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Meet the Guinea Worm

Screen Shot 2016-03-14 at 10.48.20 PM.pngGuinea worm disease is caused by a parasitic worm found in stagnant waters of Africa. It has been known since early recorded history with possible mentions in the Bible and a definite reference (along with a treatment method for removing the worm that is still used today) in the Ebers Papyrus, an ancient scroll written around 1500B.C.
Presently, only four countries, Chad, Ethiopia, Mali and South Sudan have reported cases of the disease. The worm, Dracunculus medinesis infects its (human) host through the drinking of unfiltered water inhabited by the larval forms that have been eaten by “water fleas.” When a person drinks water containing these water fleas, the larva are released from their insect host while in the stomach and burrow through the digestive tract into the body cavity where they grow into adult worms. After fertilization, male worms die in the host, but female worms can grow up to 2-3 feet long.

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A section of the Ebers Papyrus

The insidious nature of the beast is the way that it manipulates the host (human) when it is ready to release larvae. At this time, the worm will burrow to the surface of the skin (usually on the foot) where it will cause a blister. When the blister erupts, it causes a painful burning sensation that is somewhat alleviated when immersed in water.

Whenever the blistered area is immersed, the worm will eject a milky liquid containing millions of larvae into the water to repeat the life cycle. During this time, the pain can be disabling and the blisters are easily infected with bacteria.
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As the worm emerges, it can be captured and wound around a twig, etc. Pulling the worm will result in a break that worsens the condition, but if attended to, the worm can be removed a bit at a time as it emerges from the blister over the course of days to weeks.
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Since the 1980s eradication of the Guinea Worm has been aggressively pursued by a number of organizations, most notably the Carter Center, founded by President Jimmy Carter. The Carter Center has coordinated the efforts of the Nation Ministries of Health in affected countries, with the World Health Organization, The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and UNICEF. Together, these organizations provide education to at risk populations, water filters, and pumps to obtain uninfected groundwater.
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These efforts have reduced the number of Guinea Worm Disease cases from 3.5 million in 17 countries in1986 to just 22 in four countries in 2015 (provisional total). Importantly, humans are the principal host of Guinea Worms, therefore, if all cases of infection can be eliminated for just one year, this should lead to complete eradication of the organism.

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Posted by on March 14, 2016 in Uncategorized

 

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Life on Mars

I’m going to go out on a limb here:

With the recent discovery of (evidence for) liquid water on the surface of Mars, there’s going to be life there.

My own personal hypothesis would be that it’s either going to be terrestrial life that was transported to Mars via rock ejected from Earth by the impact of past meteors or the other way around, an idea known as panspermia. One solid possibility would be Earth –> Mars via ejecta following the Chicxulub asteroid impact in Mexico. It is commonly thought that Mars may have been a much more hospitable place long ago, including large seas suggested by potassium-thorium-iron enriched areas visible by Gamma Ray Spectrometer. This enrichment may be explained as an accumulation deposited by liquid water on the surface of the planet.

A superimposition of gamma-ray data from Mars Odyssey's Gamma-Ray Spectrometer onto topographic data from the laser altimeter onboard the Mars Global Surveyor.

A superimposition of gamma-ray data from Mars Odyssey’s Gamma-Ray Spectrometer onto topographic data from the laser altimeter onboard the Mars Global Surveyor.

If this is correct, some residual bacteria-like organisms remaining from a more biotic history could have seeded Earth in a Chicxulub-like impact of Mars.

“Tetsuya Hara, et al, at Kyoto Sangyo University in Japan have calculated that a large amount of Earth landed on the Moon and Mars, but also on other planets that may be compatible with life—the Jovian moon, Europa, the Saturnian moon, Enceladus, and more surprisingly even planets like Earth orbiting other stars.” (from askwhy)

On porrible map of Chicxulub asteroid ejecta

On possible map of Chicxulub asteroid ejecta

Regardless of any relationship between the life of the two planets, I have to say that I’m firmly on the side of manifest destiny here. I completely understand the arguments against contaminating another planet with life from this one, but I don’t imagine a future without Earthlings spreading to the other planets of this solar system.

