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| Great Horned Owl, Golden Gate Park |
There's still a 90 percent chance of rain in today's forecast, but the early stuff got reined in, allowing the sun to reign all morning. (It's still dry at 2 p.m.)
You've probably heard of microbes that produce methane, a potent greenhouse gas, but have you heard about the microbes that eat it? An article in the March issue of Science News is about such microbes being discovered in the tree bark of an Australian species (Melaleuca quinquenervia), but the microbes might live in other tree species as well. (Earlier news of the discovery here.)
And speaking of microbes, I've gotta share another passage from The Secret Language of Cells: "While inside the cell, Ebola uses various evasion techniques. One viral protein that covers Ebola RNA helps evasion in multiple ways. Cell sensors recognize viral RNA and trigger attacks. Ebola's protein places phosphate tags to alter production of the cell's attack molecules. The same protein disrupts the cell's attempt to place tags on the virus. At the same time, the protein also prevents viral RNA attachment to cell recognition receptors. It is hard to understand how one protein call do all of this." [Emphasis added.]
I mention this only because it hints at the complexity of the whole universe of cells and microbes interacting within our own bodies. Eight percent of all human DNA comes from viruses that have placed their DNA into human genomes. One viral protein found in the human placenta allowed us to receive nutrients from our mothers while we were in her womb; without it, we'd have died. Are microbes our lifelong companions, or are they as much of who we are as all the other cells that comprise our bodies?
"With a hundred trillion microbes in the gut," Dr. Lieff continues, "and another thousand trillion viruses hovering over them, the sum of gut microbes has been called an additional human organ.... Collectively, microbes (mostly bacteria) in the gut have three million genes compared to twenty-four thousand in human cells. With these genes, microbes produce diverse molecules and signals, many of which are needed by humans for survival.... In many ways, humans have become completely dependent on the effects of friendly microbes in the gut."
There was an artice in the New York Times today about the evolution of our eyeballs that discussed how Darwin himself was perplexed by the evolutionary means of producing such a complex organ. In Darwin's day, microbes were only just being discovered and were called "animalcules." He had no idea of their import to human life, but I'm sure he'd have been fascinated the coevolution of animalcules and such big creatures owls, hawks, and people.
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| I spotted this red-shouldered hawk yesterday as it relaxed on a former cypress limb that probably overhung Lincoln Avenue. |
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| It didn't take long to get the job done. |
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| It must have been nice to have a warm and sunny morning to get the preening chores done before getting back to incubation duties. |
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| A moment later.... |
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| Tulips are coming up in the Wilhelmina Garden at the Dutch Windmill. |
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