Argonaut octopuses use shells as flotation devices

Melbourne, May 19 (ANI): Australian researchers have found that unique, free-swimming octopuses called argonauts, use their stunning white shells to remain neutrally buoyant beneath the sea surface.

For the first time, Dr Julian Finn and Dr Mark Norman from Museum Victoria in Melbourne have observed the animals, Argonauta argo, in the wild, in the Sea of Japan.

The research say that females of these rarely-seen octopuses actively fill their shells with air, and then jet down into the water column, where the air compresses as water pressure increases with depth.

This allows argonauts to remain neutrally buoyant at depths of up to 10 metres, with the volume of air in their shells exactly compensating for their weight, they researchers say.

Finn took three female argonauts captured by Japanese fishermen scuba diving in Okidomari Harbour on the western coast of Honshu, and released them at depths of 2-7 metres. Prior to release, the shells were depleted of air.

All three argonauts jetted to the surface and rocked their shells forward to ”gulp” air, which they then sealed in their shells with specially-adapted tentacles.

The argonauts then dived until buoyancy from the trapped, compressed air cancelled their weight.

“To my delight the argonauts immediately put to rest decades of conflicting opinions, demonstrating their expert ability at obtaining and managing surface-acquired air,” ABC Science quoted Finn as saying.

“Female argonauts released with no air in their shells flailed from side-to-side when swimming, struggling to maintain vertical orientation. Argonauts released with ample air in their shells at the water surface displayed no difficulty in diving to depth,” Finn added.

The findings have been reported in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Scientists discover deep ocean current near Antarctica

Washington, April 28 (ANI): Japanese and Australian researchers have found that a deep-sea current moves millions of cubic metres of water northward from Antarctica every second.

The scientists came to the conclusion after two years of measurements.

Previous studies had noted a deep current along the eastern edge of the Kerguelen Plateau, an over 2,200-kilometre-long rise about 3,000 kilometres southwest of Australia.

However, estimates of its speed, taken as “snapshots” by instruments used from research vessels, had been “all over the place”, according to Steve Rintoul, a physical oceanographer at the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystem Cooperative Research Centre in Hobart, Australia, and a co-author of the new study.

Yasushi Fukamachi, an ocean scientist at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan, fronted a team effort to find the exact nature of the current.

The scientists moored more than 30 current and temperature recorders across its probable path for two years.

After retrieving the instruments they discovered the current, which flows at depths below 3,000 metres, at times hit speeds greater than 700 metres per hour, carrying volumes as high as 30 million cubic metres per second.

No other deep current in the Southern Hemisphere moves that quickly.

The current is formed by cold water sinking in the Ross Sea and off the coast of Adelie Land, on the Australian-facing side of Antarctica.

Once in the abyss, the water flows eastward along the coast of Antarctica before hitting the Kerguelen Plateau.

Then, just as the Gulf Stream hugs the eastern edge of North America, Coriolis force from Earth”s rotation causes the Antarctic water to embrace the plateau”s eastern flank.

The result is a narrow, and so fast-moving, stream, about 50 kilometres wide.

This is important because it represents a “fast lane” by which climatic and environmental changes affecting the Southern Ocean can propagate northward, pointed out Alejandro Orsi, a physical oceanographer at Texas A & M University in College Station, who was not involved in the study.

According to him, proof that this is already taking place can be seen from the fact that the deep waters near the Kerguelen Plateau already show “clear signs” of reduced salinity relating to changes in the rate of melting of Antarctic ice sheets.

Richard Alley, a geoscientist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park, believes understanding such currents could help scientists to predict how the world will react to increasing levels of carbon dioxide, reports Nature.

He said if heat warms the deep ocean rather than surface waters, it will have less effect on sea-level rise because cold water in the ocean”s depths expands less than warm surface waters.

Similarly, heat and carbon dioxide contained in deep-ocean currents are sequestered from the atmosphere until the water rises back the surface, many years later.

Similar flows in the North Atlantic account for the fact that Europe is warmer than comparable latitudes in Japan, Fukamachi said.

But the currents could change. “We”re not saying this could happen instantaneously, like the movie The Day After Tomorrow,” Fukamachi said, “but understanding this kind of current is very important to understanding global climate.” (ANI)

Scientists discover deep ocean current near Antarctica

Washington, April 26 (ANI): Japanese and Australian researchers have found that a deep-sea current moves millions of cubic metres of water northward from Antarctica every second.

