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Posts Tagged ‘Biology’

How to Learn Effectively With Homework Help Online Posted By : botha

I am a student of class XII have taken Biology as a major subject. To learn Biology is not an easy task. As biology is a visual science, which requires to visualize our understanding at molecular level, cellular level and organs. Biology helps us understand the biological perspective. Biology is at the heart of every medical and health advance that is ever made. Biology is the study of living organisms, concerned with whole populations, single organisms, organs, cells and the biochemical process

Oct. 20, 1984: An Aquarium for the Ages Opens

1984: The Monterey Bay Aquarium opens in California.
The aquarium occupies the site of an old sardine cannery at the edge of Monterey Bay, one of the most fertile and diverse marine environments on earth. That diversity inspired the idea of devoting the aquarium solely to the rich marine life indigenous to its own stretch of [...]

How I Leveraged My Job To Start An Online Business

As an entrepreneur, I have somewhat of a “problem”. I tend to see opportunities wherever I look. A few weeks ago, I started learning to bake a New York Cheesecake. It turned out very well and all of my friends were very impressed. When I saw how successful my cheesecake making venture was, I immediately [...]

The biology of business: Homo administrans

Biologists have brought rigour to psychology, sociology and even economics. Now they are turning their attention to the softest science of all: management

SCURRYING around the corridors of the business school at the National University of Singapore (NUS) in his white lab coat last year, Michael Zyphur must have made an incongruous sight. Visitors to management schools usually expect the staff to sport suits and ties. Dr Zyphur’s garb was, however, no provocative fashion statement. It is de rigueur for anyone dealing with biological samples, and he routinely collects such samples as part of his research on, of all things, organisational hierarchies. He uses them to look for biological markers, in the form of hormones, that might either cause or reflect patterns of behaviour that are relevant to business.

Since its inception in the early 20th century, management science has been dominated by what Leda Cosmides and John Tooby, two evolutionary psychologists, refer to disparagingly as the standard social science model (SSSM). This assumes that most behavioural differences between individuals are explicable by culture and socialisation, with biology playing at best the softest of second fiddles. Dr Zyphur is part of an insurgency against this idea. What Dr Cosmides and Dr Tooby have done to psychology and sociology, and others have done to economics, he wants to do to management. Consultants often talk of the idea of “scientific” management. He, and others like him, want to make that term meaningful, by applying the rigour of biology. …

Sept. 10, 1941: Stephen Jay Gould Born

1941: Stephen Jay Gould, who will become a famous evolutionary theorist and popular science writer, is born in New York City.
As a 5-year-old, Gould became fascinated by paleontology during a visit to the American Museum of Natural History with his father. “I dreamed of becoming a scientist, in general, and a paleontologist, in particular, ever [...]

Aug. 20, 1960: Back From Space, With Tails Wagging

1960: Belka and Strelka, a couple of stray mutts impressed into the Soviet space program, become the first living creatures to return alive from an orbital flight.
The Soviets had been using dogs for experimental high-altitude flights long before Belka (Russian for “squirrel”) and Strelka (“Little Arrow”) lifted off from Baikonur on what would be a [...]

Fisheries biology: War dividend

The second world war led to a boom in North Sea fish numbers

SOME experiments are hard to conduct. Fisheries biologists are, for example, reasonably confident that creating protected areas in the sea, in which fishing is forbidden, encourages the recovery of those species that stay put in the area. This has worked in several places in the tropics, notably the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, where fish populations in protected zones have doubled in five years. They are less confident, however, that it applies to places where the fish of interest are migratory, as is often the case in temperate-zone fisheries like those of the North Atlantic and its adjacent seas.

Closing such places to fishing in order to find out is politically difficult. But 71 years ago politics did dictate one such closure, and a group of biologists, led by Doug Beare at the European Commission’s Office of Maritime Affairs, has now taken advantage of it. The closure in question was the little matter of the second world war, and Dr Beare and his team have been looking at its effects on the population of cod, haddock and whiting in the North Sea. …

August 18, 1990: B.F. Skinner Goes in a Box

1990: American psychologist B.F. Skinner dies. He is known for transforming — for better or for worse — the study of animal and human behavior,
Burrhus Frederick Skinner embarked on his career in the late 1920s, during a backlash against the perceived overreach of biologists and naturalists who placed animals at different points on [...]

