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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: key + noses + insect  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Researchers urgently probe mystery of dying bats
Newsday, NY - Jul 19, 2008
In Wisconsin, Blehert said white-nose researchers have been making "good progress." But even if researchers key in on a culprit this summer, signs point to ...
Knowing various seed types is key to successful storage
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, AK - Jul 20, 2008
Your eyes and nose will tell you when fermentation has started, so unless you are trying to be put off your feedbag, don?t keep these bowls near where you ...
Safety is key to fun summer
Christian County Headliner News, MO - Jul 8, 2008
If you're going to wear insect repellent or makeup, apply the sunscreen first. * Wear a hat-a hat with at least a 2- to 3-inch brim all around is ideal ...
Listening to the Dalai Lama
Huffington Post, NY - Jul 27, 2008
Physically, His Holiness pointed out, some have smaller noses, some have larger noses, etc. But we are all otherwise the same. We all have the desire for ...
NWF - Bats
WNYT, NY - Jul 25, 2008
They help the whole ecosystem, not just one city: Bats are key species to helping their habitats flourish. Not only do they eat insects and pollinate crops, ...
Take Rabies Precautions If Exposed To Bats
eMaxHealth.com, NC - Jul 29, 2008
Worldwide, they play key roles in ecosystems, from rain forests to deserts, especially by pollinating, dispersing seeds, and eating insects - including ...
Finicky Trout 3
Terrace Standard,  Canada - Jul 8, 2008
?All of the caddis flies, and most insects of other orders, look much paler in flight than they actually are on the water.? There it was, the key. ...

Oxford American
TOUCH TOUCH ME
Oxford American, AR - Jul 6, 2008
At first, the cautious girl slung her arm wearily as if shaking off a pesky insect, but the forward girl moved closer to her and pulled a little the way a ...
When Kids Go To Prison, plus 100 Rockin' Lawsuits
San Diego Reader, CA - Jul 30, 2008
I felt like an insect under a microscope, and they all had to have their turn to look in disgust. My secondhand clothes were taboo, along with everything ...

Sportinglife.co.za
SECOND TEST, DAY FOUR COMMENTARY
Sportinglife.co.za, UK - Jul 21, 2008
He's so popular he could get a standing ovation for blowing his nose. A flick off his hip for two means England now trail by 61. ...
Source: Google News

An insect-based BioFET as a bioelectronic nose -
S Sch?tz, MJ Sch?ning, P Schroth, ? Malkoc, B … - Sensors & Actuators: B. Chemical, 2000 - Elsevier
... basis of intact chemoreceptors of insects, Biosensors and ... fungal volatiles using
an electronic nose, Biosensors and ... Bock, L. Heinert, D. Kohl, Key food aroma ...

Volatiles as an indicator of fungal activity and differentiation between species, and the potential … -
N Magan, P Evans - Journal of Stored Products Research, 2000 - Elsevier
... is to examine some of the key studies carried ... the potential for using electronic
nose technology for ... certain fungal volatiles also attract insects (Hedlund et ...

A universal insect clock: under our noses all the time! -
JR Stevens - Trends in Parasitology, 2002 - Elsevier
... A universal insect clock: under our noses all the time ... similar topologies were recovered
within each insect order ... The key divergence dates are shown to be robust ...
-

[PDF] ense S
I Chemical - notes.med.unsw.edu.au
... E-Nose Pty Ltd ... Insect Chemical Communication ... 3). However, the key sense insects use
to detect the chemical cues in their environment is olfaction rather than ...

Determination of plant volatiles 1: analysis of the insect-attracting allomone of the parasitic … -
BV Burger, ZM Munro, JH Visser - Journal of High Resolution Chromatography and Chromatography …, 1988 - doi.wiley.com
... Key Words: ... a distance of more than four meters by the human nose on a ... of this plant,
the recovery and identification of the volatile insect attractants became ...

[PDF] The Fly Nose-Function and Evolution
MC Stensmyr - diss-epsilon.slu.se
... The concept of key-ligand tuning is further nicely illustrated in the third and ... of
flies, 10 Mechanisms of the olfactory system, 11 The insect nose, 11 The ...

Sustained-flight tunnel for measuring insect responses to wind-borne sex pheromones -
JR Miller, WL Roelofs - Journal of Chemical Ecology, 1978 - Springer
... Key Words--Flight tunnel, wind tunnel, sex pheromones, insect ... INSECT SUSTAINED-FLIGHT
TUNNEL ... of apple oliffac were positioned with their noses within several ...

