ScienceIQ.com

If You're Bringing Cows, Bring Your Own Decomposers

Living organisms create a lot of waste products. Every year they deposit millions of tons of dead plant and animal matter on almost every corner of the earth - and they make dung, lots of dung. Where would we be without the natural decomposers - millions of species of bacteria, fungus, and animals that eat all the dead matter and dung, turning it ...

Continue reading...

CowsAndDecomposers
Biology

Giant Cloned Monster Loose In Mediterranean Sea

Native Caulerpa taxifolia is found in and around the waters of Florida and the Caribbean. It is a smallish, yet hardy saltwater plant that grows rapidly and is ideal for use in aquariums with diverse ... Continue reading

Caulerpa
Mathematics

Fibonacci Patterns In Nature?

Often it takes a second look to see how mathematical numbers and patterns fit into the natural world. Numbers, after all, are manmade. However some very interesting number patterns underlie some ... Continue reading

Fibonacci
Biology

Splitting Hairs

Pluck a single strand of hair from your head and you've lost what scientists call the hair shaft. The shaft is made of three layers, each inside the other. The outer casing is the cuticle. Under an ... Continue reading

SplittingHairs
Astronomy

Solar Spitwads

Take a piece of paper. Make a little wad. If you're a kid, spit on it. Put it in a straw and blow hard. If your teacher sends you to the principal's office, here's your excuse: you were making a model ... Continue reading

SolarSpitwads

GM: Not For General Motors Anymore

GMNotForGeneralMotorsAnymoreGenetically Modified plants have been given genes from other plants or even other species, that make them better able to resist diseases and pests, or more nutritious, or more productive. The list of qualities that can be provided by genetic modification is long and getting longer. Rice has been given a gene to make beta-carotene so children who eat mostly rice will get enough vitamin A. Cotton has been given a gene that makes a bacterial toxin that kills boll weevils, an insect pest that ruins cotton crops.

How is genetic modification done? Thanks to biotechnology, genes from other plants or other species can be inserted directly into the nuclei of plant cells. Cells from the plant you want to modify are grown in a petri dish, the new genes are put in the growth medium and chemically or mechanically prodded to enter the cells. Then the cells are cultured until they form a new plant, just like the original except that it now contains a foreign gene. This is a much faster and more versatile way of adding new characteristics to a plant than the old method of selective breeding.

But GM crops are very controversial. Many people think they promise better nutrition, cheaper food, and less pesticide use. But many other people fear that GM plants may escape from farmlands into wild areas, or that some people may turn out to be allergic to the 'foreign' substances they contain, or that the companies that produce GM seeds will have too much power.