A Cousteau Centennial

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Jacques-Yves Cousteau was a French naval officer, ocean explorer, filmmaker, TV presenter and preservationist. He and Émile Gagnan designed the Aqua-Lung, the first self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, or scuba. It made longer trips underwater possible. He brought the underwater world to millions by filming his adventures on the Calypso, [...]

April 21, 1987: Feds OK Patents for New Life Forms

1987: The U.S. Patent and Trademark office announces it will begin accepting patent applications for animals.
A year later, Harvard University was awarded the first such patent — the Oncomouse, a mouse researchers produced to be especially susceptible to getting cancer.

Three decades later, the government has issued about 800 animal patents –- on everything from [...]

Feb. 8, 1865: Mendel Reads Paper Founding Genetics

1865: Gregor Mendel reads his first paper on genetics to the local scientific organization. It will be decades before Mendel’s intellectual seeds take root in the fertile grounds of Darwinism and grow a scientific revolution.
Mendel was born in 1822 and became an Augustinian monk, living at the monastery in Brünn, Moravia. (Moravia was then ruled [...]

Jan. 5, 1943: George Washington Carver Bites the Dust He Enriched

1943: George Washington Carver dies, leaving a legacy of a revived and diversified Southern agriculture and hundreds of new and improved food products. Think of him whenever you’re enjoying peanut butter.
Carver was born into slavery in Missouri sometime in the first half of the 1860s: The exact date is unknown. His father was killed in [...]

Reproductive biology: Girls on top

Stressed mothers spontaneously abort male fetuses

IT HAS been known for a while that stressful conditions such as famine result in more girls being born than happens in good times. The shift in the sex-ratio is tiny—around 1%—but in a large population that is still noticeable. A possible evolutionary explanation is that daughters are likely to mate and produce grandchildren regardless of condition, whereas weedy sons may fail in the struggle to have the chance to reproduce at all. In hard times, then, daughters are a safer evolutionary bet. Regardless of why the shift happens, though, it has long been argued that the moment when it happens is conception—or, more probably, implantation. A womb exposed to stress hormones, runs the hypothesis, is less likely to accommodate a male fetus.

A recently published study, however, suggests this ain’t necessarily so. According to Ralph Catalano of the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleagues, writing in the American Journal of Human Biology, stress-induced sex selection can take place long after conception and implantation. …

Synthetic biology: Your plastic pal

A genetically engineered bacterium makes a greener plastic

ONE of the most promising alternatives to plastics made from oil is polylactic acid (PLA). It is biodegradable, safe enough to be used as food packaging, can be processed like existing thermoplastics into coloured or transparent material and can be manufactured from renewable resources such as maize and sugarcane. Although PLA has been around for decades, it is only in recent years that advances in production techniques, particularly by Cargill, a big American agricultural group, have made it feasible to produce the material commercially. Now a group of researchers led by Lee Sang-yup of the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology say they have come up with an even better way to make PLA, using the emerging science of synthetic biology.

At the moment PLA is usually made in two stages. First, a source of starch or sugar, which could be an agricultural by-product, is fermented to produce lactic acid—the same substance made by the body during exercise, only in this case it comes from the bacteria exercising themselves in the fermentation process. In the second stage, lactic-acid molecules are linked into long chains, or polymers, in chemical-reaction vessels, to produce PLA. What Dr Lee and his colleagues have succeeded in doing, as they report in Biotechnology and Bioengineering, is to produce PLA directly, in a one-stage process, in bacteria. No chemical “post processing” is required. …

Nov. 24, 1974: Humanity, Meet Lucy. She’s Your Mom

1974: Paleonanthropologist Don Johanson and graduate student Tom Gray discover the skeleton of Lucy, the first recognizably human member of the primate family tree.
One morning toward the end of his second field season in Hadar, Ethiopia, Johanson decided to put his paperwork away and go bone-hunting with Gray. After several fruitless hours, they stopped [...]

Oct. 27, 1931: Killer Fungus Causes Nightmare on Elm Street

1931: Arborists discover a new outbreak of Dutch elm disease in New Jersey, New York and Connecticut. It’s an early marker of a decades-long scourge that will kill millions of trees and denude the parks and tree-lined streets of many North American cities.
Dutch elm disease is a fungal infection that’s carried from tree to tree [...]

Sept. 29, 1898: Stalin’s Scientist Sees First Light

1898: Trofim Denisovich Lysenko is born in Karlovka, Ukraine. As dictator Joseph Stalin’s lapdog and top scientist, his influence will almost single-handedly retard the course of Soviet science, especially the fields of genetics and agronomy.
Early Soviet propagandists often relied on “miracles of science” to boost the status of their fledgling state. The young plant breeder [...]

