The Timaru Herald

The 100-million-year itch: ticks fed on dinosaur blood

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UNITED STATES: Scientists have made a skin-crawling discovery: ancient ticks, trapped in amber, that fed on the blood of feathered dinosaurs nearly 100 million years ago.

The specimens, described in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, include the oldest dinosaur parasite to be found together with remains from its extinct host - and offer a smoking gun in the long, intimate history between ticks and dinosaurs and their living descendant­s, birds.

‘‘I was astonished,’’ study coauthor Ricardo Perez-de la Fuente, a paleontolo­gist at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, said of the discovery. ‘‘It was something we weren’t expecting at all.’’

Scientists have suspected that the blood-sucking bugs dined on dinosaurs for millions of years. Their big break came in the form of ancient Burmese amber specimens that had been bought online by private collectors, who donated the finds to museums. One of the collectors, Scott Anderson, is listed as a co-author on the paper.

One of the specimens, a 99-million-year-old hard tick known as Cornupalpa­tum burmanicum, was found entangled in a plume from a feathered dinosaur - a telling sign that the tick had latched on to the feather before it was trapped in golden tree sap.

The scientists had to work harder to establish the link between the other specimens, identified as Deinocroto­n draculi, and feathered dinosaurs.

Attached to these ticks’ bodies were setae - tiny hairlike bristles - from specialise­d beetle larvae that live in nests and eat tough-todigest organic material such as skin or hair. Many feathered dinosaurs are thought to have built nests.

The find doesn’t mean there will be a real-life Jurassic Park any time soon, however.

The book and film featured dinosaurs brought to life thanks to blood-engorged mosquitoes trapped in amber, but in reality, DNA has a very short half-life, and such genetic informatio­n would not be recoverabl­e. – LA Times

Bourke St charges denied

Accused Bourke St driver Dimitrious Gargasoula­s has pleaded not guilty to murdering six people and trying to kill another 28 pedestrian­s during the vehicle rampage in Melbourne in January. Gargasoula­s, 27, yesterday pleaded not guilty via video link at Melbourne Magistrate­s Court to 39 offences, including six counts of murder and 28 counts of attempted murder. Defence lawyer James Yianoulato­s said his client’s fitness to plead and mental impairment were ‘‘live issues’’. Gargasoula­s also faces charges of reckless conduct, endangerin­g life, intentiona­lly causing serious injury, robbery, and making a threat to kill. He was remanded in custody and will appear before the Supreme Court on Monday.

Land sale in good faith

Despite opposition from local residents, the Catholic diocese of Florence has agreed to sell a parcel of church land in Sesto Fiorentino, close to the city, to Muslims who have campaigned to be allowed to build a mosque after years of praying in garages and basements. Cardinal Giuseppe Betori, the Archbishop of Florence, told city officials: ‘‘Everyone has a right to a dignified place to practise their own religion.’’ Izzedin Elzir, an imam in Florence, said there were at least 800 unofficial places of Muslim worship set up in back rooms throughout Italy but only a few proper mosques.

Chill out, says oldest man

Lack of stress and a diet of vegetables washed down with a glass of red wine are the secrets to a long life, the world’s oldest man has said on turning 113. Francisco Nunez Olivera was born on December 13, 1904 in the village of Bienvenida in Badajoz, western Spain, where he has lived all his life. He became the oldest man after the death in August of Yisrael Kristal, a Polish-Israeli Holocaust survivor who lived to 113 years and 330 days. Nunez, who was a farm worker, said he put his longevity down to ‘‘good genes’’ and a diet of homegrown vegetables and wine. His daughter, Maria Antonia, 81, who cares for him, said her father now led a ‘‘gentle routine in a quiet village, enjoying the good life’’.

 ?? PHOTO: NATURE COMMUNICAT­IONS ?? A lump of 99-million-year-old amber contains a tick entangled in a dinosaur feather. The find offers proof that the blood-sucking bugs dined on dinosaurs for millions of years.
PHOTO: NATURE COMMUNICAT­IONS A lump of 99-million-year-old amber contains a tick entangled in a dinosaur feather. The find offers proof that the blood-sucking bugs dined on dinosaurs for millions of years.
 ??  ?? These ticks had traces of beetle larvae that may have lived in dinosaur nests.
These ticks had traces of beetle larvae that may have lived in dinosaur nests.

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