehensive guide on publishing ethics

Promoting Ethics in Science:

Increasingly, journals are appearing in front page scandals that expose undisclosed industry support of research and scientists who have faked results. Blackwell Publishing, trying to prevent such problems, recently released a comprehensive guide on publication ethics to the editors of its 805 academic journals. These principles provide practical advice to inform policies on a broad range of topics such as conflicts of interest. While the guidelines will not be mandatory, experts seem pleased and expect the move will help to clean up academic publishing.

Ah, why do I like chicken so much?!

The supply in the USA is apparently not very safe.

2006 Weblog Awards – my picks

2006 Weblog Awards finals are now open for voting. The main menu is here. You can vote once per 24 hours over the next 10 days.
You can go directly to the Best Science Blog category and…good luck! Is there a science blog on the list anyone can NOT like?
Medical Blogs? Orac? Cheerful Oncologist? Again, a tough choice.
How about the Best Educational Blog? Berube? Education Wonks? Hard to choose.
Best Blog? Yuk! What horrendous choices! Only DailyKos deserves a vote from the whole list. When are Koufaxes starting?
Best New Blog – I only know (and like) Konagod.
Best Individual Blog. My first vote went to Majikthise. I’ll see later when it gets tough which of the good ones (Majikthise, Glenn Greenwald or Talking Points Memo) has the greatest chance to beat the Rightwingers.
Best Humor Blog – Jon Swift or Sadly, No?
Online Community. DailyKos again?!
Best Liberal Blog – again a cornucopia of goodness. Who shall I choose? Shakespeare’s Sister? Pandagon? My blogfather of Legal Fiction? Hullaballoo, Bitch PhD, Jesus’ General are also on top of my list. Hard to pick a favourite at this point.
Best Media Blog. Wolcott hands down.
LGBT Blog. Pam’s House Blend hands down.
Culture Blog – Tom Watson.
Best Podcast – This American Life.
Video Blog – Crooks and Liars.
Video of the Year – Mentos and Diet Coke.
Best European Blog. Fistful of Euros.
Australian/NZ Blog – John Quiggin.
Top 250: Orcinus or Feministe.
Top 3501 – 5000 Blogs – Blue Gal.
Best Of The Rest – Property of a Lady.
There are many more categories but I do not know (or do not like) anyone on the list.
Have I missed someone really good?

Global Warming for Ditto-Heads

Explained patiently, with pretty pictures.

Today on PLoS – Biology

Interspecific Communicative and Coordinated Hunting between Groupers and Giant Moray Eels in the Red Sea:

The article offers a description and accompanying videos, such as the one showing a grouper and eel swimming side by side as if they are good friends on a stroll. It also offers quantification, which is truly hard to achieve in the field, of the tendencies involved in this mutually beneficial arrangement. The investigators were able to demonstrate that the two predators seek each other’s company, spending more time together than expected by chance. They also found that groupers actively recruit moray eels through a curious head shake made close to the moray eel’s head to which the eel responds by leaving its crevice and joining the grouper. Groupers showed such recruitment more often when hungry.
Given that cooperative hunting increases capture success for each of the two predators, and that they don’t share with each other but swallow the prey whole, their behavior seems a form of “by-product mutualism,” defined as a form of cooperation in which both parties achieve rewards without sacrificing anything for the other. They are both out for their own gain, which they attain more easily together than alone.

Divergent Selection on Opsins Drives Incipient Speciation in Lake Victoria Cichlids:

Though Lake Victoria cichlids appear millions of years younger than their counterparts in nearby Lake Malawi, both groups display an enormous range of physical and behavioral traits. This staggering diversity in such young species provides compelling evidence for adaptive radiation, which occurs when divergent selection operates on ecological traits that favor different gene variants, or alleles, in different environments. When divergent selection on an ecological trait also affects mate choice–promoting reproductive isolation of diverging populations–ecological diversity and speciation may proceed in tandem and quickly generate numerous new species.
Despite substantial theoretical and some experimental support for such “by-product speciation,” few studies have shown that selection has “fixed” alleles (that is, driven its frequency in a population to 100%) with different effects on an adaptive trait in closely related populations. But now, Yohey Terai, Norihiro Okada, and their colleagues have bridged that gap by demonstrating divergent selection on a visual system gene that influences both ecological adaptation and mate choice in cichlids.

