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Science Friday

Ancient East Asian Genomes, COVID And Clotting, And Cassowary Plumage. May 22, 2020, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 22 May 2020

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The cassowary, a large flightless bird native to Australia, New Guinea, and nearby islands, has a reputation for aggression and wickedly clawed feet that can cause serious injury. Indeed, they’ve been known to attack humans dozens of times, and even occasionally kill people. But they also have a beauty trick: Their glossy black body feathers have a structure for producing shine that’s never before been seen in birds. Where other black birds like crows are shiny because of structures in their feather barbules, the cassowary instead derives its shine from a smooth, wide rachis—the main “stem” of the feather. University of Texas paleontologist Julia Clarke explains how the cassowary’s color could help shed light on the feathers of extinct birds and dinosaurs—and how paleontologists are investigating the evolution of birds as we see them today. The novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has primarily been considered a respiratory virus, causing acute problems in the lungs. But doctors around the world have recently been reporting unusual blood clotting in some COVID-19 patients. The exact cause of these blood clots isn’t yet known—there are several interacting biological pathways that all interact to create a blood clot. One theory is that the clotting is related to an overactive immune response, producing inflammation that damages the lining of small blood vessels. Other theories point to the complement system, part of the overall immune response.  Ira speaks with hematologists Jeffrey Laurence of Weill-Cornell Medicine, and Mary Cushman of the University of Vermont Medical Center about the unusual clotting, how it impacts medical treatment, and what research they’re doing now in order to better understand what’s going on in patients.  The history of a group of people can be reconstructed through what they’ve left behind, whether that’s artifacts like pottery, written texts, or even pieces of their genome — found in ancient bones or living descendents. Scientists are now collecting genetic samples to expand the database of ancient East Asian genomes. One group examined 26 ancient genomes that provide clues into how people spread across Asia 10,000 years ago, and their results were published this month in the journal Science. Biologist Melinda Yang, an author on the study, explains how two particular groups dominated East Asia during the Neolithic Age, and how farming may have influenced their dispersal over the continent.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. Just a quick note before we get started, we miss you, we miss talking to you, and we want you to say hello. So please talk to us on the Science Friday Voxpop app on Twitter or even email us, SciFri at Science Friday.com.

0:19.9

Later in the hour, we explore new insights into the genetic story of the early humans who populated

0:26.2

East Asia.

0:27.4

But first, in the bird world, you can be one of two branches of the evolutionary tree.

0:33.4

Either you're one of the 10,000 flying songbirds, shore birds, and raptors,

0:38.4

or you're one of just 70 species in the group of mostly flightless birds,

0:44.3

like ostriches, emus, and the fierce giant cassowary,

0:48.2

a native of Australia, New Guinea, and nearby islands.

0:51.7

Casawaries with their strong legs and vicious toes have a well-earned

0:55.7

reputation as aggressive, dangerous birds than just a scary face. Producer Christy Taylor

1:01.5

takes a closer look at new research on the evolutionary mysteries of cassoaries and their close

1:07.5

relations. And she begins, of course, with their feathers.

1:15.7

If you've ever looked at a cassowary, I hope you'll agree that they're not just weird-looking flightless murderers.

1:17.3

They're also kind of gorgeous.

1:18.7

They've got these bald, bright blue necks and really glossy, fluffy-looking black feathers

1:23.5

that drape their very powerful bodies.

1:26.2

It's that black glossiness that caught the eye of Dr.

1:28.6

Julia Clark, a paleontologist at the University of Texas in Austin. She joins me to explain how a

1:33.6

close look at feather color can help scientists understand not just the evolution of cassowaries,

1:38.8

but also their extinct cousins and the dinosaurs that gave rise to them. Welcome back to Science

1:43.5

Friday, Dr. Clark.

1:45.0

It's my pleasure to join you, Christy.

...

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