Interspecies Hybrids Play a Vital Role in Evolution – Quanta Magazine

Controversies like this one underscore the possibility that the bad reputation of naturally occurring hybrids is not entirely justified. Historically, hybrids have often been associated with the sterile or unfit offspring of maladaptive crossings (such as the mule, born of a female horse and a male donkey). Naturalists have traditionally viewed hybridization in the wild as a kind of irrelevant, mostly rare, dead-end fluke. If hybrids arent viable or fertile or common, how could they have much influence on evolution? But as genomic studies provide new insights into how species evolve, biologists are now seeing that, surprisingly often, hybrids play a vital role in fortifying species and helping them take on useful genes from close relatives.

In short, maladaptive pairings dont tell the full story of interbreeding. The genetic transfer that takes place between organisms while their lineages are diverging has a hand in the emergence of adaptive traits and in the creation of new species altogether. According to Arnold, not only is it common for newly emerging species to reacquire genes through hybrid populations, but its probably the most common way evolution proceeds, whether youre talking about viruses, plants, bacteria or animals.

Most recently, signatures of hybridization have turned up in studies on the evolution of the jaguar. In a paper published last month in Science Advances, a team of researchers from institutions spanning seven countries examined the genomes of the five members of the Panthera genus, often called the big cats: lions, leopards, tigers, jaguars and snow leopards. The scientists sequenced the genomes of the jaguar and leopard for the first time and compared them with the already existing genomes for the other three species, finding more than 13,000 genes that were shared across all five. This information helped them construct a phylogenetic tree (in essence, a family tree for species) to describe how the different animals diverged from a common ancestor approximately 4.6 million years ago.

Some of these adaptations, however, may not have originated in the jaguar lineage at all. Eiziriks team found evidence of many crossings between the different Panthera species. In one case, two genes found in the jaguar pointed to a past hybridization with the lion, which would have occurred after their phylogenetic paths had forked. Both genes turned out to be involved in optic nerve formation; Eizirik speculated that the genes encoded an improvement in vision the jaguars needed or could exploit. For whatever reasons, natural selection favored the lions genes, which took the place of those the jaguar originally had for that trait.

Such hybridization illustrates why the Eizirik groups delineation of the Panthera evolutionary tree is so noteworthy. The bottom line is that this has all become more complex, Eizirik said. Species eventually do become separated, but its not as immediate as people would frequently say. He added, The genomes we studied reflected this mosaic of histories.

Although supporting data as detailed and as thoroughly analyzed as Eiziriks is rare, the underlying idea that hybridization contributes to species development is by no means new. Biologists have known since the 1930s that hybridization occurs frequently in plants (its documented in about 25 percent of flowering plant species in the U.K. alone) and plays an important role in their evolution. In fact, it was a pair of botanists who, in 1938, coined the phrase introgressive hybridization, or introgression, to describe the pattern of hybridization and gene flow they saw in their studies. Imagine members of two species lets call them A and B that cross to produce 50-50 hybrid offspring with equal shares of genes from each parent. Then picture those hybrids crossing back to breed with members of species A, and assume that their offspring do the same. Many generations later, nature is left with organisms from species A whose genomes have retained a few genes from species B. Studies have demonstrated that this process could yield entirely new plant species as well.

But animal species seemed more discrete, at least for a while. Most zoologists supported the biological species concept proposed in 1942 by the legendary biologist Ernst Mayr, who was one of the architects of the modern synthesis, the version of evolution theory that combined Darwins natural selection with the science of genetics. Mayrs biological species concept was based on reproductive isolation: A species was defined as a population that could not or did not breed with other populations. Even when exceptions to that rule started to emerge in the 1970s, many biologists considered hybridization to be too rare to be important in animals. We had a blinkered attitude, said James Mallet, an evolutionary biologist at Harvard University. Today, he added, saying that such hybridizations dont affect reconstructions of evolutionary history or that this wasnt useful in adaptive evolution thats no longer tenable.

This is especially true now that computational and genomic tools prove just how prolific introgression is even in our own species. Since 2009, studies have revealed that approximately 50,000 to 60,000 years ago, some modern humans spreading out of Africa interbred with Neanderthals; they later did so with another ancestral human group, the Denisovans, as well. The children in both cases went on to mate with other modern humans, passing the genes they acquired down to us. At present, researchers estimate that some populations have inherited 1 to 2 percent of their DNA from Neanderthals, and up to 6 percent of it from Denisovans fractions that amount to hundreds of genes.

In 2012, Mallet and his colleagues showed a large amount of gene flow between two hybridizing species of Heliconius butterfly. The following year, they determined that approximately 40 percent of the genes in one species had come from the other. Mallets team is now working with another pair of butterfly species that exchange even more of their genes: something like 98 percent, he said. Only the remaining 2 percent of the genome carries the information that separates the species and reflects their true evolutionary trajectory. A similar blurring of species lines has already been found in malaria-carrying mosquitoes of the Anopheles genus.

Other types of organisms, from fish and birds to wolves and sheep, experience their share of introgression, too. The boundaries between species are now known to be less rigid than previously thought, said Peter Grant, an evolutionary biologist at Princeton University who, along with his fellow Princeton biologist (and wife) Rosemary Grant, has been studying the evolution of Galpagos finches for decades. Phylogenetic reconstructions depict treelike patterns as if there is a clear barrier between species that arises instantaneously and is never breached. This may be misleading.

Arnold concurred. Its a web of life, he said, rather than a simple bifurcating tree of life. That also means its more necessary than ever before to examine the entire genome, and not just selected genes, to understand a species evolutionary relationships and generate the correct phylogeny. And even that might not be enough. It may well be, Mallet said, that some actual evolutionary patterns are still completely irrecoverable.

Genomic studies cant create a complete picture of the introgressive movements of genes. Whenever one species inherits genes from another, the outcome can be either deleterious, neutral or adaptive. Natural selection tends to weed out the first, although some of the genes we have inherited from Neanderthals, for example, may be involved in disorders such as diabetes, obesity or depression. Neutral introgressed regions drift, so its possible for them to remain in the genome for very long periods of time without having an observable effect.

But its the beneficial introgressions that particularly fascinate researchers. Take the Neanderthal and Denisovan DNA again: Those genes have allowed people to adapt to the harsh environs of places like the Tibetan plateau, protecting them against the harmful effects of high altitudes and low oxygen saturation, which in nonlocals can cause stroke, miscarriage and other health risks. Variants from interbreeding with archaic humans have also conferred immunity to certain infections and made skin and hair pigmentation more suitable for Eurasian climes.

Mallets butterflies, too, reflect evidence of adaptive hybridization, particularly with traits involved in mimicry and predator avoidance. Researchers had observed that although most Heliconius species had highly divergent wing coloration and patterning, some bore a striking resemblance to one another. The researchers believed that these species had independently converged on these traits, but it turns out thats only partially correct. Mallet and others have found that introgression was also responsible. The same goes for Galpagos finches: Pieces of their genomes that control for features including beak size and shape were shared through hybridization. Once again, parallel evolution cant explain everything.

For these effects to occur, the rate of hybridization can be and most likely is very small. For Mallets almost entirely hybridized butterflies, the occasional trickle of one hybrid mating every 1,000 normal matings is sufficient to completely homogenize genes between the species, he said. Thats pretty exciting.

As these patterns of introgression have become more and more predominant in the scientific literature, researchers have set out to uncover their evolutionary consequences. These go beyond the fact that speciation tends to be a much more gradual process than its often made out to be. Diversification, adaptation and adaptive evolution really do seem to be driven quite often by genes moving around, Arnold said.

The research done by Eizirik and his team makes a compelling case for this. Around the time when the gene introgressions they analyzed occurred, the populations of all five Panthera species are estimated to have declined, likely due to climate changes. The smaller a population is, the greater the probability that a harmful mutation will get affixed to its genome. Perhaps the gene flow found between the different species, then, rescued them from extinction, providing adaptive mutations and patching deleterious ones. This kind of infusion of genetic mutations is so large that it can cause really rapid evolution, Arnold said.

And the process doesnt end with speeding up evolution in a single species. Adaptive introgression can in turn contribute significantly to adaptive radiation, a process by which one species rapidly diversifies into a large variety of types, which then form new lineages that continue to adapt independently. The textbook case can be found in the great lakes of East Africa, which are home to hundreds upon hundreds of cichlid species, a type of fish that diversified in explosive bursts (on the evolutionary timescale) from common ancestors, largely in response to climatic and tectonic shifts in their environment. Today, cichlids vary widely in form, behavior and ecology thanks in large part to introgressive hybridization.

Biologists will need many more years to understand the full importance of hybridization to evolution. For example, Arnold wants to see further investigations like the ones that have been done on the finches in the Galpagos and the wolves of Yellowstone National Park: behavioral, metabolic and other analyses that will reveal how much of introgression is adaptive and how much is deleterious or neutral as well as whether adaptive introgression affects only particular kinds of genes, or if it acts in a more widespread manner.

