This blog contains student opinions and postings about the concepts discussed during their study of biology in this college level course.
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Summer STEM Program at Manhattan College School of Engineering
This sounds like an interesting opportunity for Sophomore and Junior students, who are interested in Engineering. Deadline for the application is May 15. See your science teacher for the application or download it from here.
Manhattan College Summer Engineering Prog-04162013 by Charles Ippolito
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Science Seminar April 3
Science
Seminar Series
Presents
Naomi Schwartz
Doctoral student, Columbia
University
Understanding
the causes and effects
of fire in the Peruvian Amazon
In recent years, wildfire activity has increased across the
Amazon. In the past, fire was very rare there, so these changes could have big
effects on biodiversity, ecosystems, and the carbon cycle. Most fires in the
Amazon are started by people, either intentionally, through the use of fire for
land management, or accidentally. Especially during drought years these fires
can burn out of control into nearby forests. Naomi
Schwartz is a Ph.D. student in ecology, evolution, and environmental biology at
Columbia University. Her work uses a combination of ground and satellite
measurements to understand the causes and effects of these fires in the
Peruvian Amazon. She is especially interested in understanding the
relationships between human activities and fire occurrence, and the effects
of fire on secondary forests.
Wednesday, April 3
7 pm
Bronxville High School Auditorium
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
New Concussion Guidelines Stress Individual Treatment
AP Bio 3/19/13
Comment 3/19 Brooke
Bonfiglio
The
article I chose is quite relevant to the new guidelines and restrictions coming
into play in all levels of contact sports. This article talks about the
precautions that individuals and doctors must take when determining a
concussion and its severity. In Belson’s article entitled “New Concussion
Guidelines Stress Individual Treatment” his main focus is how concussions are a
much more complicated injury than a broken a broken arm for example, and how
they must be diagnosed with much more detail because of this. Benson describes
concussions as “too idiosyncratic to be categorized neatly.” Idiosyncratic is
defined as “a structural or behavioral characteristic
peculiar to an individual or group” meaning that the brain and therefore
concussions impact on the brain is still a mystery to scientist and doctors. One
of the approaches doctors and trainers are taking to make concussions
assessments more personalize is not giving one set time when you are safe to
return to play, but instead diagnosing each person individually and giving them
the ok based on their assessment. Other tools such as, symptom tests, online
diagnostics, and balance tests are also used and helpful, however Giza and many
other authors on the subject said that they should not be used alone. Recent
other revisions were published yesterday in Neurology, a well respected medical
journal, and should be implemented by all physicians dealing with concussions.
This
article is important to our culture as some of the biggest sports, such as
football and soccer, also hold the highest concussion rates, and scientists and
doctors are just recently finding out the long term damage concussions, minor
and major, can have on a person for the rest of their life. The NFL and many
college programs are changing their diagnostic on players and their revision to
play with this recent discovery, and there has even been talk of taking out the
kick off from football as it is the most physically dangerous play of the game.
It is also important for any person to understand how fragile and sensitive our
brain is, and to be know when we are endangering the most important and
sophisticated part of our bodies.
This
article I thought was very interesting, however lacked much detail. I think
Benson could have included some of the more recent guidlelines that were going
to be followed, as they were just recently published in the journal “Neurology.”
This would provide the reader with an ability to find a resolution to this
problem and would have strengthened the article greatly. I did enjoy how he
listed the most dangerous sporst to be football and rugy, followed by soccer.
And that women’s soccer and basketball have the highest rate of concussions.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
The Dying of Monarch Butterflies
Aridjis, Lincoln P. Brower And Homero.
"The Dying of the Monarch Butterflies." The New York Times.
The New York Times, 16 Mar. 2013. Web. 17 Mar. 2013.
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/16/opinion/the-dying-of-the-monarch-butterflies.html?_r=0>.
The article, “The Dying of Monarch Butterflies”
was quite interesting. This article was written by Lincoln P. Browner, a
professor of zoology at the University of Florida. He speaks of the mortality
of butterflies, the deforestation of their natural habitat and the affect of
herbicides on the butterflies.
In a place called Contepec, in
Michoacán, a few hours northwest of Mexico City, every winter, swarms of orange
and black butterflies arise from the Oyamel fir forest on Altamirano Hill to
look for water. The first time Mr. Browner witnessed this event was in 1977.
Today what is left of the beautiful butterfly reserve is almost nothing. The
reason for the decline of butterflies as speculated by Browner is the
destruction of breeding habitat in the United States due to powerful herbicides
and genetically engineered crops, and illegal logging in Mexico’s
high-elevation Oyamel fir forests. Because of such serious issues, in 1986, the
Monarch Butterfly Special Biosphere Reserve was founded, but there is still
logging present. Tourism is also ruining the habitats of these butterflies.
