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

Unknown species and larval stages of extremely long-legged beetles discovered by DNA test

Unknown species and larval stages of extremely long-legged beetles discovered by DNA test
2011-10-19
(Press-News.org) The research program AQUA Palawana has been exploring the unique freshwater biodiversity of the Philippine Island and biosphere reserve of Palawan for more than a decade. Scientists from the Senckenberg Museum of Zoology Dresden and the Bavarian State Collections of Zoology in Munich have now described larvae and a new species of the curious Spider Water Beetles (Ancyronyx) from this biodiversity hotspot. Their study was realized in cooperation with the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development and the De La Salle University Manila.

The scientists conducting this study, Hendrik Freitag and Michael Balke, used mitochondrial DNA, which should be identical in all developmental stages in a species, to assign the previously unknown larval stages to adult imagines. This method was very useful because the outside appearance of immature and mature stages of holometabolous insects look completely different and would not allow an easy assignment to each other.

The studied insects of the genus Ancyronyx have extremely long legs, often accompanied by an eye-catching cross-like elytral colour pattern, so that they remind of spiders. In point of fact they are "Riffle Beetles" (Elmidae) that are able to breathe through a plastron, a microfilm of air around their body surface that is microscopically enlarged by setose structures. This enables them to remain permanently under water. Such beetles are often highly sensitive to water pollution and are therefore greatly valued as bioindicators. The researchers aim at providing basic knowledge and identification tools for tropical species that are potentially useful as freshwater bioindicators.

One of newly described Philippine species, Ancyronyx punkti – named after the German environmental NGO punkt e.V. – was recently chosen by BIOnet International for a campaign highlighting the relevance of taxonomy to society which was presented at the tenth COP meeting of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan 2010.

The new discoveries from the Philippines lead to the assumption that the region is the actual diversity centre of the genus. By now, ten of the 18 described species are known solely from the Philippines, of which most are endemic to the country or even to single islands.



INFORMATION:

Original source: Freitag H, Balke M (2011) Larvae and a new species of Ancyronyx Erichson, 1847 (Insecta, Coleoptera, Elmidae) from Palawan, Philippines, using DNA sequences for the assignment of the developmental stages. ZooKeys 136: 47-82. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.136.1914

Posted by Pensoft Publishers.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Unknown species and larval stages of extremely long-legged beetles discovered by DNA test

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fellow-Servant Rule Bars Suit Against Injured Employer, Co-Worker in NJ

2011-10-19
The relationship between personal injury law and workers' compensation law requires careful explanation. The New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division's decision in McDaniel v. Lee shows how the court applied the State's Workers' Compensation Act in a motor vehicle accident case to bar a third-party lawsuit against the plaintiff's co-worker. This is known as the fellow-servant rule, which provides an injured employee's co-workers with immunity from personal injury lawsuits. Although workers' compensation claims are handled differently than personal injury lawsuits, ...

Simple nerve cells regulate swimming depth of marine plankton

Simple nerve cells regulate swimming depth of marine plankton
2011-10-19
As planktonic organisms the larvae of the marine annelid Platynereis swim freely in the open water. They move by activity of their cilia, thousands of tiny hair-like structures forming a band along the larval body and beating coordinately. With changing environmental conditions the larvae swim upward and downward to their appropriate water depth. Scientists of the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in Tübingen, Germany have now identified some signalling substances in the larval nervous system regulating swimming depth of the larvae. These substances influence ...

More poor kids in more poor places, Carsey Institute finds

2011-10-19
DURHAM, N.H. – Persistent high poverty is most prevalent among children, with those living in rural America disproportionally impacted, according to researchers from the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire. "Nearly 22 percent of America's children live in poverty, compared with 14 percent of the total population. Poverty is scattered and geographically concentrated, and it ebbs and flows with economic cycles. However, in some parts of the country, poverty has persisted for generations," the researchers said. Areas with persistent high child poverty are ...

Wage Garnishment: What You Need To Know

2011-10-19
When you are in debt and fail to make timely payments, creditors may take steps to collect money directly from your paycheck. Known as wage garnishment, this legal tool can take a substantial bite out of your earnings. The Wage Garnishment Process Before wage garnishment occurs, a court must authorize it. A creditor will ask for a court order to compel payment. If you have stopped repaying the debt, the court can issue a judgment against you. Next, the creditor will place the judgment and an accompanying garnishment order in the hands of your local sheriff's department. ...

Nearly half of physician practices do not meet national standards for 'medical homes'

2011-10-19
Many Americans do not have access to a "medical home"—a physician practice that is able to manage ongoing care for patients and coordinate care among specialists and other health care facilities, according to a University of Michigan Health System-led study. The study revealed that nearly half (46%) of physician practices do not meet national standards to qualify as a medical home. "Our study findings are particularly worrisome because the medical home model of care is seen as providing higher quality, more cost-efficient care" said John Hollingsworth, M.D., M.S., the ...