Unfortunately, for conservationists and others challenged with managing the diversity of imperiled species, the absence of satisfactory answers poses more immediate problems. They must often weigh the value of protecting wild hybrid populations against the harm hybrids can do to established species, including the ones from which they emerged.

A case in point: In the 1950s, a pair of California bait dealers from the Salinas Valley, seeking to expand their business, hopped into a pickup truck and took off to central Texas and New Mexico. They brought back barred tiger salamanders, which could grow to more than double the size of Californias native tiger salamander. The new species quickly proved to be good for the local fishermen but bad for the local ecosystem: The introduced salamanders mated with the natives, creating a hybrid breed that could outcompete its parent species. Soon the California tiger salamander found itself in danger of being wiped out entirely, and it remains a threatened species today.

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Interspecies Hybrids Play a Vital Role in Evolution - Quanta Magazine

The Evolution Of My Dividend Growth Portfolio – Seeking Alpha

When I write articles about buying shares of companies like Alibaba (BABA) and Tencent (OTCPK:TCEHY), yet call myself a dividend growth investor, Im sure that people begin to wonder what in the world is going on? I wouldnt blame them. Those singular pieces focused on high-growth stocks dont do my focus on income justice. Ive had several people reach out to me, asking about my current holdings. Its been awhile since Ive done a portfolio review piece, so I decided to spend some time putting this together so that followers, old and new, can stay up to date on my portfolios construction.

We live in a different world now than investors did in the middle of the last century. Many of the markets that have given tremendous returns throughout much of the 20th century are very mature at this point, and therefore, I dont expect a lot more growth coming out of them. Im not saying that a company like Coca-Cola (KO) is going away. I expect continued large cash flows and capital returns, but Im not satisfied with 100% exposure to slow-growth industries. I bet that KO will continue to post low-single-digit top line growth on average over the long-term as it adds brands and takes market share. This is all a very mature company needs to do: Single-digit sales growth combined with respectable margins and a sustainable share buyback with excess cash flows is all a mature company needs to produce respectable bottom line growth. Being that these companies are typically evaluated based upon a price to earnings ratio, this bodes well for their stock prices over the long-term. With that being said, I dont expect many of the current dividend aristocrats to generate wealth for their investors over the next 50 years as they did during the last 50 years, and Ive been willing to place riskier bets to attempt to capitalize on truly wealth-building opportunities elsewhere.

I dont think that any of this could come across as a controversial or revolutionary statement. As markets mature, growth slows, and expectations of future returns should change. When seeking that same sort of generational growth that early investors in the dividend aristocrats of today experienced, Im looking at new growth frontiers. Im looking for developing markets in terms of both sectors/industries and economies. In other words, when it comes to growth, Im looking at things like software, and not soft drinks.

But before we get to the growth portion of my portfolio, lets take a look at the more conservative dividend growth portion, which makes up the vast majority of my holdings. I end up writing about my more speculative bets much more often than my conservative holdings, but thats sort of the point, isnt it? When I buy shares of a dividend aristocrat, I hope that I never have to write about them again. I dont want these companies in the news. Im quite happy to sit back and watch as they slowly and steadily grow. Im happy to watch their dividends compound via re-investment in an un-noteworthy fashion and track my monthly income, which is surely trending in the right direction. For the most part, I hope that my dividend growth holdings are boring. That would mean that theyre meeting my expectations and goals.

My dividend growth investments make up nearly 75% of my portfolio. When you consider the fact that ~8.5% of my portfolio is currently in cash, this majority appears even larger. My speculative bets basket amounts to 16.7% of my portfolio, though 5 of the 11 companies that currently comprise that basket pay a growing dividend and I imagine that in a decade or so, their yields will be high enough for me to move them up into the main dividend growth category. So without further ado, here are the graphs I put together to break down my holdings.

DGI Holdings:

Speculative Growth Basket:

As you can see, I hold more holdings than many of the other DGI portfolios that are regularly tracked here on Seeking Alpha. I think only RoseNose owns more individual names. This highly diversified strategy may not be best for other investors; Im essentially a full-time investor at this point, and I have the time/energy available to track a portfolio with 75 holdings. I know Jim Cramer says that retail investors shouldnt hold more than a dozen or so stocks because of the time it takes to properly track them. I dont think there is any one magic number in terms of the right amount of holdings. I imagine it comes down to investable capital, risk tolerance, and the aforementioned time, energy, and passion for the markets. I look at a lot of professionally managed funds/sovereign wealth funds, and these portfolios are typically highly diversified. While I ultimately make investment decisions based upon my own personal goals, I like to see what the big boys and girls are doing as I strive to become a better investor. I imagine that my portfolio will continue to grow to the point where its 100 holdings or so and plateau there due to the fact that, for me at least, money doesnt grow on trees.

I understand that my industry/sector allocations are different than many of the other DGI portfolios that youll see here on Seeking Alpha. Technology, not consumer staples, utilities, or real estate, is my largest sector allocation at more than 26% of my overall portfolio. Up next is consumer cyclical and healthcare, coming in at ~16.5% and ~15%, respectively. The rest of my major sectors/industries are currently weighted fairly equally in the 7-10% range. None of these sector allocations are set in stone. Over time I buy value where I see it (healthcare throughout 2016, for example), and I imagine these weightings will change as market sentiment ebbs and flows. When I take a step back and look at my portfolio through a wider lens, Im happy with where they all currently sit.

Maybe the most glaring difference between my portfolio and others is the fact that I have basically zero exposure to energy and utilities. Ive been a bear with regard to the energy space for some time now, having divested all of my oil/gas-related names in 2015/early 2016. Id love to add exposure to the utilities back into my portfolio, but for the time being, I believe theyre irrationally overpriced in this low-rate environment. These high valuations combined with the fact that utilities typically dont offer the dividend growth that Id like to see have caused me to avoid the sector, in general.

77% of my holdings are of the large/mega cap variety. 6% are mid-caps and less than 1% are small caps. Generally, because of my focus on shareholder returns, reliable earnings, strong balance sheets and large cash reserves, Im attracted to large-cap companies. Even when I look at growth names I find myself attracted to large-/mega-cap names because of my focus on best in breed names. The cream typically rises to the top in the markets, and once a growth company becomes profitable (something that I usually wait for before investing), their market caps are relatively large. Im OK with this. Ive seen amazing stories of investors who created generational wealth with relatively small investments in early stage companies that turned into the industry leaders that we see today, but for every one of these home runs Im sure there were numerous strike outs, and sticking to the baseball metaphor, Im content to bat for average rather than power.

Nearly 92.5% of my overall portfolio is comprised of companies domiciled in North America. I dont mind being so overweight with North American (primarily American) companies because many of them are multinationals and Im getting exposure to foreign and emerging markets through their sales anyway. I have taken steps recently to reduce this vastly overweight exposure, hoping to become a bit more diversified internationally. European companies currently make up about ~5% of my portfolio and Id probably like to see that figure rise to the 10% range. Asia makes up the last ~2.5% of my portfolio; as time moves forward, Id like to see this figure rise as well, probably to the 5-10% range. Right now Im seeing better value in Europe and Asia than I am in the U.S. markets, generally. I hope to take advantage of these value gaps as the world plays catch up to the American markets.

But heres the most important graph that Ill be including in this piece: my monthly dividend income totals. Im quite pleased with the progress that Ive made in this regard and I feel confident that Im well on my way to financial freedom because of this passive income. Every few months it seems that I cross a new monthly income threshold with potentially impactful meaning to my life. I remember a few years ago when I was excited to know that my dividends could cover my utility bills if I needed them to. Now my utilities and both of our car payments could fall under the dividend income umbrella if I decided to spend the cash rather than re-invest it. I havent had a month yet where my dividend income could have potentially covered my mortgage payment, but I expect to achieve that goal within the next year or so. Tracking dividend income, rather than the overall value of my portfolio, gives me an anchor to hold on to during market volatility. This is one of the reasons why Ive become so attracted to the DGI portfolio management strategy.

Sure, if I was to eliminate my speculative growth basket and put those funds into a handful of stocks yielding 3%, my monthly income would be even higher. But since Im still in the accumulation phase, I like having that growth exposure and the opportunity to generate outsized returns over the long-term. Although I like to focus on my income stream, I still track the major market indexes and attempt to beat them on an annual basis. The competition aspect of the stock market is a large part of what I love so much about it. Having exposure to companies like Facebook and Amazon and Alibaba and Tencent as a small piece of my portfolio gives me what I believe to be the best of both worlds: steady, reliable income and the potential to make large jumps up the social ladder due to the massive potential of a sub-set of my portfolio.

All of this just goes to show that there are many ways to skin the cat in terms of a dividend growth portfolio. I dont think it matters much what ones sector/industry allocation weights look like so long as they stay true to standard value investing principles with an extra focus on shareholder return related metrics. I look forward to hearing what everyone has to say about the portfolio that Ive constructed over the last 5 years or so. I look forward to the continued journey moving forward. Until next time, best wishes all!

