DNA Detectives Count Thousands of Fish Using a Glass of Water 61
vinces99 writes "A mere glass full of water from Monterey Bay Aquarium's 1.2 million-gallon Open Sea tank is all scientists really needed to identify the Pacific Bluefin tuna, dolphinfish and most of the other 13,000 fish swimming there. Researchers also discerned which of the species were most plentiful in the tank. Being able to determine the relative abundance of fish species in a body of water is the next step in possibly using modern DNA identification techniques to census fish in the open ocean, according to Ryan Kelly, University of Washington assistant professor of marine and environmental affairs, and lead author of a paper in the Jan. 15 issue of PLOS ONE. 'It might be unpleasant to think about when going for a swim in the ocean, but the water is a soup of cells shed by what lives there,' Kelly said. Fish shed cells from their skin, damaged tissues and as body wastes. 'Every one of those cells has DNA and if you have the right tools you can tell what species the cell came from. Now we're working to find the relative abundance of each species present,' he said."
So, IOW (Score:1)
Fish do piss in the water.
The next logical step ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Fish do piss in the water.
As far as I can see, the next logical step for the technique as outlined in TFA is to take a glass of sewage from a city sewage treatment center and analyze for the % of the number of human beings with a particular type of disease (HIV, TB, Polio or whatever).
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“I don't drink water. Fish fuck in it.”
W.C. Fields
Also:
"I certainly do not drink all the time. I have to sleep you know."
"Don't worry about your heart, it will last you as long as you live."
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Re:The next logical step ? (Score:5, Informative)
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I know that in Finland they do that now to detect polio.
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,quote>Fish do piss in the water.
Well, if you think about it practically every bit of water on the planet has been pissed by an animal at one time or another or at least is commingled with water that has.
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blink (Score:1)
Fish use glasses of water?
Quelle surprise! (Score:1)
Also, for the squeamish, fish, whales, penguins, sharks, jellyfish and manta rays don't use condoms. Not sure about crocodiles or wombats.
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I can confirm that I didn't use a condom with my wombat.
yeah (Score:5, Funny)
Being able to determine the relative abundance of fish species in a body of water is the next step in possibly using modern DNA identification techniques to census fish in the open ocean
"the machine says that by far the pacific is full of a fish called...poly vinyl chloride. hm, that's a funny name."
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"the machine says that by far the pacific is full of a fish called...poly vinyl chloride. hm, that's a funny name."
I guess it's more likely to identify the "Poly Yeti Lenne" species - rationale: PVC will sink to the bottom [wikipedia.org] (30-45% denser than the water).
Evert seen those CSI lights? (Score:2)
Why would you do that to yourself, for Odin's sake, if you planned to ever sleep in a hotel bed again?
What about... (Score:5, Interesting)
all scientists really needed to identify the Pacific Bluefin tuna, dolphinfish and most of the other 13,000 fish swimming there
What about species no-one knows about?
Re:What about... speciation (Score:2)
What about species no-one knows about?
As with other "soup" DNA techniques those species that they do not have DNA information for (I'm using this term loosely) would simply be separated by their genetic differentiation between each other. This is one of the primary problems with identifying species with "Soup" because organisms can be the same distance apart genetically but some may be different species morphologically and others may be the same.
In a simplified example say you have organisms A, B and C. A and B are closest genetically, A and
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In a simplified example say you have organisms A, B and C. A and B are closest genetically, A and C are furthest away while B and C are the same distance away from each other. One would look at this and assume A, B and C are separate species. However you then observe in the wild that B and C are able to breed, perhaps B and C are one species while A is separate? This is one of many examples of how genetic information can mislead species information
Fine and dandy.
Now, let's take another case: you know species A, you know nothing about B and C. Thus you can tell "A was here" but... can you tell there are other (exactly) two that "were here" as well? Maybe they were only one, maybe more than two. How can you tell?
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Fine and dandy.
Now, let's take another case: you know species A, you know nothing about B and C. Thus you can tell "A was here" but... can you tell there are other (exactly) two that "were here" as well? Maybe they were only one, maybe more than two. How can you tell?
Welp, that's exactly the problem, that isn't to say there aren't other methods though. For example you could see how much genetic differentiation there is between known species in the area and make assumptions based on that. You could also use other types of DNA, mitochondrial DNA for example which may tell a different story.
Fact is, taxonomists are always fighting about which species is which, sometimes with fruition. DNA, while it is very useful in determining one species from another has added to the
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all scientists really needed to identify the Pacific Bluefin tuna, dolphinfish and most of the other 13,000 fish swimming there
What about species no-one knows about?
You think there were fish species no one knows about swimming in "Monterey Bay Aquarium's 1.2 million-gallon Open Sea tank" (from the part of TFS you omitted)? How would they have gotten in there?
From the same TFS that you referred:
Fish shed cells from their skin, damaged tissues and as body wastes. 'Every one of those cells has DNA and if you have the right tools you can tell what species the cell came from. Now we're working to find the relative abundance of each species present,' he said."
Do you think they are working to determine the abundance of each species in the "Monterey Bay Aquarium's 1.2 million-gallon Open Sea tank"? 'Cause... you know?... that would be a question which can find an answer by more practical means.
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Stick it in some fish embryos and see what grows.
(Ok maybe it's not possible NOW but give technology a couple decades.)
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Well, in the Monterey Bay Aquarium there probably aren't any species that no-one knows about. But there certainly would also be DNA from the various microorganisms in the water as well. That brings to mind that the water in the tank comes from the ocean anyway and I doubt the filtering is good enough to remove all traces of "wild" DNA before it goes in the tank. So maybe they would find DNA from and unknown species.
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The take home message was we don't know anything
Next step (Score:5, Funny)
Followed swiftly by fish taxation.
Oh man ... (Score:2)
Now you've ruined my winter vacation, and while I'm sitting on the beach sipping rum I'll know if I go in the ocean I'll be covered in fish goo.
*sigh* I'll just have to have another rum. Purely to fight infections you understand.
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Put lime in it. Wards off scurvy.
You're welcome. And wear 50.
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With some bitters, sugar and mint leaves, we call that a mojito. ;-)
LOL, already on it.
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Given my pasty white complexion, I'll err on the side of caution.
Since 50 doesn't cost any more than 35 in my experience, what's the 'scam' part here?
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Don't worry about it, the alcohol in your rum is the piss/shit of yeast cells.
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No, that's beer.
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Hmm...I stand corrected. It appears rum as well is flavored by the products of yeast.
Safe to go back in the water? (Score:1)
But can it tell them when they're gonna need a bigger boat?
http://www.wingclips.com/movie-clips/jaws/a-bigger-boat [wingclips.com]
Which ones could they not identify? (Score:1)
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Extrapolate. (Score:2)
And you can use the same method at the sewage stations to be able to count the number of individuals in a town or city, then separate out the DNA of everyone that's there illegally and track them down.
Nobody will be safe from our civil masters.
So how many salt water fish (Score:1)
So how many salt water fish would they find in the sewers of every city. I think that just because the dna is present doesn't imply or cause the critter to be present. At least not alive.
So, not counting then (Score:2)
DNA Detectives Count Thousands of Fish Using a Glass of Water
Researchers also discerned which of the species were most plentiful in the tank.
Someone doesn't know what counting is (the article had the good grace to put it in scare quotes).
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Done Already (Score:1)
If only academic departments/institutions collaborated or communicated a little bit more, maybe the research dollar would go a little further?
Cheers.
G
PADI instructor 636522