The scientists came to the conclusion after two years of measurements.

Previous studies had noted a deep current along the eastern edge of the Kerguelen Plateau, an over 2,200-kilometre-long rise about 3,000 kilometres southwest of Australia.

However, estimates of its speed, taken as “snapshots” by instruments used from research vessels, had been “all over the place”, according to Steve Rintoul, a physical oceanographer at the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystem Cooperative Research Centre in Hobart, Australia, and a co-author of the new study.

Yasushi Fukamachi, an ocean scientist at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan, fronted a team effort to find the exact nature of the current.

The scientists moored more than 30 current and temperature recorders across its probable path for two years.

After retrieving the instruments they discovered the current, which flows at depths below 3,000 metres, at times hit speeds greater than 700 metres per hour, carrying volumes as high as 30 million cubic metres per second.

No other deep current in the Southern Hemisphere moves that quickly.

The current is formed by cold water sinking in the Ross Sea and off the coast of Adelie Land, on the Australian-facing side of Antarctica.

Once in the abyss, the water flows eastward along the coast of Antarctica before hitting the Kerguelen Plateau.

Then, just as the Gulf Stream hugs the eastern edge of North America, Coriolis force from Earth”s rotation causes the Antarctic water to embrace the plateau”s eastern flank.

The result is a narrow, and so fast-moving, stream, about 50 kilometres wide.

This is important because it represents a “fast lane” by which climatic and environmental changes affecting the Southern Ocean can propagate northward, pointed out Alejandro Orsi, a physical oceanographer at Texas A & M University in College Station, who was not involved in the study.

According to him, proof that this is already taking place can be seen from the fact that the deep waters near the Kerguelen Plateau already show “clear signs” of reduced salinity relating to changes in the rate of melting of Antarctic ice sheets.

Richard Alley, a geoscientist at Pennsylvania State University in University Park, believes understanding such currents could help scientists to predict how the world will react to increasing levels of carbon dioxide, reports Nature.

He said if heat warms the deep ocean rather than surface waters, it will have less effect on sea-level rise because cold water in the ocean”s depths expands less than warm surface waters.

Similarly, heat and carbon dioxide contained in deep-ocean currents are sequestered from the atmosphere until the water rises back the surface, many years later.

Similar flows in the North Atlantic account for the fact that Europe is warmer than comparable latitudes in Japan, Fukamachi said.

But the currents could change. “We”re not saying this could happen instantaneously, like the movie The Day After Tomorrow,” Fukamachi said, “but understanding this kind of current is very important to understanding global climate.” (ANI)

Call to extend HPV vaccine to boys

Australian researchers say the human papillomavirus (HPV), which can cause cervical cancer in women, is now a leading cause of oral cancer in men in the Western world.

The news has reignited debate over whether the HPV vaccine, which is free for young women, should also be offered to men.

A University of Sydney study shows that 60 per cent of throat and tonsil cancers are caused by the virus.

“We’ve tested just over 300 cancers of the oropharynx, and the oropharynx includes the tonsil and the base of tongue and part of the pharangyl wall,” said Barbara Rose, an Associate Professor in research at the University of Sydney.

“We’ve tested those for the human papillomavirus type-16 and type-18, which are the major cause of cervical cancer in women.

“And we found a sizeable proportion are associated with those types. In fact, probably in excess of 50 per cent now.”

Those figures from 2001 to 2005 increased to almost 60 per cent in 2006 and 2007.

Associate Professor Rose says head and neck cancers have traditionally been associated with older men and related to alcohol and smoking.

She says these findings show that has now changed and most are due to the increasing practise of oral sex.

“We now know that there’s another subset, which is quite distinct biologically, which tends to affect younger people who don’t smoke and don’t drink, caused by human papillomavirus probably by sexual transmission,” she said.

“And the types of papillomavirus that are associated are type-16 and 18, which are the major cause of cervical cancer.”

For the past two years, Australia has been rolling out the cervical cancer vaccine Gardasil to young women. It immunises them against HPV.

Associate Professor Rose says the findings should prompt discussions about extending the vaccination program to boys.

