Sex may have evolved in part as a defense against parasites.

August 5th, 2009

What’s so great about sex? From an evolutionary perspective, the answer is not as obvious as one might think. An article published in the July issue of the American Naturalist suggests that sex may have evolved in part as a defense against parasites.

Despite its central role in biology, sex is a bit of an evolutionary mystery. Reproducing without sex—like microbes, some plants and even a few reptiles—would seem like a better way to go. Every individual in an asexual species has the ability to reproduce on its own. But in sexual species, two individuals have to combine in order to reproduce one offspring. That gives each generation of asexuals twice the reproductive capacity of sexuals. Why then is sex the dominant strategy when the do-it-yourself approach is so much more efficient?

One hypothesis is that parasites keep asexual organisms from getting too plentiful. When an asexual creature reproduces, it makes clones—exact genetic copies of itself. Since each clone has the same genes, each has the same genetic vulnerabilities to parasites. If a parasite emerges that can exploit those vulnerabilities, it can wipe out the whole population. On the other hand, sexual offspring are genetically unique, often with different parasite vulnerabilities. So a parasite that can destroy some can’t necessarily destroy all. That, in theory, should help sexual populations maintain stability, while asexual populations face extinction at the hands of parasites.

The scenario works on mathematical models, but there have been few attempts to see if it holds in nature.

Enter Potamopyrgus antipodarum, a snail common in fresh water lakes in New Zealand. What makes these snails interesting is that there are sexual and asexual versions. They provide scientists with an opportunity to compare the two versions side-by-side in nature.

Jukka Jokela of the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Mark Dybdahl of the University of Washington and Curtis Lively of Indian University, Bloomington began observing several populations of these snails for ten years starting in 1994. They monitored the number of sexuals, the number asexuals, and the rates of parasite infection for both.

The team found that clones that were plentiful at the beginning of the study became more susceptible to parasites over time. As parasite infections increased, the once plentiful clones dwindled dramatically in number. Some clonal types disappeared entirely. Meanwhile, sexual snail populations remained much more stable over time. This, the authors say, is exactly the pattern predicted by the parasite hypothesis.

Gays strengthen their rights in Albania

August 1st, 2009

Albania’s homosexuals won more than they had hoped for after the government said it planned to allow same-sex marriages despite opposition from religious leaders and politicians.

The proposal put forward by Prime Minister Sali Berisha on Thursday faces a tough fight in Parliament.

But should he make good on his plans, Albania would join European Union members the Netherlands, Belgium, and Spain in giving gay couples the same rights as heterosexual couples and would be the first country in the Balkans to do so.

“This is not only a step to be taken for European integration, but primarily for the emancipation of the Albanian society,’’ the Alliance Against Discrimination Against Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, and Transgenders said yesterday.

“We are proud that our country is joining so many others in embracing equality and rejecting discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people,’’ it added.

As candidates for EU membership, all Balkan nations will have to pass laws protecting sexual minorities from discrimination as part of the accession process, but not necessarily approve gay marriages.

Almost two decades after communism fell, Albanian homosexuals still keep their sex lives secret to shield themselves from the opprobrium of that nation’s society.

Leaders of Albania’s Muslim majority and Christian Orthodox and Catholic communities condemned same-sex marriage as a sin, and some opposition politicians accused Berisha of using the issue to draw attention away from their allegations that a June election was rigged.

Sabri Godo, a Berisha ally and one of the Balkan nation’s elder statesmen, said he thought Albania should not have taken such a giant leap ahead of other European Union countries.

Michael Jackson’s death: homicide?

July 15th, 2009

Rumors and speculations have been swirling about the late Michael Jackson’s death without conclusion. However, amongst all the clamor, it had been reported that the LAPD believes the pop star’s death was due to misuse of a powerful anaesthesia and his personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray, may have been involved.

Law enforcement officials claim there is “plenty of powerful evidence” connecting Dr. Murray as the person who injected Jackson with the drug. The physical evidence encompassed an array of medical items found in the singer’s house, including the anaesthestic drip, Propofol, an IV stand and oxygen tank.

Propofol is a powerful sedative that is used in hospitals to put patients, who are undergoing surgery, to sleep. It is believed that Jackson often requested the drug to curve his insomnia.

Los Angeles County’s chief coroner investigator Craig Harvey said, “We are serving a coroner subpoena at the office of Dr. Klein to obtain medical records. That is all I can comment on.”

“Dr. Klein has been and continues to cooperate with the coroner’s office into the investigation if the death of Michael Jackson. There will be no further comments in Dr. Klein at this time. Also the coroner has indicated to us that Dr. Klein is not under investigation by the coroner’s office,” said Klein’s lawyer Bradley Boyer.