Disclosure: I am/we are long AAPL, DIS, T, BA, AMGN, ABBV, BMY, MDT, MRK, PFE, NVO, JNJ, AMZN, FB, GOOGL, NVDA, MA, V, EXPE, REGN, CELG, BABA, TCEHY, KR, MKC, SJM, KO, PEP, MMM, MO, HASI, NNN, STOR, VER, VTR, SBRA, OHI, CMCSA, MSFT, DLR, AVGO, NKE, QCOM, CSCO, UPS, WHR, FDX, NSRGY, C, MS, GS, BAC, JPM, TRV, BRK.B, GILD, HON, UNP, BX, BLK, UL, XLF, XLK, EZU, IEUR, DEO, BUD, VZ, KMB, IBM.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Additional disclosure: Just incase I missed a long in the disclosure form, I am long every stock mentioned in the graphs posted in this article.

Editor's Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.

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The Evolution Of My Dividend Growth Portfolio - Seeking Alpha

Justin Chon on YouTube’s evolution – Olean Times Herald

Justin Chon may have made it in Hollywood through a key role in the "Twilight" franchise, but he appreciates the "renegade" approach of YouTube. (Aug. 24)

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Justin Chon on YouTube's evolution - Olean Times Herald

Taylor Swift’s New Album Signals a Dark, Powerful Style She’s Never Shown Before – Glamour

Taylor Swift is a master of self-invention. It's been said before, but she's a success by design: behind the girl-next-door persona that's so incredibly easy to relate to (yeah! Eff that guy and his precious truck, we'll do better), there's a whole machine of thought that goes into her image. Since she burst onto the scene in 2006, we've lived through multiple incarnations, watching her style evolve at every big turning point in her career.

Country princess, pop star, retro babe, fashun lover: everyone's got their personal Swift era preference. Nowhere better is each image so succinctly summed up than the look that comes with a new album drop. So, with Reputation's cover reveal and a rumored new single on the way, we're taking a stroll back through her greatest beauty hitsand analyzing what this new era could signal.

PHOTO: Getty Images

Our first introduction to Swift as a Nashville teen, her country era was strongly, strongly boilerplate princess-themed. Innocence was the name of the game on her eponymously named album, alongside songs like "Teardrops on My Guitar" (DREW!), "Picture to Burn" (still a banger), and "Our Song." With her naturally curly hair and love for the maximum amount of glitter on both her eyeshadow and dresses, it was very much a "this girl believes in fairytales and romance" moment, and one that both made her approachable to the middle school girl demo, and set her apart from the rest of the country music scene.

PHOTO: Getty Images

"You Belong With Me" hit in 2008, and who could forget Swift pulling a Parent Trap and playing both the girl next door and the villainous popular girl. Truly, this woman contains multitudesbut the greatest trick of all was selling the idea that Swift was just an average girl looking for love. The sparkles got toned down, and while her curls were still going strong, they started to move into a more styled, barrel curl look. Spanning from Fearless to Speak Now , these were the years of her image as a lovelorn lady out for her Nicholas Sparks story. "Mine," "Dear John," "If This Was a Movie," "Better Than Revenge"there was drama, but Swift's persona was always squarely on the right of it, with her curls and lipgloss there to back her up.

PHOTO: Ethan Miller

And with Red the curls exited stage right, in favor of her now-trademark red lip and sleek bangs. This was Swift with more vindication and agency: if you wrong her, you're gonna get called out. Curls can have agency, but Swift's transition to a totally smooth style read like she was tightening her grip on deciding who the world saw. There was still the romance in her lyricsand what's more romantic than a red lip?but with Red's cover showing her face half in the shadows, only her lips and a shiny lock of hair in the light, Swift painted a narrative of a girl who'd been burnt, but was surviving. The vibe was cardigans and Keds, with red lipstick and cat eye liner; a little kitschy, '50s nostalgia-cute .

PHOTO: Getty

Ah, the age of "Blank Space," "Shake It Off," and "Bad Blood." It was an aggressive time, matched by Swift's turn to chic, femme fatale looks without a single hair out of place. Her red lips went darker, with 1989 's cover revolving around her fractured, above the fray self: lips-down on the cover, nose-up on the album liner, and a faded, Polaroid-from-a-distance aesthetic. Truly, she hit an insane balance between approachable BFF (I'm just a girl baking cookies and taking roadtrips with Karlie Kloss ) and bombshell living above the rumors (those now-signature two-piece sets; " It had to do with business ").

PHOTO: Getty Images

This 'twas not an era of much new music for Swift. Her only release was "I Don't Want to Live Forever" with Zayn Malik for 50 Shades Darker . But personally, it was a huge. With an abundance of think pieces surrounding the Kim/Kanye fiasco , at this point, the world caught on to Swift's immaculate image control. And so she transformed again.

The first signal came at Coachella , when she debuted a new platinum dye job (which came at Vogue 's persuasion ). Then at the Met Gala, she channeled Debbie Harry's punk look with dark lips and a shaggier cut. This progressed into a few other decidedly less "safe" looks, including this unexpected rendezvous with contour and bubblegum pink gloss. That was in May 2016, and as you know, she's been out of the spotlight pretty much since. (Her break from the red carpet, of course, was hardly a vacationduring her sexual assault trial earlier this month she paved the way for anyone fuzzy on consent with her concrete, unyielding testimony .)

Everything from here on is speculation, though we'll surely be seeing plenty of Swift again soon enough. But what we can gather from her new album cover is that we're in for the singer's most powerful evolution (both personally and lyrically) yet. Significantly, the cover is black and whiteand with headlines covering half Swift's face, fans are speculating that it implies we've only gotten half the story.

Her makeup is pared down and clean with the exception of a not just dark but jet-black lip, and her hair looks wet, which could allude to the concept of rebirth and renewal. Such can also be said that a snake represents the same since it sheds its skin (and it'd fit with her clean slate social media strategy). The conclusion would be that she's had her persona (and thus, her style) built a certain way, and now the real her is coming out. It's not commercial, bubblegum, or high-fashion approvedbut it's mature and authentic, a look worn with the confidence of coming into your own.

Related Stories: -Taylor Swift's New Shag Haircut Is All Kinds of Cool -Taylor Swift's 10 Most Powerful Statements From Her Sexual Assault Trial Cross-Examination -Katy Perry and Taylor Swift's Feud: A Timeline

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Taylor Swift's New Album Signals a Dark, Powerful Style She's Never Shown Before - Glamour

Gone Hunting: Shotgun shells have undergone an evolution for a resolution on lead shot issue – Greeley Tribune

I am a staunch believer in the Book of Genesis and what it teaches us about how we arrived at where we are today.

However, when it comes to shotgun ammunition, evolution is the key to successful hunting.

Thirty years ago, in 1987, the Federal government began phasing in its ban on toxic lead shot for waterfowl/migratory bird hunting. This ban spread nationwide in 1991.

The reasoning behind this ban was the thought that crippled birds that flew off, died and were then ingested by birds of prey such as our national symbol, the Bald Eagle. There was evidence to support this theory, with several instances of birds of prey found dead or dying from lead poisoning.

I know hunters that carry nothing but steel even when hunting upland/non-migratory birds just to avoid having to switch loads in the field.

Waterfowl hunters were sent scrambling for alternative ammunition. Even upland (pheasant/quail) hunters needed options if they were hunting on federal waterfowl production areas and national wildlife refuges.

The initial and often-used option to lead shot was steel shot. The results were not good. Unprepared for this new law, ammo manufacturers simply switched out steel for lead without changing much of anything else in the shell.

Steel shot is not nearly as heavy as lead shot and does not pack the wallop or shock when it contacts the target. Steel shot also patterns more tightly which reduces the "kill zone". Hunters crippled more birds but didn't kill them.

I can vividly remember hunting geese with my brother Jack in the cornfields north of Greeley back in the late 80s. The first morning flock of Canadian honkers were locked up, feet down and settling into our decoys. We emptied our shotguns on them.

It literally rained feathers on us as we watched that flock hurry into the sky and safety. Not one pellet penetrated enough to be lethal.

Ammo manufacturers tried alternative shot such as bismuth and tungsten, which were comparable to lead in weight and shocking power but not in price.

Manufacturers began to concentrate on making a better steel-shot shotgun shell. Evolution, trial and error, and test markets were used well, and finally, we have a better product.

It began with the guts of the shotshell. The wad that cradles the tiny pellets was re-tooled. It became a bit shorter to accommodate more pellets.

The primers that ignite the powder were redesigned to burn slower and reduce chamber pressure. The steel shot remained spherical but some manufacturers experimented with different shapes of the tiny BB's. I likened this to the dimples on a golf ball. Ball manufacturers claim their dimple pattern is the best for straight flight or longer flight. The same claims were made by the shotshell makers. The results of this evolutionary period are shotgun shells that contain steel pellets that perform virtually as well as lead ammo.

My favorite lead ammo continues to be a Federal shotshell that contains 1 oz. of no. 4 lead pellets pushed by 3 drams of gunpowder at 1330 feet per second. I prefer this load for upland hunting because it has been my most consistently lethal load at all ranges and in any wind and weather conditions.

