DailyDirt: To Seek Out New Life…
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The Earth’s biosphere has some incredible diversity, and biologists have hardly even begun to scratch the surface. There used to be just the Plant and Animal Kingdoms, and then there were as many as six “kingdoms of life” — but recent discoveries have made the classification of eukaryotes a bit messy for biologists to agree upon. Here are some examples of a couple of strange species and an ambitious project to create a virtual biosphere that could become as intricate as the one we live in.
- Spongiforma squarepantsii is a recently discovered fungus that looks like a sponge (but doesn’t live under the sea). It looks like biologists need more formal naming conventions. [url]
- Bacteria that can live on pure caffeine were found in a nice flowerbed in Iowa. And researchers have isolated the enzymes that can metabolize caffeine — potentially to be used in a new “organic” way to remove caffeine from coffee/tea. [url]
- Steve Grand isn’t trying to discover new life in the real world. He’s trying to build virtual lifeforms from “complex networks of virtual brain cells and biochemical reactions and genes.” The final product will be a video game called Grandroids — virtually descended from Grand’s popular 1996 game, Creatures. [url]
- To discover more interesting biological curiosities, check out what’s currently floating around the StumbleUpon universe. [url]
By the way, StumbleUpon can recommend some good Techdirt articles, too.
Filed Under: biosphere, caffeine, fungus, grandroids, life, steve grand
Comments on “DailyDirt: To Seek Out New Life…”
“It looks like biologists need more formal naming conventions.”
How truly boring.
Keep up the great new names, I say!
Re: Re:
I suppose physicists name their particles with silly names, so biologists can name things after cartoon characters if they want. There’s already a protein named after Sonic the Hedgehog: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonic_hedgehog
Re: Re: Naming
Particle physicists already had ?charm? and ?strangeness?. And of course ?quark? from James Joyce.
The astronomers seem to be the sticks-in-the-mud, vetoing ?Xena? and calling it ?Eris? instead.
Though given the discord the demotion of Pluto has caused, maybe the name ?Eris? was appropriate after all…
Looks like scientists have found the Iowa Unix Convention.
Caffeine Bacteria
No, I?m fine, not jittery at all, really. I don?t need to sleep, because in 20 minutes I?ll be dividing into new offspring.