(Press-News.org) By examining art printed from woodblocks spanning five centuries, Blair Hedges, a professor of biology at Penn State University, has identified the species responsible for making the ever-present wormholes in European printed art since the Renaissance. The hole-makers, two species of wood-boring beetles, are widely distributed today, but the "wormhole record," as Hedges calls it, reveals a different pattern in the past, where the two species met along a zone across central Europe like a battle line of two armies. The research, which is the first of its kind to use printed art as a "trace fossil" to precisely date species and to identify their locations, will be published in the journal Biology Letters on 21 November 2012.
Hedges explained that most printed "wormholes" were formed in the carved woodblocks by adult insects and not by the worm-like larvae. After landing on a piece of dry wood, beetles lay their eggs in cracks and crevices. The larvae then spend three to four years burrowing inside the wood, nourishing themselves on the wood's cellulose and growing until they enter the cocoon-like pupal stage when they transform into adults. The adult beetles then burrow straight up toward the surface of the wood, exiting to find a mate and to begin the life cycle anew. "The so-called 'wormholes' found in wood -- including furniture, rafters, oak floors, and woodblocks that were used to print art in books -- are not made by worms as the word suggests; rather, most are 'exit holes' made by those newly transformed adult beetles boring up to the surface and flying away," Hedges said.
When these wormholes were present in an artist's woodblock, they resulted in empty circles within the inked prints made from the woodblock. "These tiny errors or interruptions in the print serve as 'trace fossils,'" Hedges said. "They aren't the animals themselves but they are evidence of the animal's existence. They show that beetles invaded a particular piece of wood, even if that wood no longer exists." Hedges added that studying the prints, rather than the much rarer woodblocks themselves, provides better and more accurate information. A piece of wood can acquire new wormholes throughout the years, and it is difficult to know whether a particular hole was made 10 years ago or many centuries ago. Even a museum specimen that has been protected in recent years could have wormholes from beetles that landed on it just a few years prior to its arrival in the museum.
"By studying printed wormholes, we are seeing only the wormholes that were made at a specific moment in history," Hedges said. "Because most prints, including those in books, have publication dates, we know that the wormholes in question were made very close to that date, or at least between that printing and the first printing. It's an almost perfect biological timestamp. And in most cases, we also know where the book was printed. For example, if printed wormholes appear on a print made in Bamberg, Germany in 1462, then we know that the beetles that made the wormholes in the corresponding woodblock must have lived in or around that place at that time. So wormholes can tell us when and where a species existed with fairly good accuracy, more than 500 years ago, and that is amazing."
Hedges measured the size of more than 3,000 printed wormholes in works of art and books spanning five centuries, from 1462 to 1899. He found that prints from northern Europe -- including England, the Netherlands, Germany, and Sweden -- had holes that were small and round, averaging 1.43 mm in width. However, woodcuts from southern Europe -- including Spain, Portugal, most of France, and Italy -- had larger holes averaging 2.30 mm in width, as well as some unique tracks, including long holes.
"The species that made the wormholes were identified by a process of elimination. For example, the size of the beetle closely matches the size of the hole made, and most species have preferences for the wood they eat. This left two species as the probable hole-makers," Hedges said. "The northern European wormholes most likely were made by the Common Furniture Beetle, Anobium punctatum. The wormholes in southern Europe most likely were made by the Mediterranean Furniture Beetle, Oligomerus ptilinoides." Hedges added that, by comparing the diameters of the wormholes found in art from many different regions of Europe, he was able to determine that the Common Furniture Beetle lived only in a geographic area extending northward from northern France, Switzerland, and Austria, while the Mediterranean Furniture Beetle lived only south of that dividing line. "This is surprising because it means that the two species' ranges were in close contact but, oddly, did not overlap along a precise dividing line," Hedges said. "However, today and for the past 100 years, because travel, shipping, and furniture transport tends to spread insects around, we find both species all over northern and southern Europe and elsewhere in the world." Hedges suspects that the contact zone of the two species across Europe may have been maintained for centuries because of competition for the same food source. All of those details of the species' distribution, including the contact zone, were previously unknown.
Hedges said that this method can be used to study different beetle species in other regions, such as eastern Europe, the Americas, and Asia, and the method even could be used to study earlier time periods. He also predicts that old DNA from the beetles might be recoverable from original woodblocks preserved in museums. "Woodblocks that have been long-preserved in museums have been protected from any recent beetle activity," Hedges explained. "So one exciting possibility would be to examine those woodblocks for traces of DNA from the beetles that made the wormholes, adding a genetic dimension. This research could be done without damaging the rare woodblocks and it would help to confirm identities of the species and their relationships."
Hedges added that his new method has relevance not just to biology, but also to art history. "There are some situations in which a book or print's origin is unknown because a printing location was never added to the text," Hedges said. "Now that we know that different species of beetles existed in different locations in Europe, art historians can determine whether a book was from northern or southern Europe simply by measuring the wormholes."
INFORMATION:
[ Katrina Voss ]
CONTACTS
Blair Hedges: 814-865-9991 or 814-777-0077, sbh1@psu.edu
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
IMAGES
High-resolution images associated with this research are online at http://www.science.psu.edu/news-and-events/2012-news/Hedges11-2012 , which is where text will be posted after the embargo lifts. The following image captions are for your convenience in preparing your story.
CREDITS AND CREDITS
1 & 2: Renaissance woodcut art print, The Rich Man by Cornelis Anthonisz (1541), showing printed wormholes. Credit: Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
3: Partially carved woodblock, The Wedding of Mopsus and Nisa by Bruegel (1566), showing actual wormholes. Credit: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
4: Diagrams showing position of typical woodblock in hardwood tree, tunneling by worm-like beetle larva, and adult beetle emerging through wormhole. Credit: S. Blair Hedges.
