Daily Archives: February 7, 2017

Bitcoin Exempt from UAE Central Bank’s Ban on Virtual Currencies … – Bitcoin Magazine

Posted: February 7, 2017 at 7:50 am

On January 1, 2017, the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) published a new framework covering digital payments in the country. According to the new Regulatory Framework For Stored Values and Electronic Payment Systems, which is applicable to all electronic payment services providers, all Virtual Currencies (and any transactions thereof) are prohibited.

In the new framework, the definition for virtual currencies that the central bank has identified is any type of digital unit used as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, or a form of stored value. This would suggest that bitcoin and other digital currencies have been officially banned by the UAE central bank as of January 1.

However, on February 1, Mubarak Rashed Khamis Al Mansouri, governor of the UAE central bank, informed Gulf News in a statement saying that these regulations do not cover virtual currency, which is defined as any type of digital unit used as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, or a form of stored value. In this context, these regulations do not apply to bitcoin or other digital currencies, currency exchanges, or underlying technology such as blockchain.

He added that digital currencies are currently under review by the Central Bank and new regulations will be issued as appropriate.

In the statement, Governor Al Mansouri further highlighted that fintech development will play an integral role in the future of the UAEs financial industry, which is the reason why the new framework was introduced at the beginning of the year.

While the new framework for e-payments and the confusion surrounding bitcoin regulations may sound worrying to some, the reality is that the UAE aims to become a leading center for blockchain innovation by 2020 and intends to become the first government to execute all of its transactions using the distributed ledger technology.

To achieve this goal, Dubais Crown Prince, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, launched the Dubai blockchain strategy to improve inefficiencies in governmental departments by eliminating paper transactions and by reducing the work hours involved in handling paper transactions. Furthermore, the blockchain strategy also aims to facilitate company incorporations for Emiratis, expats and foreign investors by creating a blockchain-based incorporation system.

As the UAE aims to become a leader in blockchain technology, it would be extremely surprising if its regulators would then stunt innovation in this area by restricting or prohibiting the use of digital currencies. Hence, any future bitcoin regulations in the UAE will most likely favor blockchain startups and the bitcoin economy.

Read more:
Bitcoin Exempt from UAE Central Bank's Ban on Virtual Currencies ... - Bitcoin Magazine

Posted in Bitcoin | Comments Off on Bitcoin Exempt from UAE Central Bank’s Ban on Virtual Currencies … – Bitcoin Magazine

This Dark Market Wants to Pay You Bitcoin to Find Security Bugs … – CoinDesk

Posted: at 7:50 am

Bug bounty hunters could make as much as 10 bitcoins identifying security problems at the popular dark marketplace Hansa.

Taking a page from leading tech companies which offer cash rewards to developers that spot code issues, administrators for the market announced last week that it would pay 10 BTC for "vulnerabilities that could severely disrupt HANSA's integrity".The program was first reported by CyberScoop.

For bugs that arent as critical, admins said they would offer 1 BTC, with 0.05 BTC being put up for display issues and other minor problems.

There are rules for the program, however. Prospective bounty hunters are asked not to make the exploits public prior to disclosing them to the markets operators, or undertake any attacks that might harm Hansa users. The more details that are provided, the admins wrote, "the higher the chance a payout will be awarded".

The admins went on to explain:

"To be eligible, you must demonstrate a security compromise on our market using a reproducible exploit. Should you encounter a bug please open a ticket and inform us about your findings."

In a way, the bug bounty program further highlights the dark market ecosystems continued use of bitcoin as a financial tool. Years before, it was the now-defunct Silk Road that relied on bitcoin as a payment tool, though today markets have begun looking to other digital currencies like monero.

Social media posts suggest that at least one site-critical bug has been identified, with CyberScoop reporting that others had been found since the programs launch.

Image via Shutterstock

CrimeHansa

See the rest here:
This Dark Market Wants to Pay You Bitcoin to Find Security Bugs ... - CoinDesk

Posted in Bitcoin | Comments Off on This Dark Market Wants to Pay You Bitcoin to Find Security Bugs … – CoinDesk

Bitcoin Price Watch; Upside Run! – newsBTC

Posted: at 7:50 am

Here's a look at what we are focusing on in the bitcoin price this morning.

So, were half way through the week, and things are hotting up in the bitcoin price from an intraday perspective. After what was a pretty slow day yesterday, we saw a little bit of up and down overnight and then this morning, just as European markets kicked off for the day, we got a spike in price and some fresh intra-weekly highs produced. Spikes like this are great because they not only serve as an opportunity to get into the market on the breakouts they represent, but they also give us some pretty solid levels to use as our defining range parameters. In this instance, with the spike being an upside break, we can use its peak as resistance.

Additionally, and as a side note, we also managed to get in long on the break, and pull a profit from the market on the action.

Thats not the end of the move, however, with any luck.

If we can get a continuation of the momentum (things seem to be consolidating right now, but this is probably a good sign) then we will try and get in early on the move and ride it up into further profitability.

So, with this in mind, and as we move in to todays session, heres what we are going at.

As ever, take a quick look at the chart below to get an idea of the levels in focus.

As the chart shows, the range we are looking at this morning is defined by support to the downside 1075, and resistance to the upside at 1087. Breakout only this morning, as the range is a little too tight for us to go at things intrarange.

If we see price break through resistance, we will enter long towards an upside target of 1097. A stop loss on the trade at 1084 defines risk. Conversely, if price breaks below support, we will enter towards 1065.

Lets see how things play out.

Charts courtesy of SimpleFX

Visit link:
Bitcoin Price Watch; Upside Run! - newsBTC

Posted in Bitcoin | Comments Off on Bitcoin Price Watch; Upside Run! – newsBTC

NASA okays commercial airlock for space station – Spaceflight Now

Posted: at 7:49 am

Artists concept of the NanoRacks airlock attached to the space stations Tranquility module. Credit: NanoRacks

A commercial airlock built in partnership by NanoRacks and Boeing will be connected to the International Space Station in 2019, the companies announced Monday, after the proposed project won preliminary approval from NASA managers.

NanoRacks plans to deploy small commercial satellites and CubeSats from the airlock, reducing the workload currently occupying time on the smaller equipment airlock inside the Japanese Kibo laboratory module. Only half of the Kibo airlocks capacity is allocated to NASA and commercial clients the rest goes to Japan.

This partnership is an important step in the commercial transition well see on the ISS in coming years, said Mark Mulqueen, Boeings ISS program manager. Utilizing a commercial airlock to keep up with the demand of deployment will significantly streamline our process.

NanoRacks has arranged for the launch of more than 375 payloads to the space station since 2009, including more than 100 CubeSats released from a deployer mounted on the end of the Japanese robotic arm outside Kibo for commercial customers, universities and NASA.

Houston-based NanoRacks also has an external platform outside Kibo, where scientists can test sensors, electronics and other equipment in the harsh environment of space.

The privately-funded commercial airlock will launch inside the unpressurized trunk of a SpaceX Dragon cargo craft, then attach to a port on the stations Tranquility module with the Canadian-built robotic arm.

Another commercial module is already to connected to Tranquility.

The Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, launched to the station in April 2016 under a NASA-funded contract. Developed and built by Bigelow Aerospace, the soft-sided module expanded to full size in late May after bolted on to the Tranquility module.

BEAM is on a two-year demonstration to test the performance of an expandable module in space, but Bigelow and NASA are in discussions to extend the modules presence on the station longer.

NASA and NanoRacks signed a Space Act Agreement for the airlock project last year. The space agency announced Monday that it has committed to install the airlock on the station once NanoRacks completes pre-agreed financial and technical milestones outlined in the agreement.

We want to utilize the space station to expose the commercial sector to new and novel uses of space, ultimately creating a new economy in low Earth orbit for scientific research, technology development and human and cargo transportation, said Sam Scimemi, director of the ISS division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. We hope this new airlock will allow a diverse community to experiment and develop opportunities in space for the commercial sector.

