Spotlight

Biologist Bill Loomis on Life As It Is

Professor Bill Loomis

UC San Diego cell biologist Bill Loomis explores the interplay of social issues, ethics and the biological sciences in his new book, Life As It Is: Biology for the Public Sphere (University of California Press, 2008).

At a time when the gap is widening between scientific discovery and what the public and policy makers understand about science, Loomis asserts that scientific evidence needs to be considered when making socially important decisions about such controversial issues as abortion, euthanasia, use of embryonic stem cells, cloning, and overpopulation.

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Biology and the Future

The role of biological sciences in finding solutions to global health, environmental and economic issues. (12 min.)
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  • While Socrates graduate students and teachers look on at Scripps Pier, Socrates Fellow Ignacio Vilchis explains how his doctorate research in ocean climate study is shedding light on bird and sea life in the southern Pacific.

    Bio Grad Students Megan Eckles and Sam Lasse Help Bring Research into Area Classrooms

    Building upon the success of its BioBridge science education outreach program, the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) has this summer launched an enhanced initiative to further bring the excitement of scientific research directly into area high school classrooms. The new program has an interesting twist: participating UCSD doctoral students in research benefit as much as high school teachers and students.

  • Hot foragers returning to a bumble bee hive could signal the availability of nutritious food.

    Wasps and Bumble Bees Heat Up, Fly Faster With Protein-Rich Food

    Good pollen makes bees hot, biologists at UC San Diego have found. Wasps warm up too when they find protein-rich meat, a separate experiment has shown.

    Because foragers of neither species eat the protein they collect, feeding it instead to their larvae, their warming must be a behavioral rather than a metabolic response to nutritious food, both research teams conclude.

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