2015年9月30日星期三

International Journal of Immunology

International Journal of Immunology
ISSN Print: 2329-177X
ISSN Online: 2329-1753

International Journal of Immunology (IJI) is serving the needs of the immunology community worldwide with objective enthusiasm. It plays an essential role in monitoring advances in the various fields of immunology, bringing together the results in a readable and lucid form. Together with the other sections of the journal they give the reader a complete picture of the diverse field of immunology. This broad perspective makes Trends in Immunology an invaluable information source for researchers, lecturers and students alike.
International Journal of Immunology is a peer-reviewed, international, open-access journal that publishes original research articles as well as review articles dealing with all aspects of research on immunology. Subject areas may include, but are not limited to the following fields:
Antigen processing
Cellular immune response
Immunity to infection
Immunomodulation
Innate immunity
Molecular immunology
Leukocyte signalling
Clinical immunology
New technology
Read this journal for free:http://bit.ly/1PMR3Cp

2015年9月29日星期二

Share video:Mantis shrimp fight with shockwave-producing appendage



By David Shultz 23 September 2015 

Any animal with a body part called a “raptorial appendage” should probably be taken seriously. Most mantis shrimp (Neogonodactylus bredini) never grow to more than a few inches long, but their rounded claws strike so fast they can deliver shockwave-producing blows that crack apart hard-shelled prey like clams and crabs. A new study reveals the shrimp even use this weapon on each other. To set up some conflict, researchers placed two mantis shrimp of the same sex, separated by an opaque barrier, into a small tank. One shrimp was provided with a small tube that simulated a nesting site, whereas the other was given no place to live. Scientists then removed the barrier. Thirty-three out of 34 of these contests escalated to striking with the raptorial appendages. The scientists originally suspected that the combatant able to deliver the hardest blow would come out on top, but maximum strike force didn’t correlate very well with success. Instead, landing a higher number of strikes correlated better with victory, the researchers report online today in Biology Letters. The finding could mean the sparring events are ritualistic contests of stamina, rather than an attempt to kill. When being struck by a competitor, shrimp almost always received the blows on a region of their tail known as the telson. As seen in the video above, the shrimp appear to be adopting a specific “telson coil” posture designed to shield themselves from their opponent’s strikes.

2015年9月28日星期一

SciencePG book:Treason and War: English Gentry Families: Sir Thomas Kiriel 1400-1480

Author: Tarık Tolga Gümüş
ISBN: 978-1-940366-54-8
Published Date:
September, 2015
Authors
Tarık Tolga Gümüş has completed his Masters Degree in Bilkent University in Ankara in the Department of History, after graduating from the Middle East Technical University from the Department of Philosophy. His master’s thesis was related to the European History. Then, he completed his PhD. in the same university in 2007. His PhD. dissertation was about the fifteenth century British history. The author is currently working at Mersin University, Department of History. His areas of interest are fifteenth century English history, aristocracy, gentry class and chivalry. He also teaches the Medieval European History Medieval French, and the history of Early Modern Europe.
Description
The importance of the gentry class families in the political history of the fifteenth century is becoming more and more apparent in the academic developments of the recent years. Therefore, this book is focused on the life and career of one individual of these gentry families. The life and career of Thomas Kiriel who was the knight of the body and who was actively enrolled in the wars with France in the king’s side are analyzed. The study shows that Thomas Kiriel took his fortune from the land and military service to the king Henry VI. Then when he changed side he was accused of treason and beheaded.

If you are interested in this book, find it in SciencePG:http://bit.ly/1JsNLyV

2015年9月24日星期四

Strong Radical Scavenging Macrofungi from the Dry Zone Forest Reserves in Sri Lanka

Authors:

Dilusha Fernando, Ravi Wijesundera, Preethi Soysa, Dilip de Silva, Chandrika Nanayakkara