The new airlock will triple the number of small satellites that can be deployed in a single cycle, according to Boeing.

Astronauts inside the station will also be able to assemble payloads from components delivered to the complex in bags, then put them through the NanoRacks airlock, which can handle larger packages than the sizes supported by the current Kibo passageway.

Boeing is providing the passive common berthing mechanism, a connecting ring to install the new port on the Tranquility module, plus unspecified engineering services required for developing and manufacturing of the airlock, according to NanoRacks.

We are very pleased to have Boeing joining with us to develop the airlock module, said Jeffrey Manber, CEO of NanoRacks. This is a huge step for NASA and the U.S. space program, to leverage the commercial marketplace for low Earth orbit, on Space Station and beyond, and NanoRacks is proud to be taking the lead in this prestigious venture.

Boeing is also NASAs lead contractor for the entire space station, providing engineering support for all of the labs U.S. modules.

NanoRacks said the airlock could be detached from the ISS and placed on another platform in orbit.

The NanoRacks airlock module is the next logical step in the successful line of NanoRacks commercial payload facilities, said Brock Howe, head of the airlock project at NanoRacks. This airlock module will provide a broad range of capabilities to our payload customers and expand greatly on the commercial utilization of the station and I look forward to leading the team at NanoRacks on this next venture.

The airlock module will be assembled and tested by NanoRacks, which is also responsible for the design, safety, operations, quality assurance, mockups and crew training, the company said in a statement.

ATA Engineering of San Diego will lead structural and thermal analysis and testing services for the airlock project.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

See original here:
NASA okays commercial airlock for space station - Spaceflight Now

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on NASA okays commercial airlock for space station – Spaceflight Now

Look up in the sky tonight: See the space station along the Sacramento horizon – Sacramento Bee

Posted: at 7:49 am


Sacramento Bee
Look up in the sky tonight: See the space station along the Sacramento horizon
Sacramento Bee
Tonight is likely to afford good viewing to see the International Space Station in the Sacramento sky. A wet weather system is expected to arrive Wednesday night, but Tuesday night is likely to be clear. That will allow sky gazers in Sacramento to see ...
The first private space station: Axiom to blast commercial module to the ISS in 2020 - then use it to create its own ...Daily Mail
Russian Progress MS-03 departs International Space StationSpaceFlight Insider
Axiom Space Wants to Launch a Private Space Station by 2020Inverse
ABC10.com -NBCNews.com
all 32 news articles »

More here:
Look up in the sky tonight: See the space station along the Sacramento horizon - Sacramento Bee

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on Look up in the sky tonight: See the space station along the Sacramento horizon – Sacramento Bee

Movie review: "The Space Between Us" is aimed squarely at teens – Gwinnettdailypost.com

Posted: at 7:48 am

The Space Between Us is apparently a large divide when it comes to describing this silly, romantic, mixed-up movie.

Its an interplanetary adventure as a science-fiction flick with a race against time.

Its a teen romance (involving a girl named Tulsa!) formed around a fish-out-of-water story.

Its a morality play, and its a redemption story.

Its a mess, more than anything, that goes from a convoluted, boring first hour to a second half that is such a heart-on-its-sleeve love story, aimed so squarely at tween girls, that your 12-year-old daughter may walk out of the theater swooning.

That may be the one group of people whose space between their ears will really appreciate The Space Between Us.

Initially set in the very near future, NASA sends a shuttle of astronauts to prep Mars for colonization, but theres a problem: One of them is pregnant. The baby is born on Mars, and the mother dies in childbirth.

That makes Gardner Elliott the first human not born on Earth, and that makes him different.

No. 1: A full gestation in zero-gravity atmosphere means his organs are different than our own, endangering his ever coming home.

No. 2: Sentencing him to live on Mars is a bit of a public-relations nightmare, so his existence is kept a secret from the public.

