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Do animal eyes glow in the dark? Detailed answer

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Do animal eyes glow in the dark?

Many of us, driving along a night road, have seen the eyes of animals glowing from the darkness. And so it was natural to assume that these eyes glow by themselves. In fact, this glow is nothing more than a reflection of the eyes of light coming from some other source, such as car headlights or flashes.

Reflection of light occurs due to a layer of crystalline substance present in the eyes of many animals. This substance has the ability to reflect light. In the eyes of a person, it is almost not present. The reflective layer also helps animals see humans much better in the dark.

The color of the "glow" of the eyes of animals depends on the number of blood vessels in them. An animal with a large number of vessels in the eyes will reflect red light, and if there are fewer vessels, then the reflection will be brighter.

Author: Likum A.

 Random interesting fact from the Great Encyclopedia:

Where are eels born?

The most curious living creatures are long, slippery, whip-like members of the eel family.

If it were possible to follow one of the species of this fish, then it could be found either in the ocean, swimming hundreds of miles, or rising along rivers, or even crawling in the grass over land to where, as instinct tells it, there is a rich pond food. Every eel caught in America or Europe or even in rivers on the mainland comes from one of the approximately 20 million eggs laid by its mother at a depth of 180 to 275 meters in a certain area of ​​the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda! The common eel has a dark brown color and is covered with smooth skin, on which, as a rule, scales or not, or it is very delicate, small.

Only recently have people learned about the origin of young eels. It is now known that they originally appear as transparent creatures floating near the surface of the ocean. After a while, these creatures gradually decrease and take on the definite shape of an adult eel. Then the eels of a certain section of this breeding zone swim in the direction of Europe by the millions. But they do not enter the fresh waters of European rivers until they reach the third year of life. Eels from another part of the breeding zone swim towards America and, after reaching one year, rise along all American rivers from the St. Lawrence River to the Gulf of Mexico.

After living in fresh water from four to twelve years old and reaching an average length of 60 to 90 centimeters, they descend the rivers, never to return. Eels swim back to Bermuda, breed in the depths and die! Eels are caught as they travel down the rivers from July to late October - sometimes later - and on their way to Bermuda. The annual catch of eels along the Atlantic coast exceeds 900 kilograms.

 Test your knowledge! Did you know...

▪ What is air?

▪ On what ships did Christopher Columbus discover America?

▪ Why is one of the whites of the human eye named after Pikachu?

See other articles Section Big encyclopedia. Questions for quiz and self-education.

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Genes and love for coffee 19.10.2014

There are people who cannot live without coffee for a day, and there are those who are completely indifferent to it or cannot stand it at all. Of course, the reason for such a difference in tastes may lie in different upbringing, different cultural environments, etc. - it can be assumed that if the adults in the family all drink coffee, then the children will get used to it, and there, you see, they will fall in love. But is there also a genetic background here?

An article appeared in the journal Molecular Psychiatry, the authors of which - several dozen researchers from different scientific centers - talk about the genes on which the love of coffee depends. Such interest in coffee on the part of scientists is quite understandable: on the one hand, it is one of the most popular products, on the other hand, coffee and caffeine have many interesting physiological properties. For example, coffee consumption is known to reduce the risk of type XNUMX diabetes, liver disease, and Parkinson's syndrome; there are suspicions that coffee also affects the likelihood of cancer and cardiovascular diseases, but how and in what way this effect manifests itself is not yet completely clear. The intrigue in coffee affairs is also added by the fact that it is not always clear to whom to attribute this or that effect: whether the reason is in caffeine, or in some other substances, since, as it turned out, decaffeinated coffee can also have a beneficial effect. to physiology.

To find out why some love coffee and some don't, Marilyn Cornelis of the Harvard University Health Department (USA) and her colleagues analyzed the genes of more than 120 people, Europeans and African Americans. They found eight loci in the genome, which depended on the love of coffee; single nucleotide substitutions in them led to the fact that coffee consumption increased or decreased.

What genes correspond to the discovered zones of "coffee love"? Firstly, the authors of the work thus managed to find two new genes involved in caffeine metabolism - POR and ABCG2. Modifications in them greatly influenced the amount of coffee consumed. The other two genes that it depends on, BDNF and SLC6A4, are associated with the work of the brain, or rather, with the work of the pleasure center and the reward system. Some genetic modifications reduce the synthesis of the BDNF protein (or brain-derived neurotrophic factor), and then a person becomes indifferent to coffee - apparently due to the fact that he does not enjoy it. On the other hand, changes in the SLC6A4 gene, which determines the transport of the neurotransmitter serotonin, increase coffee cravings.

Another pair of "love or dislike coffee" genes are GCKR and MLXIPL. They are not related to caffeine metabolism or neurotransmitters, but are involved in the metabolism of fats and carbohydrates. Modifications in the GCKR gene increase the brain's sensitivity to glucose, and thus likely affect a person's craving for the popular drink. (Here, perhaps, we should collect more information about the difference between lovers of coffee with sugar and those who love coffee in any form, even with sugar or without.) As for the MLXIPL gene, in its case one simply has to state the connection between him and the love of coffee - so far there is not even any guesswork about the mechanism of this connection.

Of course, taste buds (and their genes) should also influence our attitude to coffee, but, as we see, it is not only and, perhaps, not so much about them: love for coffee depends not only on the actual taste sensations. Here we can recall a similar work that was recently published in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research - in which researchers from the University of Pennsylvania (USA) report that love for alcohol depends on sensitivity to bitter. Addiction to drinking comes from many reasons, including the effect of alcohol on pleasure centers, but the role of purely taste sensations here has long been underestimated. Meanwhile, it is precisely the taste impressions from alcohol that different people can differ dramatically: for some, vodka is delicious, for others it is unbearable bitterness. And it's understandable why John E. Hayes and his colleagues focused primarily on bitter taste receptors.

Humans have 25 genes for these receptors, and it turns out that some of them affect how alcohol tastes. For example, if a person had two copies of the TAS2R38 gene, he became more sensitive to bitterness, while the presence of the TAS2R13 gene, on the contrary, decreased the sensitivity to bitterness. And, most importantly, such genetic variations did affect taste sensations and alcohol consumption, which was confirmed both in statistics and in experimental data. Now it remains only to understand how taste sensations contribute to the emergence of alcohol dependence - that is, whether a person with a weakened sense of bitterness is really more likely to "drink bitter" than someone who is especially sensitive to such taste.

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