Abstract: Natural metabolites produced by macrofungi are of great interest as potential antioxidant defensive agents to reduce the oxidative damage caused by free radicals. Primarily, phenolic and flavonoid type metabolites have gained major importance due to the strong capacity of scavenging free radicals. The study was mainly focused to investigate the natural antioxidant properties of macrofungi found in Sri Lankan dry zone forest reserves using DPPH radical scavenging assay and to find out the contribution of phenol and flavonoid substances towards their antioxidant capacity. EC50 values of all extracts were below 1.2 mg/ml. Among the analyzed specimens, Phellinus repandus and Inonotus porrectus showed the most potent antioxidant activities having EC50 of 7.91 ± 1.38 µg/ ml and 19.70 ± 0.17 µg/ ml, respectively. Ten fungal forms exhibited EC50 < 300 µg/ ml and eighteen showed a mean values of EC50 in the range of 300-1200 µg/ ml. Further, P. repandus and I. porrectus also exhibited the highest level of total phenols and flavonoids. EC50 values of the species studied were inversely related to the total phenol and flavonoid contents.The analyzed macrofungi specimens exhibited high antioxidant power highlighting their potential as therapeutically useful antioxidant agents. Particularly, P. repandus and I. porrectus could be an important source of novel antioxidant compounds. In addition, phenol and flavonoid compounds largely contribute to the scavenging activity of studied macrofungi.

Keywords: Macrofungi, Antioxidant Activity, Phenol Content, Flavonoid Content,EC50
Read full scientific paper in Frontiers in Environmental Microbiology.

2015年9月20日星期日

Share:Made in the shade

Agroforestry — combining woody plants with agriculture — yields many benefits

BY 
4:18PM, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015
Does this look like a “farm?” These women in Sulawesi, Indonesia, hand pick coffee beans. Shade grown coffee is prized and can command especially high prices.
An Ethiopian coffee farm is “a gorgeous forest with massive, old-growth trees in the canopy and these coffee plants that are a native species growing in theunderstory,” explains Evan Buechley. He’s a graduate student at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Buechley studies birds and conservation biology.woman coffee beans
There's a bonus to growing coffee in a traditional way that preserves tall trees — and it's not just for the birds.
Scientists recently found a rich and diverse bird population living in the shade of forested coffee farms. Those farms are in the east African nation of Ethiopia. Ample birdlife is just one of many benefits of this type of farming, called agroforestry. The practice mixes in trees when growing crops or raising livestock.
Combining forest and farm provides habitat for many species of wildlife around the world. The practice can help keep waterways clean and soils healthy. This helps farmers and ranchers. Agroforestry is essential to producing one of the world’s favorite treats — chocolate. And it may even blunt the effects of climate change.
Thanks to growing recognition of its benefits, this ancient farming technique is gaining new attention.
In Ethiopia, agroforestry has been the standard way to grow coffee for more than a thousand years. The coffee plant, Coffea arabica, thrives in the shadows of tall trees. (The word “coffee” comes from the name of an old Ethiopian province named Kaffa.) To farm coffee, growers simply thin the forest of any competing plants. Experts prize the resulting shade-grown coffee beans.
Buechley and his colleagues recently conducted a census of birds on Ethiopia’s farms and in its forests. His team found something special: All the species of birds that could be found in the forest also were living on traditional coffee farms.
Despite its benefits, many farmers are reluctant to adopt agroforestry practices, says Jim Brandle. He is a professor of forestry at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. People have a difficult time believing it’s worthwhile planting trees on land that could be sown with a profitable crop, he explains. Still, the idea is catching on. India, for example, announced in 2014 that agroforestry would lead its push to add more trees.

Border territory

Long before the technique got its name, humans had used agroforestry to grow plants. The basic idea behind agroforestry is the same, Brandle explains, whether it's in Africa or halfway around the world in the South Pacific. On Hawaii and other tropical islands in the Pacific Ocean, for instance, farmers have a history of cultivating forests filled with coconut, banana, breadfruit and other trees. Agroforestry is also common elsewhere, even in the continental United States.
farming fields
These windbreaks are in North Dakota. The trees protect crops in the fields and reduce the amount of soil eroded by the wind. Those trees also store carbon.
USDA-NRCS
If you travel across America by car, bus or train, you’ll pass a lot of farms. You might see field after field of corn in Indiana, barley in Montana or soybeans in Iowa. In many places, a thin wall of trees will border a field. It’s called a windbreak. Although this looks very different from an Ethiopian coffee farm, windbreaks represent a form of agroforestry.
In fact, windbreaks may be one of the most easily recognizable forms of agroforestry in the United States. Planting trees along the edges of a field interrupts the wind, altering its speed, Brandle explains. Next to a windbreak, it’s a little warmer and less windy. Crops grow better in these sheltered areas. The trees also help to protect the soil from wind erosion.
Another common type of agroforestry in the United States takes place along what are called riparian (Ry-PAIR-ee-un) zones. These are regions along the banks of rivers and streams (ripa is Latin for river bank). To create a buffer — or protected area — farmers plant trees and other types of vegetation here. This vegetation helps limit erosion. The plants also provide food and habitat for birds and other wildlife. And the greenery helps prevent rains from washing sediment, nutrients and pesticides away into nearby streams...