I know what some may be thinking, but no: The moon landing was not faked.

This whole snafu leaves Gary Oldman, as the architect of this Mars mission, fretting and yelling at people about this massive cover-up, and it leaves a motherless boy stuck with astronauts inside a small space station for the first 16 years of his life.

Asa Butterfield (Miss Peregrines Home for Peculiar Children) already proved his sci-fi teen mettle in Enders Game, and now as Gardner he gets an upgrade to romantic lead.

But it takes forever to get him there in the hands of director Peter Chelsom (Serendipity, Hannah Montana: The Movie).

Between Oldmans rants down on Earth, Mars mother-figure Carla Guginos sentimental concerns for the boy and Gardners repeated questions Whats Earth like? Whats your favorite thing about Earth? Will I know how to act on Earth? that the only thing that kept me from snoring was thinking out loud: When are you going to get this boy on Earth?

The movie never really takes off until we get Gardner in front of Tulsa, the teen girl in Colorado hes been secretly future-texting from Mars, where the wi-fi is red planet-hot.

Tulsa is played by Britt Robertson, who was the one good thing about Tomorrowland and who, at 26, is so pretty that she can make us believe shes still in high school.

It turns out that she was abandoned at age 4 in Tulsa, and the orphan girl adopted the city as her nickname.

So we can see that bond start to form: Both Gardner and Tulsa grew up without parents, forced to live with strangers who didnt always tell them the truth.

Butterfield brings an awkward, goofy, somewhat cute manner to his discovery of Earth things both large and small, from crawly bugs to homeless people to Robertsons lips.

Robertson, playing the street-smart girl who can steal a car as easily as she takes off in a crop-dusting plane, brings a blushing sweetness to her tough chick, whose defenses weaken in the presence of a true innocent.

After a sloooow-developing period of great length, its remarkable that the final act is as moving in a sappy kind of way as it is. Admittedly, my 12-year-old daughter may have coaxed that feeling along.

She and her friends are the audience for The Space Between Us, and those accompanying them will just have to grin and bear it.

Link:
Movie review: "The Space Between Us" is aimed squarely at teens - Gwinnettdailypost.com

Posted in Mars Colonization | Comments Off on Movie review: "The Space Between Us" is aimed squarely at teens – Gwinnettdailypost.com

Snow Moon and lunar eclipse both coming this week – Cantech Letter

Posted: at 7:48 am

Skywatchers are in for a treat this Friday evening as a rare Snow Moon eclipse will take place.

A so-called deep penumbral lunar eclipse will occur on February 10th, as the Earth moves almost directly between the sun and moon, blocking the suns rays and casting a shadow on the moon. Unlike a total or partial lunar eclipse where the moon passes through the central part of the Earths shadow, called the umbra, and goes completely dark, the penumbral eclipse will involve the moon travelling through the outer edges of the Earths shadow (the penumbra), an event which on Earth will be seen as a dimming of the moons brightness.

What makes this penumbral eclipse special is that this is a rare occasion when almost the whole of the moons face will pass within the Earths penumbra, says Jeremy Shears from the British Astronomical Association, to the Telegraph, and so the reduction of the moons brightness will be more perceptible than usual.

The eclipse is expected to last just over four hours and can be seen almost everywhere on Earth. In Canada, viewers will see the full moon shining in the Eastern sky during the eclipse and theyll get the best view as the moon goes into mid-eclipse at 7:44 pm EST. Close watchers in eastern Canada, however, will get the best look as theyll be able to see the shading begin on the moons left side at least an hour and a half earlier at 6:15 pm EST.

Februarys full moon is known as the Snow Moon, a name said to be handed down from Indigenous North American cultures. Februarys moon has also been called the Hunger Moon and the Storm Moon.

