[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

In Case you miss Bad Journalism

Bobby K Jr was Exiled For Saying This:

Quantum Meets AI: Morgan Stanley Maps Out Next Tech Frontier

670,000+ Swept Away as Dams Burst in Canton China, Triggering Deadly Flood!

Senate Version Of Trump Tax Bill Adds $3.3 Trillion To Deficit, $500BN More Than The House; Debt Ceiling Raised By $5 Trillion

Iran Disables GPS, Joins China’s Beidou — The End of U.S. Satellite Dominance?

Ukraine's Withdrawal From Anti-Personnel Landmine Treaty Could Haunt Generations

71 killed in Israeli attack on Iran's Evin Prison

Practice Small, Daily Acts Of Sabotage Against The Imperial Machine

"EVERYONE'S BEEN SHOT UP HERE": Arsonists Set Wildfire In Northern Idaho, Open Fire On Firefighters, Police In Ambush

Trump has Putin trapped, and the Kremlin knows it

Kamala's comeback bid sparks Democrat donor meltdown amid fears she'll sink party in California

Russia's New Grom-A1 100 KM Range Guided Bomb- 600 Kilo

UKRAINIAN CONSULATE IN ITALY CAUGHT TRAFFICKING WEAPONS, ORGANS & CHILDREN WITH THE MAFIA

Andrew Cuomo to stay on ballot for NYC mayor in November general election

The life of the half-immortal who advised CCP (End of CCP in 2026?)

Millions Flee China’s Top Cities

Violence begets violence: IDF troops beaten, choked, rammed by Jewish settlers in West Bank

Netanyahu Says It's Antisemitic For Israeli Soldiers To Describe Their Own Atrocities

China's Economy Spirals With No End In Sight, Says Kyle Bass

American Bread Cannot Be Sold in Most Countries

Woman Spent Her Life To Prove 796 Babies were buried under Catholic Home

Japan Got Rich Without Getting Fat

US Spent $495.3 million to fire 39 THAAD Missiles

Private Mail Back Online

Senior Israeli officials tell Israeli media that they intend to attack Iran after ceasefire.

Palestinian Woman Nails Israeli

Tucker Carlson: Marjorie Taylor Greene:

Diverse Coney Island in New York looks unrecognizable after third world invasion

Corbett Report: Palantir at the Heart of Iran


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Splitting Two Birds With One Gene
Source: The Scientist
URL Source: [None]
Published: Jun 17, 2009
Author: Elie Dolgin
Post Date: 2009-06-26 14:27:35 by Prefrontal Vortex
Keywords: None
Views: 65
Comments: 1

Splitting Two Birds With One Gene

A single base pair change that turned a colorful bird entirely black probably guided the formation of a new species, researchers report in the August issue of The American Naturalist.

"It looks like we have a single mutation that's driving speciation in these birds," J. Albert Uy, an evolutionary biologist at Syracuse University in New York, who led the study, told The Scientist. "It's one of the first if not only examples of this kind of thing in vertebrates."

Eighty years ago, the late Harvard zoologist Ernst Mayr visited the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific and marveled at the variation in plumage color of the Monarch flycatcher (Monarcha castaneiventris), a small, insect-eating songbird with a long, fanned tail. In particular, two flycatcher populations that lived on islands eight kilometers apart caught Mayr's eye. One had a chestnut-colored belly with an iridescent bluish-black backside, and the other was all black, or "melanic." Mayr discussed these birds as an archetypal example of speciation in action in his 1942 opus Systematics and the Origin of Species, but he didn't know what was driving the two birds apart. Now, Uy thinks he has the answer -- a single nucleotide substitution in a gene underlying plumage color.

Uy and his colleagues sequenced the coding region of the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) gene, a G protein-coupled receptor that regulates melanin production, in the chestnut-bellied and melanic birds as well as three other subspecies of Monarch flycathers. They discovered three nucleotide differences, but only one affected the amino acid sequence. Strikingly, all the melanic birds had the derived amino acid change, whereas the chestnut-bellied birds and the three other subspecies all had the ancestral sequence. The researchers also used stuffed taxidermic mounts to test the birds' ability to recognize their own subspecies and found that the two groups of flycatchers consistently preferred their own kind. Together, these results indicate that the single genetic swap probably set speciation in motion, Uy said.

"I think we do have a speciation gene because this substitution creates a different physical appearance for the bird, which in turn causes the birds to recognize members" of its own subspecies, Uy said. "We're catching them right now in the act of becoming new species."

Daven Presgraves, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Rochester, New York, who was not involved in the study, agrees that MC1R probably counts as a speciation gene, but pointed out that the ultimate test would be to show that the gene directly influences mate choice. Nonetheless, the "study is as strong as we can reasonably expect," he wrote in an email, because mate choice trials are "nearly impossible for monogamous birds on remote islands." Uy, who is now building aviaries and applying for licenses to keep the tropical, endangered birds in captivity, plans to carry out mating trials, but conceded that it "may take five years" or more.

Uy is also investigating the genetic basis of another all-black subspecies that lives on a separate island some 150 kilometers away from the other melanic population but which does not have the same mutation in the MC1R gene. He intends to sequence the "next group of candidates" -- genes that encode proteins that interact with the MC1R to control pigmentation. Slowly but surely, "we are now getting at the underlying basis of species divergence" in these birds, Uy said.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Prefrontal Vortex (#0)

"I think we do have a speciation gene because this substitution creates a different physical appearance for the bird, which in turn causes the birds to recognize members" of its own subspecies, Uy said. "We're catching them right now in the act of becoming new species."

What if genes are controlled by spirit? Or thought?

Maybe that is why meditation opens people up?

It's all in your vibes, man!

“Some say that the age of chivalry is past, that the spirit of romance is dead. The age of chivalry is never past, so long as there is a wrong left unredressed on earth.” Charles Kingsley

Clitora  posted on  2009-06-26   14:45:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]