Keep reading:https://student.societyforscience.org/article/made-shade

2015年9月18日星期五

American Journal of Embedded Systems and Applications

American Journal of Embedded Systems and Applications (AJESA) provides a forum for sharing timely and up-to-date publication of scientific research and review articles. The journal publishes original full-length research papers in all areas related to the embedded systems and its applications with emphasis on algorithms, systems, models, compilers, architectures, tools, design methodologies, test and applications.It aims to bring together researchers and practitioners from academia and industry to focus on understanding Embedded Systems and establishing new collaborations in these areas.

ISSN:2376-6069 (Print)
ISSN:2376-6085 (Online)
About This Journal
American Journal of Embedded Systems and Applications is a peer-reviewed, open access, online journal, publishing original research, reports, reviews and commentaries on all areas of embedded systems. Subject areas may include, but are not limited to the following fields:
  • • Application-specific processors
  • • Component and binding models
  • • Embedded computing education
  • • Embedded hardware
  • • Embedded software
  • • Embedded system architecture
  • • Emerging technologies
  • • Hardware co-design
  • • Software co-design
  • • Industrial practices
  • • Integration with business logic
  • • Integration with SOA
  • • Middleware
  • • Networked embedded systems
  • • Policy-based management
  • • Real-time systems
  • • Recent trends
  • • Service-oriented architectures
  • • Testing techniques

2015年9月17日星期四

Watch: Cancer patient receives world’s first 3D printed sternum and ribs



In a novel surgery, surgeons have transplanted the world’s first 3D printed titanium rib cage, NPR reports. A 54-year-old man who lost his sternum and four rib pieces when doctors removed a cancerous tumor was the recipient of the metallic implant, the surgeons describe in the European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. Engineers with the Australian company Anatomics used CT scans of the man’s chest to custom design the device before printing it at a government lab. The 3D printing technology is particularly useful in these extreme cases that call for extensive reconstructions, helping craft an implant that “fitted like a glove,” the surgeons say. Such accuracy of fit may help to reduce any potential complications with the transplant. 
(Video Credit: CSIRO)

Story source:http://news.sciencemag.org/sifter/2015/09/watch-cancer-patient-receives-world-s-first-3d-printed-sternum-and-ribs

2015年9月16日星期三

Analysis of a Class of Teledetection Devices with a Rotating Antenna (TDA)

Authors: Marian Apostol ,  Stelian Ilie ,  Aurel Petrut ,  Marcel Savu ,  Stefan Toba
ISBN: 
978-1-940366-26-5
Published Date: October, 2014