Federal, Remington, Fiocchi all make loads similar to what I have just described.

I know hunters that carry nothing but steel even when hunting upland/non-migratory birds just to avoid having to switch loads in the field.

A good example of an effective modern steel load is Federal's Prairie Storm Steel. It comes in a 3-inch shell (requiring at least a 3-inch chamber in your shotgun) and launches number 3 or 4 steel shot at 1600 feet per second. Sixteen hundred feet per second is fast and should have enough wallop out at 40 yards or in the killing zone.

There are also two shapes of pellets or BB's in the Prairie Storm shell. About half of the 170 pellets are spherical while the remaining pellets are spherical with a band (called Flitestoppers). They resemble the planet Saturn and help deliver a lethal punch.

I don't hunt waterfowl much any more. I don't like to kill something that I don't like to eat. However, I do carry a box of steel shot along with me in my F-150 just in case I get the urge.

When you stop to think about it, steel shotgun shell evolution had to have a genesis, too.

Jim Vanek is a longtime hunter who lived in Greeley for many years. He can be reached at kimosabe14@msn.com.

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Gone Hunting: Shotgun shells have undergone an evolution for a resolution on lead shot issue - Greeley Tribune

The more people know about climate change and evolution, the more they disagree – Cosmos

It seems the political hyper-partisanship engulfing the United States has found yet another victim: science. New research shows that political and religious orientations are strongly associated with polarized views of scientific consensus.

Theres a twist, however: the more scientific education and literacy a person has, the more their views are likely to be polarized. These puzzling findings are outlined in a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences authored by Caitlin Drummond and Baruch Fischoff of Carnegie Mellon University.

The pair studied data from the General Social Survey about Americans views on six controversial topics: human evolution, the Big Bang, stem cell research, anthropogenic climate change, genetically modified foods and nanotechnology. For the first four issues there was significant polarization among respondents, while the last two showed little evidence of it.

Respondents who identified themselves as politically and religiously conservative were far more likely to reject scientific consensus on the polarised issues, while those who identified as liberal were more likely to accept it.

Both for other subjects, such as genetically modified food, that are controversial but have not become part of these larger social conflicts in America, Drummond and Fischoff found no connection between education and polarisation.

So how to explain this? One model the authors suggest is known as motivated reasoning which suggests that more knowledgeable individuals are more adept at interpreting evidence in support of their preferred conclusions. The authors also speculate that better educated people are more likely to know when political and religious communities have chosen sides on an issue, and hence what they should think (or say) in keeping with their identity.

This, of course, will have a substantial effect on science communications efforts. Drummond suggests that science communication on polarized topics should take into account not just science itself, but also its context and its implications for things people care about, such as their political and religious identities. While pragmatic, this may be a bitter pill to swallow for those who think that science should stand or fall on its epistemic merits.

There was one positive finding: greater trust in the scientific community meant greater agreement with the scientific consensus. Perhaps, then, scientists and sciences advocates need to work on building such trust, on both sides of the aisle.

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The more people know about climate change and evolution, the more they disagree - Cosmos

The Evolution Of Smart Speakers – Seeking Alpha

For a relatively nascent product category, smart speakers like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) Echo and Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Home are already seeing a huge influx of attention from both consumers and potential competitors eager to enter the market. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) has announced the HomePod and numerous other vendors have either unveiled or are heavily rumored to be working on versions of their own.

Harman Kardon (in conjunction with Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)), GE Lighting and Lenovo (OTCPK:LNVGY) have announced products in the US, while Alibaba (NYSE:BABA), Xiaomi (Private:XI) and JD.com (NASDAQ:JD), among others, have said they will be bringing products out in China. In addition, Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) is rumored to be building a screen-equipped smart speaker called Gizmo.

One obvious question after hearing about all the new entrants is, how can they all survive? The short answer, of course, is they won't. Nevertheless, expect to see a lot of jockeying, marketing and positioning over the next year or two because it's still very early days in the world of AI-powered and personal assistant-driven smart speakers.

Yes, Amazon has built an impressive and commanding presence with the Echo line, but there are many limitations to Echos and all current smart speakers that frustrate existing users. Thankfully, technology improvements are coming that will enable competitors to differentiate themselves from others in ways which reduce the frustration and increase the satisfaction that consumers have with smart speakers.

Part of the work involves the overall architecture of the devices and how they interact with cloud-based services. For example, one of the critical capabilities that many users want is the ability to accurately recognize different individuals that speak to the device, so that responses can be customized for different members of a household. To achieve this as quickly and accurately as possible, it doesn't make sense to try and send the audio signal to the cloud and then wait for the response. Even with superfast network connections, the inevitable delays make interactions with the device feel somewhat awkward.

The same problem exists when you try to move beyond the simple single query requests that most people are making to their smart speakers today. (Alexa, play music by horn bands, or Alexa, what is the capital of Iceland?) In order to have naturally flowing, multi-question or multi-statement conversations, the delays (or latency) have to be dramatically reduced.

The obvious answer to the problem is to do more of the recognition and response work locally on the device and not rely on a cloud-based network connection to do so. In fact, this is a great example of the larger trend of edge computing, where we are seeing devices or applications that use to rely solely on big data centers in the cloud start to do more of the computational work on their own.

That's part of the reason you're starting to see companies like Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) and Intel (NASDAQ:INTC), among others, develop chips that are designed to enable more powerful local computing work on devices like smart speakers. The ability to learn and then recognize different individuals, for example, is something that the DSP (digital signal processor) component of new chips from these vendors can do.

Another technological challenge facing current generation products is recognition accuracy. Everyone who has used a smart speaker or digital assistant on another device has had the experience of not being understood. Sometimes that's due to how the question or command is phrased, but it's often due to background noises, accents, intonation or other factors that essentially end up providing an imperfect audio signal to the cloud-based recognition engine. Again, more local audio signal processing can often improve the audio signal to be sent, thereby enhancing overall recognition.

Going further, most of the AI-based learning algorithms used to recognize and accurately respond to speech will likely need to be run in very large, compute-intensive cloud data centers. However, the idea of being able to start do pattern recognition of common phrases (a form of inferencing-the second key aspect of machine learning and AI) locally with the right kind of computing engines and hardware architectures is becoming increasingly possible. It may be a long time before all that kind of work can be done within smart speakers and other edge devices, but even doing some speech recognition on the device should enable higher accuracy and longer conversations. In short, a much better user experience.

As new entrants try to differentiate their products in an increasingly crowded space, the ability to offer some key tech-based improvements is going to be essential. Clearly there's a great deal of momentum behind the smart speaker phenomenon, but it's going to take these kind performance improvements to move them beyond idle curiosities and into truly useful, everyday kinds of tools.

Disclaimer: Some of the author's clients are vendors in the tech industry.

Disclosure: None.

Editor's Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.

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The Evolution Of Smart Speakers - Seeking Alpha

Jurassic World Evolution Everything we know so far – TrustedReviews

Frontier Developments has just announced Jurassic World Evolution, a park-builder set within the films universe. Following in the distant footsteps of 2003s Operation Genesis, we cant wait to let dinosaurs loose to con our customers with overpriced food and drink. In a nutshell, its Jurassic Park meets Rollercoaster Tycoon.

Trusted Reviews has compiled everything we know so far about Jurassic World Evolution including all the latest news, trailers, gameplay and more.

Created by Frontier Developments, the studio behind Elite Dangerous, Jurassic World Evolution is an upcoming park management title. Youre the authority figure in charge of breeding dinosaurs, building attractions and making sure everything runs in an orderly fashion. Of course, things are bound to go wrong.

Related: F1 2017 review

Evolution is set to launch for PS4, Xbox One and PC in summer 2018.

While we havent seen much of Jurassic World Evolution in action, we can make some safe assumptions about what it will entail. Players will have the opportunity to create and manage their own Jurassic World, complete with prehistoric dinosaurs and state-of-the-art attractions.

Dinosaurs can be bio-engineered to your liking, so its up to you whether the park is filled with ferocious carnivores or cuddly herbivores. The same goes for attractions, with research dictating what can be built upon Isla Nublar.

Revealed during Gamescom 2017, you can find the debut trailer below:

Related: Xbox One X

Make your own dinosaurs!

Evolution must try its best to include all of our favourite dinosaurs, including the Velociraptor, Brachiosaurus and, of course, the Tyrannosaurus Rex. But wed also love to make our own prehistoric monstrosities.

Being able to directly engineer our own creations before unleashing them into the park could be fun. Depending on research they might possess different stats, resulting in varied public reaction once their out and about in their habitat. Perhaps we could even share creations online?

They could also escape, so youd best be careful when crafting a deadly killing machine.

A story mode

Games such asPlanet Coaster and Total Warhammer 2 continue to make great strides in bringing meaningful narrative missions to the base-building/RTS genre. By providing the player with frequent objectives, youre able to paint a picture in your head of the consequences each action. This would also give us a reason for building up the park beyond the usual internal satisfaction.