5: Map of Europe showing locations of cities (black circles) where prints were found to contain printed wormholes of the northern (blue, 1.4 mm holes) and southern (red, 2.3 mm holes) species. Credit: S. Blair Hedges.
Wormholes from centuries-old art prints reveal the history of the 'worms'
2012-11-21
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Human obedience: The myth of blind conformity
2012-11-21
In the 1960s and 1970s, classic social psychological studies were conducted that provided evidence that even normal, decent people can engage in acts of extreme cruelty when instructed to do so by others. However, in an essay published November 20 in the open access journal PLOS Biology, Professors Alex Haslam and Stephen Reicher revisit these studies' conclusions and explain how awful acts involve not just obedience, but enthusiasm too—challenging the long-held belief that human beings are 'programmed' for conformity.
This belief can be traced back to two landmark empirical ...
Beneficial microbes are 'selected and nurtured' in the human gut
2012-11-21
Animals, including humans, actively select the gut microbes that are the best partners and nurture them with nutritious secretions, suggests a new study led by Oxford University, and published November 20 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology.
The Oxford team created an evolutionary computer model of interactions between gut microbes and the lining (the host epithelial cell layer) of the animal gut. The model shows that beneficial microbes that are slow-growing are rapidly lost, and need to be helped by host secretions, such as specific nutrients, that favour the beneficial ...
The evolution of human intellect: Human-specific regulation of neuronal genes
2012-11-21
A new study published November 20 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology has identified hundreds of small regions of the genome that appear to be uniquely regulated in human neurons. These regulatory differences distinguish us from other primates, including monkeys and apes, and as neurons are at the core of our unique cognitive abilities, these features may ultimately hold the key to our intellectual prowess (and also to our potential vulnerability to a wide range of 'human-specific' diseases from autism to Alzheimer's).
Exploring which features in the genome separate ...
Study finds link between access to online health information and use of clinical services
2012-11-21
DENVER, Nov. 20 — Patients with online access to their medical record, including secure email communication with clinicians, had an associated increase in use of some clinical services, according to new Kaiser Permanente research published this month in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The study examined health records of more than 500,000 Kaiser Permanente members in Colorado between May 2005 and June 2010. The researchers looked at office visits, telephone encounters, after-hours clinic visits, emergency department encounters, and hospitalizations ...
Patients with online access to clinicians, medical records have increased use of clinical services
2012-11-21
CHICAGO – Patients with online access to their medical records and secure e-mail communication with clinicians had increased use of clinical services, including office visits and telephone encounters, compared to patients who did not have online access, according to a study appearing in the November 21 issue of JAMA.
"Using health information technology to foster efficient health care delivery is an important component of health care reform," according to background information in the article. "Prior studies suggest that providing patients with online access to health ...
Citicoline does not improve functional, cognitive status in patients with traumatic brain injury
2012-11-21
CHICAGO – Although approved for use for treating traumatic brain injury (TBI) in nearly 60 countries, use of citicoline in a randomized trial that included more than 1,200 participants with TBI did not result in improvement in functional and cognitive status, according to a study appearing in the November 21 issue of JAMA.
"Despite considerable advances in emergency and critical care management of TBI as well as decades of research on potential agents for neuroprotection or enhanced recovery, no effective pharmacotherapy has yet been identified," according to background ...
Xpert test for TB could help prevent deaths in southern Africa, but at substantial cost
2012-11-21
A rapid test for tuberculosis (TB) could help to reduce TB deaths, improve TB treatment, and also offer reasonably good value for money if introduced in southern Africa, an area that has high rates of HIV and a type of TB that is resistant to some drugs (multi-drug resistant TB), according to a study published in this week's PLOS Medicine.
The World Health Organization (WHO) recently recommended the use of a new diagnostic test for TB (the Xpert MTB/RIF test), which can show a result within 2 hours, in people at high risk of multi-drug resistant TB and/or HIV-associated ...
More work needed on models to predict risk of chronic kidney disease
2012-11-21
Models used for predicting the likelihood of individuals developing chronic kidney disease and for predicting disease progression in people who already have the condition are useful tools but not yet robust enough to help inform clinical guidelines, according to a study published in this week's PLOS Medicine.
Chronic kidney disease is a common but serious condition which can lead to kidney failure. The condition cannot be cured but progression of the disease can be slowed by controlling high blood pressure and diabetes, both causes of chronic kidney disease, and by adopting ...
New guidance for cluster randomized trials
2012-11-21
In this week's PLOS Medicine, Charles Weijer and colleagues present the Ottawa Statement on the Ethical Design and Conduct of Cluster Randomized Trials, which aims to provide researchers and research ethics committees with detailed guidance on the ethical design, conduct, and review of CRTs.
###
Funding: This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (grant numbers MOP85066, MOP89790). CW and JMG hold Tier I Canada Research Chairs. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the ...
Discovery offers new treatment for epilepsy
2012-11-21
New drugs derived from components of a specific diet used by children with severe, drug-resistant epilepsy could offer a new treatment, according to research published today in the journal Neuropharmacology.
Scientists from Royal Holloway, in collaboration with University College London, have identified specific fatty acids that have potent antiepileptic effects, which could help control seizures in children and adults.
The discovery could lead to the replacement of the ketogenic diet, which is often prescribed for children with severe drug-resistant epilepsy. The ...