ScienceIQ.com

Is Your Immune System Educated?

When spring comes, do you hide indoors because your eyes and nose water, and you can't stop sneezing? Do cats or dogs cause you the same symptoms? Have you wondered why you have allergies and other people don't? Perhaps your immune system missed out on an education when you were young! ...

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ImmuneSystem
Physics

What Is An Atom?

Atoms are the extremely small particles of which we, and everything around us, are made. A single element, such as oxygen, is made up of similar atoms. Different elements, such as oxygen, carbon, and ... Continue reading

WhatIsAnAtom
Geology

Wetter not Necessarily Better in Amazon Basin

June through September is the dry season for the Amazon Basin of South America. Yet the basin's dry season may be getting uncharacteristically wetter, according to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ... Continue reading

AmazonBasin
Geology

Salty Remnants At Death Valley's Badwater

Beneath the dark shadows of the Black Mountains, a great, extraordinarily flat expanse of shimmering white spreads out before you. You are at Badwater, at -282 feet it is the lowest spot in the ... Continue reading

SaltyRemnantsAtDeathValley
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Area Of A Circle

A circle is the round counterpart of a square. To find the area of a square, one multiplies the length by the width. A circle doesn't have these, however, so there has to be a different way to ... Continue reading

AreaOfACircle

Nematodes Are Everywhere

NematodesAreEverywhereNematodes are simple worms consisting of an elongate stomach and reproduction system inside a resistant outer cuticle (outer skin). Most nematodes are so small, between 400 micrometers to 5 mm long, that a microscope is needed to see them. Their small size, resistant cuticle, and ability to adapt to severe and changing environments have made nematodes one of the most abundant types of animals on earth. The cuticle is the flexible coating around the nematode [its skin], which protects the nematode from physical and chemical dangers. The most noticeable feature of the cuticle is the system of grooves across the body from head to tail. As nematodes grow they usually shed their cuticle four times.

Most nematodes feed on bacteria, fungi, and other soil organisms. Others are parasitic, obtaining their food from animals (such as the dog heartworm), humans (such as the pinworm), and plants. Agricultural cultivation encourages an increase in parasitic nematodes that feed on the crops being grown. Occasionally, new kinds of plant parasitic nematodes may be introduced into a field by contaminated plant parts, soil on farm equipment and irrigation water. Nematodes which parasitize plants may cause yield losses by themselves or they may join with other soilborne organisms such as viruses, fungi, and bacteria, to promote disease development in plants. Most often, nematode feeding reduces the flow of water and nutrients into the plant, increasing the plant's susceptibility to other stress factors such as heat, water, and nutritional deficiencies.

After hatching, plant-parasitic nematodes move through the soil to find areas on plant roots to feed. Some nematodes stay outside the root and use long stylets to puncture cells inside the root (ring, stubby root, and sting nematodes). Nematodes which enter the root may move throughout the root (lesion nematode) and feed at many sites (causing root lesions), or stay in one feeding site (cyst and root-knot nematodes). Nematodes which stay at one feeding site swell from eel-shaped to pear-shaped and stay at the same site until they die.