Making real science accessible and interesting for all people.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Why are garden tomatoes so much better than store bought tomatoes?
Nearly everything grown in the garden is better than store bought. Somethings grown in the garden are so much better though there isn't really a comparison of the two. Tomatoes are one such garden vegetable (or fruit!). Of course, the garden produces vegetables that are only minutes old off of plants babied by the gardener and in optimal soil. All this sets garden produce up for better taste over large scale farm produce shipped hundreds of miles to your local supermarket. This is only part of the reason why garden grown tomatoes are so much better than store bought though. Over many decades of tomato breeding programs, plant scientists have been able to produce tomatoes that store well and are firm enough to withstand the bumps and bruises of the shipping process. The problem is this breeding process somehow "turned-off" the gene that produces the sweet garden fresh tomato taste found in common garden type tomatoes. This type of problem is not isolated to tomatoes though. Some modern roses, through years of breeding to produce a rose that withstands shipping and has fewer or no thorns lost their genetic ability to smell good. So today, it is pretty common to find roses at the flower shop that have virtually no sent at all. With researchers recently finding the taste gene that was turned-off in the tomato breeding process there is hope though that plant breeders will again be able to breed garden taste back into tomatoes. There problems of turning off genes is also a good example of how genetics and breeding works. You can selectively breed plants or animals in such a way to pick out specific traits such as large fruit, firmness, lack of thorns or so on. The problem is that you can only do so much of this. You can only breed tomatoes that are so big and then you can't breed them any larger. There are limits to what plant breeding and genetics can do. Corn, probably the most amazingly bred crop, has been bred to grow 15 feet tall. The shortest varieties grow only two or so feet tall. I don't think it would ever be genetically possible to produce a variety of corn that could grow 100 feet tall. It trying to select for different traits other traits must decline to allow for the selected trait to be expressed increasingly. That is exactly what has happened to tomatoes and roses. As certain traits were selected for increasingly, other traits such as taste went by the wayside as the plant increasingly supported the selected for trait.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Life of a Cactus Part 9: Cactus Fruit and Seed
Ripe Prickly Pear Cactus fruit. |
Ripe Saguaro Cactus fruit. |
Friday, June 22, 2012
Corn: the Worlds Most Amazing Grain
Glass gem corn. This variety of corn is an amazing testament of the incredible genetic flexibility and diversity of corn. |
What makes Corn so amazing? A big part of it is corns amazing genetics. Corn has the ability to be selectively bred to adapt to environmental conditions so it can be grown anywhere from the equator all the way to the Arctic Circle. And all the way from rainforests to deserts. No other crop matches this diversity and ability to be selectively bred to adapt to so many conditions. Amazingly, none of these genetics were a result of, or even needed modern molecular bioscience. Even more amazing, modern molecular bioscience has reduced the overall diversity of corn by over 90 percent according to many estimates. So called modern corn varieties developed by science also are more dependent on fertilizer, irrigation, and pesticides. On the positive side though, modern science developed corn is extremely productive.
So think about it. Pretty much no matter where your ancestors came from they probably ate quite a bit of corn a long the way. And if you think about your diet now, you probably eat quite a bit of corn today also. We all are very dependent on the amazing legacy of corn and it is very likely that without corn we wouldn't be here today. On the flip-side without us, corn wouldn't be here either.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Life of a Cactus Part 8: Flowers
Prickly Pear Cactus flower. |
As you may deduct from above, if a cactus is ever to reach
maturity, it must earn its way. The
cactus first puts years of effort into establishing itself in the harsh desert
environment. Drought, scorching sun, and
relentless heat day after day are unforgiving.
Any violation of these harsh desert laws results in death. Very few cacti survive much past the seedling
stage and only those that are fortunate enough to land in ideal soil conditions
during a good rainfall year will survive.
Those that do must grow and work to establish themselves as a strong
young plant before even a single flower is produced. Cacti that do flower are survivors to which few
other plants are comparable. Some cacti,
such as prickly pears, can flower within a matter of several years after
germination. Others, such as the
saguaro, require 35 to 40 years of growth and may be eight feet tall before a
single flower is produced. After the
first year of flower production, those that continue to flower and produce seed
year after year are even greater survivors.
It isn’t until young cacti grow from their seed however, that these
cacti have truly beaten the brutal reality of natural selection in the desert
environment.
