Archive for the ‘Biology’ Category

I made my own yogurt at home

Monday, March 22nd, 2010
Stuff you'll need

Stuff you'll need

I’ve been working out for a few months, and recently really increased my intensity at the gym, and have been modifying my diet to help me gain weight. I’ve discovered that smoothies are a great way to get extra calories and protein in my diet, and are quick and easy before going to work out.

The thing is, yogurt is kind of expensive. You can buy a whole gallon of milk for what you’d pay for a quart of yogurt. By making your own, you can get four times the yogurt for the same price!

There are lots of instructions on the internet for making your own. I followed the steps at wikiHow and had success the first time.

Here’s the stuff you’ll need:
(more…)

Firefly Summer

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009
from "Grant and Caroline's pix" on Flickr.

from Grant and Caroline’s pix on Flickr

This summer I’ve seen more fireflies than I can remember. Well, I have to qualify that, as there weren’t many around the house where I grew up in south Georgia. Sure, we’d see the occasional yellow-green light flickering through the yard, or, sadly, obliterated on the car’s windshield when driving at night. My best remembered display was when as a young teen I was visiting my grandmother’s house in Clayton, Georgia. The lightning bugs flickered through the bamboo grove below the house, and in the trees and bushes surrounding the house on Duggan Hill. It was also on that trip that I saw my first Luna moth.

I don’t recall seeing fireflies here at home last summer, but just a week ago I walked outside and witnessed an awe-inspiring display of hundreds of tiny lights flickering in the woods at the edge of the back yard. I stood transfixed, amazed at nature’s magical beauty. I instantly understood why people once believed in fairies and wee folk, and for a moment I did, too.

Though they never really synchronized, their flashing seemed to come in waves. For a few seconds they flickered all over the yard, then there seemed to come a pause for a few seconds, with only a couple of fireflies sending their sparkling mating signals. For a few nights I spent time on the back deck, enjoying their spellbinding lights.

This week the number of fireflies has greatly decreased, and tonight I counted only three or four flashing among the trunks of the sweetgums and pines. Some floated through the back yard, almost as if they were desperately aware that the pickins for a mate are slimmer than just last week.

I did a quick search and found some interesting information about fireflies in Georgia. There may be many different species here, differentiated by color of the light, or the pattern of flashing. It also turns out that one of the nation’s foremost firefly researchers is Jonathan Copeland at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro. He’s researched some species in the South that exhibit synchronized flashing, previously thought only to occur in Asian species.

I also discovered that, depending on the area, fireflies may be in decline or in others, increasing. They’re sensitive to environmental conditions, so, like frogs and other amphibians, may be indicators of the ecological health of an area. Given this year’s backyard display, I hope that means they’ve found a comfortable home here.

The Museum of Science in Boston is again working to collect information about firefly populations in New England and the rest of the US. I’ll be sending in my observations this summer, and hope that it adds to our knowledge of fireflies. Hopefully the public’s participation can help in our understanding these animals, and will help us to preserve these magical creatures for future generations.

Resources:

You can help conserve firefles by participating in the Boston Museum of Science’s Firefly Watch program at this website:

An inventor has created a product which so closely mimics the look of one species of firefly that not only does it fool us humans, but has been used by researchers to lure fireflies. The product is called Firefly Magic, and is available to the public. If you live in an area without native fireflies, like much of the west coast of the US, you can place this system in your yard and experience much of the wonder of fireflies.

Gay penguins show that same-sex couples raising children isn’t “unnatural”

Friday, June 5th, 2009

MSNBC reports on a pair of male Humbolt penguins at a zoo in Germany that incubated an egg and have continued to raise the chick.

Considering that the egg was originally abandoned by its presumably heterosexual penguin mother, it seems this is quite a good example of why letting same-sex couples adopt is really a good idea. See, it’s like this: the chick would have perished before hatching had the gay pair not incubated the egg. (Zookeepers placed the abandoned egg in their nest.) Similarly, gay couples in the human world can be fantastic parents for children currently being shuffled through foster care because they’ve been taken from abusive, neglectful, or otherwise harmful straight parents.

The “But it’s unnatural!” argument no longer works, folks.