Without the need to transport masses of water, NASA (and other Terrestrial space agencies) may suddenly see a manned mission to Mars as imminently do-able. The question changes from could we go to should we go? What are our obligations if our presence there will disturb an extant biosystem?

Carl Sagan said “no.” It was his belief that any planet with indigenous life should be protected from human intrusion. Perhaps an inspiration for Star Trek’s Prime Directive.

On this issue, I would have to part with Sagan’s advice – perhaps on purely selfish grounds. I want humans to explore the heavens and I believe that a strict policy like this Prime Directive would prevent that forever.

If you are reading this, take a moment contribute your two bits.

If possible, should humans go to and possibly remain, on Mars?

 
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Posted by on September 29, 2015 in Uncategorized

 

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Photosynthesis: Turning CO2 into O2 – or maybe not.

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It’s so simple, right?

“The evolution of photosynthesis remade the Archaean Earth. Before photosynthesis, the air and oceans were anoxic. Now the air is a biological construction, a fifth of which is free molecular oxygen”  – Bendall et al. 2008cIt’s easy to mistakenly think that photosynthesis turns CO2 into O2, people have been doing it for years. In fact, you’d even be remiss not to initially think that it’s the case – it is, after all, a simple conclusion to make and William of Ockham tells us to always start with the simplest ideas.

How could we do this experiment now?

We could  use radiolabeled Oxygen in our CO2 and then look for that same radioactive O2 being produced as a waste from the plant. But if that experiment were done, we’d quickly see that this wasn’t the case. As we will see below, this experiment was eventually what was done and instead of labeled CO2 being produced, the leaves of the plant becoming radio labeled, while only ‘cold’ CO2 was being released. Vexing!

One complication in addressing this idea comes from the very notion of air as being something to begin with. So, what is air? – and what happens (to air) during photosynthesis?

The Dutch scientist and physician, Jan Baptista van Helmont (1579-1644), did some early experiments to understand the nature of photosynthesis. His experiment was to determine where the mass of the plant came from. He suspected that it would be from the soil it was growing in, and did a very simple experiment that refuted this hypothesis. He reasoned that if the mass of the plant came from the soil, then it was a simple conversion that he could observe happening over time as soil was depleted resulting in an equal growth in mass of the plant. His experiment used a potted willow tree planted in 200 lbs of soil. In five years, his 5 lb sprig grew to 169 lbs, using only 2 oz. of soil.

Clearly the mass was coming from somewhere else. Knowing that he watered his tree regularly, he speculated that this was the source of the tree’s growing mass.

Helmont’s experiment did nothing to answer the question directly, but it does introduce a new player into the mix: Water… H2O. There’s Oxygen in water too – another possibility?

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What could possibly have killed this mouse?

In 1771 Joseph Priestley came onto the scene with experiments examining the nature of air as something more than just “nothing.” He noticed that a flame tainted the air with a kind of pollutant that was not amenable to animal life. He called this pollutant, phlogiston. Phlogiston could be produced by burning a candle in a closed container until the candle put itself out. Then, any animal (he used a mouse), that was put in this phlogistated air would quickly die. Yet a sprig of mint could counter this effect and somehow clean up the phlogistated air.

What do we know now?

1. Air is not just ‘nothing.’

2. Air quality (composition) is affected by certain biologic and abiologic processes.

a. Candle flames pollute the air with something toxic to animals (at least mice)

b. A mint sprig is sufficient to neutralize or eliminate this pollutant

Another Dutchman, Ingenhousz determined that de-phlogistation by plants occurs only in the light and required he green parts of plants to accomplish this.

(Much of the above material can be found in the excellent History of Research Page)

How to observe these gasses more easily? Perhaps under water, where gas will appear as bubbles.

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A simple experimental setup to measure photosynthesis

“When a sprig [of Elodea] is placed upside down in a dilute solution of NaHCO3 (which serves as a source of CO2) and illuminated with a flood lamp, oxygen bubbles are soon given off from the cut portion of the stem. ” -from a History of Photosynthesis. Using this device (pictured below) as a readout, F.F. Blackman measured gas production under various conditions by observing the production of bubbles under a number of conditions.