Physics Blogging of the Week

Philosophia Naturalis #4 is up on Down To Earth

Books: Michael Pollan – The Omnivore’s Dilemma

Amanda just reviewed Michael Pollan’s book The Omnivore’s Dilemma and also recently wrote a post on the same topic while under the influence of the book. I agree with her 100%, so go and read both posts.
I have read the book a couple of months ago and never found time to write a review of my own. I also remember that I finished the book on a Thursday afternoon – an important piece of information as it is on Thursday afternoons that there is a Farmers’ Market here in Southern Village, barely a block from me. The first thing I did when I closed the book was to walk up to the Farmers’ Market, buy some locally grown food and talk to the farmers about all the issues raised in the book and, lo and behold, they all agree with Pollan on everything I asked them about.
They were also a little taken aback that I tried to talk to them. But, I grew up in the Balkans. A big part of going to the Farmer’s Market is to chat with the farmers, banter, joke, complain about the government, haggle over prices, and make sure a kilo of cheese is reserved for you for next week – it is a very friendly and talkative affair. Great fun! Here, there is much more of a class divide. The farmers set the prices. The elegantly dressed city-slickers pick and pay. And all of that is done pretty silently, with a minimal exchange of words. No eye-contact. Nobody is haggling! At the Farmers’ Market nobody is haggling!?*@#%$^&! Travesty and Heresy!
In his book, Michael Pollan initially set out to make three – industrial, organic and personal – types of meals, but once he learned more, he realized he had to do four: industrial, industrial-organic, local-sustainable, and personal.
So, although the book officially has three parts, it really has four. Each of the four parts also reads differently and has a different style and tone:
The first part (industrial) is full of facts, stats, governmental documents, etc. – it reads like Molly Ivins’ Bushwacked or Chris Mooney’s Republican War On Science, although I heard he played loose with some stuff, i.e., cited as true some studies that are very contentious within the scientific community.
While I am a biologist, focusing on animals made me “plant blind” and I learned more about biology of corn from this book than I ever knew before.
The key event, according to Pollan, is the change, during Nixon administration, in the way farmers are paid for corn – everything else flows from that single event: the monoculture, the oil, the feedlots, the fertilizers and pesticides, environmental destruction, obesity and McDonalds.
The second part (industrial organic) is a little bit less of an onslaught of information and he gets a little looser and slower, a bit more personal. He looks at the way organic food production changed since the 1960s hippy farms to today’s giant organic producers who are, more and more, playing by the rules of Big Agra.
While the food they produce is still better than the Industrial and the practices are still more energy and environmentally friendly than Industrial, it only looks good because it is compared to the Big Industrial which is totally atrocious. This part of the book resulted in a big back-and-forth debate between Pollan and John Mackey, the CEO of Whole Foods, resulting in some changes in the way Whole Foods operates. You can find the relevant links on Pollan’s website.
The third part (local-sustainable) is totally fascinating – it is a mix of a travellogue and analysis – he keeps jumping back and forth between his dialogues with his host – Joel Salatin of the Polyface Farms – and the data. This is really the most riveting part of the book and the key element of it. This is also a part of the book that covers most new ground, not stuff found in Fast Food Nation or other well-known books. It also exposes, even better than the first part, the perniciousness of the way our agricultural system is set up, the way Big Agribusiness controls legislation and regulation, and eliminates small farmers from the competition.
Joel Salatin is a Virginia farmer who has perfected amazing agricultural practices on his farm – practically nothing has to be bought by the farm and nothing gets thrown away. Everything has its use and re-use. Everything makes sense when patiently explained to the reader. I actually bought Salatin’s book Holy Cows and Hog Heaven and read it immediately after Pollan’s.
Interestingly, although the guy is a conservative, libertarian, Christian Creationist, I agree with him on almost everything. His distrust of the Government is perhaps a little bit over the top for my taste, but his Creationism is fascinating because his whole philosophy and his whole methodology of the way he runs the farm reveals a deep understanding of evolution and ecology. His farming practice is BASED on evolutionary thinking. He is, for all practical purposes, an evolutionary biologist. Yet, he says he does not believe in evolution. How is that possible? Because he has no idea what he word “evolution” means. He probably has some “chimp is your uncle” cartoon notion of evolution, while at the same time not giving his own evolutionary ideas any name at all. Someone should tell him.
The fourth part (personal) of the Pollan’s book is in a completely different mood, very introspective, sometimes even mystical. One important thing that sets this part apart is that the type of food production described in it is the only one of the four that cannot in any way be affected by legislation, politics or activism – unless one completely bans hunting, gathering, catching, picking, stealing from neighbors, planting stuff in your garden, or collecting yeast from the air!
The best part of this portion of the book is his look at animal rights and his dialogue with Peter Singer. He, being such a typical city-slicker and “Birckenstock liberal” (Come on – slaughtering a chicken, and later a pig, made him sick? Has he never watched or participated in any kind of animal slaughter in his long life yet? Never spent some time on a farm? Dissected an animal in a biology class? What a woefully unnatural and alienated existence!), started out very sympathetic to the idea, but, over a dozen pages or so, dissects the underlying logic and discovers its fatal flows and exposes it in a brilliant paragraph – the best one in the book. You’ll find it and recognize it immediately once you read it – and you will read it because Omnivore’s Dilemma is one of the most important books written in the last few years, and should be a battle cry for many political activists and a source of ideas for many candidates for political office.
In the meantime, go read Amanda’s review.

