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

New method of unreeling cocoons could extend silk industry beyond Asia

2011-05-18
(Press-News.org) The development and successful testing of a method for unreeling the strands of silk in wild silkworm cocoons could clear the way for establishment of new silk industries not only in Asia but also in vast areas of Africa and South America. The report appears in ACS' journal Biomacromolecules.

Fritz Vollrath, Tom Gheysens and colleagues explain that silk is made by unraveling— or unreeling — the fine, soft thread from cocoons of silkmoths. The practice began as far back as 3500 BC in ancient China, where silk was the fabric of royalty. Today, most silk comes from cocoons of the domesticated Mulberry silkworm (bred from a species native to Asia) because they are easy to unreel into long continuous strands. The cocoons formed by "wild" species are too tough for this process, so harsher methods are sometimes used. However, these methods damage the strands, producing a poor-quality silk. To overcome this challenge to the widespread commercial use of wild cocoons, the researchers developed a new way to loosen the strands without damaging them.

The group found that the surfaces of wild cocoons were coated with a mineral layer and that removing this layer ("demineralizing") made it easy to unreel the cocoons into long continuous strands with commercial reeling equipment. These strands were just as long and strong as those from Mulberry silkworm cocoons. The researchers say that the new method could expand the silk industry to new areas of the world where wild silkworms thrive.

INFORMATION:

The authors acknowledge funding from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the European Union, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Safety concerns about adulterated drug ingredients

2011-05-18
Government regulators and pharmaceutical companies are moving to address a major new risk for the global supply of medicines: The possibility that unsafe ingredients are entering the supply chain as pharmaceutical companies increasingly outsource the production of drug ingredients to third parties. That's the topic of the cover story in the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), ACS' weekly newsmagazine. C&EN Senior Editor Rick Mullin explains that the jolt for action came from several incidents. One incident —a major 2008 recall of contaminated heparin ...

Reforestation research in Latin America helps build better forests

Reforestation research in Latin America helps build better forests
2011-05-18
A tropical forest is easy to cut down, but getting it back is another story. In a special issue of the journal Forest Ecology and Management, leading researchers at the Smithsonian in Panama and across Latin America offer new insights on reforestation based on 20 years of research. "Twenty years ago, we had almost no information about how to build a forest," said Jefferson Hall, staff scientist at the Smithsonian and lead editor of the new special issue of Forest Ecology and Management. "People either planted one of four non-native species—teak, pine, eucalyptus or acacia—or ...

Sodium channels evolved before animals' nervous systems, research shows

Sodium channels evolved before animals nervous systems, research shows
2011-05-18
AUSTIN, Texas—An essential component of animal nervous systems—sodium channels—evolved prior to the evolution of those systems, researchers from The University of Texas at Austin have discovered. "The first nervous systems appeared in jellyfish-like animals six hundred million years ago or so," says Harold Zakon, professor of neurobiology, "and it was thought that sodium channels evolved around that time. We have now discovered that sodium channels were around well before nervous systems evolved." Zakon and his coauthors, Professor David Hillis and graduate student ...

New form of girl's best friend is lighter than ever

2011-05-18
LIVERMORE, Calif. -- By combining high pressure with high temperature, Livermore researchers have created a nanocyrstalline diamond aerogel that could improve the optics something as big as a telescope or as small as the lenses in eyeglasses. Aerogels are a class of materials that exhibit the lowest density, thermal conductivity, refractive index and sound velocity of any bulk solid. Aerogels are among the most versatile materials available for technical applications due to their wide variety of exceptional properties. This material has chemists, physicists, astronomers, ...

UT physicist accelerates simulations of thin film growth

UT physicist accelerates simulations of thin film growth
2011-05-18
A Toledo, Ohio, physicist has implemented a new mathematical approach that accelerates some complex computer calculations used to simulate the formation of micro-thin materials. Jacques Amar, Ph.D., professor of physics at the University of Toledo (UT), studies the modeling and growth of materials at the atomic level. He uses Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) resources and Kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) methods to simulate the molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) process, where metals are heated until they transition into a gaseous state and then reform as thin films by condensing ...

First National Insurance Program for Mobile Food Vending Trucks

2011-05-18
Whorton Insurance Services, the parent company of mobilefoodvendorsinsurance.com and MFVInsurance.com, is pleased to announce the launch of the first national insurance program to serve the insurance needs of the mobile food vending industry, a new industry formed by the rapid expansion of mobile food trucks in metropolitan areas throughout the country. Because of this rapid growth, fueled by an ever-increasing appetite and demand for gourmet food and beverages from mobile vendors, city governments are amending their outdated ordinances to accommodate these operations. ...