“The paper that we just published gives some indication of the numbers of cancers that would be potentially preventable down the track by vaccinating boys,” she said.

Dr Jonathan Clark, a head and neck surgeon at Royal Prince Alfred and Liverpool Hospitals in New South Wales, says the rate of HPV cancers in men is increasing.

“At the moment we’re trying to come to grips with what it means and how it changes our approach to managing these types of cancers,” he said.

“The evidence is very strong that if you have the human papillomavirus causing this sort of cancer, in fact your prognosis is better than if the cancer is caused in the typical fashion, which is due to smoking.”

Extend vaccine to boys

Dr Clark says extending the vaccination to boys is worth considering and is worthy of further research, which could take some time.

“Tonsil cancers occur in an older group of patients. Though HPV tonsil cancers tend to occur in younger people who don’t smoke, but they develop over many years,” he said.

“So it is going to take quite a bit of time to see whether the introduction of HPV vaccine actually has an effect of reducing the rate of tonsil cancer.”

But the director of the Australian Centre for Economic Research on Health, Luke Connolly, says the cost-effectiveness of extending the program to boys needs to be analysed.

“What needs to be done is the models that researchers like myself and others are using need to be extended to try to cover these additional types and the impact of the vaccine on these types,” he said.

“That’s not always particularly easy to do but there’s now sufficient data to allow us to start down that path to assess the cost-effectiveness of the vaccine for boys.”

Early warning sign for Alzheimer”s discovered

Melbourne, March 26 (ANI): A team of Australian researchers has discovered an early warning sign for Alzheimer”s.

The new research, conducted in partnership between the CSIRO and the Queensland government, suggests that the sign is evident in the brain years before the disease causes any cognitive decline.

The researchers have mapped the presence of amyloid-beta “plaques” in the brain, which are known to accumulate alongside the development of the degenerative condition.

Until now, it was not known whether this plaque was toxic and contributed to Alzheimer”s disease or whether it was coincidental.

Dr Olivier Salvado and his research colleagues found when the plaque was located in a particular spot in the brain it could cause damage to the hippocampus, which plays a key role in memory functioning.

“We found when there is plaque in this inferior temporal cortex then the hippocampus gets atrophied,” News.com.au quoted Salvado as saying.

It is believed that the plaque disrupts connections with the hippocampus, causing its neurons to die.

The new discovery reveals one mechanism by which Alzheimer”s disease could unfold within the brain plus a possible way to spot it early.

The research has been published in the journal Neurology. (ANI)

Size, not foreplay, is what fulfils women’s sexual fantasies

Melbourne, September 15 (ANI): When it comes to female orgasms, it is the size of the penis, and not the duration of foreplay, that increases the likelihood of fulfilling women’s sexual fantasies, suggests a new study.

Lead researcher Stuart Brody, from the University of the West of Scotland, focused on the number of factors that contributed to the regularity of vaginal orgasms.

The researchers described a vaginal orgasm as an “orgasm produced simply from movements of the penis in [the] vagina without any additional stimulation.”

Boffins found that factors like the length of the penis, the duration of intercourse, and the ability to mentally focus on vaginal sensations, minus the duration of foreplay, increased the likelihood of orgasm.

“Given that the vagina [has a high nerve density] throughout… more thorough stimulation of the full length of the vagina… might result in a more fulfilling experience,” ABC Science quoted the paper’s authors as saying.

But some Australian researchers and practitioners have cast a shadow of doubt over the methodology and the political motivations behind the study.

Dr. Gemma O’Brien, a reproductive physiologist from the University of New England in Armidale, said: “Self reporting needs to be done very carefully. These things come down to perceptions and that introduces a weakness in the study.”

Dr. Vivienne Cass, an adjunct professor at Curtin University of Technology in Perth and author of The Elusive Orgasm, also questioned the motivations of research that accorded vaginal orgasms greater significance over clitoral ones.

Associate Professor Rosemary Coates, also of Curtin University of Technology and president of the World Association for Sexual Health, also said “some form of clitoral stimulation is almost always required to trigger orgasm.”

The results appear in an upcoming issue of The Journal of Sexual Medicine. (ANI)

Oz boffins question ‘ideal’ sitting posture

Melbourne, Aug 26 (ANI): Australian researchers have questioned the science behind the ‘ideal’ sitting posture.

