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Genetic Archaeology News Archives Page 6

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Should I eat the kids? When to care for, abandon, or eat your offspring (11/22/2007)

Should I eat the kids? When to care for, abandon, or eat your offspringIt is difficult to see how filial cannibalism, the consumption of one's own offspring, can be an adaptive evolutionary strategy. It is, however, common in many animals, and surprisingly is often coupled with parental care. ...> Full Article


Like father, like son: attractiveness is hereditary (11/21/2007)

Sexy dads produce sexy sons, in the insect world at least. While scientists already knew that specific attractive traits, from cricket choruses to peacocks' tails, are passed on to their offspring, the heritability of attractiveness as a whole is more contentious. Now, new research by the University of Exeter, published in the journal Current Biology, shows that attractiveness is hereditary. ...> Full Article


New Evidence For Female Control In Reproduction (11/21/2007)

New Evidence For Female Control In ReproductionAdding another layer of competition to the mating game, scientists are reporting possible biochemical proof that the reproductive system of female mammals can "sense" the presence of sperm and react to it by changing the uterine environment. This may be the molecular mechanism behind post-copulatory sexual selection, in which females that have mated with several partners play a role in determining which sperm fertilizes their egg. ...> Full Article


Evolution Is Deterministic, Not Random, Biologists Conclude From Multi-Species Study (11/20/2007)

Evolution Is Deterministic, Not Random, Biologists Conclude From Multi-Species StudyA multi-national team of biologists has concluded that developmental evolution is deterministic and orderly, rather than random, based on a study of different species of roundworms. ...> Full Article


Gene In Male Fish Lures Females Into Sex (11/19/2007)

Gene In Male Fish Lures Females Into SexA gene has been found in male cichlid fish that evolved to lure female fish so that male cichlids can deposit sperm in the females mouths. A study in the online open access journal BMC Biology reveals that the gene is associated with egg-like markings on the fins of cichlid fishes and uncovers the evolutionary history of these markings, which are central to the success of the fishes' exotic oral mating behaviour. ...> Full Article


'Time-sharing' birds key to evolutionary mystery (11/19/2007)

'Time-sharing' birds key to evolutionary mysteryWhereas most birds are sole proprietors of their nests, some tropical species "time share" together - a discovery that helps clear up a 150-year-old evolutionary mystery. ...> Full Article


Parasites might spur evolution of strange amphibian breeding habits (11/18/2007)

Parasites might spur evolution of strange amphibian breeding habitsParasites can decimate amphibian populations, but one researcher believes they might also play a role in spurring the evolution of new and sometimes bizarre breeding strategies. ...> Full Article


Genetic technology reveals how poisonous mushrooms cook up toxins (11/18/2007)

Genetic technology reveals how poisonous mushrooms cook up toxinsResearchers discover remarkably small genes that produce mushroom toxin - a unique pathway previously unknown in fungi. ...> Full Article


Fruit fly study advances genetics (11/17/2007)

The humble fruit fly has played a lead role on the scientific stage for more than a century. Tiny picnic pests to us, flies from a single species, Drosophila melanogaster, have provided a bounty of Nobel Prize-winning discoveries for researchers in the fields of genetics and developmental biology, and helped serve as models of human diseases such as Parkinson's and cancer. ...> Full Article


Simple reason helps males evolve more quickly (11/17/2007)

The observation that males evolve more quickly than females has been around since 19th century biologist Charles Darwin noted the majesty of a peacock's tail feather in comparison with the plainness of the peahen's. ...> Full Article


Evolutionary Biology Research on Plant Shows Significance of Maternal Effects (11/16/2007)

Evolutionary Biology Research on Plant Shows Significance of Maternal EffectsWhen habitat changes, animals migrate. But how do immobile organisms like plants cope when faced with alterations to their environment? This is an increasingly important question in light of new environmental conditions brought on by global climate change. ...> Full Article


The bacteria can cheat on their mates (11/16/2007)

Pursuing our own short term interests by cheating on the rest of the population is not the preserve of the human race. It seems bacteria can operate in just the same way. ...> Full Article


Ice age imprint found on cod DNA (11/15/2007)

Ice age imprint found on cod DNAAn international team of researchers has demonstrated how Atlantic cod responded to past natural climate extremes. The new research could help in determining the vulnerability of cod to future global warming. ...> Full Article


Proteins pack tighter in crowded native state (11/15/2007)

Proteins pack tighter in crowded native stateThe syrupy soup of proteins, ribosomes and membranes inside a living cell is so tightly packed it may increase the structural content of proteins by as much as 25 percent, according to new research from Rice University and the University of Houston. The study is one of the first aimed at determining how the crowded environment inside a living cell affects protein structure. ...> Full Article