For lunar enthusiasts, 2017 expects to be a banner year, space travel-wise, as all five remaining teams competing for Googles Lunar X Prize gear up for their respective missions to the moon. The $30 million prize ($20 million for the first place finisher and $5 million each for second and third place) will be rewarded to the team that first lands a rover on the moon, sends it rolling 500 metres across the moons surface and sends back images and video of the event to Earth.

All in the name of advancing private innovation and entrepreneurship, the Lunar X Prize recently announced the names of the five teams remaining in the competition, all of which have secured launch contracts. The one solely North American entry, Moon Express, has so far reportedly raised $20 million in financing. The Florida-based group is planning a launch later in 2017 and has said its larger ambitions include mining the moon for minerals and moon colonization.

We now have all the resources in place to shoot for the Moon, said Bob Richards, Moon Expresss CEO, in a statement. Our goal is to expand Earths social and economic sphere to the Moon, our largely unexplored eighth continent, and enable a new era of low cost lunar exploration and development for students, scientists, space agencies and commercial interests.

Excerpt from:
Snow Moon and lunar eclipse both coming this week - Cantech Letter

Posted in Moon Colonization | Comments Off on Snow Moon and lunar eclipse both coming this week – Cantech Letter

Scientists Discover 83 Genetic Mutations That Help Determine Your Height – Huffington Post

Posted: at 7:47 am

Ever wonder how much of your height you inherited from your parents?

A large-scale genetic study published recently in the journal Natureis helping shed some light on the factors that determine whether a person grows to be 6-feet-1 or 5-feet-2.

While scientists already had a good idea of the most common genetic factors that contribute to height, the new findings uncover a number of rare genetic alterations that can play a surprisingly major role in human growth.

Using data from the Genetic Investigation of Anthropometric Traits consortium (a group also known as GIANT), scientists from the Broad Instituteat MIT and Harvard analyzed genetic information from more than 700,000 people, discovering 83 DNA changes that play a part in determining a persons height.

In their previous work, the same research team identified nearly 700 common genetic factors linked with height. Now, theyve identified a number of rare genetic variants for human growth that have an even larger effect than most common factors. For some people, these rare DNA changes may account for height differences of up to a full inch.

Overall, common variants still contribute more to height than rare variants, Dr. Joel Hirschhorn, the studys lead author and a professor of pediatrics and genetics at Boston Childrens Hospital and Harvard Medical School, told The Huffington Post. But, for the person who happens to carry one of the rare variants, the impact can be much greater than for common variants. For the variants we looked at, this was up to almost an inch... as opposed to a millimeter or less for the common variants.

Using a new technology called the ExomeChip, the researchers were able to scan the genomes of large populations to find rare markers that correlated with a particular height. They identified 51 uncommon variants found in less than 5 percent of people, and 32 rare variants found in less than 0.5 percent of the population.

With the addition of these uncommon variants, geneticists can now account for 27 percent of the genetics determining height up from 20 percent based on earlier studies.

Heritability is by far the largest factor contributing to individual height.

Today, in places where most people get enough nutrition in childhood to grow to their potential, about 80 percent or more of the variability in height is due to genetic factors that we inherit from our parents, Hirschhorn explained.

According to the studys authors, this method of testing rare genetic variants could be used to investigate uncommon DNA changes involved in other aspects of human health.

Looking at rare variants in genes was helpful in understanding the biology of human growth, Hirschhorn said. With a big enough study, similar approaches could be valuable in understanding the biology of many diseases, which could help guide better treatments.

View post:
Scientists Discover 83 Genetic Mutations That Help Determine Your Height - Huffington Post

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on Scientists Discover 83 Genetic Mutations That Help Determine Your Height – Huffington Post

GIANT study finds rare, but influential, genetic changes related to height – Science Daily

Posted: at 7:47 am


Science Daily
GIANT study finds rare, but influential, genetic changes related to height
Science Daily
In the largest, deepest search to date, the international Genetic Investigation of Anthropometric Traits (GIANT) Consortium has uncovered 83 new DNA changes that affect human height. These changes are uncommon or rare, but they have potent effects ...
The Genetics Of Human Height RevealedScience 2.0
Researchers Find New Genetic Variants that Influence Human Adult HeightSci-News.com

all 14 news articles »