According to researchers at the University of Queensland’s Centre of Clinical Research Excellence in Spinal Pain, Injury and Health, the posture often recommended as ideal cannot be achieved sans assistance.

In fact, the ‘ideal’ curved lower back posture is not only difficult to achieve in a sitting position, it also takes effort to maintain, reports ABC Online.

Lead researcher Dr Andrew Claus says the belief that slumped postures are worse for spine than upright ones is making assumptions based on limited evidence.

“That’s the thing that we’re starting to redress,” says Claus.

“It may be that slumped postures are uncomfortable for the spine and may cause people some problems, but the science to actually test or prove that is really weak,” he adds.

To reach the conclusion, boffins used sensors attached to the backs of ten male volunteers to monitor the angle of their backs as they imitated pictures and descriptions of various postures. They were later helped to achieve the positions by a physiotherapist.

After analyses, scientists found that men could not achieve the much-recommended curved lower back posture unless hands-on guidance was provided, but were able to adopt the flat back and slump positions without any help.

Claus says that it suggests that if such a posture is the ideal, people must be educated properly on how to achieve it and specially designed chairs are unlikely to be enough.

The study has been published in the journal Manual Therapy. (ANI)

Jelly thickener may help grow artificial muscles in future

Melbourne, July 14 (ANI): In a novel study, Australian researchers are using food thickener used in yoghurts and jellies to develop artificial muscle.

Nanotechnology graduate Cameron Ferris, and supervisor Dr. Marc in het Panhuis, of the University of Wollongong, have developed a scaffold with the help of gellan gum-a biopolymer produced by the bacteria Pseudomonas elodea-that can help get cells to grow into the right kind of tissue.

“At home it’s used as a food additive. You’ll find it in lots of yoghurts and jellies as a thickener and emulsifier,” ABC Online quoted Ferris as saying.

Gellan gum is particularly useful because it becomes a gel at 37 degree Celsius, which is a good temperature for living cells, he adds.

Using the novel scaffold, the researchers are trying to develop artificial heart muscle that may soon be used to replace damaged parts of the heart in heart attacks patients.

“Muscle and heart need electrical stimulation for the cells to achieve their fully differentiated functioning state,” said Ferris.

To achieve this, Ferris has made a scaffold that mixes the gellan gum with carbon nanotubes, which conduct electricity.

To date, Ferris has successfully grown fibroblasts on his gellan gum and carbon nanotube scaffold but has “steered away” from using carbon nanotubes because of “unanswered questions” over their safety.

“Some (studies) say they’re fine and that they can be passed out of the body when the scaffold degrades,” he said.

“Others have said that they’re quite toxic to cells or can accumulate in the lungs,” he added.

The study has been published in the journal Soft Matter. (ANI)

Jelly thickener may help grow artificial muscles in future

Melbourne, July 14 (ANI): In a novel study, Australian researchers are using food thickener used in yoghurts and jellies to develop artificial muscle.

Nanotechnology graduate Cameron Ferris, and supervisor Dr. Marc in het Panhuis, of the University of Wollongong, have developed a scaffold with the help of gellan gum-a biopolymer produced by the bacteria Pseudomonas elodea-that can help get cells to grow into the right kind of tissue.

“At home it’s used as a food additive. You’ll find it in lots of yoghurts and jellies as a thickener and emulsifier,” ABC Online quoted Ferris as saying.

Gellan gum is particularly useful because it becomes a gel at 37 degree Celsius, which is a good temperature for living cells, he adds.

Using the novel scaffold, the researchers are trying to develop artificial heart muscle that may soon be used to replace damaged parts of the heart in heart attacks patients.

“Muscle and heart need electrical stimulation for the cells to achieve their fully differentiated functioning state,” said Ferris.

To achieve this, Ferris has made a scaffold that mixes the gellan gum with carbon nanotubes, which conduct electricity.

To date, Ferris has successfully grown fibroblasts on his gellan gum and carbon nanotube scaffold but has “steered away” from using carbon nanotubes because of “unanswered questions” over their safety.

“Some (studies) say they’re fine and that they can be passed out of the body when the scaffold degrades,” he said.

