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Locust upset: DNA puts swarmer's origin in Africa.


The desert locust Plagues of the Desert Locust (Schistocerca gregaria) have threatened agricultural production in Africa, the Middle East and Asia for centuries. The livelihood of at least one-tenth of the world’s human population can be affected by this vociferous insect. , often blamed for modern crop ruin and biblical plagues, was not an ancient export from the Americas, say DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 analysts.

Some biologists had recently argued that Africa's storied locust locust, in botany
locust, in botany, any species of the genus Robinia, deciduous trees or shrubs of the family Leguminosae (pulse family) native to the United States and Mexico.
 arose from ancestors of today's New World Schistocerca species that crossed the Atlantic Ocean Atlantic Ocean [Lat.,=of Atlas], second largest ocean (c.31,800,000 sq mi/82,362,000 sq km; c.36,000,000 sq mi/93,240,000 sq km with marginal seas). Physical Geography
Extent and Seas
. That's backwards, Nathan R. Lovejoy of the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells,  at Scarborough now says.

Lovejoy and his colleagues used DNA sequences as the basis for a new family tree of the Schistocerca genus. Their analysis of that tree suggests that ancient locusts from Africa gave rise to the 50-or-so modern New World species, Lovejoy and his colleagues say in an upcoming Proceedings of the Royal Society Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London.

Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
  • Series A, which publishes research related to mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
 B. They propose that the African locusts crossed the Atlantic several million years ago.

"We were surprised" says Lovejoy.

The term locust refers to grasshoppers Grasshoppers may refer to one of the following:
  • Grasshoppers (Caelifera), a suborder of insects
  • Grasshopper-Club Zürich, a Swiss football club.
 that gather in swarms to feed. One of the most famous, the desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) of Africa, can take either of two forms depending on environmental conditions. The mild-mannered green grasshoppers forage individually, but as food and water become abundant, the next generation turns black and yellow. Its members congregate into groups that can include more than a billion. These swarms can fly 100 kilometers in a day.

In 1988, biologists observed a swarm of desert locusts from Africa arrive at the coast of South America. This confirmation of extremely long-distance travel ignited interest in which direction the insects' ancestors had moved.

In 2004, Hojun Song of Ohio State University Ohio State University, main campus at Columbus; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1870, opened 1873 as Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College, renamed 1878. There are also campuses at Lima, Mansfield, Marion, and Newark.  in Columbus argued that New World locusts had traveled to Africa. He based his claim on a family tree constructed with body characteristics of Schistocerca locusts. According to that tree, Song says, the desert locust seems the closest relative only to some recent New World species. Thus, he argued that species were diversifying in the New World when some of them crossed the Atlantic and gave rise to today's African desert locust.

For the new family tree, Lovejoy and his colleagues analyzed a DNA stretch that covered several genes from various species' mitochondria, or cell powerhouses. On the resulting family tree, the African desert locust forms the lowest branch and so represents the most-ancient lineage, says Lovejoy. That pattern argues that ancestors of the desert locust crossed the Atlantic to give rise to a lineage that branched out in the New World, he says.

Song, so far, is sticking to the view that desert locusts migrated out of the Americas. The new family tree, he says, doesn't include as many locust species as the old ones did. Only a family tree based on both morphological data and sequences from more genes will settle the debate, he says.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 7, 2006
Words:445
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