Researchers have identified a gene pattern associated with autism by studying rare genetic mutations in people with autism and their families. They found disruptions in the same 100 to 200 genes in over 10% of people with autism or developmental delay. This gene pattern provides a new path for understanding the causes of autism and potentially developing targeted treatments.
1. SOUTH AMERICA ENVIRONMENT, SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY,
AND HEALTH NEWSLETTER
227t h
issue, June 12, 2013
CLIMATE CHANGE: Peru to Host Next Year's Climate Talks
By Lisa Friedman
A group of Latin American and Caribbean nations have decided that Peru should host the U.N. climate
change conference in 2014, several people close to the process said yesterday.
The decision by the Group of Latin American and Caribbean Countries in the United Nations (GRULAC) will be
announced today in Bonn, Germany. It ends a competition between oil giant Venezuela -- which has become
the darling of the climate justice movement by bashing the United States at every turn and indicated its desire
to host when the rotating chance to hold the convention came to Latin America -- and Peru, a progressive
country that has joined a Latin American coalition of governments willing to cut carbon. "Peru has been a
pioneer at the climate negotiations and was one of the first developing countries to put forward a voluntary
emission pledge in 2008," said Guy Edwards, a research fellow at Brown University's Center for Environmental
Studies who has helped advocate for Peru to host the 20th U.N. Conference of the Parties, informally known as
COP20.
"It's good news that Peru got the nod for COP20. Hopefully, things could start moving in a more ambitious
direction," he said. Earlier this week, 60 civil society groups signed a declaration backing Peru as host, saying
the country's "climate diplomacy offers the possibility to represent in a balanced fashion the interests and
concerns of all participating countries and find workable constructive compromise." That's key because
countries have agreed in 2015 to sign a new pact that will bind all emitters to cut greenhouse gases, officially
ending the current system in which only industrialized nations are expected to curb carbon. Climate change
activists said the summit in Peru will be an important step in getting countries on a common course.
A Victim and a Leader for Change. "Peru is not a country that took sides with really strong positions, so I can
see a potential for them to have a good facilitation," said
Enrique Maurtua Konstantinidis, regional Latin American
coordinator for Climate Action Network International. Peru, he
said, "is a country that can moderate well the discussions and
bring people together." CAN did not take a position on which
country should host.
In Peru, activists said that they were elated by the news and
that Peru's identity as both deeply threatened by climate
change and willing to be a leader in curbing emissions will
work in its favor. "We have been saying that we must ask the
main emitting countries to reduce, but also get agreements
from others, even those who are not the main emitters," said
Rocio Valdeavellano, coordinator of the Movimiento
Ciudadano frente al Cambio Climático (MOCICC) in Lima, Peru.
"We are very happy. We were waiting for this, asking every
day if the decision was taken."
Read full article at: http://www.eenews.net/
climatewire/2013/06/11/stories/1059982616
The information contained herein was gathered from news sources from across the region, and the views expressed below do not
necessarily reflect those of the Regional Environmental HUB Office or of our constituent posts.
Addressees interested in sharing any ESTH-related events of USG interest are welcome to do so.
For questions or comments, please contact us at quevedoa@state.gov.
* Free translation prepared by REO staff.
Climate Change: Peru to
Host Next Year’s Climate
Talks.
Climate Change:
Rainforests Can Take the
Heat.
CHILE: A.L.M.A.
Discovers “Comet
Factory”.
Conservation:
Conserving Neotropical
Migratory Birds in the
High Andean Wetlands.
Health: Compulsive
Behavior Triggered and
Treated.
Energy: UN Climate Goals
Possible With Efficiency
Measures, IEA Says.
Health: Scientists Find
Autism Gene Pattern
June 24-27, 2013
REO in Sao Paulo, Brazil
June 28-29, 2013
Peru Green Build 2013
Expo & International
Congress, Lima, Peru
July 10-12, 2013
Eolica, Buenos Aires,
Argentina
August 19-23, 2013
10th
Latin American
Congress of Private
Nature Reserves, Chile
http://asiconservachile.cl/en/x-
congreso-latino-agosto-
2013.html
Next events:
In this issue:
Image credits: NASA.
