PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study uncovers new evidence on species evolution

2014-05-15
(Press-News.org) A study involving Simon Fraser University researchers and published today in the journal Science has found evidence for the genomic basis of how new species evolve, in adapting to different environments.

Researchers studying an insect known as the walking stick (genus Timema) determined that the process of "speciation" happened in association with the use of different host plants. They also determined that across many populations of the insect, those on one host plant are diverging, genetically, from the populations on another host plant, a process they call "parallel speciation."

"Parallel speciation is important because it is like replication in a scientific study - it tells you whether a pattern and process are repeatable, which lends credence and statistical rigor to the causes," says SFU biology professor Bernard Crespi, whose former PhD student, Patrik Nosil, led the research. Nosil is now a professor at the U.K.'s University of Sheffield.

"From this we can learn, more effectively than in systems where speciation processes happen only once, how new species arise."

The work involved experiments in combination with genome sequencing of populations from two host plants. The sets of individual walking sticks were put on different host plants to test directly for natural selection's role in speciation.

Whole-genome data was obtained, which allowed inference of which genes were associated with speciation processes. "This tells you about the roles of natural selection, and how many genes are involved, in speciation," Crespi notes.

The team's work extends numerous earlier studies by using whole genomes on a large scale, and conducting experiments to validate the roles of natural selection in speciation.

"The combination of whole genomes, and experiments, is unprecedented in speciation studies," says Crespi, adding that future work will involve determining what specific genes are involved in speciation, and how natural selection works upon them.

INFORMATION:

The European Research Council provided funding for the research.

Simon Fraser University is consistently ranked among Canada's top comprehensive universities and is one of the top 50 universities in the world under 50 years old. With campuses in Vancouver, Burnaby and Surrey, B.C., SFU engages actively with the community in its research and teaching, delivers almost 150 programs to more than 30,000 students, and has more than 125,000 alumni in 130 countries.

Simon Fraser University: Engaging Students. Engaging Research. Engaging Communities.

Contact: Bernard Crespi, 778.782.3533; crespi@sfu.ca
Marianne Meadahl, PAMR, 778.782.9017; Marianne_Meadahl@sfu.ca

Photos: http://at.sfu.ca/dbFSqB
Link to paper: http://at.sfu.ca/fhcZpq


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Land and power: Women discover one can lead to the other

2014-05-15
The change was clear and it was dramatic: "I went from being property to owning property," a woman in a remote area of Nicaragua told UC Santa Cruz assistant professor of psychology Shelly Grabe. Grabe wanted to know how the power dynamic between men and women might change when women owned land. More importantly, she wanted to know how the propensity for gender-based violence against women might change. Writing in the journal Psychology of Women Quarterly, Grabe suggests that when women in developing countries own land, they gain power within their relationships and ...

Caught in the act: Study probes evolution of California insect

Caught in the act: Study probes evolution of California insect
2014-05-15
HOUSTON -- (May 15, 2014) -- A first-of-its-kind study this week suggests that the genomes of new species may evolve in a similar, repeatable fashion -- even in cases where populations are evolving in parallel at separate locations. The research is featured on the cover of the May 16 issue of Science. A team of evolutionary biologists at Rice University, the University of Sheffield and eight other universities used a combination of ecological fieldwork and genomic assays to see how natural selection is playing out across the genome of a Southern California stick insect ...

Marijuana use involved in more fatal accidents in Colorado

2014-05-15
AURORA, Colo. (May 15, 2014) – The proportion of marijuana-positive drivers involved in fatal motor vehicle crashes in Colorado has increased dramatically since the commercialization of medical marijuana in the middle of 2009, according to a study by University of Colorado School of Medicine researchers. With data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's Fatality Analysis Reporting System covering 1994 to 2011, the researchers analyzed fatal motor vehicle crashes in Colorado and in the 34 states that did not have medical marijuana laws, comparing changes ...

'Physician partners' free doctors to focus on patients, not paperwork

2014-05-15
Primary care physicians already have enough administrative duties on their plates, and the implementation of electronic medical records has only added to their burden. As a result, they have less time to spend with their patients. But a new UCLA study suggests a simple way to lighten their load: a "physician partner" whose role would be to work on those administrative tasks, such as entering information into patient records, that take up so much of doctors' time. A physician partner allows doctors to focus more of their attention on their patients and leads to greater ...

Negative stereotypes can cancel each other out on resumes

2014-05-15
Stereotypes of gay men as effeminate and weak and black men as threatening and aggressive can hurt members of those groups when white people evaluate them in employment, education, criminal justice and other contexts. But the negative attributes of the two stereotypes can cancel one another out for gay black men in the employment context, according to research by a Princeton University graduate student in sociology, challenging the commonly held idea that membership in multiple marginalized groups leads to more discrimination than being a member of a single such group. Sociologist ...

