Grades 9-12 - Life Science

  • Maggots, leeches, parasitic worms
    Maggots, leeches, parasitic worms

    Three gross “biotherapies” are gaining medical attention, and two already have FDA approval as “medical devices” (?) ! Leeches can suck excess blood after surgery, and maggots remove dead tissue and kill bacteria in hard-to-heal wounds. Parasitic worms might fight ulcerative colitis — a widespread bowel disease. Maybe.


    Thursday, December 23rd, 2010
  • Bathed in poison!
    Bathed in poison!

    All life requires oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, carbon, hydrogen and phosphorus. Until now. Bacteria in a toxic California lake that have replaced phosphorus with arsenic are quite healthy, thank you very much. Tune in for our scientific remake of the boffo comedy: “Arsenic in Old Lake!”


    Thursday, December 2nd, 2010
  • Biofuel advance
    Biofuel advance

    Ethanol in gasoline now comes mainly from corn, a food crop. Cellulose, found in crop wastes, wood and switchgrass, could be a great source of ethanol, if only the yeast that makes ethanol could digest cellulose. A new genetic alteration forced yeast to break down cellulose, and then convert it into ethanol.


    Friday, September 10th, 2010
  • Seeing the cell
    Seeing the cell

    Imagine a transistor so tiny that it can slip inside a living cell to measure electrical potential. Now coat that transistor so the cell will pull it inside without damage. Then adapt the transistor to measure RNA and proteins. Nanofabrication tricks convert science fiction into science fact!


    Thursday, August 12th, 2010
  • Bee with stinger coming from its snout poking its head out of the dirt
    Pollinator crisis ahead

    Many of the tastiest crops can’t pollinate themselves: melons, cucumbers, strawberries, almonds, cacao. But pollinators — both native and managed — are under threat from diseases and pesticides. They aren’t finding enough to eat. Their colonies are dying. What can we do?


    Thursday, August 5th, 2010
  • Spider silk: Material of the future?
    Spider silk: Material of the future?

    Strong, tough, sticky, elastic and biodegradable, silk may be used for a mesh to support injured tissues, or as a temporary container for drugs, stem cells and growth factors. As scientists divine the secret of how spiders and silkworms make silk, they are finding ways to engineer silk into medical devices.


    Thursday, July 29th, 2010
  • Tales of the whales
    Tales of the whales

    Some people blame strandings on a noisy ocean. A new study shows that the endangered North Atlantic right whale is shouting to be heard. Another whale tale: a giant killing whale was recently discovered in Peru, with about the biggest teeth in history…


    Thursday, July 15th, 2010
  • For many, fireflies are at the center happy childhood memories. For science, they  could be a peephole into the brain.
    A flash in the night sky

    Most fireflies flash on their own schedule, but some do it all at once. In most animals, the guys try to stand out from the crowd – but these flies try to make a crowd! What’s the evolutionary advantage? What can we learn about bug-brains from the “all-at-once” display of synchronous fireflies?


    Thursday, July 8th, 2010
  • Treatment defeats phony hormones!
    Treatment defeats phony hormones!

    When chemicals in the water trigger the endocrine system, male fish can start looking and acting female. What happens once chemicals from plastics, drugs and our own endocrine system are flushed down the toilet? Can we prevent them from entering our streams and harming wildlife?


    Thursday, June 24th, 2010
  • Holy horseradish! Ancient roots of pain
    Holy horseradish! Ancient roots of pain

    Horseradish, onions and caffeine all activate a group of chemical receptors that can trigger a pain signal. Turns out the same receptors exist in fruitflies, mussels, corals and mule deer. Why has this receptor survived a half-billion years? Because it protects against toxic chemicals – even if they taste good in small doses!


    Thursday, March 18th, 2010


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