Plant life has been demolished and the pick up of dust is filling the lungs of
the butterflies. As stated in the article, When we visited the Piedra Herrada
site this February, along with former President Jimmy Carter, a welcome sign on
the trail leading to the butterflies read, ‘No more than 20 people in the
Sanctuary.’ And yet we counted 24 tourist buses in the parking lot.” Clearly,
the park is not being monitored enough.
This
demolishment of the Monarch butterflies is terrible. Humans may make these
beautiful creatures extinct. Every animal is important to society. As we
learned about the food chain, taking one animal and removing it from the
equation causes a domino affect of all the other animals in the food chain
either at the extreme dying off too, or having to migrate and find another food
source.
Overall this article was written quite
well with the exception of a few unclear statements. Hopefully, action can be
taken in the future to better preserve the butterfly habitats so that we can
enjoy their beauty and also keep them safe. Right now even though there is
supposedly monitoring, the butterflies are dying from ecotourism and the
destruction of habitat. I also thought the author could have gone more in depth
about what he was doing to help the butterflies from decreasing in Mexico.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Solving the Puzzles of Mimicry in Nature
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/12/science/solving-the-puzzles-of-mimicry-in-nature.html?ref=science
“Solving
the puzzles of Mimicry in Nature” by Sean Carroll was a very interesting
article about the nuances of mimicry and recent discoveries that relate to
it. The article begins by walking
the reader through the discovery of mimicry by Charles Darwin, Henry Walter
Bates, and Fritz Muller. Darwin is
credited with the theory of evolution with natural selection; however, its
acceptance was aided tremendously by the fieldwork by Bates and Muller and
Brazil. Both noticed Brazil to
contain a myriad of colorful butterflies, but what interested them most was the
way that palatable butterflies would have wing patterns and colors that were
nearly perfect matches of other unpalatable butterflies. They theorized that this was a
mechanism of self-defense, as predators would stay away from those they had
learned are unpalatable. Muller
went even further as he made the crucial discovery one day that unpalatable
butterflies were also mimicking other unpalatable butterflies, which seems
quite pointless at first.
Muller saw more deeply, and realized that unpalatable butterflies would
be stronger if they were in greater abundance as their unpalatability had to be
learned by predators before it would protect them. Natural selection explains why the different wing patterns
would converge, but until recently scientists did not understand how such
complex wing patterns could be imitated by different species. An international team of researchers
recently did an experiment to figure out whether the mimicry was evolved from
mutations or whether patterning genes were exchanged between species. By analyzing the DNA sequences in two
mimicking species they were able to determine that each species had
independently evolved up to 20 different patterns that were strikingly similar
in each species, but that in species that are more closely related,
color-controlling genes had been exchanged.
This
article has a great deal of connections with the current unit we are doing on
evolution and natural selection.
Much of what we have learned in this unit relates greatly to the article
that was written today. I’m sure
many of my classmates were as interested in mimicry as I was, but felt the
explanation for the striking similarities in species like butterflies to be
insufficient without a better explanation. Therefore, this article was an interesting read and also
helps me in understanding evolution a little better.
I
thought the article was, for the most part, quite well-written. I enjoyed the way the author set the
stage for the reader by introducing all the major historical scientific figures
that were involved in the discovery and study of mimicry; however, at times, I
felt that the author took away from the science in the article by including
rather pointless facts such as Muller having six daughters. Other than that, I appreciated the flow
and conciseness of the article, the only other complaint I have is that the
experiment that yielded the results about how mimicry comes about was not fully
explained in the article and left me with a few questions.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Major Grocer to Label Foods With Gene-Modified Content
Strom, Stephanie. "Major Grocer to Label Foods With Gene-Modified Content." The New York Times. The New York Times, 09 Mar. 2013. Web. 13 Mar. 2013. <http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/09/business/grocery-chain-to-require-labels-for-genetically-modified-food.html?pagewanted=all>.
In the article, “Major Grocer to Label Foods With
Gene-Modified Content”, the author discusses the fact that Whole Foods is going
to be trying something new in regards to genetically modified foods. Whole
Foods Market will become the first retailer in the United States to require
labeling of all genetically modified foods sold in its stores. The president of Whole Foods said that this
labeling requirement will be in place within five years and was instated
because of consumer demand. According to the president of Whole Foods,
manufacturers have seen a fifteen percent increase in sales of products that
are labeled. Although there is much support for this new act, there is also
opposition; “The Grocery Manufacturers Association, the trade group that
represents major food companies and retailers, issued a statement opposing the move.
“These labels could mislead consumers into believing that these food products
are somehow different of present a special risk or a potential risk,”” It is
important to note that the FDA has deemed genetically modified products safe.
This
is very interesting since we have recently been talking about genetically
modified organisms and how they should be treated. This is also very important for
the future since as we all grow older, food will be changing with us and the
way sellers will deal with the changes will be very interesting.
I
believe that this author did a great job with the article. The article covered
an issue that is very relevant at this time. Overall I enjoyed this article
because I thought it was very informative.
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