Category: Nature

Are Human Beings Organisms Or Living Ecosystems?

Since it’s the most interesting thing I’ve read this morning I’m just going to copy-paste this from Slashdot for those of you that missed it.

“Every human body harbors about 100 trillion bacterial cells, outnumbering human cells 10 to one. There’s been a growing consensus among scientists that bacteria are not simply random squatters, but organized communities that evolve with us and are passed down from generation to generation. ‘Human beings are not really individuals; they’re communities of organisms,’ says microbiologist Margaret McFall-Ngai. ‘This could be the basis of a whole new way of looking at disease.’ Recently, for example, evidence has surfaced that obesity may well include a microbial component. Jeffrey Gordon’s lab at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis published findings that lean and obese twins — whether identical or fraternal — harbor strikingly different bacterial communities that are not just helping to process food directly; they actually influence whether that energy is ultimately stored as fat in the body. Last year, the National Institutes of Health launched the Human Microbiome Project to characterize the role of microbes in the human body, a formal recognition of bacteria’s far-reaching influence, including their contributions to human health and certain illnesses. William Karasov, a physiologist and ecologist at University of Wisconsin-Madison, believes that the consequences of this new approach will be profound. ‘We’ve all been trained to think of ourselves as human,’ says Karasov, adding that bacteria have usually been considered only as the source of infections, or as something benign living in the body. Now, Karasov says, it appears ‘we are so interconnected with our microbes that anything studied before could have a microbial component that we hadn’t thought about.’”

It is definitely outside-of-the-box thinking and well worth the read.

Link

 

Posted by Nelson @ Evoflux on 04.15.09 at 09:32 AM in NatureScience • (5) CommentsPermalink

21 Leaf Clover Sets New Record

If it was naturally occurring there wouldn’t be a gray area around here about whether cross-breeding should break the rules.

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A 21-leaf clover discovered on June 3 by Iwate prefecture farmer Shigeo Obara has shattered the Guinness world record for most leaves on a clover stem (Trifolium repens L.). The current official record is held by an 18-leaf clover that Obara found in his garden in May 2002.

The record-breaking clover’s 21 leaves each measure about 1 centimeter long and overlap each other like rose petals on a 3-centimeter stem.

Obara, a former food crop researcher, has been conducting independent research on clovers in his garden for over 50 years. He first became interested in clover mutations after discovering an unusual patch of 4-leaf clovers in 1951. Since then, Obara has been crossbreeding the plants in his garden to research the genes associated with leaf count, color, pattern and size.

Link (via Pink Tentacle)

Posted by Nelson @ Evoflux on 06.11.08 at 11:00 AM in NatureNewsRandomJapan • (0) CommentsPermalink

Honey and the Bee

The District Domestic blog has a good article about common sense things a person can do to help bees. Since we’re still unsure why they’re dying off in such huge numbers every little bit helps. Here are just a few tidbits of the advice.

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  • Plant native species, which bees love - for example: mint, daisies, strawberries, raspberries, lavender, salvia, asters, sunflowers and verbena.
  • Choose plants that flower at different stages in the growing season to provide a constant supply of food for the bees.

Link

Posted by Nelson @ Evoflux on 06.04.08 at 11:06 AM in FoodNatureBeesNews • (1) CommentsPermalink
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