MIT's Lincoln Lab: Seeing through walls

2011-10-19
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- The ability to see through walls is no longer the stuff of science fiction, thanks to new radar technology developed at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory. Much as humans and other animals see via waves of visible light that bounce off objects and then strike our eyes' retinas, radar "sees" by sending out radio waves that bounce off targets and return to the radar's receivers. But just as light can't pass through solid objects in quantities large enough for the eye to detect, it's hard to build radar that can penetrate walls well enough to show what's happening ...

Recent Court Ruling Will Reduce Amount of Money Awarded to Plaintiffs

2011-10-19
The Supreme Court of California recently denied plaintiff Rebecca Howell full compensation for her medical expenses from Hamilton Meats & Provisions, the company whose truck struck Hamilton's vehicle while making an illegal u-turn. As a result of the accident, Howell suffered through two spinal surgeries, among other medical treatments. The initial bill for her medical expenses came to almost $190,000. Fortunately, Howell had the foresight to purchase health insurance to cover unforeseen medical costs like these, but doing so denied her almost $130,000. It turned ...

Cyber war might never happen

2011-10-19
Cyber war, long considered by many experts within the defence establishment to be a significant threat, if not an ongoing one, may never take place according to Dr Thomas Rid of King's College London. In a paper published in The Journal of Strategic Studies, Dr Thomas Rid, from the Department of War Studies, argues that cyber warfare has never taken place, nor is it currently doing so and it is unlikely to take place in the future. Dr Rid said: 'The threat intuitively makes sense: almost everybody has an iPhone, an email address and a Facebook account. We feel vulnerable ...

Technology targets genetic disorders linked to X chromosome

2011-10-19
Geneticists at Emory University School of Medicine have demonstrated a method that enables the routine amplification of all the genes on the X chromosome. The technology allows the rapid and highly accurate sequencing and identification of novel genetic variants affecting X chromosome genes. The method, developed in cooperation with RainDance Technologies (www.RainDanceTech.com), is described in the Oct. 2011 issue of Genomics. Senior author Michael Zwick, PhD, assistant professor of human genetics at Emory University School of Medicine, is using the method to identify ...

Piecing together the priceless 'Cairo Genizah'

Piecing together the priceless Cairo Genizah
2011-10-19
A well-known collection of historical texts, the Cairo Genizah is one of the most valuable sources of primary documents for medieval historians and religious scholars. The 350,000 fragments found in the Genizah include not only religious texts, but also social and commercial documents, dating from the 9th to 19th century. But the collection is scattered among 70 institutions worldwide, including libraries in Cambridge, Jerusalem, and New York City, and scholars are hampered by both the wide dispersal of the collection as well as their fragmentary condition. Now researchers ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

ACS Annual Report: Cancer mortality continues to drop despite rising incidence in women; rates of new diagnoses under 65 higher in women than men

Fewer skin ulcers in Werner syndrome patients treated with pioglitazone

Study finds surprising way that genetic mutation causes Huntington’s disease, transforming understanding of the disorder

DNA motors found to switch gears

Human ancestor thrived longer in harsher conditions than previous estimates

Evolution: Early humans adapted to extreme desert conditions over one million years ago

Race and ethnicity and diffusion of telemedicine in Medicaid for schizophrenia care after onset of the COVID-19 pandemic

Changes in support for advance provision and over-the-counter access to medication abortion

Protein level predicts immunotherapy response in bowel cancer

The staying power of bifocal contact lens benefits in young kids

Dose-dependent relationship between alcohol consumption and the risks of hepatitis b virus-associated cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma: A meta-analysis and systematic review

International Alliance for Primary Immunodeficiency Societies selects Rockefeller University Press to publish new Journal of Human Immunity

Leader in mission-driven open publishing wins APE Award for Innovation in Scholarly Communication

Innovative 6D pose dataset sets new standard for robotic grasping performance

Evaluation of plasma neurodegenerative biomarkers for diagnosing minimal hepatic encephalopathy and predicting overt hepatic encephalopathy in Chinese patients with hepatic cirrhosis

MEXICO: How animals, people, and rituals created Teotihuacán

The role of political partisanship and moral beliefs in leadership selection

Parental favoritism isn't a myth

Arctic hotspots study reveals areas of climate stress in Northern Alaska, Siberia

Mount Sinai study finds wearable devices can detect and predict inflammatory bowel disease flare-ups

Peripheral blood CD4+/CD8+ t cell ratio predicts HBsAg clearance in inactive HBsAg carriers treated with peginterferon alpha

MIT Press’s Direct to Open reaches annual funding goal for 2025, opens access to 80 new monographs

New NCCN patient resource shares latest understanding of genetic testing to guide patient decision making

Synchronization in neural nets: Mathematical insight into neuron readout drives significant improvements in prediction accuracy

TLE6 identified as a protein associated with infertility in male mice

Thin lenses have a bright future

Volcanic eruption caused Neolithic people to sacrifice unique "sun stones"

Drug in clinical trials for breast cancer could also treat some blood cancers

Study identifies mechanism underlying increased osteoarthritis risk in postmenopausal females

The material revolution: How USA’s commodity appetite evolved from 1900 to present

[Press-News.org] Unknown species and larval stages of extremely long-legged beetles discovered by DNA test