“Others have said that they’re quite toxic to cells or can accumulate in the lungs,” he added.

The study has been published in the journal Soft Matter. (ANI)

Scientists develop egg-free swine flu vaccine

Melbourne, June 30 (ANI): Australian researchers have created an egg-free vaccine for swine flu that can be produced from scratch within weeks.

The revolutionary vaccine matches the virus found in the boy, 10, from San Diego who was the first US case of the illness.

Professor Anton Middelberg, of the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, claims that the vaccine, which is currently not registered for use in Australia, is different from conventionally produced vaccines because it is made in cell cultures instead of in eggs, reports ABC Online.

According to the expert, the plus point of the technology, developed by US company Protein Sciences Corporation (PSC), is the speed and potency of the vaccine.

Middelberg says while the vaccine contains the same amount of protein as conventionally produced vaccines, it contains virus protein rather than a combination from egg and virus. This implies that a single dose delivers three times as much of the virus protein as a conventional vaccine.

Its other advantage is because the vaccine is only made up of virus protein it opens up a variety of methods of delivery apart from injection.

Middelberg was amazed that the University of Queensland team as they could produce a batch of vaccine within two weeks of receiving the genetic construct of the virus.

“This technology shifts the timeframe [in vaccine production] from months to weeks,” he said.

“The vaccine can be made quickly when a new virus emerges or when it changes, and we can turn manufacturing on and off as needed. So we can choose to make vaccine just for those at risk of severe illness,” he added. (ANI)

Scientists develop egg-free swine flu vaccine

Melbourne, June 30 (ANI): Australian researchers have created an egg-free vaccine for swine flu that can be produced from scratch within weeks.

The revolutionary vaccine matches the virus found in the boy, 10, from San Diego who was the first US case of the illness.

Professor Anton Middelberg, of the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, claims that the vaccine, which is currently not registered for use in Australia, is different from conventionally produced vaccines because it is made in cell cultures instead of in eggs, reports ABC Online.

According to the expert, the plus point of the technology, developed by US company Protein Sciences Corporation (PSC), is the speed and potency of the vaccine.

Middelberg says while the vaccine contains the same amount of protein as conventionally produced vaccines, it contains virus protein rather than a combination from egg and virus. This implies that a single dose delivers three times as much of the virus protein as a conventional vaccine.

Its other advantage is because the vaccine is only made up of virus protein it opens up a variety of methods of delivery apart from injection.

Middelberg was amazed that the University of Queensland team as they could produce a batch of vaccine within two weeks of receiving the genetic construct of the virus.

“This technology shifts the timeframe [in vaccine production] from months to weeks,” he said.

“The vaccine can be made quickly when a new virus emerges or when it changes, and we can turn manufacturing on and off as needed. So we can choose to make vaccine just for those at risk of severe illness,” he added.(ANI)

Drinking milk at breakfast helps you feel fuller, eat less at lunchtime

Washington, June 22 (ANI): Drinking fat free milk instead of a fruit drink at breakfast helps you feel fuller and eat less at lunchtime, according to a new study.

During the study, Australian researchers found that drinking fat free milk in the morning helped increase satiety, or a feeling of fullness, and led to decreased calorie intake at the next meal, as compared with a fruit drink.

The milk drinkers ate about 50 fewer calories (or nearly 9 percent less food) at lunch.

In the study, 34 overweight but otherwise healthy men and women participated in two testing sessions – one in which they were served about 20 ounces of fat free milk, and one in which they were served the same amount of a fruit drink (both beverages contributed about 250 calories to the breakfast meal).

During the four hours between breakfast and lunch, the men and women gauged their feelings of fullness and were allowed to eat until comfortably full at lunch.

The researchers found that the milk-drinking adults reported feeling fuller, more satisfied and therefore ate fewer calories at lunch.

The researchers suspect that milk’s protein content, the lactose or simply the thickness of the beverage may play a role in the satiety benefits.

Choosing foods that can help enhance satiety is an important success factor in any weight management plan, the researchers suggest.

The study has been published in the July issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. (ANI)

Ancient refuges could be key to saving biodiversity under threat from climate change

Sydney, May 30 (ANI): Australian researchers have said that ancient refuges could be the key to saving the country’s unique biodiversity under threat from climate change.

