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

Geckos might lose their tails, but not their dinner

Ability to capture prey unaffected by defensive tail detachment

2021-06-23
(Press-News.org) A new UC Riverside study finds geckos are fierce hunters whether or not their tails are attached to their bodies.

Geckos and other lizards can distract predators by quickly dropping their tails. The tail vertebrae are perforated, making it easier to disconnect them without any formation of scar tissue or loss of blood. Though this ability can keep lizards from being eaten, the maneuver is performed at a cost.

"Other studies have documented the negative effects of tail loss on lizards' ability to run, jump, mate, and reproduce," said UCR biologist Marina Vollin, lead author of the study. "However, few have examined their ability to capture food when they lose their tails, which is critical for regenerating the tail and for overall survival."

To help fill this gap in understanding, Vollin and Tim Higham, an associate professor in UCR's Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, observed intact and newly tailless geckos on the hunt. Their work is published in a recent Integrative and Comparative Biology journal article.

The researchers found that geckos successfully captured crickets about 77% of the time both before and after losing tails -- a surprising retention of accuracy since tails appear to help stabilize gecko body positions during and after a strike.

"The geckos were much slower without tails, and their attack strikes much more awkward," Vollin said.

Western banded geckos, native to the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, are one of the few reptiles that help control scorpion populations.

In this study, the geckos were observed hunting crickets in artificial enclosures. Vollin and Higham are planning future studies in which they hope to observe geckos hunting in the wild and feeding on other small insects.

"It is very possible that geckos suffer a loss in feeding performance and success following autotomy in nature given the complexity of the habitat and more room for the prey to escape," Higham said.

They'll also study whether geckos are able to fully regain their agility once their tails have regenerated, which can take up to a month.

"It's important to get a sense of how they operate in nature, where additional elements could affect whether they have more difficulty capturing prey," Vollin said.

Understanding how lizards like the Western banded gecko are able to survive carries a significance beyond the lizards themselves. Though they eat a variety of small insects, they also serve as a key food source for birds, snakes, and other predatory mammals.

"I've heard them referred to as 'nature's popcorn,' because other animals can eat a bunch of them at once, they're abundant, and easy to acquire," Vollin said. "They're a big part of the base of the food chain."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Low energy hydrogenation without hydrogen: Efficient catalysis in a stable emulsion gel

2021-06-23
UJ researchers take a novel step to change hydrogenation into a safe, low energy process. They use a very stable three phase emulsion to transform a toxic waste product into valuable feedstock. The process does not need flammable, compressed hydrogen gas. The emulsion catalysis hydrogenates nitrobenzene efficiently at room temperature to output aniline. Aniline is widely used in the pharmaceutical industry. The bi-metallic hydrogenation catalyst is fully recovered afterwards. Without hydrogenation, it would not be possible to manufacture many of ...

Cities 'must become car-free to survive'

2021-06-23
Cities must become fully car-free in order to be liveable in the future, according to the UCL experts behind a new modelling report looking at urban car use. The experts have called for a shift in collective behaviour to reduce the number of private cars in cities. Globally, the number of cars produced is increasing faster than the population; 80m cars were produced in 2019, while the population increased by 78m. The researchers said future city planning must include a focus on reducing dependence on cars, promoting fewer and shorter trips and encouraging walking and cycling as primary modes of local transport. Public transport should be encouraged for longer journeys, the researchers argued, and cars should only be used for emergencies or special occasions. ...

Songbirds and humans share some common speech patterns

Songbirds and humans share some common speech patterns
2021-06-23
If you listen to songbirds, you will recognize repeated melodies or phrases. Each phrase is made up of distinct sounds, strung together. A study from researchers at McGill University has found that the song phrases of many songbird species follow patterns that are similar to those used in human speech. At least in some respects. The songbirds the researchers studied, like humans---no matter what language they speak---tend to use shorter elements (whether these are words or sounds) when they are putting together longer phrases. Linguists speculate that this pattern, known as Menzerath's Law, may make communication more efficient by making things easier to understand or say. But the McGill team suggest ...

Making our computers more secure

Making our computers more secure
2021-06-23
New York, NY--June 22, 2021--Because corporations and governments rely on computers and the internet to run everything from the electric grid, healthcare, and water systems, computer security is extremely important to all of us. It is increasingly being breached: Numerous security hacks just this past month include the Colonial Pipeline security breach and the JBS Foods ransomware attacks where hackers took over the organization's computer systems and demanded payment to unlock and release it back to the owners. The White House is strongly urging companies to take ransomware threats seriously and update their systems to protect themselves. Yet these attacks continue to threaten all of us on an almost daily basis. Columbia Engineering researchers ...

Salton Sea aerosol exposure triggers unique and mysterious pulmonary response

Salton Sea aerosol exposure triggers unique and mysterious pulmonary response
2021-06-23
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- Communities surrounding the Salton Sea, the inland body of water straddling California's Riverside and Imperial counties, show high rates of asthma due, possibly, to high aerosol dust levels resulting from the sea shrinking over time. Scientists suspect, however, the Salton Sea plays an additional role in pulmonary health. A University of California, Riverside study performed on mice has found Salton Sea aerosol turns on nonallergic inflammation genes and may also promote lung inflammation. For comparison, aerosolized fungal allergen (Alternaria) -- a common household fungal allergen -- produces an allergic inflammation in the lungs of mice. "Our ...