About the Authors
Marian Apostol, Marian Apostol is a scientific researcher and professor of the oretical physics in the Institute of Atomic Physics, Magurele-Bucharest, Romania. In the past 4 years he worked also as a hired consultant for MiraTechnologies, Bucharest, Romania. Apostol is an expert in condensed matter physics, atomic and nuclear physics, with a high record of scientific and technical publications. 
Stelian Ilie, Stelian is an electronics engineer, with a university degree in telecommunication. He implemented several projects in security and defense and devoted his career to promoting and managing high-tech activities in this area. Stelian started and developed successfully MiraTechnologies, Bucharest, Romania. 
Aurel Petrut, Aurel Petrut is an electronics engineer with a vast experience in various areas of electronics equipment. In his career he assumed difficult, special tasks on many occasions, always with a successful output. In the past five years he was associated with MiraTechnologies, Bucharest, Romania, where he brought many valuable contributions and where he enjoys a high esteem and appreciation. 
Marcel Savu, Marcel is a chemical engineer, with an extensive activity in scientific research. He devoted a large part of his career to conducting and implementing complex scientific projects, both at national and international level. He is associated with MiraTechnologies, Bucharest, Romania, as a scientific and technological expert and a director of research and development. 
Stefan Toba, Stefan started his career as a high-school teacher of Physics in Bucharest, then became a University College Professor of Metrology and Applications of Nuclear Physics. At the same time he worked as a scientific researcher in X-ray diffractometry, X-ray fluorescence analysis, electronic microscopy and non-destructive control. He turned then to chief inspector in the Romanian Agency of Nuclear Activities, which is the national regulatory body in the field. In the past several years he was a scientific researcher at MiraTechnologies, Romania.
About this book:
The present book reports upon the results of scientific and technical research conducted for five years, between 2009 and 2013, by a group of cca 10 scientists, engineers and technicians at MiraTechnologies, Bucharest, Romania, upon some devices of remote detection with rotating antenna.

It is known that an important problem today in our society consists in combating the terrorist acts by detecting explosives or narcotics, as well as other illegal materials. Of course, a remote detection is the most desirable one. There exists, since long, on the international technological markets a series of devices which seem to be able to perform such a remote detection. All these devices (some of them reviewed in the book) share as a common element a rotating antenna which can swivel about its axis and point to the target in the field. These devices, which evoke a charming rod, a magic wand or the famous dowsing rod, have the aspect of a rather small device, like a pistol, which the operator holds in hand. 

The functioning of these devices was never convincingly proved, and their validity is controversial. 

MiraTechnology became interested in such devices and, about 2009, started to assemble a team of researchers in order to help clarify the functioning of these curious devices. The studies carried out by these researchers (their leaders are this book’s authors), both experimental and theoretical, resulted in a series of scientific publications listed below. The main conclusion of these studies is that there exist firm principles in science which make possible the functioning of such devices. The results of these studies are presented in this booklet.
If you like, you can read this book in SciencePG:http://bit.ly/1UXVhhi

2015年9月15日星期二

The Importance of Planning for Green Spaces

Authors:
Elizelle Juaneé Cilliers
Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, South Africa, Potchefstroom
1.Introduction to Green Spaces
The aim of spatial planning is to plan and provide for sustainable living spaces, implying balancing the social needs of the citizens, the development pressure for economic growth and the surrounding environment. Current reality however, suggest of increasing unsustainability linked to diverse and complex reasons such as political, economic and social considerations. However, the prevailing approach to spatial planning is believed to be part of the problem as green spaces are often perceived as a luxury, and not a necessity, especially in rural areas where the value and importance of such spaces are under-prioritised in comparison to providing basic services and meeting housing demands [1]. The concept and importance of green spaces are undervalued in terms of spatial planning approaches. This paper aims to identify the indirect and direct benefits of green spaces in an attempt to enhance the necessity of planning and providing for qualitative green spaces within modern communities.
Keep read this scientific paper in journal Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries:http://bit.ly/1NB9xXF

Share:Some pollutants made mice less friendly

By studying the effects of certain pollutants in mice, scientists probed risks they might also pose to people

