Gloomy weather responsible for red hair

Redheads can put their colouring down to the weather, new research has claimed. Experts believe that Scotland's gloomy climate has seen a deliberate genetic adaptation to help exploit rare sunny days and boost Vitamin D production. Alastair Moffat, managing director of the Scotland's DNA project, said the country's dull weather was responsible for a larger number of flame-haired men and women being born, the Daily Mail reported. Only about 1-2 per cent of the world's population has red hair but in Scotland the figure is much higher, with about 13 per cent, or 650,000 people, with flaming locks. Researchers are investigating how many people carry the red-hair gene and their findings will be used to make a 'ginger' map of the British Isles. Moffat said he wanted to map the number of possible carriers of the gene in Scotland in a bid to try to explain why so many Scots have red hair. "I think it's to do with sunshine. We all need Vitamin D from sunshine but Scotland is cloudy. We have an Atlantic climate and we need light skin to get as much vitamin D from the sun as possible," Moffat said. A person who does not have red hair can still produce red-haired children if their partner is a carrier of the gene. Red hair appears in people with two copies of a recessive gene on chromosome 16, which causes a mutation. Despite concerns that red hair could be dying out, experts say that it is likely to continue for many more generations. According to the Centre for Equality Policy Research think tank, redheads suffer more discrimination per head of population than ethnic minorities do. Only disabled people suffer more. "Red hair still gives out deep cultural signals," Barbara McNulty, lecturer in psychology at the University of the Western Isles, and herself a redhead, said. "Women, for example, are wild and quick-tempered, while ginger-haired men are unattractive and geeky," McNulty added. Source: Indian ExpressImage
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Birds That Live With Varying Weather Sing More Versatile Songs

Credit: Wikipedia
A new study of North American songbirds reveals that birds that live with fluctuating weather are more flexible singers. Mixing it up helps birds ensure that their songs are heard no matter what the habitat, say researchers at Australian National University and the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center. To test the idea, the researchers analyzed song recordings from more than 400 male birds spanning 44 species of North American songbirds — a data set that included orioles, blackbirds, warblers, sparrows, cardinals, finches, chickadees and thrushes. They used computer software to convert each sound recording — a medley of whistles, warbles, cheeps, chirps, trills and twitters — into a spectrogram, or sound graph. Like a musical score, the complex pattern of lines and streaks in a spectrogram enable scientists to see and visually analyze each snippet of sound. For each bird in their data set, they measured song characteristics such as length, highest and lowest notes, number of notes, and the spacing between them. When they combined this data with temperature and precipitation records and other information such as habitat and latitude, they found a surprising pattern — males that experience more dramatic seasonal swings between wet and dry sing more variable songs. "They may sing certain notes really low, or really high, or they may adjust the loudness or tempo," said co-author Clinton Francis of the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center. The Pyrrhuloxia or desert cardinal from the American southwest and northern Mexico and Lawrence's goldfinch from California are two examples. In addition to variation in weather across the seasons, the researchers also looked at geographic variation and found a similar pattern. Namely, species that experience more extreme differences in precipitation from one location to the next across their range sing more complex tunes. House finches and plumbeous vireos are two examples, Francis said. Why might this be? "Precipitation is closely related to how densely vegetated the habitat is," said co-author Iliana Medina of Australian National University. Changing vegetation means changing acoustic conditions. "Sound transmits differently through different vegetation types," Francis explained. "Often when birds arrive at their breeding grounds in the spring, for example, there are hardly any leaves on the trees. Over the course of just a couple of weeks, the sound transmission changes drastically as the leaves come in." "Birds that have more flexibility in their songs may be better able to cope with the different acoustic environments they experience throughout the year," Medina added. A separate team reported similar links between environment and birdsong in mockingbirds in 2009, but this is the first study to show that the pattern holds up across dozens of species. Interestingly, Francis and Medina found that species with striking color differences between males and females also sing more variable songs, which means that environmental variation isn't the only factor, the researchers say. The team's findings were published online in the August 1, 2012 issue of the journal Biology Letters. Contacts and sources: Robin Ann Smith, National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), Citation: Medina, I. and C. Francis (2012). "Environmental variability and acoustic signals: a multilevel approach in songbirds." Biology Letters. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2012.0522, The National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) is a nonprofit science center dedicated to cross-disciplinary research in evolution. Funded by the National Science Foundation, NESCent is jointly operated by Duke University, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and North Carolina State University. For more information about research and training opportunities at NESCent, visit www.nescent.org. Source: Nano Patents And Innovations
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