SCIENCE NEWS ONLINE

Butterfly IQ

April 11, 1998 | Volume 153 | Number 15

Cover: Can butterflies learn preferences for flower colors or knacks for finding the nectar in certain flowers shapes? Pollination researchers have started to find out. (Credit: Dave Cavagnaro, Fenton Communications, Washington, D.C.)

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News of the Week:

Greenhouse Warming Hurts Arctic Ozone 

Atmospheric warming in coming decades could delay the recovery of Earth’s ozone layer.

 

Drug prevents some cancer, poses risks

 While tamoxifen can halve the risk of breast malignancies in cancerfree women, it also poses some serious risks—at least in women over 50. 

 

Bacteria cause plague in coral reef 

Researchers have identified the bacterium causing an unusually virulent coral disease.

 

Carotid surgery comes with complications 

A common operation to reduce blockage in the carotid artery carries greater risks of stroke than previously thought.

 

Tiny bioreactors speed up enzyme reaction 

Spherical clusters of polymer molecules in a mixture of water and supercritical carbon dioxide can act as reaction vessels for enzymes.

 

Mutualisms seen as partnerships for barter 

A century-old economic model may help ecologists understand how two species can develop a mutually beneficial relationship.

 

Internal fight settles size of body parts 

By preventing the growth of butterfly wings and beetle horns, investigators can increase the size of other developing body parts.

 

Evading quantum barrier to time travel

Quantum effects do not necessarily rule out the possibility of traveling back in time.


Research Notes

Archaeology

Cutting-edge pursuits in Stone Age 

Human ancestors made sophisticated stone tools, displayed advanced hunting skills, and created symbolic artwork at least 200,000 years ago in the Middle East.

 

New light on ancient smokers 

A chemical analysis pushes back direct evidence for tobacco smoking by Native Americans to between 1715 B.C. and A.D. 105.

 

Biomedicine

Gene therapy for breast, ovarian cancer 

Hyperactivity of a gene implicated in breast and ovarian cancer was dampened by injections of another gene.

 

Raspberry-rich diet forestalls cancer in rats 

Raspberries are suggested to ward off a cancer of the digestive tract.

 

Arsenic: A novel cancer remedy? 

Low doses of arsenic may prove helpful in treating people suffering from leukemia.

 

Chemistry

Friends, elephants: Lend me your ears 

Elephants appear to use secretions from glands behind their ears to communicate with each other.

 

Violin’s varnish makes beautiful music 

A violin’s sweet sound may depend on the wood's finish.

 

Soap stamps out grease fires 

Certain fire extinguishers can smother flames with a foamy layer of soap.

 


Articles:

How Bright Is a Butterfly?
The prettiest pollinators match wits with bees

Butterflies may be more capable of learning than pollination biologists have thought.

 

Electrons in Boxes
Probing artificial atoms to stretch quantum physics

Physicists find surprises when they probe the behavior of electrons inside tiny semiconductor structures called quantum dots.




 

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