Hedgehog Cactus in bloom. |
When it comes to cacti and reproduction, water again is
central. This time it’s a little
different though. The normally water
conservative cactus becomes quite liberal with water use in flower and fruit
production. Many cacti produce very
succulent, tender, and beautiful flowers containing lots of water. If you were to touch the petals you would
notice a slight succulence. Then,
touching the inside of the flower you would notice a slightly sticky
dampness. This is odd when compared to other typical
desert plants that produce much drier and water conservative flowers. So why would the cactus put so much water
into flower production? Why is it
wasting this water? If a cactus could
talk it would probably say it is not wasting the water at all. Rather, the wetness of the flower displays
its heavy dependence as well as contribution to the animal world around
it. The cactus gives a little and takes
a little. In the form of nectar, the
cactus flower provides both water and food for animals. Bats, bees and other insects, as well as
birds look to cacti as both a food and water source in the hot dry desert. Often, the moisture found in a cactus flower
is the most available source of hydration smaller desert animals can find at
certain times of the year in the desert.
This water and food source often becomes a magnet for activity during
flowering time. The cactus flower can
become a small swarm of buzzing insects looking for nourishment. The cactus doesn’t just give out nectar just
because it’s nice though, it does expect something in return. When bugs, birds, and bats feed on cacti
nectar, they also inadvertently pick-up pollen.
The pollen is then carried to the next cactus flower as the animal
searches for more nectar. In this way
pollen is distributed from one flower to the next and pollination is
accomplished. Without bugs, birds, or
bats carrying out this pollination cactus fruits and seeds would never
form. So the cactus gives a little and
takes a little.
Friday, June 15, 2012
Book Review 1491: new revelations of the Americas before Columbus
Epidemiology: Very early on, when Europeans contacted the New World prior to 1500 or so, huge populations of Native Americans were found. Populations were so dense that some early explorers found it impossible to settle. A few decades later the population of Native Americans had decreased so significantly it became much easier to settle, for example the Pilgrims. During the time period between first contact and settlement by Europeans up to 95 percent of Native Americans were wiped out by diseases Europeans introduced to the New World. Diseases such as influenza, measles, and small pox, which Europeans were well adapted to, decimated the Native Americans. There are several reasons for this including no prior exposure to the diseases, genetics, and ecological history of the North American continent. The book goes in-depth into each of these areas to examine why Native Americans were affected so drastically.
Genetics: Several sections of the book are devoted to genetics of natives to the Americas. As mentioned before, the genetics of Native American immune systems is discussed and why this is partially responsible for susceptibility to disease. Genetics are also examined to determine lineages of how North America was originally settled by Asians. There is also a small section devoted to how a scientist is searching for descendants of an extinct people group by searching for there mitochondrial DNA in people alive today.
Botany and agriculture: The history of corn is examined, which is quite an enigma. Corn is one of the major contributions of the Americas to the rest of the world. Other foods such as tomatoes, beans, potatoes, peanuts, peppers and squash were also completely unheard of in the Old World prior to contact with the new world. It is odd to think of Africa without peanuts, Italy without corn or tomatoes, and norther Europe without potatoes. This was the case though prior to the 1500's.
Overall, the book also gives you a decent idea of how science works. While science obviously informs us about unknowns in the world, it also finds a lot more unknowns, questions and can often be inconclusive. So, while this book gives an excellent history of North America is also is a pretty good science book. Also on my reading list is Charles Mann's next book, "1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created."
Monday, June 11, 2012
Thomas Edison and Renewable Energy
Thomas Edison I am sure is one of the most interesting and influential Americans ever. Everyone knows he invented the light bulb. But he also had a number of other inventions, some of which were decades if not a whole century ahead of what the rest of the world was ready for. For example, he was the first to invent a automatic electric vote-counting machine, which politicians thought would mess-up the entire democratic process. Amazingly, most of Edison's education was self-taught. He could not function well in traditional educational settings both because of his personality as well as being mostly deaf. Edison, being the forward thinking and amazing inventor that he was, even foresaw problems we are having today with the environment. Unfortunately, he was so ahead of his times that no one was able to really pick-up where he left off. Him, being a father of modern electricity, it is amazing to see that he was able to think beyond extracting resources to produce electricity. This was many decades before anyone seriously considered renewable energy as important or extraction of limited natural resources as a problem. Here are some interesting quotes.
“We are like tenant farmers chopping
down the fence around our house for fuel when we should be using
Nature’s inexhaustible sources of energy — sun, wind and tide…
“I’d put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power!
“I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that.”
Thomas Edison, 1847-1931
Inventor of the incandescent light
Founder of Edison General Electric
Credited with 1,093 patents
Inventor of the incandescent light
Founder of Edison General Electric
Credited with 1,093 patents
The picture, information, and quotes are from the above website.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Montezuma Castle National Monument: Montezuma's Well
Montezuma's Well, part of Montezuma Castle National Monument. This is the well viewed from the cliffs surrounding the pond. |
Montezuma's Well at the outlet, where the pond flows into one of the surrounding cliffs. |
Vegetation along the canal the empties into Beaver Creek. |
Monday, June 4, 2012
Montezuma Castle National Monument
Montezuma's Castle |
Instead of giving the basic information on the park, I'll try to give you a little different perspective.