Hiding From Biting Insects in Plain Scent -
NPTB Peril - Science - sciencemag.org
... She and her colleagues netted key evi- dence about ... concentration found in many sprays,
the insects preferred the ... a frog egg into a fly nose,? says Vosshall. ...

NEUROSCIENCE: Hiding From Biting Insects in Plain Scent -
M Leslie - Science, 2008 - sciencemag.org
... She and her colleagues netted key evi- dence about ... concentration found in many sprays,
the insects preferred the ... a frog egg into a fly nose,? says Vosshall. ...

… of volatiles released by diseased potato tubers using a biosensor on the basis of intact insect -
S Sch?tz, B Wei?becker, UT Koch, HE Hummel - Biosensors and Bioelectronics, 1999 - Elsevier
... unit and electroantennogram recordings in insect olfactory organs ... of fungal volatiles
using an electronic nose. ... Key food aroma compounds: important standards to ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Insect 'noses' the key to cybernose collaboration

A new $4 million collaboration announced today will help scientists in their efforts to produce a new generation of electronic nose, the 'cybernose'.

Researchers in the collaborative Cluster between The Australian National University, Monash University and CSIRO's Food Futures National Research Flagship are trying to understand how simple animals make sense of smells.

The microscopic nematode worm will be central to the cybernose research due to its highly sensitive molecular recognition system, allowing it to sense smell and flavour qualities in grapes.

The cybernose will involve putting sensor proteins from insects and nematodes in to an electronic nose to replace the current generation of electronic sensors that are not discriminating enough.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

Drosophila

Caption: A scanning electron micrograph of the head of Drosophila, or Fruit Fly. Scientists are studying odorant receptors in Drosophila in research on developing a cybernose.

Credit: CSIRO, Entomology

 

 

The cybernose may also be used in future across other sectors of the food and beverage industries and, in the long term, the cybernose technology could be developed to enhance Australia's biosecurity by detecting and intercepting pests and diseases

The Minister for Education, Science and Training, Julie Bishop, has announced the first round of Flagship Collaboration Fund Cluster funding, designed to facilitate the involvement of the wider Australian research community in addressing the critical national challenges targeted by the Flagships.

As part of the $305 million over seven years provided by the Australian Government to the National Research Flagships, $97 million was specifically allocated to further enhance collaboration between CSIRO, Australian universities and other publicly funded research agencies.

The Flagship Collaboration Fund enables the skills of the wider Australian research community to be applied to the major national challenges targeted by CSIRO's Flagship Initiative.

The University Cluster partners will receive $2.2 million from the Flagship Collaboration Fund over two and a half years. This money will be matched in-kind by ANU and Monash.

Dr Bruce Lee, Director of the Food Futures Flagship, says that the Olfactory Pattern Recognition Research Cluster is one of the first Clusters to receive funding from the Flagships Collaboration Fund and university partners.

"This is the first time that we've had a real opportunity to collaborate with CSIRO to build on basic science to generate a potentially extremely useful technology," says Cluster leader, Professor Mandyam Srinivasan from ANU.

"It is very exciting that the research will have applications in a number of industries."

Dr Coral Warr from Monash University says the collaborative cluster is an exciting opportunity.

"It is bringing together Australian olfaction researchers using very different approaches to solve a common problem - how do animals detect and discriminate odours," Dr Warr says.

She says that participation in the Flagship Cluster has enabled her to bring to Australia one of the foremost insect olfactory electrophysiologists, Dr Marien de Bruyne, thus enabling her group to study odorant receptor function in the fruit fly Drosophila in entirely new ways.

"The information we generate about how these receptors function will directly benefit CSIRO's development of olfactory biosensors," Dr Warr says.

Although the applications will be numerous, in the first instance, the group is working with the wine industry.

"The Cybernose will draw on how the brains of simple organisms such as insects and tiny nematode worms process information about smells and tell the difference between related odours," says Dr Trowell, the Flagship theme leader.

"By 2013, we aim to have, in wineries around Australia, a Cybernose that will enable the wine industry to objectively measure aroma and flavour - a more reliable measure than chewing some grapes.

"This will enable winemakers to pick grapes at the time of optimum ripeness and even to tailor the style of wine precisely and so improve its value. This has the potential to contribute $750 million annually to the industry."

 
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