In case you missed it

In case you missed it

Idaho? I dunno • Photo by Andrey Konstantinov on Unsplash

Originally published 28 December 1998

Here are some true sci­ence sto­ries you may have missed dur­ing the past year, most­ly drawn from the pages of the jour­nal Sci­ence:

  1. Aus­trali­a’s Com­mon­wealth Sci­en­tif­ic and Indus­tri­al Research Orga­ni­za­tion and a com­pa­ny called Bio­clip Pty Ltd. announced the devel­op­ment of self-shear­ing sheep. No more mus­cled, bare-chest­ed Aussie hunks wield­ing shears in big dusty sheds. Now, at shear­ing time, the ani­mals will be giv­en an injec­tion of a pro­tein sub­stance called Bio­clip, and in a week the wool falls off clean to the skin. Of course, 150 mil­lion Aussie sheep will need to be fit­ted with hair­nets to catch the falling wool, a task macho ex-shear­ers may find too sissy.
  2. A group of sci­en­tists from the Cen­ter for Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion in Seat­tle has devel­oped a method to extract and ampli­fy DNA from bear feces and match the feces to indi­vid­ual bears. Any bear that makes a mess in the for­est can now be iden­ti­fied. Why any­one would both­er remains unclear.
  3. Sev­er­al stud­ies report­ed a cor­re­la­tion between the study of music and brain devel­op­ment. Gov­er­nor Zell Miller of Geor­gia is ahead of the curve. In Jan­u­ary, he pro­posed to the Geor­gia leg­is­la­ture that the state buy a clas­si­cal tape or CD for every baby born in the state — more than 100,000 a year. Mozart and an bulging cere­bel­lum could soon be the birthright of every Georgian.
  4. The pres­ti­gious sci­ence jour­nal Nature broke new ground last month when it pub­lished a full-page ad show­ing a naked human cou­ple in full-body embrace. The ad tout­ed a Swiss biotech com­pa­ny called Dic­ta­gene that sells chem­i­cal­ly syn­the­sized pro­teins. Appar­ent­ly, the entwined bod­ies are sup­posed to sym­bol­ize the beau­ty of pro­teins. What next? Sci­ence centerfolds?
  5. The world’s largest and stinki­est plant bloomed in June at Miami’s Fairchild Trop­i­cal Gar­den, only the sixth doc­u­ment­ed bloom of the huge plant in the Unit­ed States in this cen­tu­ry. The plant is a native of Suma­tra, where its stench — which resem­bles decay­ing flesh — attracts the car­rion bee­tles that it relies upon for pol­li­na­tion. Whether car­rion bee­tles are avail­able in Flori­da to do their task, we were not told, but 5,500 humans showed up to admire the 5‑foot-high blos­som and sniff the mal­odor­ous fumes.
  6. Watch out for those coun­ter­feit Ida­ho spuds! Appar­ent­ly, impos­tor pota­toes have been passed off as the real thing. To counter the scam, the Ida­ho Pota­to Com­mis­sion asked chemist Kim Ander­son to find a way to iden­ti­fy the true Gem State tuber. She devised a method based on minute amounts of cop­per, zinc, nick­el, and dozens of oth­er ele­ments in the pota­to, which pre­sum­ably match the unique com­po­si­tion of Ida­ho soil. Con­sumers may won­der why they should pre­fer Ida­ho pota­toes, if it takes an ana­lyt­ic chemist to tell the difference.
  7. Do octopi have fun? A ques­tion wor­thy of a sci­en­tif­ic answer. Ani­mal behav­ior­ists Jen­nifer Math­er of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Leth­bridge in Alber­ta and Roland Ander­son of the Seat­tle Aquar­i­um gave plas­tic pill bot­tles to octopi in tanks. At first the ani­mals showed mere curios­i­ty, but soon devised a game with the objects, push­ing them into the water stream flow­ing into the tank and let­ting them drift back, over and over again. This is the first time inver­te­brates have been observed to play.
  8. Gib­bons have been long thought to be most bliss­ful­ly part­nered of pri­mates, liv­ing in tight, sta­ble fam­i­ly units. “The impres­sion was that they were monog­a­mous… [and] there­fore, that they were fair­ly bor­ing,” says anthro­pol­o­gist Thad Bartlett of Dick­in­son Col­lege in Penn­syl­va­nia. But at an April meet­ing of the Amer­i­can Asso­ci­a­tion of Phys­i­cal Anthro­pol­o­gists, Bartlett offered evi­dence that gib­bons are as randy as their human cousins, engag­ing in infi­deli­ty, aban­don­ment, and rais­ing step-chil­dren from oth­er unions.
  9. Also on the pri­mate front, Oliv­er the pur­port­ed human-chimp hybrid has been deci­sive­ly debunked. After a check­ered career in side shows and theme parks, Oliv­er now resides in an ani­mal res­cue cen­ter in San Anto­nio, Texas. For sev­er­al decades, the ani­mal attract­ed atten­tion because of his habit of walk­ing upright, his dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly small, bald head, and his “eeri­ly human” face. He is also known to sit down at night with a beer to watch tele­vi­sion. All of which led to wide­ly-cir­cu­lat­ed rumors that he was the prod­uct of a human-chim­panzee mat­ing. Not so, say geneti­cists John Ely of San Anto­nio’s Trin­i­ty Uni­ver­si­ty and Char­lene Moore of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Texas, who per­formed a genet­ic analy­sis of Oliv­er’s blood. The beer-sip­ping pri­mate is all chimp, they con­clude, his tele­vi­sion habits notwithstanding.
  10. The Hall of Explo­ration at Bal­ti­more’s new Colum­bus Cen­ter inau­gu­rat­ed an inno­v­a­tive sci­ence dis­play: a research lab behind plate glass, staffed by the Uni­ver­si­ty of Mary­land’s Cen­ter of Marine Biotech­nol­o­gy. The idea was that the pub­lic would line up at the win­dow to watch real, hon­est-to-God, white-coat­ed sci­en­tists at work. The exhib­it was soon closed as a flop. Appar­ent­ly, vis­i­tors found the mul­ti­me­dia shark dis­play vast­ly more interesting.
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