According to a report by ABC News, the researchers are mapping areas they believe could remain untouched, despite climate change, in an effort to save species from extinction.

Areas known as refugia have helped preserve biodiversity during previous periods of major climate change, and could once again in the future, according to Associate Professor Stephen Williams, director of the Centre for Tropical Biodiversity and Climate Change at James Cook University in Townsville.

Experts believe refugia helped save species such the Wollemi Pine, whose ancestry dates back 200 million years.

The Wollemi Pine, which only numbers several hundred in the wild, was thought to be extinct until it was rediscovered in 1994 in a deep, narrow canyon near Lithgow, 150 kilometres west of Sydney.

Williams and colleagues are attempting to map past and possible future refugia in the Wet Tropics region, north of Cairns.

Williams said that the map will help authorities identify areas that should be actively managed for species to retreat to as temperatures increases.

“It is hoped by maintaining these areas not as many of Australia’s rare tropical animals and plants will become extinct due to climate change,” said Williams.

According to Professor Ary Hoffman of the University of Melbourne, mapping refugia across Australia is “something we need to do urgently” in response to the threat of climate change.

“If we can identify where refugia have been in the past, that is where they are also likely to be in the future, so it can be a criteria for establishing new parks and reserves,” he said.

Williams said that their work not only involves mapping past refuges, but also predicting areas that will act as refugia in the future.

For the map, Williams and colleagues have looked at the current distribution of the 200-odd species of vertebrate and predicted their distribution under climate change.

He said that modelling shows these refugia might protect up to 75 percent of species in that area.

“Lots of species that would be predicted to disappear entirely, might survive in very small numbers in these refugia,” he said.

Refugia is not a long-term option, but may keep species alive long enough “for the world to come to its senses,” according to Williams.

“If we can identify areas that are most likely to be valuable as a future refuge it gives us a map of where we should be putting our conservation efforts,” he said. (ANI)

Breakthrough in ‘floppy baby’ syndrome

Washington, May 26 (ANI): Australian researchers have successfully treated mice with a devastating muscle disease that causes a Floppy Baby Syndrome.

The breakthrough could ultimately help thousands of families across the globe.

The research, published online today in the Journal of Cell Biology, reveals how a team at the Western Australian Institute for Medical Research (WAIMR) has restored muscle function in mice with one type of Floppy Baby Syndrome – a congenital myopathy disorder that causes babies to be born without the ability to properly use their muscles.

The currently incurable genetic diseases render most of the affected children severely paralysed and take the lives of the majority of these children before the age of one.

Dr Kristen Nowak, lead author on the publication, said the team was extremely encouraged that it had been able to cure a group of mice born with the condition.

“The mice with Floppy Baby Syndrome were only expected to live for about nine days, but we managed to cure them so they were born with normal muscle function, allowing them to live naturally and very actively into old age,” she said.

“This is an important step towards one day hopefully being able to better the lives of human patients – mice who were cured of the disease lived more than two years, which is very old age for a mouse,” the expert added.

Dr Nowak said the team was able to cure the mice with the recessive form of the genetic condition by replacing missing skeletal muscle actin – a protein integral in allowing muscles to contract – with similar actin found in the heart. (ANI)

Tall, fat men earn more than their shorter, slimmer counterparts

Melbourne, May 17 (ANI): Being tall can really have its advantages, for a new study has found that the taller you are, the more you earn.

What’s more, overweight people earn more than their skinny workmates, the study found.

Australian researchers have found that a man who is six foot can expect to take home a “wage premium” of almost 1000 dollars a year.

Researcher Andrew Leigh, an economist at the Australian National University, said the reason behind tall men’s pay perk was that they were more capable at some physical tasks, such as reaching the top shelf.

“Beyond that is basically discrimination,” the Australian quoted Leigh as telling AAP.

“We tend to think that tall people are more powerful and smarter, even when they’re not necessarily,” he added.

Leigh, who stands at 180.34 centimetres, said it was unfortunate that society was biased towards taller people.

For the study, Leigh crunched the numbers on the height, weight and pay of thousands of people around the country.

He found than an extra 10cm in height meant 3 per cent higher wages for men, and 2 per cent higher wages for women.