Despite launching way back in 2003 for PS2, Xbox and PC, Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis was a park builder with a healthy number of story missions. While not taking place in your park, you were given a task to solve to your greatest ability. One such mission had you saving the president from a dinosaurs jaws.

Related: Best PS4 Games

A real sense of danger

Keeping a park full of dinosaurs for entertainment purposes probably creates its fair share of paranoia. Knowing these creatures could escape at any time and go to town on the general public is a tiny bit terrifying.

The reveal trailer showcases how dinos are capable of escaping and even eating employees, something wed hope to see envisioned in the finished product. Reinforcing electric fences and deploying armed security should be a regular occurrence, mimicking the tension we love about the films.

Cameos from the films

What better way to emulate the spirit of Jurassic World than provide Evolution with a handful of star-studded cameos. Chris Pratts character could reprise his role as a dinosaur trainer, offering the player advice as they begin assembling their park and breeding animals.

Also, wed absolutely adore a cheeky cameo from Jeff Goldblum. Its very unlikely, especially since the actor is busy with the Jurassic World sequel at the time of writing. But, as Ian Malcolm once said, life finds a way.

Related: Assassins Creed Origins Preview

Are you excited for Jurassic World Evolution? Let us know in the comments.

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Jurassic World Evolution Everything we know so far - TrustedReviews

How the Tiger Snake’s Venom Beat Evolution – Newser


Newser
How the Tiger Snake's Venom Beat Evolution
Newser
(Newser) With its exceedingly deadly venomunchanged over the past 10 million yearsthe Australian tiger snake has essentially defeated evolution. Researcher Bryan Fry says in a press release it's "really unusual" for venom to remain unchanged over ...

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How the Tiger Snake's Venom Beat Evolution - Newser

Toothless, dwarf dolphin, a case study in evolution – Phys.Org

August 23, 2017 by Marlowe Hood A life restoration of Inermorostrum xenops dolphins

Scientists on Wednesday unveiled an extinct species of toothless, whiskered and objectively cute mini-dolphin that plied Earth's oceans some 30 million years ago.

With only a fossilised craniumfound in a river near Charleston, South Carolinato work with, the researchers were able to reconstruct the snub-nosed mammal's evolutionary saga, describe its facial features and figure out what it snacked on.

Just over a metre (three feet) from snout to tail, Inermorostrum xenops was half the size of the common bottlenose dolphin.

Ironically, the pint-size Flipper was an early offshoot from one of the two main groupings of cetaceans called Odontoceti, or "toothed whale", that includes sperm whales and orca.

This group also developed a radar-like capacity to navigate and detect objects by emitting sounds, called echolocation.

The other branch, baleen whales, are filter feeders that strain huge volumes of ocean water to net tiny, shrimp-like krill or planktonthink humpback or the gargantuan blue.

"Inermorostrum took only four million years to evolve from ancestral whales with precisely occluding teeth"matching top and bottom"into a toothless, suction feeding specialist," explained Robert Boessenecker, a professor at the College of Charleston and lead author of a study in the British Royal Society journal Proceedings B.

During those four million yearsa brief interlude on the evolutionary clockI. xenops lost its pearly whites, saw its snout and mouth shrink and developed super muscular lips.

"This last feature is perhaps the most critical," said Boessenecker, who deduced the dolphin's powerful smackers from a series of deep artery channels clearly designed to nourish extensive soft tissue.

"Short snouts typically occur in Odontoceti that are adept at suction feedingthe smaller the oral opening, the greater the suction," he said in a statement.

Absent dentition, I. xenops' diet would have consisted exclusively of small fish, squid and other soft-bodied creatures. Because its nose was bent downward, the researchers suspect it prowled the ocean floor in search of prey.

The dwarf dolphins were not the only "toothed whales" undergoing rapid evolution at that time.

During the Oligocene age, 25 to 35 million years ago, other echolocating cetaceans developed long, toothy snouts specialised in catching fish.

The researchers also found that both short and long snouts evolved independently numerous times, suggesting that natural selection is not an arbitrary process.

Some dolphins, such as the modern bottlenose, settled on a happy medium between the extremes, "the optimum length as it permits both fish catching and suction feeding," Boessenecker added.

Explore further: Ancient South Carolina whale yields secrets to filter feeding's origins

More information: Proceedings of the Royal Society B(2017). Doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0531

2017 AFP

The blue whale is the largest animal that has ever lived. And yet they feed almost exclusively on tiny crustaceans known as krill. The secret is in the baleen, a complex filter-feeding system that allows the enormous whales ...

Until now, it has been a bit of a mystery about the evolution of hearing capabilities in those graceful ocean behemoths, the baleen whales.

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Modern whales' ancestors probably hunted and chased down prey, but somehow, those fish-eating hunters evolved into filter-feeding leviathans. An analysis of a 36.4-million-year-old whale fossil suggests that before baleen ...

University of Otago palaeontology researchers are continuing to rewrite the history of New Zealand's ancient whales by describing two further genera and three species of fossil baleen whales.

A single amino-acid variation in a key receptor in whales may help explain why some species of cetaceans evolved sleek, muscular bodies to hunt fish and seals, while others grow to massive sizes by filter-feeding on large ...

Epigenetics may explain how Darwin's finches respond to rapid environmental changes, according to new research published in the open access journal BMC Evolutionary Biology.

Proteins involved in the production and perception of pheromones may determine if red fire ant colonies contain a single queen or multiple queens.

So much of what happens inside cells to preserve health or cause disease is so small or time-sensitive that researchers are just now getting glimpses of the complexities unfolding in us every minute of the day. UNC School ...

The first unambiguous fossil from the botfly family adds to the few known fossils of a major clade of flies (Calyptratae), shedding light on their rapid radiation during the Cenozoic Era, according to a study published August ...

A Johns Hopkins paleontologist and her collaborative team of scientists report they have clear evidence that the arrival of humans and subsequent human activity throughout the islands of the Caribbean were likely the primary ...

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Toothless, dwarf dolphin, a case study in evolution - Phys.Org

Toothless Dwarf Dolphin Showcases Diverse Evolution of Feeding Behavior – Laboratory Equipment

A fossilized skull recovered from a river near Charleston, South Carolina belonged to a newly identified species of ancient, toothless dwarf dolphin, researchers report.

The extinct dolphin, named Inermorostrum xenops, likely used its mouth like a vacuum to suck up small fish, squid, sea cucumbers and other soft prey.

Inermorostrum xenops translates to weaponless-snouted strange face in Latin.

The skull fossil was discovered by divers who were on the hunt for shark teeth in the Wando River.

A team of researchers from the College of Charleston, led by Robert Boessenecker, analyzed the fossil and the layers of sandy limestone in the same location where the skull was found, and determined the animal lived 28 to 30 million years ago.

They also revealed that the species was just about 4 feet long, and weighed 100 pounds making it an easy target for predators like sharks, whales and other giant creatures it shared the ocean with.

As a point of reference, the modern bottlenose dolphin ranges in length from 7 to 12 feet.

Inermorostrum xenops belonged to an early group of echolocating dolphins the xenorophidae which, ironically, represent the earliest diversification of toothed whales. This group evolved just 4 million years before Inermorostrum xenops appeared, indicating it only took that timespan to evolve a toothless, suction-feeding dolphin from ancestral whales, according to the research team. It also evolved within 5 million years of modern cetaceans (a group of aquatic mammals including whales, dolphins and porpoises).

Boessenecker explained that both short and long snouts evolved numerous times on different parts of the evolutionary tree, demonstrating that the aquatic mammals can rapidly adapt their feeding behaviors and specializations.

The bottlenose dolphin has the optimal snout length, according to Boessenecker. Its snout is twice as long as it is wide, allowing it to suction feed and catch prey as it chooses.

Inermorostrum xenops had the shortest jawbone of any known cetacean, living or extinct, and enlarged holes in its snout suggest the dwarf dolphin may have had whiskers or fleshy lips.

The discovery of a suction-feeding whale this early in their evolution is forcing us to revise what we know about how quickly new forms appeared, and what may have been driving early whale evolution said Danielle Fraser, a paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature. Increased ocean productivity may have been one important factor.

The paper was published in the journal, Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The skull fossil is now on display at the Mace Brown Museum of Natural History at the College of Charleston.

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Toothless Dwarf Dolphin Showcases Diverse Evolution of Feeding Behavior - Laboratory Equipment

In Turkey, Schools Will Stop Teaching Evolution This Fall – NPR

Zeynep Terzi, left, 23, a medical student in Istanbul, and Betul Vargi, 22, a college student studying English literature, are part of what Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan calls a new "pious generation" of Turks. They wear headscarves and attend mosque, but they also believe in a separation of religion and state. Gokce Saracoglu/NPR hide caption

Zeynep Terzi, left, 23, a medical student in Istanbul, and Betul Vargi, 22, a college student studying English literature, are part of what Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan calls a new "pious generation" of Turks. They wear headscarves and attend mosque, but they also believe in a separation of religion and state.

When children in Turkey head back to school this fall, something will be missing from their textbooks: any mention of evolution.

