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Gazelles Shrink Heart to Beat Heat

Shrinking hearts are just what I have been looking for! My experiments in rapidly-shrinking animals have been hitting snags when certain parts of the rats fail to shrink fast enough, causing the animals to explode. Hearts, eyeballs, and tongues are the three organs that are the hardest to shrink, but now I will be one step closer once I master the gazelle-shrinking heart!

Muhahahahahaha!

Bizarre Survival Tactic: Gazelles Shrink Heart to Beat Heat
By Bjorn Carey
LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 08 June 2006
04:13 pm ET

In an extreme way to beat the heat, a sand gazelle shrinks its liver and heart to cope with long periods of drought, a new study reveals.

The deserts of the Arabian Peninsula rank among the most severe environments in the world. It’s extremely hot and unpredictable rains do little to quench the arid land.

While some of the region’s animal inhabitants struggle under these conditions, the sand gazelle stands out as one of the most successful critters at dealing with this stress.

“We found that gazelles had the lowest total evaporative water loss ever measured in an arid zone ungulate [hoofed animal],” write the team of researchers from Ohio State University and the National Wildlife Research Center in Saudi Arabia.

Organs such as the liver and heart require significant amounts of oxygen to function. By shrinking these organs, the gazelles don’t have to breathe as much and thus reduce the amount of water lost by respiratory evaporation.

Water-deprived sand gazelles also have a higher fat content in their brains. The researchers suggest that these stores might be beneficial for fueling brain metabolism during prolonged food and water deprivation.

The study, announced today, was published online May 19 in the journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.

pic via

Gazelle

Go Gazelle!

Somebody stole this poor lizard's legs!

Dr. Mobusu here. I’m sure that many of you have the same problem I do, random people try to steal your legs for use on cyborgs, Frankenstein-style monsters, or for an army of bodyless legs that will kick their way into world power. As a mad scientist, I have many tools at my disposal to protect my legs from any and all who try to take them. However, many creatures in the animal kingdom do not have such skills. A big example is the snake, as well as some skinks. And now a new victim has been found! This Bachia lizard has lost his legs in an attempt to by like the snake. That’s what happens when you watch Boa vs. Python too many times!

Bachia
Bachia2

And I’m definitely not using the legs from this lizard and the lungs from this frog to make some sort of supermonster. So don’t get any ideas. But stay away from the Seattle sewers for a few years.

Legless lizard found in Brazil may be new species

By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent Tue Apr 29, 12:17 PM ET

OSLO (Reuters) – Scientists have discovered a legless lizard, a toad and a dwarf woodpecker among 14 species believed to be new to science in central Brazil, a wildlife conservation group said on Tuesday.

A four-week expedition to the Cerrado region, a wooded savannah under threat from the expansion of farming, found eight apparently unknown types of fish, three reptiles, one amphibian, a mammal and a bird, Conservation International said.

“The lizard, of the Bachia genus, resembles a snake due to its lack of legs and pointed snout, which help it move across the predominantly sandy soil,” U.S.-based Conservation International, a non-profit group, said in a statement.

Susan Bruce, a spokeswoman for Conservation International, said the lizard was about 15-20 cm (6-8 inches) long. Other legless lizards around the world include ones related to geckos in Australia or slow worms in Europe.

The lizard was found during the expedition to the Serra Geral do Tocantins Ecological Station, a 716,000 hectare (1.77 million acre) protected area in the Cerrado.

Other suspected new species include a dwarf woodpecker and horned toad. Conservation International seeks to preserve biodiversity and argues that human societies can live in harmony with nature.

“Protected areas such as the Ecological Station are home to some of the last remaining healthy ecosystems in a region increasingly threatened by urban growth and mechanized agriculture,” said expedition leader Cristiano Nogueira.

The Cerrado region, part of Brazil’s central high plains region that once covered an area half the size of Europe, is being converted to crops and ranch land at twice the rate of the nearby Amazon rainforest, Conservation International said.

The expedition also recorded threatened species such as the three-banded armadillo, the marsh deer and hyacinth macaw among more than 440 species documented in the expedition comprising 26 researchers. — (Editing by Giles Elgood)

My Starfish Outbreak Threatens Corals

When a mad scientist is bored, one thing they do is think of things to make massive armies of to unleash upon the populace. And one of the funnest to create is starfish armies. They grow quickly, and you can double the size by just cutting every starfish in half, as each piece regrows into a new member! It is great for taking out your aggressions and building your troops at the same time. And now, my latest starfish army, Starfish Commandos 13, is now being unleashed! This is the first time I’ve used thorns starfish, but they are just as fun as the more common types! Suck it, coral! MuHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!

Starfish Outbreak Threatens Corals

ScienceDaily (Jan. 18, 2008) — Outbreaks of the notorious crown of thorns starfish now threaten the “coral triangle,” the richest center of coral reef biodiversity on Earth, according to recent surveys by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society and ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.

The starfish — a predator that feeds on corals by spreading its stomach over them and using digestive enzymes to liquefy tissue — were discovered in large numbers by the researchers in reefs in Halmahera, Indonesia, at the heart of the Coral Triangle, which lies between Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. It is considered the genetic fountainhead for coral diversity found on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, Ningaloo and other reefs in the region.

Scientists fear the outbreak is caused by poor water quality and could be an early warning of widespread reef decline.

Recent surveys of Halmahera by the Wildlife Conservation Society and ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies confirmed that while Halmahera’s reefs are still 30-50 percent richer than nearby reefs, some areas were almost completely destroyed.