Sept. 8, 1854: Pump Shutdown Stops London Cholera Outbreak

1854: Physician John Snow convinces a London local council to remove the handle from a pump in Soho. A deadly cholera epidemic in the neighborhood comes to an end immediately, though perhaps serendipitously. Snow maps the outbreak to prove his point … and launches modern epidemiology.
The Soho neighborhood was not then filled with galleries, clubs, [...]

Aug. 12, 1883: Quagga’s Extinction a Nasty Surprise

1883: The quagga goes extinct when the last of these South African zebras dies at the Amsterdam Zoo.
It was not immediately recognized, as the mare expired, that she was the last of her kind. Although the name quagga refers specifically to an animal that looked like a common zebra that had run out of stripes [...]

UK medical tests on animals rise 14%

Animal rights campaigners round on government as expansion in biomedical research triggers ‘biggest increase’ in medical tests

The number of medical experiments involving animals has shown its largest rise since modern records began, the latest government figures reveal.

Nearly 3.7m experiments were performed on animals last year, a rise of 454,000 or 14% on the previous year, the Home Office said. The increase marks the greatest leap in animal use in medical research since 1986, when the government introduced new auditing procedures.

The growth in animal experiments reflects an expansion in biomedical research in Britain and is driven by advances in genetics and the development of new drugs that must be tested rigorously in monkeys before they are allowed to be given to humans. The experiments range from small procedures such as taking blood and tissue samples to invasive brain surgery and inducing incurable diseases such as Parkinson’s and cancer. Substantial numbers of animals are used to test the safety of new drugs before they are allowed to be used in human trials.

Animal rights campaigners deplored the latest rise, which coincides with the 50th anniversary of landmark proposals to find alternatives to animals in medical research.

Judy MacArthur Clark, chief inspector of the Home Office animals scientific procedures inspectorate, said the rise reflected an increase in “ethically justified research” in Britain. “If the research is ethically justified and has funding, it’s not our role to say you can’t do it, we’ve used too many mice this year,” she said.

More experiments on rodents and fish account for the vast majority of the rise and make up 97% of all experiments on animals. Of 197,000 more experiments on mice last year, most involve breeding genetically modified rodents to help scientists understand the role of individual genes in development and disease.

The figures reveal large falls in experiments on rats, domestic fowl, guinea pigs, rabbits and beagles, which together decreased by more than 40,000.

Britain has a longstanding policy that bans the use of great apes such as chimpanzees and gorillas in medical research, but the use of macaques and marmosets rose by more than 600 experiments, up 16%. This masks a reduction of more than half in experiments on marmosets and other new world primates, but the use of old world macaques in 1,000 more experiments, a 33% rise. Macaques have similar immune systems and physiology to humans and are increasingly being used to test advanced antibody-based drugs that target diseases with far more precision than older drugs.

Testing in monkeys has become more extensive after the disastrous clinical trial of an antibody drug at Northwick Park hospital in north London in 2006. The drug, which had been tested in primates, triggered a catastrophic immune reaction in the six trial participants which led to widespread organ failure.

Home Office inspectors investigated 45 cases where scientists had infringed their licences to do animal research. The most minor cases involved poor record keeping and retaining animals after licences had expired. Of the more serious cases, the worst occurred when mice in one study unexpectedly developed gangrene in their legs, causing greater suffering than the licence permitted. Two researchers involved in the study surrendered their licence before the inspectors’ investigation was completed.

The figures were met with dismay by animal rights campaigners who rounded on the government and called for a concerted effort to reduce the number of animals used in medical research.

“With the scientific expertise this country has to offer we should have seen far greater progress to replace animals with more advanced techniques,” said Dr Sebastien Farnaud of the Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research. The organisation called on political parties to agree to a “roadmap to replacement” to drive the use of animals in research down.

The animal rights group, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), said it was “profoundly disappointed” at the statistics and called on the government to be open about the fate of every animal used in experiments. “We have seen increases year on year in contradiction to public sentiment, but the numbers in this year’s statistics are shocking by any standards,” a spokesperson said.

The science minister, Lord Drayson, defended the figures and said the government was committed to reducing the use of animals in research where possible. “Britain has a high reputation for its standards of regulating research which uses animals. This work, described in today’s report from the Home Office, is critical to the development of new medicines and increasing the level of understanding of diseases,” he said.

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