Supported by funding from the European Research Council and the Natural Environment Research Council, a large international team of scientists compared genetic data with existing archaeological evidence and show that man’s best friend may have emerged independently from two separate (possibly now extinct) wolf populations that lived on opposite sides of the Eurasian continent. This means that dogs may have been domesticated not once, as widely believed, but twice.
A major international research project on dog domestication, led by the University of Oxford, has reconstructed the evolutionary history of dogs by first sequencing the genome (at Trinity College Dublin) of a 4,800-year old medium-sized dog from bone excavated at the Neolithic Passage Tomb of Newgrange, Ireland. The team (including French researchers based in Lyon and at the National Museum of Natural History in Paris) also obtained mitochondrial DNA from 59 ancient dogs living between 14,000 to 3,000 years ago and then compared them with the genetic signatures of more than 2,500 previously studied modern dogs.
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¿Quién influye en las negociaciones sobre el clima?
La influencia de las empresas de combustibles fósiles fue fuertemente cuestionada por los países en desarrollo en la reunión, posterior a la de París, de las negociaciones sobre cambio climático en Bonn, la semana pasada. Los rastreadores climáticos Pavlos Georgiadis, Renee Karunungan y Anna Pérez Català, destacan los problemas fundamentales que se debatieron.
Renewable Energy Closes "The Gap"
The Renewables Energy Policy Network for the 21st Century - shows that renewables are now firmly established as competitive, mainstream sources of energy in many countries around the world, closing the gap between the energy haves- and have-nots
NASA studies details of a greening Arctic
The northern reaches of North America are getting greener, according to a NASA study that provides the most detailed look yet at plant life across Alaska and Canada. In a changing climate, almost a third of the land cover - much of it Arctic tundra - is looking more like landscapes found in warmer ecosystems.
With 87,000 images taken from Landsat satellites, converted into data that reflects the amount of healthy vegetation on the ground, the researchers found that western Alaska, Quebec and other regions became greener between 1984 and 2012. The new Landsat study further supports previous work that has shown changing vegetation in Arctic and boreal North America.
Las abejas recogen un número sorprendente de pesticidas en plantas no cultivadas
Un estudio de la Universidad de Purdue muestra que las abejas recogen la mayor parte de su polen de plantas que no son de cultivo, incluso en las zonas dominadas por el maíz y la soja y que el polen se contamina constantemente con una serie de plaguicidas agrícolas y urbanos a lo largo de la temporada de crecimiento.
Map Shows Where Fossil Fuels Should Stay in the Ground
We know that we need to keep the vast majority of fossil fuels in the ground in order to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Now, a new project from the University of Arizona shows us exactly where we need to keep these fuels in the ground.