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Thursday, January 17, 2008

Amoebas Anticipate Climate Change

A new experiment demonstrated that amoebas slow their motion in synchronization with periodic hostile changes in their environment. The amoebas even displayed anticipation to the periodically appearing unfavorable conditions. This meant that they even slowed down when the adverse condition was to be expected to appear even it did not occur.A team of scientists from Hokkaido University and the ATR Wave Engineering Laborataries cultured the single-celled slime mold Physarum polycephalum (a member of the amoeba clan) in a bed of oat flakes on an agar media. Every ten minutes the air was made slightly cooler and drier, which had the effect of slowing the movement of the amoebas.Then more favorable air would be restored and the motion continued as before. After several cycles, the amoebas slowed down their motion even when the hostile conditions were not applied. Later still, when the organisms have been tricked into anticipating impending climate change several times, they stop from slowing without an actual change in conditions. One of the researchers, Toshiyuki Nakagaki from Hokkaido , cautions that amoebas do not have a brain and that this is not an example of classic “Pavlovian” conditioned response behavior. Nevertheless, it might represent more evidence for a primitive sensitivity or “intelligence” based on the dynamic behavior of the tubular structures deployed by the amoeba.

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