The Turkish government is phasing in what it calls a values-based curriculum. Critics accuse Turkey's president of pushing a more conservative, religious ideology at the expense of young people's education.

At a playground in an upscale, secular area of Istanbul, parents and grandparents express concern over the new policy.

"I'm worried, but I hope it changes by the time my grandchildren are in high school," says Emel Ishakoglu, a retired chemical engineer playing with her grandchildren, ages 5 and 2. "Otherwise our kids will be left behind compared to other countries when it comes to science education."

With a curriculum that omits evolution, Ishakoglu worries her grandchildren won't get the training they'll need if they want to grow up to be scientists like her.

Nearby, an American expat who's married to a Turk pushes her toddler on the swings and describes a book they've been reading at home.

"It's for 3- to 5-year-olds, and it teaches evolution," says Heather Demir. "It starts off, 'I used to be fish, but then I grew some legs.'"

The Demir family plans to leave Turkey before their son reaches grade school, in part because of this new curriculum.

Suat Keceli, left, a retired stockroom worker, and his barber Yasar Ayhan pose in Ayhan's barber shop in Kasimpasa, the Istanbul neighborhood where President Recep Tayyip Erdoan grew up. Keceli is a conservative Muslim who kept his daughter out of school when headscarves were banned in the classroom. Gokce Saracoglu/NPR hide caption

Suat Keceli, left, a retired stockroom worker, and his barber Yasar Ayhan pose in Ayhan's barber shop in Kasimpasa, the Istanbul neighborhood where President Recep Tayyip Erdoan grew up. Keceli is a conservative Muslim who kept his daughter out of school when headscarves were banned in the classroom.

"I just think it'd be too confusing for him, to teach him two opposing viewpoints," Demir says.

At a news conference last month, Turkey's education minister announced that new textbooks will be introduced in all primary and secondary schools, starting with grades 1, 5 and 9 this fall, and the rest next year. They will stop teaching evolution in grade 9, when it's usually taught.

"Evolutionary biology is best left to be taught at the university level," Education Minister Ismet Yilmaz told reporters. "It's a theory that requires a higher philosophical understanding than schoolchildren have."

That means students who don't go on to university may never learn who Charles Darwin was.

"Among scientists, of course, we feel very sorry and very, very worried for the country," says Ali Alpar, an astrophysicist and president of Turkey's Science Academy, an independent group that opposes the new curriculum. A Turkish association of biologists and teachers' unions have also expressed concern about the new textbooks.

"It is not only evolution. Evolution is a test case. It is about rationality about whether the curriculum should be built on whatever the government chooses to be the proper values," Alpar says. He also objects to how the government has converted many secular public schools into religious ones Turkey's publicly funded Imam Hatip schools in recent years.

Some Muslims, like some Christians, believe in creation, not natural selection. Turkey is majority Muslim, with a constitution that emphasizes its secular character.

But a battle has been underway between secular and religious Turks ever since President Recep Tayyip Erdogan came to power. He was elected prime minister in 2003, and president in 2014.

Erdogan does not support implementing sharia law. But he has repeatedly been elected by religious voters who felt their beliefs were neglected during decades of enforced secularism.

In a barber shop in the Istanbul neighborhood where Erdogan grew up, a bearded man in a traditional Muslim cap chats with the barber as he gets a shave. He explains how he kept his daughter out of school when Turkey didn't allow girls to wear headscarves in classrooms. The ban was lifted in middle schools and high schools in 2014.

"In school, they taught us humans evolved from monkeys. But that's not true," says Suat Keceli. "I support our government taking it out of biology textbooks. I think it's Satan's work."

In revising these textbooks, the government sought input from a small cadre of religious academics, including the president of Turkey's Uskudar University, a private institution that will host an academic conference on creationism this fall.

"Most Turks don't believe in evolution because it implies that God doesn't exist, and we're all here on earth just by chance! That's confusing," says the university's president, Nevzat Tarhan. "Turkey is a modern democracy, but we should not be afraid to embrace our Islamic culture as well."

Outside an Istanbul flower shop, two college students, Zeynep Terzi and Betul Vargi, are part of what Erdogan calls the new "pious generation." They wear headscarves. But they also support the separation of religion and state and accuse the president of chipping away at it.

"You can't learn religion in school, I think. It's about you and God. You should learn maybe in your home," Terzi says.

"They can send their kids to mosques. Schools are for science, I think," says Vargi.

Terzi is in medical school. Her scientific training in Turkey makes her competitive for jobs here and abroad. But she fears that might not be the case for the next generation of pious Turks.

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In Turkey, Schools Will Stop Teaching Evolution This Fall - NPR

The evolution of cell phones – WBAY

DE PERE, Wis. (WBAY) - As we reported last week, it's been 30 years since Cellcom first launched cellular phone service in Northeast Wisconsin. And how the technology has changed over three decades!

When Rob Riordan helped launch Cellcom in 1987, cell phones on the market weren't like anything we use today. They were big and bulky, like carrying a lunchbox full of rocks with a phone receiver on top.

And they were expensive. "A briefcase, this and an extra battery was $4,000. Within a year of that, it was for a thousand bucks," Riordan said.

It wasn't until the early 1990's that phones started to get smaller -- from the size of World War II-era walkie-talkies to a handheld phone that shaped the future.

"Then we got the brick phone, which was the one you'd see on some of the old TV shows and stuff like that, but the StarTAC is the one that kind of took off because it was small enough you could carry it and move with that one," Riordan recalls.

By the early 2000's, small, flip-top phones were the rage. And thanks to new technology, we had a new way to communicate.

"The Blackberry was probably one of the biggest breakthrough phones," Riordan said. "You could text with it, you could write emails with it."

Phones were getting smarter, but not that smart -- until 10 years ago when Apple launched the first iPhone.

"What was interesting is we were pushing the industry -- the LGs of the world, the Samsungs of the world that were out there and the Motorolas -- saying we need a smarter phone. Some of the bigger operators of the world were coming back, no, no we don't need that, Apple came along and said we don't care what you need, this is what we're making. And the big guys said we don't want that, and Apple said tough, this is the phone. They made it, and all of a sudden it went like crazy."

That craze hasn't slowed. Smartphones passed so-called "feature phones" in U.S. usage in 2012, and an estimated 83% of mobile phone users in the U.S. own a smartphone today, according to Statistica.

Today, just about everyone has a cell phone, and Riordan has witnessed the advances every step of the way.

Asked if this makes him a hip grandpa, Riordan answered, "You know it's funny, my grandkids show me a little bit sometimes, too. I tried to stay ahead of it, but it's changing so quickly."

"Crazy, crazy stuff, and it's not stopping."

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The evolution of cell phones - WBAY

Microbes May Rig Their DNA to Speed Up Evolution – WIRED

In 1944, a Columbia University doctoral student in genetics named Evelyn Witkin made a fortuitous mistake. During her first experiment in a laboratory at Cold Spring Harbor, in New York, she accidentally irradiated millions of E. coli with a lethal dose of ultraviolet light. When she returned the following day to check on the samples, they were all deadexcept for one, in which four bacterial cells had survived and continued to grow. Somehow, those cells were resistant to UV radiation. To Witkin, it seemed like a remarkably lucky coincidence that any cells in the culture had emerged with precisely the mutation they needed to surviveso much so that she questioned whether it was a coincidence at all.

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

For the next two decades, Witkin sought to understand how and why these mutants had emerged. Her research led her to what is now known as the SOS response, a DNA repair mechanism that bacteria employ when their genomes are damaged, during which dozens of genes become active and the rate of mutation goes up. Those extra mutations are more often detrimental than beneficial, but they enable adaptations, such as the development of resistance to UV or antibiotics.

The question that has tormented some evolutionary biologists ever since is whether nature favored this arrangement. Is the upsurge in mutations merely a secondary consequence of a repair process inherently prone to error? Or, as some researchers claim, is the increase in the mutation rate itself an evolved adaptation, one that helps bacteria evolve advantageous traits more quickly in stressful environments?

The scientific challenge has not just been to demonstrate convincingly that harsh environments cause nonrandom mutations. It has also been to find a plausible mechanism consistent with the rest of molecular biology that could make lucky mutations more likely. Waves of studies in bacteria and more complex organisms have sought those answers for decades.

The latest and perhaps best answerfor explaining some kinds of mutations, anywayhas emerged from studies of yeast, as reported in June in PLOS Biology . A team led by Jonathan Houseley, a specialist in molecular biology and genetics at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge, proposed a mechanism that drives more mutation specifically in regions of the yeast genome where it could be most adaptive.

Its a totally new way that the environment can have an impact on the genome to allow adaptation in response to need. It is one of the most directed processes weve seen yet, said Philip Hastings, professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine, who was not involved in the Houseley groups experiments. Other scientists contacted for this story also praised the work, though most cautioned that much about the controversial idea was still speculative and needed more support.