BY 
7:00AM, SEPTEMBER 14, 2015
Watching how mice behave after exposure to certain chemicals could help scientists learn how those chemicals might affect people.
The body’s endocrine system makes hormones. Like a band director’s baton, those hormones signal cells when and how to perform. But some chemicals can mimic — or sometimes block — the activity of these hormones. Like a fake band director, these hormone imposters might send out false directions. Many such hormone-like chemicals leach out of plastics, cosmetics, packaging materials and more. A mouse study now finds signs that some of these common pollutants indeed can issue false signals.
white lab mice
In a recent study, overweight mice had lower social status than slimmer ones did. Lighter mice were more dominant.
RAMA/WIKIMEDIA COMMONS (CC-BY-SA 2.0)
Faking out the body’s hormone sensors could alter biology in a host of ways. It might affect how the body develops. It might alter how an individual behaves. It could even increase an individual’s risk of disease. In the new study, the affected mice seemed to become anxious. The pollutants also altered the rate at which the mice grew. No one knows if the same thing is going on in people exposed to these common chemicals. But that’s one of the concerns that prompted the new research.
Alexander Suvorov studies environmental health at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. He had become curious about why rates of two brain disorders seem to be on the rise. The first is autism. It affects how someone experiences the world and interacts with it. The second condition is ADHD, orattention deficit hyperactivity disorder. People with ADHD have difficulty concentrating and staying still.
Suvorov wanted to test in mice whether pollutants might cause or intensify behaviors typical of autism or ADHD. If the chemicals did, that might explain recent increases in the number of people diagnosed with the disorders.
For its new study, Suvorov’s team exposed pregnant mice to high doses of one of three common chemicals. They were bisphenol S (Bis-FEE-nul S), BDE-47 and TBBPA. Bisphenol S is used in some clear plastics and papers used to make cash-register receipts. BDE-47 and TBBPA are flame retardants. Companies no longer use BDE-47, though. Scientists suspect it may have harmful health effects in people. The dose of BDE-47 given to mice in the study was similar to the amount that studies have shown has accumulated in the bodies of humans, Suvorov says. And everyone is exposed to TBBPA. That’s because it is now one of the most widely used chemicals for making materials fire resistant.
Each of the three chemicals can affect hormones. Scientists call such chemicalsendocrine disruptors. For instance, BPS canwork like a weak version of estrogen. That’s the body’s primary female sex hormone.
Mice were exposed to different of these chemicals in the womb. Later, as adults, the mice encountered a stranger mouse. Mice that had been exposed to a pollutant now moved more quickly around the stranger than unexposed animals did. This suggests the exposed animals felt anxious, Suvorov says. Indeed, mice exposed to these chemicals avoided the stranger mice and spent more time alone. In contrast, mice not exposed to any of the three chemicals sniffed strangers longer and acted friendlier.
The new study also found that weight affected how social a mouse was. That is a measure of how comfortable it was around others of its kind. Heavier mice had a lower status. They tended to be less popular or attractive to others. Skinnier mice were more dominant. The scientists also found some hints that the chemicals they worked with could affect body weight.
A bigger study is needed to confirm the new observations. But if they are confirmed, then these pollutants may have the ability to indirectly affect an individual’s social status.
That could be very important, Suvorov says. “It has never been shown in animals before that having a higher body weight also means it will be subordinate,” that is, lower in rank or position.

What about people?

It is still too early to people might respond similarly, Suvorov says. In fact, no data exist to show these chemicals have any effect on human behavior.
Still, the new tests have begun to probe what types of changes to look for in people. For instance, Suvorov wonders if exposures to such chemicals might slightly change how people interact.
“Let’s imagine that everybody in our society is now 10 percent more aggressive,” he says. That small change would make little difference in one individual. But if everybody was affected, “then the whole society may function differently,” he says.
Like the mice in the study, overweight people in many societies may be shunned or less popular, said Robert Schwartz. A retired doctor in Wake Forest, N.C., his work focused on hormone effects in children. But, Schwartz notes, people are exposed to many endocrine disruptors. They can be found throughout the environment and in our diets. So, he says, “It’s hard to say that at the lower levels that humans are exposed to, that these chemicals have significant effects.

Story source:http://bit.ly/1KnhKNS

2015年9月14日星期一

2015年9月11日星期五

International Journal of Intelligent Information Systems

International Journal of Intelligent Information Systems (IJIIS) provides a forum wherein academics, researchers and practitioners may publish high-quality, original and state-of-the-art papers describing theoretical aspects, systems architectures, analysis and design tools and techniques, and implementation experiences in intelligent information systems. Articles published in IJMIS include: research papers, invited papers, meeting, workshop and conference announcements and reports, survey and tutorial articles, and book reviews.