However, it was a different story when it came to weight. Fat men earn 5 per cent more than their trimmer colleagues. And thin women don’t earn higher wages.

Leigh said it was possible that being overweight had become so common that it was no longer a problem for workers. (ANI)

Offspring of promiscuous tit birds gets a head start to remain stronger

Melbourne, May 15 (ANI): Female tit birds are known for mating with rival males before their social partner, for giving genetic advantage to their chicks. But, a new study has questioned this belief by claiming that the chicks resulted from promiscuity are benefited only because they are laid and hatch earlier.

Dutch and Australian researchers have claimed that the chicks are stronger, larger, and more likely to survive simply because they get a head start over chicks produced from faithful unions.

Dr. Michael Magrath, of the University of Melbourne’s Department of Zoology, says that this means they begin feeding earlier than their half-siblings, who may hatch as much as five days later.

For the study, the researchers numbered 1732 eggs from 190 blue tit bird nests in the order in which they were laid across two breeding seasons, and then placed the eggs in an incubator to note the order in which they hatched, before finally returning them to their original nest.

“Remarkably, almost 75 per cent of the offspring from these ‘extra-pair’ matings were produced in the first half of the clutch,” ABC News quoted him as saying.

On an average, the extra-pair chicks were hatched 10 hours before their half-siblings, which gave them time to gain an initial size advantage because they start feeding immediately.he promiscuous nature of commonly monogamous female birds has puzzled researchers, but studies had earlier showed that the offspring of these so-called extra-pair matings were bigger, had better immune response, and were more likely to survive.

Thus, the researchers had concluded that these matings provided a genetic advantage.

“We don’t rule out the idea (extra-pair mating) is to gain a genetic advantage. But we have shown what’s been considered good evidence isn’t that strong,” said Magrath.

The study has been published online in Current Biology. (ANI)

Offspring of promiscuous tit birds gets a head start to remain stronger

Melbourne, May 13 (ANI): Female tit birds are known for mating with rival males before their social partner, for giving genetic advantage to their chicks. But, a new study has questioned this belief by claiming that the chicks resulted from promiscuity are benefited only because they are laid and hatch earlier.

Dutch and Australian researchers have claimed that the chicks are stronger, larger, and more likely to survive simply because they get a head start over chicks produced from faithful unions.

Dr. Michael Magrath, of the University of Melbourne’s Department of Zoology, says that this means they begin feeding earlier than their half-siblings, who may hatch as much as five days later.

For the study, the researchers numbered 1732 eggs from 190 blue tit bird nests in the order in which they were laid across two breeding seasons, and then placed the eggs in an incubator to note the order in which they hatched, before finally returning them to their original nest.

“Remarkably, almost 75 per cent of the offspring from these ‘extra-pair’ matings were produced in the first half of the clutch,” ABC News quoted him as saying.

On an average, the extra-pair chicks were hatched 10 hours before their half-siblings, which gave them time to gain an initial size advantage because they start feeding immediately.

The promiscuous nature of commonly monogamous female birds has puzzled researchers, but studies had earlier showed that the offspring of these so-called extra-pair matings were bigger, had better immune response, and were more likely to survive.

Thus, the researchers had concluded that these matings provided a genetic advantage.

“We don’t rule out the idea (extra-pair mating) is to gain a genetic advantage.

But we have shown what’s been considered good evidence isn’t that strong,” said Magrath.

The study has been published online in Current Biology. (ANI)

UV light exposure ‘boosts vitamin D levels in mushrooms’

Melbourne, May 05 (ANI): Exposing mushrooms to UV light can make them a major source of vitamin D, Australian researchers have found.

Mushrooms contain a high level of the ingredient ergosterol, needed for vitamin D.

But as the crop is usually grown in the dark, no conversion to vitamin D can take place.

However, research done by the University of Western Sydney has found that when mushrooms are exposed to UV light, they produce and then retain vitamin D for eight days afterwards.

Dr Gerald Pang and colleagues from the university tested the impact of irradiating Agaricus bisporus mushrooms with UV-C light from a xenon lamp from between 2 seconds to 30 minutes.

They found that placing the lamp the right distance away and exposing the mushrooms for the right length of time gave no impact on their colour while boosting their vitamin D concentrations.