2. South American rainforests thrived during three extreme global warming events in the past, say pale-
ontologists at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. No tropical forest in South America cur-
rently experiences average yearly temperatures of more than 84 degrees Fahrenheit (29 °C). But by
the end of this century, average global temperatures are likely to rise by another 1–7 (0.6–4 °C) de-
grees, leading some scientists to predict the demise of the world's most diverse terrestrial ecosystem.
Carlos Jaramillo, staff scientist, and Andrés Cárdenas, post-doctoral fellow, at the Smithsonian in
Panama reviewed almost 6,000 published measurements of ancient temperatures to provide a deep-
time perspective for the debate. "To take the temperature of the past we rely on indirect evidence
like oxygen isotope ratios in the fossil shells of marine organisms or from bacteria biomarkers," said
Jaramillo.
When intense volcanic activity produced huge quantities of carbon dioxide 120 million years ago in
the mid-Cretaceous period, yearly temperatures in the South American tropics rose 9–12 degrees (5–7 °C). During the Paleocene-Eocene thermal
maximum, 55 million years ago, tropical temperatures rose by 5–9 degrees (3–5 °C) in less than 10,000 years. About 53 million years ago, tem-
peratures soared again.
According to the fossil record, rainforests prospered under these hothouse conditions. Diversity increased. Because larger areas of forest gener-
ally sustain higher diversity than smaller areas do, higher diversity during warming events could be explained by the expansion of tropical forests
into temperate areas. "But to our surprise, rainforests never extended much beyond the modern tropical belt, so something other than tempera-
ture must have determined where they were growing," said Jaramillo.
Their report, published in the Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Science, also refers to Smithsonian plant physiologist Klaus Winter's finding
that leaves of some tropical trees tolerate short-term exposure to temperatures up to 122–127 degrees (50–53 °C). When carbon dioxide concen-
trations double, trees use much less water: further evidence that tropical forests may prove resilient to climate change.
Reference: Jaramillo, C., Cardenas, A. 2013 Global warming and neotropical rainforests: a historical perspective. Annual Review of Earth and
Planetary Sciences Volume 41. Source: STRI
Read more at: http://environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/article/yournews/53665
A "dust trap" surrounding a young star could help explain how planets are formed, astronomers with Chile's ALMA space observatory said. The
findings provide insight into how dust particles in the disk around a young star grow in size so that, over time, they form comets and planets.
"It's likely that we are looking at a kind of comet factory," said Nienke van der Marel, a doctoral student at Leiden University in the Netherlands,
who led the team of researchers. Van der Marel and her co-workers made their discovery when they used the ALMA observatory to study the disc
in a system called Oph-IRS 48.
They discovered that the star was circled by a ring of gas with a central hole, but what surprised them was the view of where larger, millimeter-
sized dust particles were found, said a release from the European Southern Observatory that co-funds ALMA. "Instead of the ring we had ex-
pected to see, we found a very clear cashew-nut shape," Van der Marel said. "We had to convince ourselves that this feature was real, but the
strong signal and sharpness of the ALMA observations left no doubt about the structure."
What they had come across was a so-called dust trap -- a place where larger dust grains were
trapped and could grow in size by colliding and sticking together. Van der Marel noted that the
conditions in the "comet factory" were right for the particles to grow from millimeter to comet
size, but not to planet size. "But in the near future, ALMA will be able to observe dust traps
closer to their parent stars, where the same mechanisms are at work," she said. "Such dust
traps really would be the cradles for newborn planets."
The ALMA space observatory was inaugurated on a Chilean desert plateau in March and the
findings were published in the June 7 issue of the Journal Science. ALMA -- short for the Ata-
cama Large Millimeter-submillimeter Array, an acronym which means "soul" in Spanish -- is a
joint effort among North American, European and Asian agencies.
Unlike optical or infrared telescopes, ALMA can capture the faint glow and gas present in the
formation of the first stars, galaxies and planets in an extremely cold region of the universe.
Read more at: http://uk.news.yahoo.com/chile-observatory-discovers-comet-factory-
023745820.html#RiOP51z
CLIMATE CHANGE: Rainforests Can Take the Heat
CHILE: A.L.M.A. Discovers 'Comet Factory'
Amazon River. Photo by Rex. Under Wikimedia Commons License.
Photo by Magnus Manske. Under Wikimedia Commons License.
3. The Andes Mountains are home to lakes, lagoons, marshes, and bogs that are collectively known as
the high Andean wetlands. These ecosystems provide fresh water for more than 100 million people
and provide important habitat for valuable plants and wildlife, including Neotropical migratory birds.
However, major threats to these wetlands are putting the well-being of human and animal popula-
tions that depend on them at risk.
Since 2011, BirdLife International and a group of local partners have been working across four coun-
tries in the region on a project called “Conserving Neotropical Migratory Birds in the High Andean
Wetlands.” We talked with Isadora Angarita-Martínez, the project’s regional coordinator, and Patricia
Marconi, project coordinator in Argentina, about the current situation in the high Andean wetlands
and how the project is working with governments and local communities to protect these ecosystems
and contribute to migratory bird conservation.
Why are the high Andean wetlands special or important?
Angarita-Martínez: These ecosystems are large producers, regulators, and storehouses of water in
the Andean countries. The high Andean wetlands of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Argentina provide stopover and overwintering habitats for ap-
proximately 15 species of Neotropical migratory birds of interest to conservation and are also home to farming and indigenous communities.
Marconi: The high Andean wetlands, as well as the grasslands or puna ecosystems in Catamarca, the most extensive in Argentina, provide impor-
tant bird habitat. They are summer concentration and nesting sites for the two species of high Andean flamingos (Phoenicoparrus andinus and P.
jamesi), and safeguard all the endemic and characteristic species of the Altos Andes and the puna, such as the giant coot (Fulica gigantea) and the
Andean avocet (Recurvirostra andina). They’re also home to five species of migratory birds from the Northern Hemisphere: Baird’s sandpiper
(Calidris bairdii), lesser yellowlegs (Tringa flavipes), greater yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca), Wilson’s phalarope (Steganopus tricolor), and the
American golden plover (Pluvialis dominica).
What are the main threats to these ecosystems?
Angarita-Martínez: They are seriously threatened by mining, which has cleared vegetation and contaminated water sources, as well as the un-
regulated growth in agriculture, ranching, and tourism. These activities are largely unregulated since it’s difficult for authorities to reach and
guard the ecosystems. Moreover, most of the conservation efforts on this continent have been focused on forests and jungles and not so much
on other ecosystems such as the high Andean wetlands, savannahs and natural grasslands.
Read full article at: http://www.mtnforum.org/en/news/2013-05-30/conserving-neotropical-migratory-birds-high-andean-wetlands-birdlife-international
Researchers have both created and relieved symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in genetically modified mice using a technique
that turns brain cells on and off with light, known as optogenetics. The work, by two separate teams, confirms the neural circuits that contribute
to the condition and points to treatment targets. It also provides insight into how quickly compulsive behaviours can develop — and how quickly
they might be soothed. The results of the studies are published in Science.
Brain scanning in humans with OCD has pointed to two areas — the orbitofrontal cortex, just behind the eyes, and the striatum, a hub in the mid-
dle of the brain — as being involved in the condition's characteristic repetitive and compulsive behaviours. But “in people we have no way of
testing cause and effect”, says Susanne Ahmari, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist at Columbia University in New York who led one of the studies.
It is not clear, for example, whether abnormal brain activity causes the compulsions, or whether the behaviour simply results from the brain try-
ing to hold symptoms at bay by compensating. “There’s been a big debate in the field,” says Satinder Kaur Singh of Yale University in New Haven,
Connecticut, who studies molecules involved in OCD-like disorders but was not involved in the new studies. “What the Ahmari paper shows is
that it is causative.”
Off Switch. Ahmari’s team wanted to see if optogenetics could prompt repetitive grooming in mice
— a commonly used equivalent sign of an OCD-like condition in animal models. The team injected
viruses into the orbitofrontal cortex carrying genes for light-sensitive proteins. Certain nerve cells
then began to produce the protein and became sensitive to light. The researchers then inserted an
optical fibre to shine a light on these cells for a few minutes a day. It was only after a few days that
they started to see the compulsive behaviour.
“Beforehand, I thought that we would immediately see repetitive behaviours when the light was
turned on,” Ahmari says. Rather, it seemed to be chronic activity in these networks that sets off
the abnormal grooming. That could have implications for how these patterns of behaviour develop
in humans.
Read full article at: http://www.nature.com/news/compulsive-behaviour-triggered-and-treated-1.13144
CONSERVATION: Conserving Neotropical Migratory Birds in the High Andean Wetlands,
BirdLife International By Yessenia Soto
Photo by @Doug88888(flickr user). Under Creative Commons
License.
PhotobyAaron Logan.UnderWikimediaCommonsLicense.
HEALTH: Compulsive Behaviour Triggered and Treated By Kerry Smith
4. Improving energy efficiency is among four policies that the International Energy Agency said can help
achieve emissions cuts needed to keep global temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius
(3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).
The measures would reduce energy-industry emissions by about 3.1 billion metric tons of carbon-
dioxide equivalent compared with a business-as-usual scenario, the Paris-based adviser to 28 devel-
oped nations said in an e-mailed report. The reduction is about 80 percent of what’s needed by the
end of the decade to meet the United Nations goal of keeping global temperatures within 2 degrees
Celsius of pre-industrial levels.
The report shows “the path we are currently on is more likely to result in a temperature increase of
between 3.6 degrees Celsius and 5.3 degrees Celsius but also finds that much more can be done to
tackle energy-sector emissions without jeopardizing economic growth,” IEA Executive Director Maria
van der Hoeven said in a statement.
The IEA’s policies include improving energy efficiency in buildings, industry and transport; cutting
construction and use of the least-efficient coal plants; minimizing methane emissions from oil and natural gas production and accelerating the
phase-out of some fossil-fuel consumption subsidies.
UN envoys have been meeting in Bonn since last week to work on a post-2020 climate agreement they want to seal by 2015. Delaying emission-
reduction policies would be costly, and putting off $1.5 trillion in low-carbon investments before the end of the decade would require $5 trillion
in additional spending to get back on track after 2020, the IEA said.
Global energy industry-related carbon dioxide emissions in 2012 rose 1.4 percent in 2012 to a record 31.6 billion tons, according to the IEA’s re-
port called Redrawing the Energy-Climate Map. In the U.S., carbon output fell by 200 million tons amid a switch to gas from coal for power gen-
eration. China had the biggest increase with 300 million tons, though the pace of growth was the lowest for the country in a decade, the IEA said.
Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-10/un-2020-climate-goal-possible-with-efficiency-measures-iea-says.html
Scientists have identified a genetic pattern common to people with autism that is linked to the way messages are sent in the brain.
Medical Research Council (MRC) researchers at the University of Oxford said the knowledge could help them understand the role that genetics
plays in autism. Doctors can currently only identify the exact genetic cause of autism in about one in five cases but it is known that genes play an
important role in the development of autism spectrum disorders, said an MRC spokeswoman.
A total of 181 autism patients who either had additional copies of some genes, or fewer copies, than those without autism were studied by the
team at the MRC's functional genetics unit.
The researchers found that in about half the patients, the affected genes worked together as part of a biological network involved in the way
information passes between brain cells.
Dr Caleb Webber, lead author of the study published in the journal PLOS Genetics, said: "Think of a pipe that carries water. At some points along
the pipe there are genes that act as taps to let more water into the pipe. "At other points genes act as holes to let some of the water out. We
found that in individuals with autism the mutations in all these different types of genes act in the same way to affect water
flow.
"This indicates the 'tap' genes are duplicated in some individuals with autism which increases flow into the pipe, while in other
individuals with autism the 'hole' genes are deleted which decreases the amount of water leaving the pipe. Both of these
events cause the same thing - too much water flowing through the pipe.
"Knowing not just which 'pipes' in the cell are affected in autism but also in what way they are affected helps us to know in
which way we have to change the flow to restore the balance."
Autism spectrum disorders affect about 1% of the population and affect social interaction, communication and repetitive be-
haviour.
Read full article at: hhttp://uk.news.yahoo.com/scientists-autism-gene-pattern-210435921.html#bwlKfk2
UN Climate Goals Possible With Efficiency Measures, IEA Says
By Mathew Carr & Sally Bakewell
Photo by Scott Manes. Under Wikimedia Commons License.
HEALTH: Scientists Find Autism Gene Pattern
Image by Ioannes.baptista.
U n d e r W ik im e d ia
Commons License.