More here:
GIANT study finds rare, but influential, genetic changes related to height - Science Daily

Posted in Human Genetics | Comments Off on GIANT study finds rare, but influential, genetic changes related to height – Science Daily

Scientists Get Down And Dirty With DNA To Track Wild Pigs – NPR

Posted: at 7:47 am

This wild hog from Hawaii was raised at the National Wildlife Research Center in Fort Collins, Colo. Feral pigs in the wild tend to eat anything containing a calorie from rows of corn to sea turtle eggs, to baby deer and goats. Rae Ellen Bichell/NPR hide caption

This wild hog from Hawaii was raised at the National Wildlife Research Center in Fort Collins, Colo. Feral pigs in the wild tend to eat anything containing a calorie from rows of corn to sea turtle eggs, to baby deer and goats.

In the foothills of Colorado's Rocky Mountains, a gravel road leads to a 10-foot-tall fence. Type in a key code, and a gate scrapes open. Undo a chain to get behind another. Everything here is made of metal, because the residents of this facility are experts at invasion and destruction.

They're wild pigs, aka feral swine, wild hogs or Sus scrofa. And biologists at the National Wildlife Research Center in Fort Collins have invented a promising new way to track the invasive animals by looking for tiny traces of them in mud and water.

Biologist Morgan Wehtje points to a boar who's asking her to scratch his bristled back. At 280 pounds, he weighs about as much as an NFL tight end. "His name is Makunakane, which means 'Big Papa' in Hawaiian," says Wehtje. The smaller pigs, like a female named Bobbie Socks, weigh about 150 pounds. They're dense and compact, says Wehtje, "which is why if they were to run at you they'd take you out."

They are opportunistic omnivores. If they get can their mouth around it and it has a calorie in it, they will eat it.

Jack Mayer, biologist, Savannah River National Laboratory

Wehtje and her colleagues study the biology and behavior of these pigs, which were raised in captivity. They're playing in the snow and scoping out the fence with their wet snouts. But their wild, much less cuddly counterparts are destroying the landscape in most U.S. states producing an estimated $1.5 billion in damage per year.

These animals will eat anything, from rows of corn to sea turtle eggs, to baby deer and goats.

"People don't realize that wild pigs are voracious predators," says Jack Mayer, a biologist with the Savannah River National Laboratory in Aiken, S.C., who has studied wild pigs for 40 years. "They will run down and kill and eat lamb, sheep, goats, calves, domestic chickens."

And more.

"Pigs will eat humans," says Mayer. "It's been documented in combat, remote area homicide situations and plane crashes. Pigs will go in and feed on human carcasses."

They are "opportunistic omnivores," Mayer says. "If they get can their mouth around it and it has a calorie in it, they will eat it."

In Texas, feral pigs are tearing up suburban yards. In Louisiana, they damaged levees by digging for food.

Pigs came to North America 500 years ago with early explorers as a source of food. Centuries later, the Eurasian wild boar was introduced to parts of the U.S. by sports hunters, and today's feral swine are "a combination of escaped domestic pigs, Eurasian wild boars, and hybrids of the two," according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Kelly Williams,of the National Wildlife Research Center, in Fort Collins, checks a sample of dirty water from Texas that she's about to analyze for bits of pig DNA. Rae Ellen Bichell/NPR hide caption

Kelly Williams,of the National Wildlife Research Center, in Fort Collins, checks a sample of dirty water from Texas that she's about to analyze for bits of pig DNA.

Once female wild pigs are about 6 months old or so, they can produce as many as a dozen offspring per year. For a number of reasons that haven't been completely nailed down, their populations have really exploded in the last 30 years, Mayer says. There are now at least 6 million wild pigs across the country, with established populations in 35 states.