Rather than asking very broad questions like are mutations always random? I wanted to take a more mechanistic approach, Houseley said. He and his colleagues directed their attention to a specific kind of mutation called copy number variation. DNA often contains multiple copies of extended sequences of base pairs or even whole genes. The exact number can vary among individuals because, when cells are duplicating their DNA before cell division, certain mistakes can insert or delete copies of gene sequences. In humans, for instance, 5 to 10 percent of the genome shows copy number variation from person to personand some of these variations have been linked to cancer, diabetes, autism and a host of genetic disorders. Houseley suspected that in at least some cases, this variation in the number of gene copies might be a response to stresses or hazards in the environment.

Jonathan Houseley leads a team that studies genome change at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge. Based on their studies of yeast, they recently proposed a mechanism that would increase the odds for adaptive mutations in genes that are actively responding to environmental challenges.

Jon Houseley/QUANTA MAGAZINE

In 2015, Houseley and his colleagues described a mechanism by which yeast cells seemed to be driving extra copy number variation in genes associated with ribosomes, the parts of a cell that synthesize proteins. However, they did not prove that this increase was a purposefully adaptive response to a change or constraint in the cellular environment. Nevertheless, to them it seemed that the yeast was making more copies of the ribosomal genes when nutrients were abundant and the demand for making protein might be higher.

Houseley therefore decided to test whether similar mechanisms might act on genes more directly activated by hazardous changes in the environment. In their 2017 paper, he and his team focused on CUP1 , a gene that helps yeast resist the toxic effects of environmental copper. They found that when yeast was exposed to copper, the variation in the number of copies of CUP1 in the cells increased. On average, most cells had fewer copies of the gene, but the yeast cells that gained more copiesabout 10 percent of the total population became more resistant to copper and flourished. The small number of cells that did the right thing, Houseley said, were at such an advantage that they were able to outcompete everything else.

But that change did not in itself mean much: If the environmental copper was causing mutations, then the change in CUP1 copy number variation might have been no more than a meaningless consequence of the higher mutation rate. To rule out that possibility, the researchers cleverly re-engineered the CUP1 gene so that it would respond to a harmless, nonmutagenic sugar, galactose, instead of copper. When these altered yeast cells were exposed to galactose, the variation in their number of copies of the gene changed, too.

The cells seemed to be directing greater variation to the exact place in their genome where it would be useful. After more work, the researchers identified elements of the biological mechanism behind this phenomenon. It was already known that when cells replicate their DNA, the replication mechanism sometimes stalls. Usually the mechanism can restart and pick up where it left off. When it cant, the cell can go back to the beginning of the replication process, but in doing so, it sometimes accidentally deletes a gene sequence or makes extra copies of it. That is what causes normal copy number variation. But Houseley and his team made the case that a combination of factors makes these copying errors especially likely to hit genes that are actively responding to environmental stresses, which means that they are more likely to show copy number variation.

The key point is that these effects center on genes responding to the environment, and that they could give natural selection extra opportunities to fine-tune which levels of gene expression might be optimal against certain challenges. The results seem to present experimental evidence that a challenging environment could galvanize cells into controlling those genetic changes that would best improve their fitness. They may also seem reminiscent of the outmoded, pre-Darwinian ideas of the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, who believed that organisms evolved by passing their environmentally acquired characteristics along to their offspring. Houseley maintains, however, that this similarity is only superficial.

What we have defined is a mechanism that has arisen entirely through Darwinian selection of random mutations to give a process that stimulates nonrandom mutations at useful sites, Houseley said. It is not Lamarckian adaptation. It just achieves some of the same ends without the problems involved with Lamarckian adaptation.

Ever since 1943, when the microbiologist Salvador Luria and the biophysicist Max Delbrck showed with Nobel prize-winning experiments that mutations in E. coli occur randomly, observations like the bacterial SOS response have made some biologists wonder whether there might be important loopholes to that rule. For example, in a controversial paper published in Nature in 1988, John Cairns of Harvard and his team found that when they placed bacteria that could not digest the milk sugar lactose in an environment where that sugar was the sole food source, the cells soon evolved the ability to convert the lactose into energy. Cairns argued that this result showed that cells had mechanisms to make certain mutations preferentially when they would be beneficial.

Budding yeast (S. cerevisiae) grow as colonies on this agar plate. If certain recent research is correct, a mechanism that helps to repair DNA damage in these cells may also promote more adaptive mutations, which could help the cells to evolve more quickly under harsh circumstances.

Jon Houseley/QUANTA MAGAZINE

Experimental support for that specific idea eventually proved lacking, but some biologists were inspired to become proponents of a broader theory that has come to be known as adaptive mutation. They believe that even if cells cant direct the precise mutation needed in a certain environment, they can adapt by elevating their mutation rate to promote genetic change.

The work of the Houseley team seems to bolster the case for that position. In the yeast mechanism theres not selection for a mechanism that actually says, This is the gene I should mutate to solve the problem, said Patricia Foster, a biologist at Indiana University. It shows that evolution can get speeded up.

Hastings at Baylor agreed, and praised the fact that Houseleys mechanism explains why the extra mutations dont happen throughout the genome. You need to be transcribing a gene for it to happen, he said.

Adaptive mutation theory, however, finds little acceptance among most biologists, and many of them view the original experiments by Cairns and the new ones by Houseley skeptically. They argue that even if higher mutation rates yield adaptations to environmental stress, proving that the higher mutation rates are themselves an adaptation to stress remains difficult to demonstrate convincingly. The interpretation is intuitively attractive, said John Roth, a geneticist and microbiologist at the University of California, Davis, but I dont think its right. I dont believe any of these examples of stress-induced mutagenesis are correct. There may be some other non-obvious explanation for the phenomenon.

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I think [Houseleys work] is beautiful and relevant to the adaptive mutation debate, said Paul Sniegowski, a biologist at the University of Pennsylvania. But in the end, it still represents a hypothesis. To validate it more certainly, he added, theyd have to test it in the way an evolutionary biologist wouldby creating a theoretical model and determining whether this adaptive mutability could evolve within a reasonable period, and then by challenging populations of organisms in the lab to evolve a mechanism like this.

Notwithstanding the doubters, Houseley and his team are persevering with their research to understand its relevance to cancer and other biomedical problems. The emergence of chemotherapy-resistant cancers is commonplace and forms a major barrier to curing the disease, Houseley said. He thinks that chemotherapy drugs and other stresses on tumors may encourage malignant cells to mutate further, including mutations for resistance to the drugs. If that resistance is facilitated by the kind of mechanism he explored in his work on yeast, it could very well present a new drug target. Cancer patients might be treated both with normal courses of chemotherapy and with agents that would inhibit the biochemical modifications that make resistance mutations possible.

We are actively working on that, Houseley said, but its still in the early days.

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine , an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

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Microbes May Rig Their DNA to Speed Up Evolution - WIRED

Shailene Woodley on Her Emmy Nomination and Feminist Evolution … – New York Times

Tell us about your character Jane.

When we meet her in Big Little Lies, we meet a girl whos trying to live in an adult world, whos coping with the extreme suppression of anger and sadness while also trying to deliver a life full of possibility and positivity and wonder to her young child. And I think thats why she was able to bond with so many of the women from Monterey, because although they didnt have similar personalities, Jane saw that they, too, were coping with some sort of deep grief despite the facade of white fences.

There are more than 1000 suggestions for what to stream over on Watching, The New York Timess TV and movie recommendation site.

Those women were played by real powerhouses. What was that like?

It was wonderful. Reese, Nicole and Laura would discuss with Zo [Kravitz] and me how times have changed since they were teenage actors, and reflect on the progress that has been made in Hollywood. I still think theres a long way to go when it comes to depicting females in films. But being on a set where we had the camaraderie and compassion and support of so many women and not just the actors, but our crew and producers was an unparalleled experience.

Youve spoken about the need for empathy toward the shows male characters, even the abusive husband played by Alexander Skarsgard.

A bully generally is not bullying just to bully. Theyre bullying out of pain and internal conflict and brokenness. Obviously there is no complacency on my end for any act of violence. But its worth looking at why we have so many rapes and acts of sexual violence. Many young men and women feel out of control or that they dont have support for the traumas theyre experiencing, and I think paying attention to that and providing support would create a world where we have less acts of violence.

Female friendships are important to you. And yet in the past youve said that youre not a feminist.

I would today consider myself a feminist. If females start working through the false narrative of jealousy and insecurity fed through a patriarchal society, then not only will we have more women feeling confident in themselves and supportive of one another, but we will start introducing a type of matriarchy, which is what this world needs. We need more softness and more silence and more pause through the chaos.

Youre an environmental activist. Have you considered running for political office?

There was a point last year when I was working for Bernie Sanders where I thought, Huh, maybe Ill run for Congress in a couple years. And you know what? Im not going to rule it out. Who knows? Life is big, and Im young.

Do you have a favorite Emmy nominee this year?

Im rooting for Feud, and Im all on the Susan Sarandon train, just because shes brilliant and brought so much to that show.

A version of this article appears in print on August 22, 2017, on Page C4 of the New York edition with the headline: Life Is Big, And Im Young.

