Original press release at the Field Museum of Chicago can be found at: 
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/museum_info/press/press_insect.htm
Jon
"Stuck on top of tower. Great view, but constant pelting sleet not good
for pointy hat. Am amusing self by spitting gum down on the Orcs."
From: The Very Secret Diary of Gandalf the Grey



http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/science/01/24/bugs.breathe.ap/index.html

X-ray shows how bugs really breathe
Friday, January 24, 2003 Posted: 12:09 PM EST (1709 GMT)
Beetles and other insects have tiny air sacs around their wings, legs
and abdomens that help pump air inside their bodies. 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bugs don't have lungs, so how do they breathe? Maybe
more efficiently than people, according to the first close-up view of
insects forcing air in and out of tiny oxygen pipes. 

It took one of the world's strongest X-ray beams -- a view hundreds of
times more detailed than today's most sophisticated medical scans can
provide -- for scientists at The Field Museum in Chicago and Argonne
National Laboratory to videotape how beetles, crickets and ants breathe.


"They are really pumping some gas," said lead researcher Mark Westneat,
the museum's associate curator of zoology. 
While resting, the insects exchanged up to half the air inside their
main oxygen tubes every second -- equivalent to how hard a person
breathes while doing moderate exercise, the researchers report in
Friday's edition of the journal Science. 

These tubes, called tracheae, connect to tiny air holes in the insect's
outer coating. For decades, scientists thought air just passively oozed
into those holes. 

Then researchers spotted some tiny air sacs near insects' wings, legs
and abdomens that they might use to help pump air inside. 

But the rest of the insect body is rigid, so no one thought much more
air pumping could go on. Instead, Westneat discovered insects somehow
squeeze the air tubes throughout their bodies to suck air in and out,
much as lungs do. 

"It's an important discovery," said insect researcher Robert Dudley of
the University of California, Berkeley -- and equally important is the
technology that allowed it. 

The machine is called a synchrotron, a large particle accelerator that
generates the world's most intense X-rays. There are only a few in
existence, and they've largely been used in chemistry, Westneat said. 

Then Argonne physicist Wah-Keat Lee, hunting new uses, put a dead ant
inside his synchrotron and saw spectacularly detailed images of its
organs. He teamed with Westneat to put living insects in the machine.
They were bombarded with mega doses of radiation, so experiments with
more advanced animals aren't likely. 

Still, Westneat said, "What we've done with this work is created a
window into these tiny little animals that nobody's ever seen inside
before." 

Stay tuned: Future research ranges from how bugs eat to how beetles'
eight-to-10 hearts function. 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Original press release at the Field Museum of Chicago can be found at: 
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/museum_info/press/press_insect.htm
Jon

"Stuck on top of tower. Great view, but constant pelting sleet not good
for pointy hat. Am amusing self by spitting gum down on the Orcs."
From: The Very Secret Diary of Gandalf the Grey 
_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to