Harvey added the move was not unusual, revealing several other subpoenas have been issued in relation to Michael’s death, reports Yahoo News.

In the meantime, details of the singer’s bizarre behavior have been begun to surface. Las Vegas businessman, Jack Whinsa, who attempted to stage comeback shows for Jackson in 2006 and 2007, has opened up about his time with the pop star.

Whinsa claims he found Michael at a 16,000 sq ft Las Vegas home in December of 2006 and was shocked by Michael’s condition by the time he moved from the home.

Whinsa said, “I’m looking around the house for him and I go into the master bedroom and there’s no mattress on the bed. I go into another bedroom, there’s no mattresses on the bed. I finally open up a room that was kind of like an empty room and all the mattresses are on the floor lined up so Michael can sleep there with the three kids.

“The day he moved out, the Christmas trees were still up seven months later. It was totally a mess.”

Jack also claims Michael had a strained relationship with his father Joe, and once left him waiting outside the home for nine-and-a-half hours.

He said, “Joe left without seeing him. I believe Michael was tormented tremendously from his early childhood.”

What’s the matter with Sydney?

July 15th, 2009

In a shocking piece of news announced last week, Sydney has fallen out of the top ten slots in Travel+Leisure’s best places in the world to visit.

Dropping seven places to eleventh place, in what is described as an influential survey of international travellers, Sydney failed to make it into the top ten positions for the first time in over ten years.

So, which cities beat Sydney and what’s wrong with Sydney?

Well, expect to be very surprised, with this either casting doubts on the voracity of the survey, or showing that Sydney really has deservedly slipped a long way down the rankings.

Believe it or not, Sydney lost out to the Indian city of Udaipur, which while awesome, in my opinion, does not rank in the same league as Sydney – or am I wrong?

Sydney also lost to Cape Town, Bangkok and New York, all great cities, but isn’t Sydney is just as good if not better?

In a rather small element of saving grace, Sydney did score the gong for most popular city in the region, with Melbourne even failing to make the top 20.

In other surveys, a report in the Sydney Morning Herald says that last month Sydney also lost its position as the best city “brand” to Paris, and only made 13th out of the top 25 places for quality of life by a global magazine for trendsetters, which marked it down for poor public transport and a “patchy cultural calendar“.

It gets worse, with the SMH report providing a further blow to Australian prestige, reporting that Qantas failed to make the cut as a top 10 international airline and not one Australian hotel making it into Travel + Leisure’s top 100.

Anthony Dennis, the editor of Travel + Leisure’s Australian edition, published by Fairfax Magazines, told the SMH that the intense competition between global cities as destinations, a sharp fall in business travel and a decline in long haul travel played a part in Sydney’s fall from the top.

He added, “It may be that a lot of travellers have already visited Sydney and haven’t been presented with a compelling reason to return”, and “There’s not much of the buzz surrounding Sydney that there was in the past, so what’s new to say about the city?”

Anthony, I reckon you hit the nail right on the head – Sydney appears to have lost its buzz and to an extent so has Australia, at least it appears so in the minds of international travellers.

Have we become a tad complacent about our tourism industry and do we need to urgently reignite our tourism passion and spark, especially in Sydney?

Is the message to the Federal Government, Tourism Australia and all the State Governments and their tourism organisations, that they need to take all these surveys really seriously and to heart, putting aside political differences and bickering, all pulling together to put the spark back into Australian tourism?

Should they forget the scandalously expensive and apparently ineffective ads and campaigns, “Bloody Hell”, “Walkabout” or anything else and invest all that apparently wasted and often duplicated marketing money in our sadly lack lustre tourism infrastructure, product and training, including and especially customer care?

Marketing is fine, but have we forgotten that golden rule, that before marketing it is important to get the product right in the first place.  We had it right before, but have we let it all slip?

To beat other global cities, are we going to have to reinvent ourselves?

With Sydney the gateway to Australia, I think the city does look a tad sad and jaded, with dirty streets, dirty expensive taxis often with miserable indecipherable drivers, graffiti covered trains welcoming tourists travelling to the city, some of the rudest bus drivers in the world, crime, traffic, pollution, high prices, an astronomically expensive airport, rules and regulations everywhere, homeless people living on the on the streets begging, and more.

Need I go on?

From the NSW Government releases and web sites it appears that the essence of Sydney’s Brand is ‘World City’, with these sites and documents going on to say, “From this, the core advertising proposition is summed up in the tagline – There’s no place in the world like Sydney.”
Yes, sadly, there is no place in the world like Sydney.

The only city in the world where international visitation has declined since the Olympic Games in 2000 and the only global iconic city to have continually slipped down the rankings in global city popularity surveys.

Sadly, there does appear to be something the matter with Sydney, with that malaise now potentially affecting the whole of Australia.