Health care leaders call for national focus on preventing hospital-acquired pneumonia

Health care leaders call for national focus on preventing hospital-acquired pneumonia
2021-06-23
A group of health care leaders, including a University of Massachusetts Amherst nurse innovator, has published a national call to action to prevent non-ventilator-associated, hospital-acquired pneumonia (NVHAP). This call to action was developed by a joint task force of key national healthcare stakeholders, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Veterans Health Administration, The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the American Dental Association, the Patient Safety Movement Foundation, Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice, Teaching Oral-Systemic Health and academia. In a commentary paper published in the journal Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology (ICHE), the joint ...

Atmospheric water vapor in the city of Tel Aviv is suitable for drinking

Atmospheric water vapor in the city of Tel Aviv is suitable for drinking
2021-06-23
In a first-of-its-kind study in the world conducted at Tel Aviv University, researchers found that water generated from the air in the heart of an urban area, the city of Tel Aviv, complied with all of the strict drinking water standards set both by the State of Israel and by the World Health Organization. The researchers examined the quality of the water produced from the water vapor in the urban atmosphere, which is characterized by industry and massive construction, and found that it was suitable for drinking. The test was performed using a dedicated facility of the Israeli company Watergen, which partnered in the study. The study was conducted by a team of experts from the hydrochemistry laboratory at the Porter ...

Advancing research on environmentally friendly, hydrogen-enriched fuel

2021-06-23
As you drive down the highway, you may notice an increasing number of hybrid and electric vehicles. Alternative energy automobiles are on the rise contributing to the global effort to reduce carbon emissions. As we move together down this road, researchers are looking to determine new solutions to this ongoing problem. Dr. Muzammil Arshad, instructional assistant professor for the Department of Multidisciplinary Engineering at Texas A&M University, and a team of multidisciplinary student researchers conducted a study to analyze the performance of hydrogen-enriched fuel on spark engine performance and efficiency. This solution could make significant contributions to helping automobiles ...

Sound-induced electric fields control the tiniest particles

Sound-induced electric fields control the tiniest particles
2021-06-23
Engineers at Duke University have devised a system for manipulating particles approaching the miniscule 2.5 nanometer diameter of DNA using sound-induced electric fields. Dubbed "acoustoelectronic nanotweezers," the approach provides a label-free, dynamically controllable method of moving and trapping nanoparticles over a large area. The technology holds promise for applications in the fields ranging from condensed matter physics to biomedicine. The research appears online on June 22 in Nature Communications. Precisely controlling nanoparticles is a crucial ...

Foreign-born status, but not acquired US citizenship, protects many immigrants from criminal victimization

2021-06-23
Until recently, data on criminal victimization did not include information on the status--immigrant or citizen--of respondents. In a recent study, researchers used new data that include respondents' status to explore the association between citizenship status and risk of victimization. They found that for many, a person's foreign-born status, but not their acquired U.S. citizenship, protects against criminal victimization. The study, by researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD) at College Park and the Pennsylvania State University (PSU), is forthcoming in Criminology, a publication of the American Society of Criminology. "Understanding how patterns of victimization vary ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Helping hands: UBCO research team develops brace to reduce tremors

MXene nanomaterials enter a new dimension

Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

New light-based nanotechnology could enable more precise, less harmful cancer treatment

The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed

Tracking Finland’s ice fishers reveals how social information guides foraging decisions

DNA-protein crosslinks promote inflammation-linked premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice

Accounting for fossil energy’s “minimum viable scale” is central to decarbonization

Immunotherapy reduces plaque in arteries of mice

Using AI to retrace the evolution of genetic control elements in the brain

New 3D printing method makes affordable, realistic replicas as structurally complex as a human hand

Direct imaging captures the crystalline vibrations of a supersolid made of atoms and light

What ice-fishing competitions reveal about human decision-making

Scientists solve the mystery of why termite kings and queens are monogamous

New poll: most Americans would consider a plant-based alternative to chicken wings during Super Bowl

Concordia study finds snow droughts in western and southern Canada could affect nearly all Canadians

Artificial lung system keeps patient alive without lungs until transplant

A framework for understanding (and researching) what causes human cancers

Ecology: Svalbard polar bears insulated against sea ice loss

Breakthrough study reveals early neural circuit that determines food reward

High-deductible health plans and mortality among cancer survivors

Cancer incidence and mortality with aspirin in older adults

How the brain's 'memory replay' goes wrong in Alzheimer's disease

New guide aims to tame the chaos of UTI care

The Frontiers of Knowledge Award goes to Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen for designing the cryptographic system that protects the security of electronic devices and digital connections worldwide

AI swarms could hijack democracy—without anyone noticing

Sex determines the connection between diseases, according to a BSC study that exposes historical biases in public health

Family care expectations clash with shrinking availability, dementia needs

New device switches terahertz pulses between electric and magnetic skyrmions

Vaping zebrafish suggest E-cigarette exposure disrupts gut microbial networks and neurobehavior

[Press-News.org] Geckos might lose their tails, but not their dinner
Ability to capture prey unaffected by defensive tail detachment