ISSN:2328-7675 (Print)
ISSN:2328-7683 (Online)
About This Journal
International Journal of Intelligent Information Systems is a peer-reviewed, open access, online journal, publishing original research, reports, reviews and commentaries on all areas of information systems. Subject areas may include, but are not limited to the following fields:
  • • Database management technologies
  • • Heterogeneous databases
  • • Distributed databases
  • • Mobile databases
  • • Temporal databases
  • • Active and dynamic databases
  • • Object-relational DBMS
  • • Method engineering
  • • Meta-modelling
  • • Object-oriented database systems
  • • Data warehousing and data mining
  • • E-business models & architectures
  • • M-commerce models & architectures
  • • Empirical software engineering
  • • Enterprise systems
  • • Supply chain integration
  • • Extreme modelling
  • • Extreme programming
  • • Information retrieval systems
  • • Intelligent information systems
  • • Information engineering
  • • Intelligent agents
  • • Agent-based applications
  • • Knowledge based systems
  • • Semantic web and ontology
  • • Web databases
  • • Web-based information systems
  • • Domain-driven development
  • • Component engineering
  • • Intelligent communication systems
  • • Semi-structured systems
  • • XML-able database systems
  • • Unified Modelling Language
  • Read this journal for free in SciencePG.

Research Status of the Quaternary Sedimentation in the Chengdu Basin

Scientific paper written by Zhao Xueqin1, Zhao Lijuan2, *, Wang Fudong1
Abstract: The Quaternary of the Chengdu Basin contains abundant geological information. After being studied for decades, there are still some disputes over the Quaternary sedimentary environment and evolution and the filling sequence of basin, etc., on the whole even though some common perspectives have been reached with regard to stratigraphic architecture and structural characteristics. Particularly, more aspects must be further studied, including gravel characteristics and response to tectonic activity.
Keywords: The Chengdu Basin, Quaternary, Sedimentation, Gravel
1.Introduction
Figure 1. The geological map of Chengdu Basin.
Situated in the west of the Sichuan Basin, the Chengdu Basin stands between Longmen Mountain and Longquan Mountain in the east-west direction and extends to Xiushui of Qi’an County in the north and the regions of Mingshan and Pengshan in the south (Figure 1). In the late Cenozoic era, the edge of the basin descended abruptly to form a highly thick layer of Quaternary sediments dominated by sedimentation of mountain-front molasse and sand-conglomerate (Liu, 1983), while Longmen Mountain was uplifted dramatically at the southeastern edge of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The formation is not only attributed to climatic conditions and effect of water flow, but also restricted by the strength and pattern of tectonic movement, so it contains abundant information on tectonic movement and deformation. In addition to ideal geographic and tectonic conditions, the region is always one of the key regions in the study on the late Cenozoic deformation of plateau, the uplift of plateau and the paleogeographic and palaeoclimatic changes (Xu et al., 1997). Meanwhile, it is also crucial to the study on the changes of climate & water system and ecological environment in the upstream region of the Yangtze River (Liang et al. 2014).
Read full scientific paper in SciencePG for free:http://bit.ly/1UGkpsC


2015年9月6日星期日

Share:Seabirds find fine dining among jellyfish


Seabirds may have unknowing allies in their hunt for fish. Several years ago, a Japanese seabird specialist now studying the effects of climate change on life in Alaska’s Bering Sea noticed that some birds seemed to target clusters of jellyfish. Last summer, he went back to Alaska and outfitted eight thick-billed murres (Uria lomvia), 45-centimeter-long black and white birds that nest on island cliffs, with the avian equivalent of a GoPro camera and a device that tracked their movements. Half of the resulting videos documented underwater excursions, which included 197 feeding events. In 85% of the birds’ U-shaped dives, they encountered the jellyfish Chrysaora melanaster (pictured above), a common species in that area, on their way back up. About one-fifth of the time, the birds altered their ascent to go after young fish hiding among the jellyfish, the seabird specialist and his colleagues report online in Biology Letters. The more fish hiding under the jellyfish, the more likely the birds were to attack, they note. In recent years, it seems that the number of jellyfish have been on the rise, fueling concerns that their voracious appetites for microscopic sea creatures might have a negative impact on the food web and that their density might alter how fish behave—young fish seek refuge among the jellies’ tentacles, for example—and consequently hamper the ability of predators to catch these fish. But this study shows the opposite can be true as well, with jellyfish creating more opportunities for sea birds. Next, the researchers plan to study murres in years when jellyfish numbers are down.
Story source:http://bit.ly/1KVxmsB