“The main cause of damage to the corals was the Crown of Thorns Starfish,” Dr. Andrew Baird of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University. “We witnessed a number of active outbreaks of this coral predator. There was little to suggest that the reefs have been much affected by climate change as yet: the threats appear far more localized.”

The team also saw first-hand evidence of recent blast-fishing, an extremely destructive fishing practice that uses explosives. According to locals this accompanied a break down of law and order following communal violence in 2000-2003. During the same time many reef lagoons were mined of their corals for use in construction, an activity encouraged by the Indonesian military.

“This is clearly a complex human environment and effective management of the marine resources must address the needs of communities. It will also be vitally important to understand the causes of conflict among communities and address them,” says Dr Stuart Campbell, Program Leader for the Wildlife Conservation Society’s’ Marine Program in Indonesia.

The researchers pointed out that there were still healthy populations of certain species — and still time to reverse the damage.

“The good news is that the reef fish assemblages are still in very good shape” said Tasrif Kartawijaya from WCS-IP. “We saw Napoleon wrasse and bumphead parrot fish at almost every site. So these reefs have the capacity to recover if we can address the current threats.”

The Coral Triangle Initiative (CTI) announced by six regional governments at the Bali Climate Change Conference recently offers hope for the reefs in the region, the researchers say. However, there are few details of how it will work and no mention of the fundamental role of research in the conservation program.

“We are disappointed research is yet to be fully considered in the CTI. The success of large marine parks, like the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, is largely due to the primary role of science plays in understanding what’s going on, so managers can make good decisions,” said Dr Baird.

“It isn’t enough just to document the diversity of the region. Large scale research is required to understand the Coral Triangle ecosystems and work out how best to respond to threats such as poor water quality and overexploitation,” Dr Campbell added.

Adapted from materials provided by Wildlife Conservation Society, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Parasitic plants returning to go after you!

Parasitic plants exist to leech on regular plants who just want to be green and make oxygen. When modified genetically, they can create great fun as they are unleashed upon orchids or used to control your genetically modified predator plants. Not many people study them, so they are a great way to make invasions with very few scientists who will work against you. It’s all about exploiting the rare. Here is the story for those of you who want the “official” information:
parasite plant

Scientist rediscovers rare plant unseen since 1985

By CHERYL WITTENAUER, Associated Press Writer Thu May 1, 3:39 AM ET

ST. LOUIS – A scientist with the Missouri Botanical Garden has rediscovered and identified a rare parasitic plant that hasn’t been seen by botanists in more than 20 years.

A single specimen of the plant was found in Mexico in 1985, but the plant wasn’t seen again until St. Louis botanist George Yatskievych and a colleague found it in a pine oak forest in Mexico’s mountains.

The plant, which he is identifying and naming for the first time, is not a classic beauty. The odd, orange-brown, fleshy-stemmed plant — which will have the formal Latin name for the “little hermit of Mexico” — has a pine cone-shaped dense cluster of flowers and juicy celery-like stalks.

But to Yatskievych, it’s “weird and wonderful.”

“I’ve always been interested in plants that don’t conform to our preconceived notion of what a plant should be,” he said. “Beauty is in the beholder’s eye and this plant is wonderful in so many ways.

“You can’t call it ugly, but on the other hand, I recognize it’s not everyone’s cup of tea.”

Wayt Thomas, scientist at the New York Botanical Garden, was looking for other plants in Mexico when he encountered a single specimen of the plant in 1985.

He cut a piece of it, and kept a dried, pressed specimen at his institution. He sent queries and photos of it to fellow botanists, but no one recognized or claimed it, he said, not even the late Larry Heckard who was the leading North American expert on parasitic plants. It went unrecognized because parasitic plants, when dried, don’t maintain their color and structure well.

“It sat around for a long, long time,” Thomas said.

But by luck, he met an Austrian botanist who referred him to Yatskievych, who is writing text for the encyclopedic “Flora of North America,” on the very family of flowers he believed the Mexican plant was in. Plants in the family Orobanchaceae attach as parasites on the roots of host plants.

Photosynthesis, the process by which plants use sunlight and water to create energy in the form of sugar, is hard work, Yatskievych said, and these parasitic plants have developed a way to “steal their food” and hence survive in habitats that otherwise might be inhospitable.

When Yatskievych received Thomas’ specimen in 2005, his response was, “What the heck is this?” He traveled to Guerrero, Mexico, the following year to meet with the same guide who helped Thomas two decades earlier.

The original site of the plant, near an old camping spot in the mountains west of Acapulco, had been destroyed. But days of searching finally led them to a 60-foot tree that was host to the parasitic plant. Starting as a cancer on the side of the underground root, it grew into a fleshy stem that had pushed 18 inches through rocky soil so it could flower. Yatskievych said his reaction was one of “overriding relief.” He traveled to Mexico again in 2007 to gather information on the host tree and see the plant’s fruits.

In the hierarchy of plant classification, a “species” is a collection of individuals, and “genus” is a collection of species. A collection of “genera” is a “family.”

The “little hermit” is both a new species and a new genus because it is so unusual and distinct that it cannot be included in any of the existing genera in the plant family Orobanchaceae. No other populations have been found in the host tree’s zone which spans from central Mexico to Costa Rica.

That could change in time, when Yatskievych’s research is published in the next year.

Thomas said the find is significant because there’s no field guide for the world of plants. He said describing a new genus is quite rare.

The plant is at risk of extinction as roads, logging and conversion to pasture destroy its habitat, Yatskievych said.

Yatskievych plans to present his findings this summer at a joint conference of the Botanical Society of America and the Canadian Botanical Society meeting in Vancouver, B.C.

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