Year: 2010 (Page 21 of 70)

Weekend Science Fun: Yeast

After reading yet another children’s book that identified yeast as a type of plant – an archaic classification, they are really fungi – it’s time to investigate these helpful organisms.

1. First of all, how do scientists know yeast are fungi and not plants? Obtain some baking yeast from a store. Carefully open the packet or jar and look inside. Have some plant seeds handy for comparison.

Consider the characteristics of plants:

  • They are multi-celled organisms that obtain their energy from photosynthesis.
  • They are green and contain chlorophyll.
  • They grow from seeds.

In contrast, fungi:

  • are organisms that obtain their energy from food digested externally.
  • They are not green, and do not contain chlorophyll.
  • They contain chitin, a protein found in animals.
  • Make more of themselves via spores or budding.

What color are the yeast particles in the yeast package? Are they green like plants? Even though they are not green, they still might be seeds. How would you tell? What happens when you add water to a seed? It swells up and over time, say a week or so, a small plant emerges.yeast

Try adding a teaspoon of yeast to 1/4 cup of warm water. What happens? Now add a little sugar, to serve as an energy source. What happens? What would happen if these were seeds of a plant?

Note:  Yeast organisms are actually unicellular and would be impossible to see without a microscope, so the baking yeast you examine is a processed form containing many cells.

2. Although we humans use yeast for baking or making beverages, in nature yeast are decomposers. Test the ability of yeasts to decompose common food stuffs. Gather:

  • banana (apples or bread will work too).
  • plastic bags
  • yeast

Cut the banana in half crosswise. Sprinkle 1 tsp of yeast onto one half piece of banana, and then place each half banana into separate bags. Close the bag, and leave them in a warm, dry place. Compare what happens in the banana half treated with yeast and the banana half not treated. Return twice a day and record the appearance of each half over a few days. Would the experiment be less valid if you treated one whole banana and left one whole banana untreated? Why or why not?

Compare the rates of decay to bread and apples treated with yeast to untreated samples. Interesting fact:  fruit flies don’t eat fruit as larvae, but the yeasts that grow on fruit.

Related:

  • See our previous post about blowing up a balloon with yeast. You can substitute a few Tablespoons of granulated sugar for the molasses in the experiment.
  • Also our previous post on Fungi

Bug of the Week: California Sister Butterfly

We had a lot of choices for “Bug of the Week” today, but this beauty won the contest.

California-sister-butterfly

We went hiking in Ramsey Canyon in southeastern Arizona. These butterflies were flying everywhere.

Finally we found some on the ground that were still enough for a photograph.

california-sister-puddling

The butterfly is the California sister, Adelpha bredowii. Can you see the orange tube that is its mouthpart probing the ground?

california-sister-puddling-2

The butterflies were performing a behavior known as puddling. They are thought to pick up minerals and/or salts from this behavior. Usually puddling butterflies are around actual water-filled puddle or damp ground. This one seems to be probing between rocks.

Butterflies consume a variety of materials besides nectar from flowers. Sometimes butterflies are attracted to rotting fruit (note: this post contains references to butterflies imbibing alcohol).

If you are not offended by graphic vernacular or photographs of butterflies eliminating urine, here is a post about butterflies urinating while they are puddling.

Just goes to show that if you want to attract butterflies, sometimes it takes more than pretty flowers.

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