Home Furnishings Retailer Didriks Introduces Sabre Flatware from France

Home Furnishings Retailer Didriks Introduces Sabre Flatware from France
2011-05-18
This spring, Didriks - www.didriks.com - will expand its tableware collection to include Sabre flatware from Paris France.   Started 17 years ago by Francis Gelb, Sabre flatware has a style meant to cut ties with conformism, blending the chic with the offbeat.  Sabre flatware features high quality melamine handles and 18/10 stainless steel. Didriks will spotlight the elegant Natura, Bamboo, Basic, Nature, and Djembe Sabre flatware designs when introducing the line. Jonathan Henke of Didriks said, "Sabre flatware makes a summery and also quite elegant addition ...

NYU researchers use innovative data collection method -- A video by Dutch band C-Mon & Kypski

2011-05-18
Researchers at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences have adopted an innovative data collection method for their latest work in the area of computer vision—a music video created by the Dutch progressive-electro band C-Mon & Kypski. Individual frames from the band's recent video for its song "More is Less" served as a unique visual database for the Courant researchers' work to develop computer vision technology. Computer vision, a developing technology, aims to give eyesight to machines and is currently used in a range of applications. These ...

Research questions reality of 'supersolid' in helium-4

2011-05-18
LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, May 17, 2011—The long-held, but unproven idea that helium-4 enters into an exotic phase of matter dubbed a "supersolid" when cooled to extremely low temperatures has been challenged in a new paper published recently in Science. Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers Alexander Balatsky and Matthias Graf joined Cornell University physicist J.C. Séamus Davis and others in describing an alternative explanation for behavior of helium-4 that led scientist to believe for nearly 40 years that the substance could hold properties of a liquid and solid ...

UCSB scientists track environmental influences on giant kelp with help from satellite data

UCSB scientists track environmental influences on giant kelp with help from satellite data
2011-05-18
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Scientists at UC Santa Barbara have developed new methods for studying how environmental factors and climate affect giant kelp forest ecosystems at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales. The scientists merged data collected underwater by UCSB divers with satellite images of giant kelp canopies taken by the Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper. The findings are published in the feature article of the May 16 issue of Marine Ecology Progress Series. In this marriage of marine ecology and satellite mapping, the team of UCSB scientists tracked the dynamics ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Red light therapy shows promise for protecting football players’ brains

Trees — not grass and other greenery — associated with lower heart disease risk in cities

Chemical Insights scientist receives Achievement Award from the Society of Toxicology

Breakthrough organic crystalline material repairs itself in extreme cold temperatures, unlocking new possibilities for space and deep-sea technologies

Scientists discover novel immune ‘traffic controller’ hijacked by virus

When tropical oceans were oxygen oases

Positive interactions dominate among marine microbes, six-year study reveals

Safeguarding the Winter Olympics-Paralympics against climate change

Most would recommend RSV immunizations for older and pregnant people

Donated blood has a shelf life. A new test tracks how it's aging

Stroke during pregnancy, postpartum associated with more illness, job status later

American Meteorological Society announces new executive director

People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely

Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest

General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion

Medical LLMs may show real-world potential in identifying individuals with major depressive disorder using WhatsApp voice note recordings

Early translational study supports the role of high-dose inhaled nitric oxide as a potential antimicrobial therapy

AI can predict preemies’ path, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

A wild potato that changed the story of agriculture in the American Southwest

Cancer’s super-enhancers may set the map for DNA breaks and repair: A key clue to why tumors become aggressive and genetically unstable

Prehistoric tool made from elephant bone is the oldest discovered in Europe

Mineralized dental plaque from the Iron Age provides insight into the diet of the Scythians

Salty facts: takeaways have more salt than labels claim

When scientists build nanoscale architecture to solve textile and pharmaceutical industry challenges

Massive cloud with metallic winds discovered orbiting mystery object

Old diseases return as settlement pushes into the Amazon rainforest

Takeaways are used to reward and console – study

Velocity gradients key to explaining large-scale magnetic field structure

Bird retinas function without oxygen – solving a centuries-old biological mystery

Pregnancy- and abortion-related mortality in the US, 2018-2021

[Press-News.org] New method of unreeling cocoons could extend silk industry beyond Asia