During the summer, Montezuma's Castle can give us modern humans a good perspective of what a desert oasis is like. Us moderners are used to air conditioning, running water, and produce filled super markets everywhere we go. Obviously this wasn't the case in the desert less than a century ago. Hiking around the monument in the sweltering heat and scorching sun of summer should get one major point across to everyone about living in the desert. That is: water is life. The rolling limestone hills and mountains surrounding the monument are covered with relatively sparse Upper Sonoran Desert vegetation. Water for drinking is completely absent and shade is minuscule. Yuccas, prickly pear cacti, Creosote Bush, and Grey Thorn are the dominate plants, none of which cast any significant amount of shade. Finding or not finding shade in the summer can mean life or death. Think about how much hotter it is in the sun than it is in the shade. Temperatures the weatherman gives us everyday are always taken in the shade. If you were to take the temperature in the desert sun it might be thirty or more degrees hotter. 130 plus degrees is not easy for the body to handle and can quickly lead to life threatening heat stroke. This is exactly why ancient Native Americans settled along Beaver Creek, where the water from the creek mean life.
Gazing up into an Arizona Sycamore tree along Beaver Creek in Montezuma Castle National Monument. This tree casts life giving shade that decreases the temperature by tens of degrees. |
Beaver Creek might not look like much, but its effect on the landscape is dramatic. The water-less shade-less landscape surrounding Beaver Creek quickly is transformed into a more moist and shady habitat the nearer you get to the creek. Real trees become abundant near the creek, replacing the diminutive pathetic excuses for trees further away. Smaller desert trees such as Desert Willows, Mesquites, and Acacias, become common along the outer edges of the riparian area. Riparian areas are simply the vegetation adjacent to water. As you move closer huge Arizona Sycamores, Arizona Walnuts, Velvet Ash and Cottonwoods become abundant and cast a dense shade on the ground. Hackberry, Mesquites, and Acacias are also common in the undergrowth of these large trees. This shady more moist environment is far more hospitable and inviting than the surrounding desert. In-fact, you can get the feeling this shady desert oasis might have even had a paradise like sense to it to ancient desert dwellers. While the actual creek might not look like much, remember, a much large amount of water is flowing slowly underground. This underground water feeds the deep rooted riparian trees tens of yards away, creating an abundance of life in the desert.
Beyond all this, the creek of course also supplied plenty of water for agriculture for ancient inhabitants. The riparian vegetation also supplied the ancients with plenty of wild foods to eat such as mesquite bean pods. Furthermore, the riparian area was not only attractive to humans but also to wildlife, which were hunted. On our trip we saw an abundance of wildlife including two snakes, squirrels, wrens of various species and a rather tame Summer Tanager.
A rather tame Summer Tanager found at the monument. |
Friday, June 1, 2012
Life of a Cactus Part 7: The Cactus and Freezing Temperatures
All that water stored inside the cactus can be quite a
problem certain times of the year. Freezing
temperatures can create ice crystals that burst cells causing tissue
damage. Depending on the amount of
tissue that freezes and how well a cactus is adapted to freezing temperatures,
freezing can actually kill a cactus.
Most species of cacti are not well adapted to freezing and for that
reason most are tropical and subtropical.
Tropical climates never freeze while subtropical climates occasionally
freeze. The extreme southern United
States, such as southern Arizona, Florida, and California are all
subtropical. The subtropical Sonoran
Desert of Southern Arizona and Sonora, Mexico typically average freezing temperatures a
few nights every year or fewer. Freezing
temperatures rarely last more than a few hours and results in the abundance of
cacti found in the Sonoran Desert. Saguaro cacti are the largest cacti that can
tolerate freezing, but only as long as freezing temperatures last less than 24
hours. Areas that receive freezes lasting
longer than 24 hours have no saguaro cacti.
Organ Pipe cacti are much more frost sensitive and only survives along
the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona and further south. Some species such as the Cordon can survive
no freezing whatsoever and therefore only survive further south in Mexico. A handful of prickly pears are able to
survive very deep freezes for long durations of time. Several species, such as Plains Prickly Pear,
grow in grasslands of the central United States up to the Canadian border. One species, Brittle Prickly Pear, grows
nearly to the Arctic Circle surviving temperatures as cold as -40 degrees
Fahrenheit. Species able to endure
freezing temperatures actually remove water from their cells, essentially
dehydrating themselves, so ice crystals will not burst and kill cells.
Brittle Prickly Pear, able to survive temperatures of -40 degrees F by pumping water out of its cells so ice crystals do not burst cells. |