copepods – The Artful Amoeba http://theartfulamoeba.com A blog about the weird wonderfulness of life on Earth Tue, 11 Mar 2014 16:22:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.31 Dengue Creeps North http://theartfulamoeba.com/2010/07/26/dengue-creeps-north/ http://theartfulamoeba.com/2010/07/26/dengue-creeps-north/#comments Tue, 27 Jul 2010 00:45:26 +0000 http://theartfulamoeba.com/?p=3464

Dengue virions (virus particles). They are the stack of what look like gumballs getting ready to avalanche at upper right.

Climate change scientists predicted this day would come: Dengue (den-GEE) Fever has re-entered the Florida Keys after an absence of 66 years. The tropical illness, once banished — like malaria– from the deep south, has re-established itself in the Florida Keys, where the CDC estimates that 5% of the population have already been infected.

It is possible the reintroduction has nothing to do with climate change. Certainly increased international travel likely brought us West Nile virus from Eurasia independent of temperature. But warming climates make it easier for the mosquitoes who carry the virus to make a living in more and more northerly climes.

I meant to write about this earlier when I first noticed it in the June 2 issue of New Scientist. But it was a recent article in the New York Times about how locals are shrugging it off that made me take notice.

Though an initial bout with Dengue may seem relatively innocuous, that is deptive. There are four strains of the virus that cause disease, but contracting one doesn’t confer long-term immunity to the others. In fact, it seems to make things worse through a phenomenon delightfully and unusually straight-forwardly named original antigenic sin. If your immune system mounts a response to one form of the virus, it makes antibodies whose blueprints are remembered by special cells called memory B cells. If a slightly different version of the same thing comes along, your body will try to mount a response to it using the cells it’s already manufactured. But because they don’t match well, your immune response ends up being less effective than if it had gotten a chance to tackle the virus with a clean slate.

Scientists hypothesize this may be the reason why people who’ve been infected twice are more likely to develop the more severe form of dengue, dengue hemorrhagic fever. Any time you see the word “hemorrhagic” in a virus’s name, that is not a good sign. It means bleeding — in this case, from leaky capillaries in such places as your gums, mouth, eyes, vagina, gut, skin pores, etc. Doesn’t that sound fun?

And this is not a virus that only attacks the weak. Though mortality rates are low, severe outbreaks have gripped South America in the last few years, including 55,000 reported cases, over 500 cases of Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever and over 60 deaths in Rio de Janeiro in 2008. Did I mention there is no vaccine or cure? Buckle your seatbelts, Southerners.

Aedes aegypti is the mosquito carrier of the Dengue virus. As you can see, the mosquitoes are ready and willing throughout the south. According to the CDC, 2.5 billion people, or 40% of the world’s population, live in areas where there is a risk of dengue transmission. Add the United States to the list.

Dengue viruses are in the Flavivirus family, named for the Yellow Fever Virus (Flavus is Latin for yellow)*. In this family you will also find West Nile virus, Tick-borne Encephalitis virus, and Hepatitis C virus. They’re all rather non-descript little round membrane-bound jobbies about 40-60 nanometers wide. Inside is a polyhedral (a 3-D polygon) protein structure called a nucleocapsid that is 25-30 nm across. Inside that is single-stranded positive-sense RNA (a kind of molecule that contains the information necessary to make proteins) that encodes the virus’s genes. You can get a better sense for how the capsid nestles into the lipid (fatty) membrane in the upper left image here. As with all viruses, the relationship between the Flaviviruses and everyone else is very uncertain, so no tree for you.

One final, adorable note. Apparently, in rural Australia they have trained schoolchildren to depost a “water bug” (in reality a freshwater copepod awesomely called Mesocyclops) that eats mosquito larvae into containers of standing water to help fight transmission of Dengue. Advantages: cost-effective, environmentally friendly. Disadvantage: the copepod is a host for the Guinea worm (remember them?). Good thing Australia doesn’t have Guinea worms.

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*Is it just me or do they need a Flava’Flavivirus family as well?

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When Ostracods Fly and Copepods Fire http://theartfulamoeba.com/2009/09/22/when-ostracods-fly-and-copepods-fire/ http://theartfulamoeba.com/2009/09/22/when-ostracods-fly-and-copepods-fire/#comments Wed, 23 Sep 2009 03:37:44 +0000 http://frazer.northerncoloradogrotto.com/?p=1357 I’ve been treating myself to the BBC’s Blue Planet: The Deep this week, and there are delights in every second of film. One that particularly caught my interest is below. Those of you who recall my post on Swima bombviridis will recognize the same strategy, if not the same artillery, at work here.

Now you have to admit — that orange ostracod is even more amazing than the depth-charge wielding copepod. I mean come on! Had you ever imagined a creature like that could exist? Most ostracods are considerably smaller and are called seed shrimp because of their resemblance to something like a bell pepper seed. The males should get some sort of award for virility; many species have two penises and sperm that can be up to six times the male’s body length when fully uncoiled. The ostracod in this film appears to be  a female, given the clutch of round objects residing in its posterior.

The filmmakers here seem to subscribe to the Star Wars school of foley-artistry: no sound in space? No problem! We’ll just give the spaceships cool sounds anyway (good call). Bioluminescence is silent? No problem! We’ll just give flashing creatures Super Mario-grade sound effects . . .  No offense meant, though, Blue Planet dudes at BBC. I worship your work. Unlike Macgillivray Freeman, who in my opinion have largely squandered the IMAX format with their insultingly stupid and poorly written scripts, in spite of brilliant cinematography . . .

Annnnyway . . . .Copepods and Ostracods are actually fairly closely related, both being Crustaceans. Check out the copepod taxon here, but make sure to check out the next highest taxon, Crustacea, to see how copepods and ostracods fit into it. Jumping down the ostracod hole will take you here.

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