Do You Have A Vision?

For the future of the USA? If so, go and answer Chris Clarke’s question.

From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development

From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic DevelopmentIt’s Thursday, so it is time for the next portion of my BIO101 lecture notes (May 15, 2006). As alway, I’d appreciate corrections of errors, and suggestions for improvement.

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Skeptical Spineless Feminist Anthropologists

The 49th Meeting of The Skeptics’ Circle is up on Autism Street.
Four Stone Hearth Anthropology Blog Carnival – 4th Edition – is up on Yann Klimentidis’ Weblog.
Circus of the Spineless #15 is up on Words & Pictures
The 28th Carnival of the Feminists is up at Diary of a Freak Magnet.

Tripoli 6 Update

Revere reports that there is a new article in Nature (pdf) demonstrating even stronger scientific support for the innocence of the Tripoli 6, the one doctor and five nurses facing a possible death penalty in Libya. The final verdict will be read on December 19th. The international pressure from the medical world as well as the blogosphere has been enormous, but there is no sign that the Libyan government is listening to it. Certainly now, in the last stretch, we need to renew our efforts and broadcast about this and ask our readers to write letters to people in power. Janet provides addresses and a sample letter. Other SciBlings, including John, Shelley, PZ, Orac and Razib have more informaiton and ideas as well.
Update: RPM explains the science behind the Nature report.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Pendulums, Predators And Prey: The Ecology Of Coupled Oscillations:

Connect one pendulum to another with a spring, and in time the motions of the two swinging levers will become coordinated. This behavior of coupled oscillators—long a fascination of physicists and mathematicians—also can help biologists seeking to understand such questions as why some locations overflow with plants and animals while others are bereft, University of Michigan theoretical ecologist John Vandermeer maintains.

Why Do Some Queen Bees Eat Their Worker Bee’s Eggs?:

Worker bees, wasps and ants are often considered neuter. But in many species they are females with ovaries, who although unable to mate, can lay unfertilized eggs which turn into males if reared.

Found: The Apple Gene For Red:

CSIRO researchers have located the gene that controls the colour of apples — a discovery that may lead to bright new apple varieties.

Cats Can Succumb To Feline Alzheimer’s Disease, Study Shows:

Ageing cats can develop a feline form of Alzheimer’s disease, a new study reveals.

Learning During Sleep? Researchers Investigate Communication Between Memory Areas:

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Medical Research in Heidelberg have been investigating how memories might be consolidated.

Low Self-esteem? Avoid Crime Novels With Surprise Endings:

Not everyone enjoys a murder mystery with a surprise ending, new research suggests.