Continued here:

Shailene Woodley on Her Emmy Nomination and Feminist Evolution ... - New York Times

Evolution of Sexting Tests School Leaders, Students – Education Week (subscription)

Philadelphia

For Jane Griffin, the principal at Louisiana's Winnfield High, the moment came when one of her students found a staff member's smartphone lying on a desk, picked it up, and took a picture of his own genitals.

For Shafta Collazo, an assistant principal at Delaware's Woodbridge Middle School, it came when a student got mad at his girlfriend and decided to "airdrop" compromising digital photos of her to dozens of other children using a file-transfer service for Mac devices.

And for Assistant Principal Deirdra Chandler, the realization that responding to youth "sexting" is now a part of the job, even for leaders of K-5 schools, came after one of her young students at South Carolina's Erwin Elementary School sent out sexual imagery of another student to his friends.

"It's scary," said Chandler, one of nearly 100 concerned school leaders who packed into a conference room here last month, during the annual conference of the nation's principals, to discuss the dangers of sexting.

This fraught new reality for U.S. schools is regularly in the headlines, and principals at the conference said they're overwhelmed by the developmental, legal, and technological aspects of a phenomenon that's moving faster than their ability to keep up.

"It feels like I'm standing in front of a freight train going at full speed," said Jay Hepperle, an assistant principal at North Dakota's Dickinson High School, where he says he deals with as many as two sexting-related incidents a week.

The term "sexting" generally refers to sending or receiving sexually explicit or suggestive images, videos, or messages via a mobile device or the internet.

Such activity is nothing new: Education Week has covered the dilemmas that youth sexting poses for schools going back almost a decade.

Nor is sexting limited to students. Educators at a number of schools have landed in trouble for taking and sharing sexual imagery.

But it's hard to find solid recent data on the prevalence of the practice nationwide.

Back in 2009, the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life project found that 4 percent of cellphone-owning teenagers had sent sexually explicit or suggestive photos of themselves to someone else via a text message, and 15 percent said they had received such a message. Subsequent smaller-scale studies have typically found higher rates.

For many principals on the ground, though, the problem feels like it's accelerating at an alarming rate. The dynamics around sexting have changed, they say, thanks to the rising ubiquity of smartphones, and the advent of new social-media platforms and apps such as Snapchat and Kik.

That means new worries about children's safety and potential landmines for school leaders themselves.

Addressing the principals at the conference, Kansas State University's Robert F. Hachiya issued a blunt warning for those charged with investigating and responding to sexting-related incidents.

"If you arrive in court," Hachiya told the group, "you are going to get Monday-morning-quarterbacked to death."

There's the immediate worry of protecting children. Student victims may need supports, such as counseling.

Sexting may also be considered bullying, harassment, or abuse. If that's the case, said Hachiya, an assistant professor of educational leadership, principals are likely obligated under federal laws, such as Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, to respond to an incident. In some situations, they may also be considered mandatory reporters, with a legal responsibility to report potential abuse to law-enforcement authorities.

There's also considerable pressure to move quickly on investigations, Hachiya said. But things can get dicey quickly.

Often, the original taking and sharing of sexual images is consensual. But in a world where nearly every child seems to have access to a smartphone, multiple platforms through which to distribute digital content, crises can spread quickly, Hachiya said.

Seizures and searches are often parts of the effort to contain such situations. When it comes to going through students' phones and social-media accounts, though, principals can quickly put themselves in a legal gray area, Hachiya said.

A variety of court cases have yielded no clear guidelines that cover the full variety of situations schools may face.

Then there's the thorniest problem of all: laws related to pornography and child pornography.

In some states, when a youth takes, shares, or receives sexual images of another minor, he or she can face charges involving the production, distribution, or possession of child porn.

By taking what may seem like common-sense steps to preserve evidence, Hachiya said, school administrators can run into similar jeopardy.

Among the potentially problematic administrative actions he described: a principal who confiscates and holds a device containing sexual images, forwards or saves such images to his or her own files or accounts, or even shows sexted images to a fellow administrator as part of trying to figure out an appropriate response.

For principals such as Jemi Carlone, who said she faced "five pretty serious incidents" last school year at Louisiana's Belle Chasse High, it makes for a treacherous landscape.

In one case, Carlone said, students at her school had shared sexually explicit images via the ephemeral-messaging app Snapchat. School administrators knew they needed to gather evidence for an eventual expulsion hearing. But they didn't want to take a photo or video of the images before they disappeared, because they didn't want to risk being in possession of child pornography themselves.

"I won't touch their phones at all," Carlone concluded. "We lock [the devices] up, wait for the police to come, and say, 'OK, it's on you all now.' "

Immediately involving law enforcement is a smart step, Hachiya said. Don't forward, copy, share, archive, or otherwise possess any sexually explicit or suggestive images, he advised. And don't overlook the importance of preventionan approach that some states are investing in, through laws promoting the teaching of "digital citizenship."

The reality, principals at the session said, is that there's no standard playbook for managing sexting situations, which often leaves principals in the unenviable position of figuring it out as they go.

"To know that doing what we think is right in the moment to protect kids could cost us everything," Collazo said, "is a very scary place to be."

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Evolution of Sexting Tests School Leaders, Students - Education Week (subscription)

Are Turkey’s schools dropping evolution and teaching jihad? – BBC News


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Are Turkey's schools dropping evolution and teaching jihad?
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"We are not against evolution. If science says something, it is impossible to resist it. Also, the subjects on inheritance, mutation, modification and adaptation are still present in the curriculum. These are all within the theory of evolution," Mr ...

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Are Turkey's schools dropping evolution and teaching jihad? - BBC News

Shailene Woodley on Her Emmy Nomination and Feminist Evolution – New York Times

Tell us about your character Jane.

When we meet her in Big Little Lies, we meet a girl whos trying to live in an adult world, whos coping with the extreme suppression of anger and sadness while also trying to deliver a life full of possibility and positivity and wonder to her young child. And I think thats why she was able to bond with so many of the women from Monterey, because although they didnt have similar personalities, Jane saw that they, too, were coping with some sort of deep grief despite the facade of white fences.

There are more than 1000 suggestions for what to stream over on Watching, The New York Timess TV and movie recommendation site.

Those women were played by real powerhouses. What was that like?

It was wonderful. Reese, Nicole and Laura would discuss with Zo [Kravitz] and me how times have changed since they were teenage actors, and reflect on the progress that has been made in Hollywood. I still think theres a long way to go when it comes to depicting females in films. But being on a set where we had the camaraderie and compassion and support of so many women and not just the actors, but our crew and producers was an unparalleled experience.

Youve spoken about the need for empathy toward the shows male characters, even the abusive husband played by Alexander Skarsgard.

A bully generally is not bullying just to bully. Theyre bullying out of pain and internal conflict and brokenness. Obviously there is no complacency on my end for any act of violence. But its worth looking at why we have so many rapes and acts of sexual violence. Many young men and women feel out of control or that they dont have support for the traumas theyre experiencing, and I think paying attention to that and providing support would create a world where we have less acts of violence.

Female friendships are important to you. And yet in the past youve said that youre not a feminist.

I would today consider myself a feminist. If females start working through the false narrative of jealousy and insecurity fed through a patriarchal society, then not only will we have more women feeling confident in themselves and supportive of one another, but we will start introducing a type of matriarchy, which is what this world needs. We need more softness and more silence and more pause through the chaos.

Youre an environmental activist. Have you considered running for political office?

There was a point last year when I was working for Bernie Sanders where I thought, Huh, maybe Ill run for Congress in a couple years. And you know what? Im not going to rule it out. Who knows? Life is big, and Im young.

Do you have a favorite Emmy nominee this year?

Im rooting for Feud, and Im all on the Susan Sarandon train, just because shes brilliant and brought so much to that show.

A version of this article appears in print on August 22, 2017, on Page C4 of the New York edition with the headline: Life Is Big, And Im Young.

See the rest here:

Shailene Woodley on Her Emmy Nomination and Feminist Evolution - New York Times

Turkey to stop teaching evolution in schools, report says – Fox News

Young students in Turkey will no longer be taught about evolution as the countrys government has decided to phase out its education, according to a new report.

Turkeys education minister announced last month in a news conference that new textbooks will be introduced to students this fall with the concept of evolution omitted,NPR reported, adding that it had been taught to ninth-graders.

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"Evolutionary biology is best left to be taught at the university level," Education Minister Ismet Yilmaz said. "It's a theory that requires a higher philosophical understanding than schoolchildren have."

Government officials are phasing in a curriculum which they say is based on values, as critics have reportedly accused President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of pushing conservative views and religious beliefs on the nation.

With approximately 99 percent of the country Muslim, many Turkish residents have said they dont believe in natural selection also known as Darwinism, or the theory of evolution but rather believe in creation. Creationism is the idea that god created earth, out of nothing, by an act of free will.

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The new textbooks will be released to students in 1st, 5th and 9th grades this fall and the remainder will follow next year, the report adds.

Read more here:

Turkey to stop teaching evolution in schools, report says - Fox News