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Researchers restore functions to pig brains hours after death
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Apr 17, 2019

Kakapow! Rare world's fattest parrot has record breeding season
Wellington (AFP) April 18, 2019 - The world's fattest parrot, the critically endangered kakapo, has enjoyed a record breaking breeding season, New Zealand scientists said Thursday, with climate change possibly aiding the species' unique mating spree.

Less than 50 years after the flightless nocturnal bird was thought to have been extinct, at least 75 chicks are expected to survive this year, Andrew Digby, a science advisor to New Zealand's kakapo recovery, operation told AFP.

Digby oversees a breeding programme so precisely monitored that scientists can state the last of 249 eggs laid will hatch on Friday.

It will significantly boost the population which has grown to 147 adults since a small number of the plump green, yellow and black birds was discovered in 1970.

Digby described the kakapo as an "unusual" parrot as the females control the breeding process and only mate every two to four years when New Zealand's native rimu trees are full of fruit.

"We don't quite know what the trigger is but one of the things we are looking at is that the rimu berry is really high in vitamin D, a super food basically, which is associated with fertility and health," he said.

The rimu trees have produced a bumper crop this year with Digby saying one theory was that climate change and temperature fluctuations could be behind the berry bonanza.

The surviving kakapo -- whose name means "night parrot" in Maori -- are kept on four predator-free islands off the New Zealand coast.

At the start of the breeding season, the males which weigh about 4.0 kilograms (nine pounds), put themselves on display while the females choose a partner.

They mate and then end the relationship, shutting the male out of the incubation and rearing processes.

The kakapo recovery programme is so tightly monitored that although they remain in the wild, each one has a radio transmitter attached to its body and there are monitoring systems embedded in their nests.

Digby knew that of the 50 adult females, 49 produced 249 eggs, of which 89 have so far hatched and 75 were expected to make it to adulthood.

That is more than double the success rate from the last breeding season three years ago.

"It's probably one of the most intensively managed species in the world," said Digby, who wants at least 500 birds before any thought is given to easing up the intensity of the recovery operation.

Using a solution created to preserve brain tissue and an artificial circulatory system called BrainEx, scientists at the Yale School of Medicine were able to restore some basic cellular functions inside several pigs' brains hours after death.

The breakthrough is the latest evidence of cellular resiliency in postmortem tissue. Last year, scientists observed cells continuing to express genes up to 48 hours after death.

The latest study suggests a variety of brain functions thought to end within seconds of death -- as a result of a lack of blood and oxygen -- can actually be restored hours later.

"The intact brain of a large mammal retains a previously underappreciated capacity for restoration of circulation and certain molecular and cellular activities multiple hours after circulatory arrest," Nenad Sestan, professor of neuroscience, comparative medicine, genetics and psychiatry at Yale, said in a news release.

During various lab tests, researchers regularly noticed that small brain tissues showed signs of cellular viability several hours postmortem. To find out whether this viability was widespread within a mammalian brain, scientists secured 32 pig heads from a meat-packing plant and hooked up each brain's vasculature system to their BrainEx circuitry and special solution.

In addition to preserving neural cell integrity, the solution restored some neuronal, glial and vascular cell functionality inside the pig's brain.

Researchers hope their BrainEx system -- detailed Wednesday in the journal Nature -- can help scientists study cellular functionality inside intact large mammalian brains.

"Previously, we have only been able to study cells in the large mammalian brain under static or largely two-dimensional conditions utilizing small tissue samples outside of their native environment," said Stefano G. Daniele, an M.D. and Ph.D. candidate at Yale. "For the first time, we are able to investigate the large brain in three dimensions, which increases our ability to study complex cellular interactions and connectivity."

Though some cellular and neuronal functions were restored, no electrical activity -- the kind associated with perception, awareness or consciousness -- was recorded. Scientists acknowledged that future studies involving brain restoration attempts should happen under strict ethical oversight.

"Restoration of consciousness was never a goal of this research," said Stephen Latham, director of Yale's Interdisciplinary Center for Bioethics. "The researchers were prepared to intervene with the use of anesthetics and temperature-reduction to stop organized global electrical activity if it were to emerge. Everyone agreed in advance that experiments involving revived global activity couldn't go forward without clear ethical standards and institutional oversight mechanisms."

In a commentary accompanying the paper in Nature, scientists predicted additional brain resuscitation breakthroughs would make attempts "to restore people's brains might seem increasingly reasonable."

But new opportunities to restore brain function will present new and difficult decisions for physicians, patients and patient advocates -- specifically, the decision of when to stop trying to save someone's life and start trying to save their organs for transplantation.

"The transplant community, neuroscientists, emergency medical personnel and other stakeholders must debate the issues," researchers wrote.


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FLORA AND FAUNA
Malaysia arrests Vietnam poachers, seizes tiger, bear parts
Kuala Lumpur (AFP) April 16, 2019
Malaysian authorities have arrested two suspected poachers from Vietnam and seized body parts from tigers and bears, a minister said Tuesday, as the country clamps down on rampant wildlife trafficking. The Southeast Asian nation is home to swathes of jungle and a kaleidoscope of rare creatures from elephants to orangutans and tigers, but they are frequently targeted by poachers. Two Vietnamese men, aged 25 and 29, were arrested Monday by a wildlife enforcement team in a national park in eastern ... read more

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