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Family feud.


We told you so! Four years ago, SW reported that some scientists had evidence that guinea pigs guinea pig (gĭn`ē), domesticated form of the cavy, Cavia porcellus, a South American rodent. It is unrelated to the pig; the name may refer to its shrill squeal.  were not rodents (see SW 4/3/92, p. 5). Now a new study backs up that claim.

Taxonomists--scientists who classify living things--have traditionally grouped guinea pigs with rodents like mice and rats because of their morphology morphology

In biology, the study of the size, shape, and structure of organisms in relation to some principle or generalization. Whereas anatomy describes the structure of organisms, morphology explains the shapes and arrangement of parts of organisms in terms of such
, or physical appearance. Mice, rats, guinea pigs, and some 2,000 other species have similar teeth, skulls, and jawbones.

But, as we reported in 1992, researchers found something surprising when they began to study the animals' proteins. These long, chainlike molecules, which make up the structure of an animal's body, are most similar among close relatives, explains Winston Hide, one of the researchers. Guinea pigs and mice, he found, have very different proteins. So they can't possibly belong to the same group, he says.

Last spring's study dug even deeper, into the animals' genes--the inherited instructions cells use to make proteins. The genes showed that mice and rats are indeed close cousins. But according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 that study, guinea pigs don't belong on the same branch of the mammal mammal, an animal of the highest class of vertebrates, the Mammalia. The female has mammary glands, which secrete milk for the nourishment of the young after birth.  family tree, and shouldn't called rodents anymore.

Some scientists still question whether this genetic evidence holds more weight than the morphological evidence. But Hide argues that animals that look alike don't always come from the same ancestor.

For example, sharks and dolphins look similar. But sharks are fish; dolphins are mammals. Comparing physical traits often involves guesswork, Hide adds, but genes don't lie. What kind of evidence do you think is most important?

RELATED ARTICLE: FREEZE FRAME freeze frame

a facility on an ultrasound machine which permits an image to be held on a screen.
 

DIG THAT DINOSAUR!

This dinosaur skull is so big that paleontologist (fossil scientist) Paul Sereno Paul Callistus Sereno (born October 11, 1957) is an American paleontologist who is the discoverer of several new dinosaur species on several continents. He has conducted excavations at sites as varied as Inner Mongolia, Argentina, Morocco and Niger.  could probably fit inside its mouth. Sereno found the skull during an expedition in Morocco last year. It belonged to a Carcharodontosaurus saharicus ("shark-toothed reptile from the Sahara Desert").

Based on the size of the skull (1.6 meters from front to back), Sereno estimates the dinosaur was about 13 to 15 meters (45 to 50 feet) long. That makes it slightly bigger than the largest known Tyrannosaurus Tyrannosaurus (tīrăn'ōsôr`əs, tĭr–) [Gr.,=tyrant lizard], member of a family, Tyrannosauridae, of bipedal carnivorous saurischian dinosaurs characterized by having strong hind limbs, a muscular tail, and short  rex, and "maybe a little bit heavier," Sereno says. In fact, says Sereno, C. saharicus was probably about the same size as Giganotosaurus, the largest meat-eating dino ever discovered (see SW 12/8/95). So who's "king of the dinosaurs" now?
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Title Annotation:genetic evidence seems to show that guinea pigs are not rodents although they look like rodents
Author:Stiefel, Chana Freeiman
Publication:Science World
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Oct 4, 1996
Words:383
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