Pets Can Improve Children's Health
Children who have pet animals at home have stronger immune systems and are less likely to take days off school sick, a study suggests.
Researchers at Warwick University in Coventry found that having a cat or dog exposed children to more infections early in life.
However, this exposure boosted their immune systems in the medium term and meant these children attended school more often, on average, than pupils who did not have pets.
The authors said the benefits were most pronounced in children aged between five and eight years.
Brighton Spirit, Dec.1, 2007. http://brightonspirit.co.uk/
DOGS TAUGHT TO USE COMPUTERS IN AUSTRIAN STUDY
Four dogs strutted their stuff recently by using touch-screen computers to classify color photographs for a study of animal cognition.
"Using touch-screen computers with dogs opens up a whole world of possibilities on how to test the cognitive abilities of dogs by basically completely controlling any influence from the owner or experimenter," the University of Vienna, Austria, researchers write in the most recent online issue of the journal Animal Cognition.
Fox News, www.foxnews.com
Origin of dogs traced
Dogs today come in all shapes and sizes, but scientists believe they evolved from just a handful of wolves tamed by humans living in or near China less than 15,000 years ago.
Three research teams have attempted to solve some long-standing puzzles in the evolution and social history of dogs.
Their findings, reported in the journal Science, point to the existence of probably three founding females - the so-called "Eves" of the dog world.
They conclude that intensive breeding by humans over the last 500 years - not different genetic origins - is responsible for the dramatic differences in appearance among modern dogs.
One team studied Old World dogs to try to pin down their origins, previously thought to be in the Middle East.
The other team studied dogs of the New World and found they are not New World dogs at all, but also have their origins in East Asia.
Carles Vila, of Uppsala University, Sweden, one of the team studying the New World dogs, told BBC News Online: "We found that dogs originating in the Old World arrived to the New World with immigrating humans.
"Thus, even before the development of trade as we know it now, humans had to be exchanging dogs." He added that exactly how or why humans domesticated dogs was not known, but the speed at which they seem to have multiplied and diversified indicates they played an important role in human life. ”I can imagine that if dogs were, for example, improving the quality of hunting, that would be a very great advantage for humans. It could even have made the colonization of the New World easier.
"There must have been something advantageous about those dogs that made them extremely successful and allowed them to spread all over the world."
Peter Savolainen, of the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, led the study of Old World dogs, analyzing DNA samples taken from dogs in Asia, Europe, Africa and arctic America.
'Bit of a surprise'
His team found that, though most dogs shared a common gene pool, genetic diversity was highest in East Asia, suggesting that dogs have been domesticated there the longest.
"Most earlier guesses have focused on the Middle East as the place of origin for dogs, based on the few known facts - a small amount of archaeological evidence from the region, and the fact that several other animals were domesticated there," he says.
The researchers studied gene sequences from the dogs' mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited directly from the mother. The findings indicated that the major present-day dog populations at some point had a common origin from a single gene pool.
Matthew Binns, head of genetics at the Animal Health Trust in Newmarket, UK, said the findings were significant.
He told BBC News Online: "For the first time, there's relatively convincing evidence actually pinpointing the date at which the dog was domesticated and also the location of that domestication, which is a bit of a surprise.
"People have previously thought that a lot of species were domesticated in the Middle East and this data clearly shows domestication took place in East Asia."
He added: "It looks as if 95% of current dogs come from just three original founding females and I guess these are the Eves of the dog world."
BBC News World Edition, 22Nov. 2002 http://news.bbc.co.uk/
Saturday, December 1, 2007
News Items Around The World
Posted by
William Bruce Hillman
at
11:01 AM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment