Human Brain Genes to Make Monkeys Smarter

File photo - A monkey walks on top of a fence in India's
capital New Delhi Aug. 3, 2004. (REUTERS/Desmond Boylan AH/CP)
File photo - A monkey walks on top of a fence in India's capital New Delhi Aug. 3, 2004. (REUTERS/Desmond Boylan AH/CP)
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Human Brain Genes to Make Monkeys Smarter

File photo - A monkey walks on top of a fence in India's
capital New Delhi Aug. 3, 2004. (REUTERS/Desmond Boylan AH/CP)
File photo - A monkey walks on top of a fence in India's capital New Delhi Aug. 3, 2004. (REUTERS/Desmond Boylan AH/CP)

In a new leading and controversial experiment, Chinese scientists said they tried to narrow the gap between the intelligence of humans and monkeys, by implanting human brain cells in monkeys' brains.

Human intelligence remains one of the most difficult aspects of evolution on earth. Man has managed to surpass all the living creatures and build civilizations with his mind.

Researchers at the Kunming Institute of Zoology said they managed to breed a generation of macaque monkeys with versions of human genes, which, according to the scientists, play an important role in the formation of human intelligence.

Bing Su, the geneticist at the Kunming Institute of Zoology who led the effort, said: "this was the first attempt to understand the evolution of human cognition using a transgenic monkey model."

According to their findings, the modified monkeys did better on a memory test involving colors and block pictures, and their brains also took longer to develop like those of human children do. There wasn’t a difference in brain size.

The findings of this study, published in Beijing's journal National Science Review on March 27, made headlines in the Chinese media.

The Chinese scientists had been badly criticized by a number of US scientists who called the experiments reckless and questioned the ethics of genetically modifying primates.

The journal MIT Technology Review cited James Sikela, a geneticist of primates at the University of Colorado, saying: "the use of transgenic monkeys to study human genes linked to brain evolution is a very risky road to take."



Ethiopia's Vast Lake Being Pumped Dry

Lake Dembel's depth has halved since 1990 due to over-pumping. Marco Simoncelli / AFP
Lake Dembel's depth has halved since 1990 due to over-pumping. Marco Simoncelli / AFP
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Ethiopia's Vast Lake Being Pumped Dry

Lake Dembel's depth has halved since 1990 due to over-pumping. Marco Simoncelli / AFP
Lake Dembel's depth has halved since 1990 due to over-pumping. Marco Simoncelli / AFP

There is a constant hum around Ethiopia's enormous Lake Dembel -- the sound of its water steadily being sucked out by pumps.

The pumps irrigate farms all around the lake, which is four times the size of Manhattan, and are vital for hundreds of thousands of people, AFP said.

Ethiopia has already lost at least one large lake -- Haramaya, in the east of the country -- to over-pumping.

Now it risks losing another.

Lake Dembel's depth has halved since 1990 from four meters to two (13 feet to over six), according to Wetlands International, an NGO.

"If things continue like this, the lake could disappear," said its project manager Desalegn Regassa.

Pumping by farmers and industry is not the lake's only problem. Heavy pesticide use is also killing its fish, locals and the NGO say.

Belachew Derib has been fishing the lake since the 1980s but says stocks are disappearing.

"I built my house thanks to the income from fishing and support my three children through this work," Belachew, 60, told AFP as he rowed his small boat out to pull up his nets.

"Previously, we could catch 20 to 30 fish a day. Nowadays, young fishermen are lucky to catch two or three," he said.

Just a few dozen meters (yards) from the shore, AFP found Habib Bobasso, 35, liberally covering his small onion plot with pesticides from a pump strapped to his back.

"There are many worms that can damage the plants... we could lose the entire harvest," he said as he sprayed, with just a shawl to cover his face.

He knows the pesticides are harmful but sees no alternative.

"The fertilizers and pesticides we use degrade the soil. We spend too much money on fertilizers and chemicals for a low yield," he said.

Degradation

Water management is essential for Ethiopia, a land-locked giant in east Africa with a rapidly growing population already estimated at more than 130 million and often hit by droughts.

But a lack of funds and government oversight has allowed bad practices to continue for decades.

A recent report by the Stockholm International Water Institute blamed Ethiopia's "lackluster policy frameworks" for "the demise of Lake Haramaya, the shrinking of Lake Abijata (and) the pollution of Awash River and Ziway and Hawassa Lakes."

Lately, the government has shown signs it is taking the problem seriously.

It passed a law earlier this year imposing a fee to extract water from Lake Dembel, which lies around 120 kilometers (75 miles) south of the capital Addis Ababa.

A local official, Andualem Gezahegne, told AFP he hoped this would curtail the pumps.

It cannot come too soon -- Wetlands International said there were some 6,000 pumps installed around the lake last year, running 24 hours a day, and "maybe more today".

AFP witnessed two huge tanker trucks filling up for a nearby highway project during a recent visit.

Keeping fishing under control is another challenge, said Andualem.

"Unfortunately, the peak fishing activity coincides with the fish spawning periods, from January to May," he said.

On the surface, the lake is still full of life -- from hippos to marabou storks.

But as the fishermen head out at dawn, the steady hum of the pumps strikes an ominous note for the future.