Data from such an experiment looks like this:

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The data

From these data, Blackman concluded that photosynthesis occurred in several stages, the first was a ‘light-limited’ stage that hastened with increasing light intensity, the second did not increase with increasing light intensity and required the work of enzymes (accounting for the effect of heat speeding up the reaction).

The Dutch scientist, van Niel  first suggested the idea of Oxygen gas coming from H2O based on his observations of purple sulfur bacteria converting H2S to S2 and assuming a parallel reaction was occurring in green plants.

CO2 + 2H2S → (CH2O) + H2O + 2S             (observed in purple sulfur bacteria)

CO2 + 2H2O → (CH2O) + H2O + O2             (predicted in green plants)

The final proof of this did not come until Ruben and Kamen were able to use an isotope of Oxygen to trace its route through photosynthesis.

Using algae, given ‘heavy’ oxygen in the form of either water or carbon dioxide, it was found that the isotope given in H2O was invariably that found in the resulting O2. Their experimental procedure is outlined in the diagram as two parallel experiments:

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% 18O FOUND IN
H2O CO2 O2
START 0.85 0.20
FINISH 0.85 0.61* 0.86
START 0.20 0.68
FINISH 0.20 0.57 0.20

So, what we should be saying is not that plants turn carbon dioxide into oxygen, but that plants turn carbon dioxide into sugar, which is precisely why van Helmont was confused by a 169 lb. tree growing from only 2 oz. of soil. He probably never would have believed that all that tree was actually built out of thin air.

 
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Posted by on September 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

 

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Counties Declared in Drought Emergency Summer 2012 (4)

It would be easy to forget that we are still in a fairly severe drought in the midwest. Over the summer of 2012 82 counties in Kansas were declared as federal drought emergencies in early July 2012. Just two weeks later governor Sam Brownback declared every county in the state to be in a drought emergency. Each declaration has different meanings as the first allows for federal aid for agriculture and related industries, while the second allowed water to be taken from lakes in state parks to aid the same industries(1,2). 

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100% of Kansa counties in drought emergency August 2012

This summer the drought was hard to miss. Ponds were down to puddles, crops were failing and getting tilled back into the soil all around, trees were turning autumn colors and dying in July and lawns were dead with the ground dry and cracked.

Personally, I’ve never seen anything like it. Apparently, this was the worst drought in 25 years, if not more. Not long after, the East coast was getting hit by freakishly early winter storms and ‘superstore Sandy’. (I got regular updates from my family, who all live in the mid-Atlantic region).

Now, on the last days of December, the drought feels like a thing of the past, however, we are still in severe conditions here in the Midwest (I live in Kansas). I heard yesterday on NPR that Kansas is still 17″ below normal rainfall, and a quick look to the NOAA shows that the entire state is somewhere between ‘severe’ and ‘exceptional’ conditions (3). 

With luck, I will be shoveling endlessly this winter and we can recover somewhat by spring.

 

I want to apologize, I haven’t been posting much lately because my family has been away and I have spent most of every day outside working on the shop from first light until dark and then collapsed exhausted inside. 

I did have some time while waiting for my wife’s car in the shop yesterday to get a simple children’s book I wrote for/with my son put together as an iBook. It was submitted yesterday and will likely be available for free download sometime this coming week. I’ll post again when that’s available. (Don’t expect much though, the original was a hand-drawn mini book that I redrew using Fifty Three, Inc.’s ‘Paper’ App and an artist’s stylus… and I’m not that much of an artist)

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1. http://www.ksda.gov/news/id/472

1. http://blogs.kansas.com/weather/2012/07/26/kansas-governor-declares-entire-state-is-in-drought-emergency/

3.http://www.crh.noaa.gov/eax/?n=drought

4. http://www.kwo.org/reports_publications/Drought.htm

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Almost forgot

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Mercury, the closest planet to the sun has temperatures ranging from 400 degrees C on the surface to -170 degrees C in some permanently shadowed craters.

I was just about to go to sleep when I remembered that my biology class is having a quiz tomorrow and I should post a hint to an extra credit question. Rather than post it here, I’ll refer you to the Nature.com site that has extraordinary new data about a newly identified water reservoir in our solar system.

Follow this link to Nature’s news story about the finding.

 
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Posted by on December 4, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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