SBC – NC’07

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Philip Carl is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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In Darwin’s Footsteps

The Tangled Bank Survey #68: The Voyage of Discovery is up on Down To Earth. Captain Daniel Collins commandeers H.M.S. Tangled Bank full of ship naturalists.

Seasonal Affective Disorder – The Basics

Seasonal Affective Disorder - The BasicsThis is an appropriate time of year for this post (February 05, 2006)…

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Are you a Cybrarian?

The Word of the Day for December 06, 2006 is:
cybrarian \sye-BRAIR-ee-un\ noun
: a person whose job is to find, collect, and manage information that is available on the World Wide Web
Example sentence:
The library provided an e-mail address to submit inquiries to the cybrarian.
Did you know?
We’ve been using “librarian” for the people who manage libraries since at least the beginning of the 18th century, and the word was used for scribes and copyists even earlier than that. “Cybrarian,” on the other hand, is much newer; its earliest documented use is from 1992. “Librarian” combines “library” (itself from “liber,” the Latin word for book) and the noun suffix “-an,” meaning “one specializing in.” When people wanted a word for a person who performed duties similar to those of a librarian by using information from the Internet, they went a step further and combined “cyber-,” meaning “of, relating to, or involving computers or a computer network,” with “librarian” to produce the new “cybrarian.”

So, is a blogger a cybrarian, or is a cybrarian someone who reads blogs and collects information? Or both?

EduBlogging of the week

The Education Carnival #96 is up on History Is Elementary.

My picks from ScienceDaily

Gendered Division Of Labor Gave Modern Humans Advantage Over Neanderthals:

Diversified social roles for men, women, and children may have given Homo sapiens an advantage over Neanderthals, says a new study in the December 2006 issue of Current Anthropology. The study argues that division of economic labor by sex and age emerged relatively recently in human evolutionary history and facilitated the spread of modern humans throughout Eurasia.

Peering Into The Shadow World Of RNA: Crosstalk May Control The Genome:

The popular view is that DNA and genes control everything of importance in biology. The genome rules all of life, it is thought. Increasingly, however, scientists are realizing that among the diverse forms of RNA, a kind of mirror molecule derived from DNA, many interact with each other and with genes directly to manage the genome from behind the scenes.

New Biosensors From The Blood Of Llamas :

An unusual protein found in the blood of llamas has enabled scientists to develop a quick, simple method for making antibodies that could be used in a new generation of biosensors.

How Mammals Fuel Milk Production May Have Implications For Cancer :

A new study in the December issue of the journal Cell Metabolism, published by Cell Press, offers insight into the manner in which the mammary glands of mammals meet the incredible metabolic demands of milk production. As the normal pathways of breast development undoubtedly affect breast cancer, the findings may have therapeutic implications, the researchers said.

Newts Regrow Hearts: Scientists Reveal Molecular Details Of Regeneration In Amphibians:

When a newt loses a limb, the limb regrows. What is more, a newt can also completely repair damage to its heart.

Vanishing Beetle Horns Have Surprise Function:

The function of horned beetles’ wild protrusions has been a matter of some consternation for biologists. Digging seemed plausible; combat and mate selection, more likely. But, ….

Decaffeinated Coffee Plants? New Methods Permit Functional Gene Studies In Plants:

Decaffeinated coffee plants, pest-resistant cotton, and Vitamin A-producing rice varieties have all been developed by introducing genes into plants.

Ongoing Collapse Of Coral Reef Shark Populations:

Investigators have revealed that coral reef shark populations are in the midst of rapid decline, and that “no-take zones”–reefs where fishing is prohibited–do protect sharks, but only when compliance with no-take regulations is high. The findings, reported by William Robbins and colleagues at James Cook University and its ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, appear in the December 5th issue of Current Biology.

The Best Liberal Blogging of the Year

Carnival of the Liberals is back home for the 1st Anniversary Edition at Neural Gourmet. Happy Anniversary!

