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Microbiology in the News
Last revised: Wednesday, February 23, 2000.
This page contains links to recent newsworthy stories regarding microbes. I welcome suggestions for inclusion. Please send URLs to Tom Terry, terry@uconnvm.uconn.edu
- Hydrogen gas from Pond Scum? WASHINGTON (AP) - Hydrogen may be an ideal fuel when the supply of
oil and natural gas runs out, but the problem has been finding a way
to produce it cheaply. Scientists now say the answer may be an
ordinary pond scum. Green algae, a simple plant that grows all over
the world, has the unique ability to convert water and sunlight into
hydrogen gas, researchers said Monday at the national meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. Now scientists
have found a new way to force the algae to make hydrogen gas on
demand, a process that could lead to an almost limitless supply of
fuel that burns without pollution and produces only water as a waste
product.
(Posted 2/22/2000)
- Salmonella incidence in eggs has dropped significantly!
ATLANTA (AP) - The rate of salmonella from eating raw or undercooked
eggs dropped by more than one-third between 1996 and 1998, the
government said Thursday. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention credited better safety measures for egg production and
preparation. For reasons not fully understood, the rate of a type of
salmonella illness associated with raw or undercooked eggs soared in
the 1980s and '90s from 0.6 cases per 100,000 people in 1976 to 3.6
in 1996. But the rate dropped to 2.2 per 100,000 from 1996 to 1998,
the CDC said. In the late 1980s, health officials began a push to
educate people about the dangers of raw or undercooked eggs in such
things as Caesar salads, homemade ice cream and eggnog.
(Posted 2/4/2000)
- The AIDS epidemic may have have originated back around 1930!
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The worldwide AIDS epidemic has been traced back
to a single viral ancestor - the HIV Eve - that emerged perhaps
around 1930. Earlier research had suggested the epidemic began in the
first half of the 20th century, but the latest analysis, done at the
Los Alamos National Lab in New Mexico, appears to be the most
definitive so far. Bette Korber, who keeps a database of HIV genetic
information at the lab, calculated HIV's family tree by looking at
the rate the virus mutates over time. She assumed these genetic
changes happen at a constant rate, and using a supercomputer she
clocked the mutations back through time to a common ancestor. Korber
estimates the current epidemic goes back to one or a small group of
infected humans around 1930, though this ancestor virus could have
emerged as early as 1910 or as late as 1950. From this single source,
she suggests, came the virus that now infects roughly 40 million
people all over the world.
(Posted 2/2/2000)
- Bugs in the News , by Jack Brown, U. of Kansas.
(Posted 1/31/2000)
- Microbe of the Week , from the Digital Learning Center for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University.
(Posted 2/16/98)
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