2015年9月5日星期六

It’s Easy to Be Fearless When You Have a Good Shell

Screen Shot 2015-09-04 at 8.11.38 AM
Aesop never penned a fable about a snail. If he had written about a certain freshwater mollusk, the moral might have been Boldness comes from a strong shell or maybe Careless snails get chomped. But because the snail and its variable shell are real, their lesson has more to do with the the weird workings of evolution.
Individual Radix balthica snails can have differently shaped shells. They also have varying “personalities,” at least as far as you can measure such a thing in a mollusk. To see whether their shells and personalities were linked, Johan Ahlgren, a researcher at Lund University in Sweden, gathered snail eggs from four nearby ponds.
Back in the lab, Alberg waited for the eggs to hatch. He fed the young snails algae and lettuce until they were grown. Then he subjected the animals to a personality test.
The trait that interested Ahlberg and his colleagues was “boldness.” Measuring an animal’s boldness or shyness is a common way to study personality in species all across the animal kingdom: Does it readily explore a new space? Does it stand frozen in a corner? In snails, shyness means staying inside your shell. So Ahlberg gently prodded the snails’ shells with tweezers to frighten them (“The snails retracted after one poke,” the scientists write). Then he counted the seconds until the animals stuck their heads back out.
After repeating the experiment a week later, Ahlberg could sort the snails into two groups. Bold snails consistently emerged from their shells in under 10 seconds. Shy snails took 15 seconds or longer. Some especially timid individuals waited three or four minutes before daring to poke their antennae out.
Next, Ahlberg scanned the shells of all the snails and analyzed their shapes. There were significant differences, he discovered, between the shells of bold and shy snails. Bold individuals had rounder shells with wider openings. Shy ones had more elongated shells with narrower openings.
shells
Shells that are round with wide openings are harder for fish to crush and eat, the authors write. So bolder snails have safer shells. In other words, they can afford to be bold, because they have better protection from predators.
Links between personality and body type have shown up in other animals. Bolder anole lizards have tails that break off more easily, for example. As in the snails, animals with a more fearless personality seem to balance that trait with a body that’s safer from predators.
Do the snails learn to be bold because they grow up with sturdier shells? Although this is possible, the authors write, in this experiment all the snails grew up in the lab, safe from predators. Their personalities emerged without any experience of fish trying to eat them. So it seems that the two traits—boldness and well-defended shells—are genetic, and have evolved alongside each other.
The scientists call this “the ghost of predation past.” The hungry fish that pursued R. balthica in its history have left their mark on its DNA. Today, even if they grow up in a safe space, snails only act fearless if their bodies can back them up.
Or maybe they learned from Aesop: Preparedness for war is the best guarantee of peace.
fox and boar
Images: Top, illustration by Milo Winter for “The Tortoise and the Ducks” (Foolish curiosity and vanity often lead to misfortune) from Aesop’s Fables; middle, Ahlgren et al. (2015); bottom, illustration for “The Wild Boar and the Fox” (Preparedness for war is the best guarantee of peace), same source as top.
Ahlgren J, Chapman BB, Nilsson PA, & Brönmark C (2015). Individual boldness is linked to protective shell shape in aquatic snails. Biology letters, 11 (4) PMID: 25904320
Story source: http://bit.ly/1JIVTNf (http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/)

2015年9月2日星期三

International Journal of Literature and Arts

International Journal of Literature and Arts (IJLA), a peer-reviewed open access journal published bimonthly in English-language, aims to foster a wider academic interest in literature and arts, and publishes a wide range of researches on literature studies, art theory, appreciation of arts, culture and history of arts and other latest findings and achievements from experts and scholars all over the world. Each issue contains a variety of critical articles, an extensive book reviews section, a selection of original poetry, and the visual and performing arts, and so on.

ISSN:2331-0553 (Print)
ISSN:2331-057X (Online)
About This Journal
International Journal of Literature and Arts (IJLA) is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal featuring research articles of exceptional significance in all areas of literature and arts. Subject areas may include, but are not limited to the following fields:
  • • Architecture
  • • Art history
  • • Art theory
  • • Appreciation of arts
  • • Children's literature
  • • Culture heritage
  • • Cultural issues
  • • Folklore
  • • Latin
  • • Literature
  • • Media studies
  • • Music
  • • Visual and performing arts
  • • Writing
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