Ancient retroviruses spurred evolution of gene regulatory networks in primates (11/14/2007)

When ancient retroviruses slipped bits of their DNA into the primate genome millions of years ago, they successfully preserved their own genetic legacy. Today an estimated 8 percent of the human genetic code consists of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs)--the DNA remnants from these so-called 'selfish parasites.' ...> Full Article


Changing environment organizes genetic structure (11/14/2007)

Study finds biological complexity arises from self-organizing structure of genes ...> Full Article


Are there rearrangement hot spots in the human genome? (11/13/2007)

The debate over the validity of genomic rearrangement "hotspots" has its most recent addition in a new theory put forth by researchers at the University of California San Diego. The study, published on November 9 in PLoS Computational Biology, holds that there are indeed rearrangement hotspots in the human genome. ...> Full Article


Genomic revelations from fly's family tree (11/12/2007)

Genomic revelations from fly's family treeFruit fly genomes provide window to genome function, clues for mammal studies ...> Full Article


To fight disease, animals, like plants, can tolerate parasites (11/11/2007)

Animals, like plants, can build tolerance to infections at a genetic level, and these findings could provide a better understanding of the epidemiology and evolution of infectious disease, according to evolutionary biologists. ...> Full Article


All Male or All Female Litter? Sex-ratio Meiotic Drive System Identified In Fruit Flies (11/10/2007)

All Male or All Female Litter? Sex-ratio Meiotic Drive System Identified In Fruit FliesIf you met a person who had 10 children, all of whom were girls, you would probably find this surprising. Yet this kind of distorted sex ratio does occur in groups as diverse as mammals, insects, and plants, where some parents consistently produce litters in which the sex ratio is dramatically skewed. ...> Full Article


Genetics plays role in determining sexual orientation (11/9/2007)

Is sexual orientation something people are born with -- like the colour of their skin and eyes -- or a matter of choice? ...> Full Article


When animals evolve on islands, size doesn't matter (11/9/2007)

When animals evolve on islands, size doesn't matterA theory explaining the evolution of giant rodents, miniature elephants, and even miniature humans on islands has been called into question by new research ...> Full Article


When Are Genes 'Adventurous' And When Are They Conservative? (11/8/2007)

When Are Genes 'Adventurous' And When Are They Conservative?Taking a chance on an experiment – this is one of the impulses that drive evolution. Living cells are, from this angle, great subjects for experimentation: Changes in one molecule can have all sorts of interesting consequences for many other molecules in the cell. Such experiments on genes and proteins have led the cell, and indeed all life, on a long and fascinating evolutionary journey. ...> Full Article


Twelve Fly Genomes Published (11/8/2007)

The complete genomes of 12 related species of the fly Drosophila are published this week in the journal Nature. One of the 12, Drosophila melanogaster, is widely used in studies of genetics and development, and its genome was published in 2000. The new work refines understanding of fruit fly genomics, but it also has implications for understanding the human genome. ...> Full Article


Scientists Devise Novel, Low-Cost Method of Sifting Genome's High-Value Regions (11/7/2007)

Technique Opens New Horizons For Scientists Seeking Disease-Related Genes ...> Full Article


Get in Touch First (11/5/2007)

When the genetic material inside a cell's nucleus starts to fall apart, a protein called ATM takes charge and orchestrates the rescue mission. Surprisingly, for ATM to kick into full gear, the stretches of DNA flanking a chromosomal break are just as important as the damaged site itself, report scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. ...> Full Article


A 'Risk Distribution Law' for Evolution (11/5/2007)

When are the genes adventuresome, and when are they conservative? ...> Full Article


Human Microbiome Projects to sequence 150 bacteria, sample human metagenome (11/4/2007)

A $2.3 million grant from the National Human Genome Research Institute will enable researchers at the Baylor College of Medicine Human Genome Sequencing Center in Houston to determine the genetic code of bacteria that colonize healthy humans and study the structure of microbial communities from five regions of the human body. ...> Full Article


Tangled Web Of The Insect, Plant And Parasite Arms Race (11/4/2007)

New insights into the evolutionary relationship between plant-dwelling insects and their parasites are revealed in the online open access journal BMC Biology. Researchers shed light on how sawflies evolved to escape their parasites and gain themselves an 'enemy-free space' for millions of years. ...> Full Article


Origins of greater horseshoe bat uncovered (11/3/2007)

Origins of greater horseshoe bat uncoveredGenetic work has found that the UK's population of greater horseshoe bats originated from west Asia around 40,000 to 60,000 years ago. ...> Full Article


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