SBC – NC’07

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Barrie Hayes is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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2006 Weblog Awards

The finalists have been announced ina number of categories. Of special interest, of course, are these two categories:
Best Science Blog
Pharyngula
John Hawks Anthropology Weblog
RealClimate
Deltoid
Good Math, Bad Math
Mixing Memory
The Panda’s Thumb
In the Pipeline
Bad Astronomy Blog
SciGuy
Best Medical/Health Issues Blog
Brainhell
Flea
Stayin’ Alive
Short Gut News
Respectful Insolence
The Cheerful Oncologist
A Life Less Convenient
Doc In the Machine
The Cancer Blog
The Amazing Adventures of Diet Girl
Hey, six of my SciBlings are there! Voting will open in a couple of days. See the entire list of all categories here.

Tuesday Carnivals – medicine, environment, education

Grand Rounds, Volume 3, Number 11 is up on The Antidote.
Carnival of the Green #56 is up on Urban Eco.
Carnival of Homeschooling from the Land of Lincoln is up on Corn and Oil.

New SciBlings!

Omni Brain is in the house!
And so is Neurontic
Go say Hello.
[quick edit]

VIP synchronizes mammalian circadian pacemaker neurons

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

No other aspect of behavioral biology is as well understood at the molecular level as the mechanism that generates and sustains circadian rhythms. If you are following science in general, or this blog in particular, you are probably familiar with the names of circadian clock genes like per, tim, clk, frq, wc, cry, Bmal, kai, toc, doubletime, rev-erb etc.
The deep and detailed knowledge of the genes involved in circadian clock function has one unintended side-effect, especially for people outside the field. If one does not stop and think for a second, it is easy to fall under the impression that various aspects of the circadian oscillations, e.g., period, phase and amplitude, are determined by the clock genes. After all, most of these genes were discovered by the study of serendipitously occuring mutations, usually period-mutations.
If the circadian properties are really deteremined by clock genes, then the predictions from this hypothesis are that: 1) every cell in the body shows the same period (phase, amplitude, etc.), 2) every cell in the body has the same period throughout its life, 3) every cell removed from the body and placed in the dish continues to oscillate with the same period as it had inside the body, and 4) the properties of the circadian rhythms are not alterable by environmental influences.
Stated this bluntly, one has to recoil in horror: of course it is not determined by genes! But without such an exercise in thinking, much work and writing (especially by the press) tacitly assumes the strict genetic determination. However, the experimental data show this not to be true. Period (and other properties) of the whole organism’s rhythms are readily modified by environmental influences, e.g., light intensity (Aschoff Rule), heavy water, lithium, sex steroids and melatonin. They change with age and reproductive state. There is individual variation even in clonal species (or highly-inbred laboratory strains). The period of the rhythms measured in cells or cell-types in a dish is not always the same as exhibited by the same cells inside the organism. Finally, the occurrence of splitting (of one unified circadian output into two semi-independent components differing in period)suggests that two or more groups of circadian pacemakers simultaneously exhibit quite different periods within the same animal.
Several years ago, Dr. Eric Herzog (disclosure – a good friend) has shown that even the individual pacemaker cells within the same SCN (suprachiasmatic nucleus – the site of the main mammalian circadian clock in the brain) exhibit different periods. When dispersed in culture, pacemaker neurons (originally taken from a single animal) tend to show a broad variation in periods (amplitudes, etc…).
As they grow cellular processes, two neurons in a dish may touch and form connections. As soon as they do, their periods change and from then on the two cells show the SAME period, i.e., they are synchronized. As more and more cells connect, they build an entire network of neurons, all cycling in sync with each other – same period, same phase, same amplitude. This is assumed to happen inside the whole animal as well – the unconnected SCN neurons of the fetus start making connections just before (or immediately after, depending on the species) birth and as a result, an overt, whole-organism rhythm emerges out of arrhytmic background.
But, what molecules are involved in cell-cell communication that allows the pacemaker cells to synchronize their rhythms? For several years, the most likely candidate was thought to be GABA, an inhibitory neurotransmitter produced by all SCN cells. Sara Aton, a graduate student in Eric Herzog’s lab (now postdoc at UPenn), set out to test this hypothesis. Over a few years and several papers, a different story emerged, culminating in this months paper in PNAS:
GABA and Gi/o differentially control circadian rhythms and synchrony in clock neurons. (by Aton SJ, Huettner JE, Straume M and Herzog ED).
What the paper shows – and there is a lot of detail there, so you can read the paper for yourself if interested, or at least the media coverage (here, here and here) – is that various perturbations of the GABA system, either at the synthesis end or the reception end, have, at best, some mild effects on amplitude and phase. There was no effect of GABA on period of individual pacemaker neurons. Yet, effect on period is neccessary for mutual synchronization of cells into a network. Instead, VIP (vasoactive intestinal polypeptide) was shown to be the agent that, by modulating period, allowed spatially coupled cells to also temporally couple – to synchronize their circadian oscillations.
This is a much more important finding than you may think at the first glance. The naive idea of a single clock driving all the overt rhythms has been abandoned for more than half a century. Every important problem in chronobiology – coherence of rhythms, temperature compensation, communication between pacemakers and peripheral clocks, entrainment to environmental cycles, etc. – hinges on the properties of the multi-clock networks. Understanding the biochemical mechanism by which pacemaker cells syncronize with each other is thus a key finding that will allow us to study those phenomena at a cellular and molecular level. Right now, and due to Sara Aton’s work, VIP is the “handle” we will use to revisit those old problems and test our pet hypotheses about the coupling of circadian systems in various animals (the reasonable assumption being that mouse is not unique in using VIP and that this molecule is probably used for the same function in all vertebrates). We can now study exactly how two cells communicate by VIP to synchronize their clocks – is the pattern of VIP release, for instance, used as a kind of temporal “code”?
Probably the most important such phenomenon to study is splitting. Different kinds of spliting have been observed in lizards, starlings, tree-shrews (Tupaia), mice, rats, hamsters, marmosets and many other animals under various experimental conditions, e.g., constant light, constant darkness, removal of the pineal, infusion with testosterone, or exposure to skeleton photocycles. Splitting can be induced by highly artificial experimental protocols, e.g., alternate eye-patching, or they may appear spontaneusly in animals out in the wild, something that can be replicated in the laboratory.
In some cases, it has been shown that the splitting is lateral, i.e., left SCN drives one component and the right SCN drives the other. In the case of alternate eye-patching, it is reasonable to hypothesize that the same thing is happening. But in other cases, it is more likely that each SCN splits into two subsets of neurons, synchronized within but not between the two groups. Is VIP the synchronizer in both groups? In all cases? In all animals?
If, for instance, rhythms split into two componenets under the influence of testosterone, is VIP used for coupling within each of those two semi-independent “clocks”? Does one group of neurons, insensitive to testosterone, use VIP to synchronize its output, while the other group of neurons, under the influence of testosterone, changes its period and also uses VIP to synchronize its output?
Now that we know to use VIP and not GABA as an entry into the system, all of these questions will be much more amenable to future research – an exciting prospect for me and many others in the field.

Sorry for the interruption

After a night and half a day of the server being down, the homepage wiki of the Science Blogging Conference is up and running again, so you can sign up if you chose to do it today. And why not today?

Who is Bonior?

Bonior Would Lead Edwards Campaign :

Former Rep. David Bonior, a one-time leader in Congress who has close ties to labor unions, has signed on to manage a future John Edwards presidential campaign.
Edwards hasn’t announced a repeat of his 2004 presidential bid yet, but an Edwards adviser said Thursday that Bonior will run the effort if Edwards decides to run. In the meantime, Bonior has signed on as a senior adviser to Edwards’ leadership PAC, the One America Committee.
Bonior represented Detroit’s northern suburbs for 26 years in the House, rising to be the No. 2 Democrat before stepping down in 2002 for an unsuccessful campaign for Michigan governor.
Bonior was a leading advocate for labor unions, a constituency that Edwards has aggressively been working to build support since losing the vice presidency as John Kerry’s running mate in 2004.
Since leaving Congress, Bonior has been a professor of labor studies at Detroit’s Wayne State University and chairman of American Rights at Work, which promotes employees’ rights to unionize.

NeuroBlogging of the week

Encephalon n°12: demandez le menu! is up on AlphaPsy.