State and federal legislators have funneled a lot of money into controlling and eliminating these animals because of the trail of destruction they leave behind. But controlling them can feel like an infuriating game of whack-a-mole, because they move a lot, reproduce quickly, and are smart enough to learn to avoid traps and bait. They're also sneaky.

"These things are very secretive," says Mayer. "A lot of people didn't know about wild pigs until they walked out their front door on Sunday morning and saw that it looked like somebody on drugs had rototilled their yard."

But the pigs may have met their match. Kelly Williams, a biological science technician at the National Wildlife Research Center, is going high-tech on these hogs.

She and her colleagues at the National Wildlife Research Center have recently developed a way to keep tabs on the animals without ever even laying eyes on them. All she needs is a scoop of water.

"So, for example, right now in New Mexico the forest service is out collecting water for me," says Williams. "All they have to do is carry around a little Nalgene bottle, scoop up a water sample and ship it back to me."

Pigs love water and mud. They drink it, play in it and roll in it to keep heat and bugs away. When they do, they leave bits of themselves behind drool, skin cells, hair and urine like a wildlife crime scene. Each of those bits contains pig DNA.

"We know pigs are pretty messy, dirty animals, so they might shed more DNA than a coyote lapping up water or something," Williams says.

She worked with wild pigs at the National Wildlife Research Center to identify these tiny bits of DNA called "environmental DNA," or eDNA which can sometimes be detectable up to a month after a pig has visited a site.

Ecologists have used eDNA to monitor invasive fish in the Great Lakes and endangered whale sharks in the Arabian Gulf. Williams' colleagues developed a version to track the presence of Burmese pythons in Florida. Wild pigs are one of the first land animals to be tracked so extensively using eDNA.

Williams starts with a bottle of dirty water, mixed with a solution to preserve the DNA inside.

"Sometimes it looks like chocolate milk," she says. "Sometimes it looks like lemonade."

Williams spins down all the solids in the liquid sample, amplifies the DNA inside, and compares what she finds to 125 base pairs of mitochondrial DNA that could only belong to a pig.

At the end, she gets an answer "Yes, pigs were here," or "No, they weren't." She then passes the results along to people like Brian Archuleta, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service in New Mexico.

Archuleta has a goal for the new year: wild pig annihilation.

"Total elimination by the last day of September of this year," he says of his goal. Archuleta is not joking.

Researchers set up cameras in the wild in Texas to confirm that their test for pig DNA corresponded to visits by actual wild pigs. Courtesy of Kelly Williams/National Wildlife Research Center hide caption

Researchers set up cameras in the wild in Texas to confirm that their test for pig DNA corresponded to visits by actual wild pigs.

He covers eastern New Mexico, which is not only thousands of square miles of desert, mountains and sand dunes, but also right next to Texas, which is teeming with pigs (not to be confused with javelina, a smaller, unrelated species native to the Americas).

To track wild pigs in his region, Archuleta used to have to repeatedly send people out across deserts and mountains to place cameras, use dogs to sniff them out, and bait traps with tubes of corn.

"The eastern side of New Mexico is a big place lots of country. We are looking for a needle in a haystack," says Archuleta.

But recently, he just had a few people go out and collect water, and then shipped the samples to Kelly Williams. With the results he got back he was able to narrow the search to about 10 square miles in the desert, and another small area in the mountains.

Next, Archuleta booked a helicopter, hired some sharpshooters and flew over the areas where pig DNA had been found. They shot eight hogs in one place and 13 in another.

"There are unknown places in New Mexico that I'm sure have pigs that we just don't know about," he says.

He's hoping the new eDNA sampler will help him find every last one.

Meanwhile, Kelly Williams is already on to her next challenge. She's working on a way to use eDNA to track another elusive species the Nile monitor. These hissing, tail-whipping, 5-foot-long lizards are expanding their reach in Florida. They eat endangered owls for breakfast.

See the article here:
Scientists Get Down And Dirty With DNA To Track Wild Pigs - NPR

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Scientists Get Down And Dirty With DNA To Track Wild Pigs – NPR