Freaky Transparent Head Fish

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Ew. Just Ew. I’m simultaneously fascinated and repulsed. This took me a while to understand, because the eyes are inside the head. Which is transparent. The fish is called Macropinna microstoma, or commonly a “barreleye fish.”

Take a look: Researchers solve mystery of deep-sea fish with tubular eyes and transparent head. (Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute via Countdown with Keith Olbermann)

Panda bites (another) man

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

What is it that makes people think its okay to enter an animal’s enclosure at a zoo? It boggles the mind that people are so stupid.

Gu Gu the panda got some noms in on his third human. Third, folks. Why do they keep doing this?

Bathtub orchids

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

I’ve never really had luck with orchids, but I think things are changing. I have mine sitting on the edge of the bathtub, which has a huge south-facing window on the other side. I got the first two orchids this past summer, and the last one in October, and the sun from the window never got to the orchids. Now that it’s winter, they get a brief dose of full sun every day. They all seem to be thriving, and one has just revealed its buds.

Bathtub Orchids

Epi Mabel Kanda 'Miyao' x Epi randianum (rear), Dend 'Thanas Blue' (in bloom), Bc Little Mermaid 'Janet' (front, with buds)

I bought the Dendrobium ‘Thanas Blue’ in bloom at Publix, of all places. They had been carrying orchids in the produce section off and on all summer and fall, and I finally couldn’t resist those beautiful purple flowers. It’s been in bloom over a month now, and only 3 of the blossoms have faded.

The Epidendrum hybrid and the Brassocattleya were bought at the local Lowes. They were good old “bag orchids” — just potted and in a stapled-closed, clear poly bag. The top label for the Bc Little Mermaid ‘Janet’ had a picture of more usual delicate Brassavola-type flowers, but after finding a picture on Flickr, I discovered it is much more like the standard corsage orchid. Which suites me must fine, actually. It was marked as a “fragrant variety,” so I hope it has that lovely Brassavola fragrance. 

The Epidendrum is described by some as an Epidendrum x Encyclia intergeneric called Epicyclia. At any rate, the tag called it Epi Mabel Kanda ‘Miyao’ x Epidendrum randianum (syn. Encyclia randii). The picture on the bag showed the classic Mabel Kanda green tepals and pink lip, but another photo on Flickr revealed an interesting pink and white striped lip. When I bought this plant, its newest growth was a spindly pseudobulb, but since then put on this new, plump pseudobulb that is getting ready to bloom.

I’m really happy that these three seem to be doing so well, and I’m going to try and see just how many orchids I can fit on the edge of the tub. Honey bought a shelf at Lowes to put up for the orchids to get them off the side of the tub, and maybe that’s a good idea. I’m sure they’ll do well on a shelf on the wall, too. Look for pictures of the Little Mermaid soon!

Show Me the Monkey

Thursday, October 13th, 2005

Yeah, it’s been quiet around SciSpot lately, hasn’t it? I’ve been a busy little beaver working on a project for some new friends at the Sasquatch Research Initiative.

What, has Woody gone completely insane? Has he forsaken science for credulity in things better left to the Weekly World News?

If you’ve read much of SciSpot, you know I have a soft spot for the big hairy hominid that supposedly lives in the Pacific Northwest. It has been something that has always intrigued me. Believe it or not, my work with SRI has been enlightening, to say the least. Not about Sasquatch, instead about myself. It’s amazing how I thought I was a tried-and-true skeptic, not prone to any type of romanticism at all. For me, UFOs, Sasquatch, the Loch Ness Monster and the like were entertaining diversions for those times when I really like to get creeped out. Deep down, I knew that they were all pretty much silliness.

The Bigfoot phenomenon has me questioning a few things about myself, however. Don’t get me wrong — I’m still very skeptical about this. The rational part of me sees no way that Sasquatch can be anything other than a cultural phenomenon, a modern-day myth. Casts of footprints and films notwithstanding, all there is are fascinating, many times terrifying reports of encounters with gigantic, hairy beasts that walk upright, and whose faces look far too human. That skeptical part of me agrees with others who have said that these attributes reflect a subconsious yearning to return to the wild in us, and at the same time relfect a fear of returning to that state.

(more…)