American Signature Furniture Locations – Value City Furniture Locations

July 11th, 2009

American Signature company is a Private Limited that was founded in 1948 by Jerome Schottenstein in Columbus, Ohio. The company is a part of the Schottenstein Stores Corp. The Schottenstein Corporation owns Value City. In 2003 the corporate name was changed from Value City Furniture to American Signature Furniture.

There are over 130 stores located various 18 states in United States. The company operated both the American Signature Furniture and Value City Furniture brands. Today, most internet surfer searching value city furniture and American Signature Furniture store locations. But, this company official websites are currently can’t open. Because, heavy traffic of this sites.

American Signature Furniture Official websites:

Value City Furniture Website

Osteoporosis drug Actonel Once-a-Month listed on PBS

July 6th, 2009

MORE than two million Australians living with osteoporosis are set to benefit from the first once-a-month osteoporosis therapy, after it was today listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).

Actonel (risedronate sodium)
150mg Once-a-Month is a bisphosphonate PBS-listed for the treatment of osteoporosis in patients with a prevalent fracture, in patients aged 70 and over with a BMD T-score of -3.0 or less and in patients on long term (three months or more), high dose (over 7.5mg prednisolone or equivalent) corticosteroid therapy with BMD T-score of -1.5 or less.

Actonel Once-a-Month is designed to help simplify patients’ lives by offering a convenient dosing regimen of only one oral tablet per month. Actonel Once-a-Month offers the efficacy and safety of daily Actonel 5mg.

According to Professor John Eisman, Director of the Osteoporosis and Bone Biology Program at Garvan Institute of Medical Research, despite the fact that osteoporosis affects more than one-in-ten Australians and costs the community more than $7b per annum in direct and indirect health care costs, the disease is not being optimally managed or treated.

“Current evidence suggests that more than 70% of women and 90% of men who have experienced a fragility fracture are not on effective treatments to reduce their risk of subsequent fracture.

“The perception of inconvenience of a weekly regimen associated with taking an oral bisphosphonate (first thing in the morning on an empty stomach, with a full glass of water, with the patient remaining upright for the half-hour prior to eating), may contribute to this treatment gap,” said Prof. Eisman.

“The introduction of a once-a-month dosing regimen, designed to simplify patient’s lives, may help narrow this gap.”

Actonel Once-a-Month has been shown to be equivalent in efficacy and safety to Actonel Once-a-Day.

In a randomised, double-blind, active-controlled, parallel group study, Actonel Once-a-Month demonstrated comparable increases in BMD at the lumbar spine and hip and similar decreases in bone turnover markers (NTX, CTX, BAP) compared to Actonel Once-a-Day. The incidence of vertebral fractures was similar in both groups, suggesting equivalent anti-fracture efficacy.

The overall adverse event profiles were similar for both daily and monthly regimens, and both dosing regimens were shown to be well tolerated.

In two crossover trials where patients trialed both monthly and weekly dosing regimens (monthly ibandronate and weekly alendronate), approximately two-thirds of study participants preferred the monthly dosing regimen – 66.1% in one study and 65.7% in the other.

A once-a-month osteoporosis therapy should help address some of the challenges faced by patients taking current regimens comprising daily or weekly dosing, said Professor Peter Ebeling, Head of Endocrinology, Western Hospital, Melbourne.

“With this novel once-a-month dosing regimen, patients need only take 12 tablets per year, compared with 52 tablets for weekly therapies, or 365 tablets or sachets for daily therapies.

“This more convenient dosing regimen may allow patients to concentrate on living more effective lives, rather than focusing on their disease,” said Prof Ebeling.

“Patient preference is an important driver of compliance and persistence with medication. This is important because just over half of all patients prescribed daily or weekly osteoporosis therapies stop taking their medication at 12 months, which can increase their fracture risk.

“We should not assume our patients are happy with a weekly dosing regimen. Instead, as always, we should involve them in the decision-making process and offer them this new monthly dosing option,” Prof. Ebeling said.

Patients prescribed Actonel Once-a-Month will have access to the ‘ActNow’ patient support programme, which offers a monthly medication reminder service via mail, email or SMS. The programme also offers patients free vitamin D and calcium supplements, if recommended by a doctor, along with monthly news bulletins, tips on falls prevention and exercise and ongoing support from registered nurses.

Actonel Once-a-Month will be available on the PBS from 1 July 2009 at a cost of $32.90 per month.

Actonel 150mg Once-a-Month is co-marketed by sanofi-aventis and Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals.

June 21st, 2009

Finishing Touch teaser

June 21st, 2009

Ice Age 3 Dawn of the Dinosaurs Trailer HD

June 21st, 2009

Dragonball Evolution Trailer

June 20th, 2009

Marvel: Civil War Teaser Trailer