Penn Vet study reveals Salmonella's hideout strategy

2014-05-15
The body's innate immune system is a first line of defense, intent on sensing invading pathogens and wiping them out before they can cause harm. It should not be surprising then that bacteria have evolved many ways to specifically evade and overcome this sentry system in order to spread infection. A study led by researchers in the University of Pennsylvania's School of Veterinary Medicine now reveals how some Salmonella bacteria hide from the immune system, allowing them to persist and cause systemic infection. The findings could help researchers craft a more effective ...

Research finds human impact may cause Sierra Nevada to rise, increase seismicity of San Andreas Fault

Research finds human impact may cause Sierra Nevada to rise, increase seismicity of San Andreas Fault
2014-05-15
RENO, Nev. – Like a detective story with twists and turns in the plot, scientists at the University of Nevada, Reno are unfolding a story about the rapid uplift of the famous 400-mile long Sierra Nevada mountain range of California and Nevada. The newest chapter of the research is being published today in the scientific journal Nature, showing that draining of the aquifer for agricultural irrigation in California's Central Valley results in upward flexing of the earth's surface and the surrounding mountains due to the loss of mass within the valley. The groundwater subsidence ...

A skeleton clue to early American ancestry

A skeleton clue to early American ancestry
2014-05-15
This news release is available in Spanish and Arabic. The discovery of a near-complete human skeleton in a watery cave in Mexico is helping scientists answer the question, "Who were the first Americans?" The finding, reported in the 16 May issue of the journal Science, sheds new light on a decades-long debate among archaeologists and anthropologists. Deciphering the ancestry of the first people to populate the Americas has been a challenge. On the basis of genetics, modern Native Americans are thought to descend from Siberians who moved into eastern Beringia (the ...

Oldest most complete, genetically intact human skeleton in New World

2014-05-15
WASHINGTON (May 15, 2014)—The skeletal remains of a teenage female from the late Pleistocene or last ice age found in an underwater cave in Mexico have major implications for our understanding of the origins of the Western Hemisphere's first people and their relationship to contemporary Native Americans. In a paper released today in the journal Science, an international team of researchers and cave divers present the results of an expedition that discovered a near-complete early American human skeleton with an intact cranium and preserved DNA. The remains were found surrounded ...

WSU anthropologist leads genetic study of prehistoric girl

WSU anthropologist leads genetic study of prehistoric girl
2014-05-15
PULLMAN, Wash.—For more than a decade, Washington State University molecular anthropologist Brian Kemp has teased out the ancient DNA of goose and salmon bones from Alaska, human remains from North and South America, and human coprolites—ancient poop—from Oregon and the American Southwest. His aim: use genetics as yet another archaeological record offering clues to the identities of ancient people and how they lived and moved across the landscape. As head of the team studying the DNA of Naia, an adolescent girl who fell into a Yucatan sinkhole some 12,000 years ago, he ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Boosting the cell’s own cleanup

Movement matters: Light activity led to better survival in diabetes, heart, kidney disease

Method developed to identify best treatment combinations for glioblastoma based on unique cellular targets

Self-guided behavioral app helps children with epilepsy sleep earlier

Higher consumption of food preservatives is associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes

NTU Singapore-led team captures first-ever ‘twitch’ of the eye’s night-vision cells as they detect light, paving the way for earlier detection of blindness-causing diseases

Global aviation emissions could be halved through maximising efficiency gains, new study shows

Fewer layovers, better-connected airports, more firm growth

Exposure to natural light improves metabolic health

As we age, immune cells protect the spinal cord

New expert guidance urges caution before surgery for patients with treatment-resistant constipation

Solar hydrogen can now be produced efficiently without the scarce metal platinum

Sleeping in on weekends may help boost teens’ mental health

Study: Teens use cellphones for an hour a day at school

After more than two years of war, Palestinian children are hungry, denied education and “like the living dead”

The untold story of life with Prader-Willi syndrome - according to the siblings who live it

How the parasite that ‘gave up sex’ found more hosts – and why its victory won’t last

When is it time to jump? The boiling frog problem of AI use in physics education

Twitter data reveals partisan divide in understanding why pollen season's getting worse

AI is quick but risky for updating old software

Revolutionizing biosecurity: new multi-omics framework to transform invasive species management

From ancient herb to modern medicine: new review unveils the multi-targeted healing potential of Borago officinalis

Building a global scientific community: Biological Diversity Journal announces dual recruitment of Editorial Board and Youth Editorial Board members

Microbes that break down antibiotics help protect ecosystems under drug pollution

Smart biochar that remembers pollutants offers a new way to clean water and recycle biomass

Rice genes matter more than domestication in shaping plant microbiomes

Ticking time bomb: Some farmers report as many as 70 tick encounters over a 6-month period

Turning garden and crop waste into plastics

Scientists discover ‘platypus galaxies’ in the early universe

Seeing thyroid cancer in a new light: when AI meets label-free imaging in the operating room

[Press-News.org] Study uncovers new evidence on species evolution