Greg Seymour, president of the The International Society for Mushroom Science and general manager of the Australian Mushroom Growers’ Association, said evidence suggests that 100 grams of irradiated mushrooms could provide the recommended daily intake of vitamin D.

However, nutritionist, Dr Rosemary Stanton, has warned about the impact of the ultraviolet light on mushrooms.

She said that mushrooms are rich in some B group vitamins, which are very sensitive to heat and light.

“You would have to be really careful that it doesn’t destroy the B-group vitamins in mushrooms,” ABC Online quoted Stanton as saying.

The findings are published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. (ANI)

Adult circumcision cuts HIV transmission risk without reducing sexual pleasure

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Washington, April 27 (ANI): Adult circumcision lowers the risk of contracting the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the risk of coital injury without reducing pleasure or causing sexual dysfunction, two new studies have shown./pp
The first study, conducted by Australian researchers, has shown that the inner foreskin has the largest concentration of Langerhans’ cells, which are the initial cellular targets in the sexual transmission of HIV. /pp
After analysing biopsy samples from 10 uncircumcised and 10 circumcised men, researchers found that the inner foreskin has a significantly higher density of Langerhans’ cells than other areas of the foreskin. /pp
By removing the inner foreskin, circumcision removes the skin surface, which is most susceptible to HIV infection, reducing not eliminating the risk of contracting HIV. /pp
No differences were found in epithelial or keratin thickness between the remnant foreskin, inner foreskin or shaft skin. /pp
The second study, by researchers in Seattle, WA; Chicago, IL; Winnepeg, Canada; Research Triangle, NC; and Kisumu, Kenya, has shown that circumcised men had a significantly lower risk for coital injuries (bleeding, scratches, cuts, abrasions or getting sore) compared to uncircumcised men and that there was no difference in sexual function between circumcised and uncircumcised men. /pp
Researchers divided 2,784 patients from Kisumu, Kenya into two groups: a control group and a group to be circumcised within 30 days of randomization. Detailed evaluations were done at one, three, six, 12, 18 and 24 months after circumcision. /pp
The researchers found that there was no difference in sexual function between the two groups and that the circumcised group reported fewer coital injuries. /pp
These are important reports which support the concepts that circumcision does not interfere with sexual function and that circumcision is an important element of HIV prevention in sub-Saharan Africa, said Ira D. Sharlip, MD, an AUA spokesman. /pp
At the same time, it should be emphasized that circumcision must be combined with other techniques of HIV prevention, such as safe sex and voluntary testing. It is not sufficient to rely on circumcision alone to prevent HIV transmission, Sharlip added./pp
Two studies presented at the 104th Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA). (ANI)/p

Cigarette smoke exposure ‘ups sudden infant death syndrome risk’

Sydney, Apr 22 (ANI): Exposure to cigarette smoke induces abnormalities in babies’ brains, thus putting them at increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome, say Australian researchers.

To reach the conclusion, researchers from University of Sydney analysed the brain tissue of babies who had undergone an autopsy at Sydney’s Glebe morgue.

After analysing, they found exposure to any second-hand smoke could precipitate these brain cell changes, and not just exposure in utero by maternal smoking.

Rita Machaalani, a scientist at the university’s Bosch Institute, and her colleague Karen Waters showed there was an increase in cell death in a region of the brain that plays a major role in the control of breathing and heart function in babies who died of SIDS, compared to those who died of other causes.

The post-mortems of 67 SIDS infants and 25 infants who died suddenly with another diagnosis between 1997 and 2002 were correlated with risk factors associated with SIDS, such as tummy sleeping, sharing a bed with adults and exposure to smoking, obtained during police interviews with the babies’ parents and hospital records.

Of the 67 SIDS infants, 81 per cent had been exposed to cigarette smoke, compared to 58 per cent of non-SIDS infants, and 32 per cent were in bed with a parent when they died.

“No one in the world has access to such a large dataset of brain tissue or the ability to correlate the tissue with the autopsy results and a record of the risk factors and this is what makes our data really important,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Machaalani, as saying.

The research has been published in the journals Brain and Acta Neuropathologica.

It found the increase in cell death (apoptosis) was higher not only in SIDS victims, but in all infants who had a history of tobacco smoke exposure, in utero and the postnatal period. (ANI)