16 SEP 2011 by ideonexus
DNA as Evidence of Common Ancestry
By sequencing
the DNA of various species and measuring how similar these sequences
are, we can reconstruct their evolutionary relationships. This is done
by making the entirely reasonable assumption that species having more
similar DNA are more closely related—that is, their common ancestors
lived more recently. These molecular methods have not produced much
change in the pre-DNA-era trees of life: both the visible traits of organisms
and their DNA sequences usually give the same informatio...The idea of common ancestry leads naturally to powerful and testable predictions about evolution.
29 JUN 2011 by ideonexus
Cross-Species Milk
Our notions of mother's milk come from what we see, and for most of us the milk we see is cow's milk, a brilliant white liquid. But milk from other species looks quite different—kangaroo milk, for example, is pink. But whatever the hue, breast milk is species-specific; that is, the composition is finely tuned to the particular growth and maturational needs and digestive system of the young of each species.^ ^ For example, cow's milk is higher in volatile fatty acids than human milk, and hum...A comparison of the milk produced by females of various species, its nutritional content, and what that tells us about their lifestyle.