ScienceIQ.com

Ants Are Wimpy

It's common knowledge that ants can lift many times their own weight. We are frequently told they can lift 10, 20, or even 50 times their weight. It is most often stated something like this: an ant can lift over its head objects that weigh 20 times what the ant weighs. This is the equivalent of a 220 pound (100 kilogram) man lifting over 4,400 ...

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Ants
Geology

Was That The Big One? Depends On How You Measured It.

The severity of an earthquake can be expressed in terms of both intensity and magnitude. However, the two terms are quite different, and they are often confused. Intensity is based on the observed ... Continue reading

TheBigOne
Astronomy

Magnitude of an Astronomical Object

'Visual magnitude' is a scale used by astronomers to measure the brightness of a star. The term 'visual' means the brightness is being measured in the visible part of the spectrum, the part you can ... Continue reading

MagnitudeofanAstronomicalObject
Engineering

Snakebots Coming Your Way

Early robots were stiff, clumsy machines that plodded in straight lines. More modern robots can be radio controlled and move with much more grace and precision. Snakebots, though, can weave through ... Continue reading

Snakebots
Biology

Beware -- Red Tide!

Red tides occur in oceans. They are not caused by herbicides or pollutants, but by a microscopic alga. Karenia brevis, when in higher than normal concentrations, causes a red tide. This bacterium ... Continue reading

BewareRedTide

Resistance is NOT Futile!

ResistanceisNOTFutileMaybe if you are a Star Trek heroine up against the Borg, 'resistance is futile.' But if you are a germ that makes people sick, resistance - to antibiotics - is not futile at all.

When penicillin began to be widely used over fifty years ago, it could kill most of the bacteria that made us sick. Such bacteria are called 'pathogens,' to distinguish them from the many bacteria that are harmless or even useful. Nowadays, many pathogens are 'resistant' to a lot of the antibiotics we use to combat them. They have evolved the ability to fight off the effects of the drugs, so the drugs cannot cure you. This can be very dangerous in hospitals, where drug-resistant pathogens can spread rapidly and kill many people.

How can bacteria evolve drug resistance so quickly? The genes for drug resistance are usually not carried as part of the regular chromosome, but on extra rings of DNA called plasmids. These can be passed on to the bacterial cell's descendants, and can also sometimes be passed around to any other bacteria that happen to be in the area, even those of other species. If a drug kills all the susceptible bacteria, any few that are resistant will be free to multiply without competition and take over the population. So we are involved in an 'arms race' between biologists and chemists inventing new antibiotics, and pathogens inventing new ways to resist them.