Bird Flu
Bird Flu
Bird Flu
BIRD FLU
Birds, just like people, get the flu. Bird flu viruses infect birds,
including chickens, other poultry, and wild birds such as
ducks. Most bird flu viruses can only infect other birds.
However, bird flu can pose health risks to people. The first
case of a bird flu virus infecting a person directly, H5N1, was
in Hong Kong in 1997. Since then, the bird flu virus has
spread to birds in countries in Asia, Africa, the Middle East,
and Europe.
Human infection is still very rare, but the virus that causes the
infection in birds might change, or mutate, to more easily
infect humans. This could lead to a pandemic, a worldwide
outbreak of the illness.
Biography
Johann Mendel was born into an ethnic German family
in Heinzendorf bei Odrau, Moravian-
Silesian border, Austrian Empire (nowHynčice, Czech
Republic). (He was given the name Gregor when he
joined the Augustinian friars.) He was the son of Anton
and Rosine (Schwirtlich) Mendel, and had one older
sister, Veronika, and one younger, Theresia. They lived
and worked on a farm which had been owned by the
Mendel family for at least 130 years. During his childhood,
Mendel worked as a gardener and studied beekeeping.
Later, as a young man, he
attended gymnasium in Opava. He had to take four
months off during his gymnasium studies due to illness.
From 1840 to 1843, he studied practical and theoretical
philosophy and physics at the University of Olomouc
Faculty of Philosophy, taking another year off because of
illness. He also struggled financially to pay for his studies
and Theresia gave him her dowry. Later he helped
support her three sons, two of whom became doctors. He
became a friar because it enabled him to obtain an
education without having to pay for it himself.
When Mendel entered the Faculty of Philosophy, the
Department of Natural History and Agriculture was
headed by Johann Karl Nestler who conducted extensive
research of hereditary traits of plants and animals,
especially sheep. Upon recommendation of
his physics teacher Friedrich Franz, Mendel entered
the Augustinian St Thomas's Abbey and began his
training as a priest. Born Johann Mendel, he took the
name Gregor upon entering religious life. Mendel worked
as a substitute high school teacher. In 1850 he failed the
oral part, the last of three parts, of his exams to become a
certified high school teacher. In 1851 he was sent to
the University of Vienna to study under the sponsorship
ofAbbot C. F. Napp so that he could get more formal
education. At Vienna, his professor of physics
was Christian Doppler. Mendel returned to his abbey in
1853 as a teacher, principally of physics. In 1856 he took
the exam to become a certified teacher and again failed
the oral part In 1867 he replaced Napp as abbot of the
monastery.
After he was elevated as abbot in 1868, his scientific work
largely ended, as Mendel became consumed with his
increased administrative responsibilities, especially a
dispute with the civil government over their attempt to
impose special taxes on religious institutions. Mendel died
on 6 January 1884, at the age of 61,
in Brno, Moravia, Austria-Hungary(now Czech Republic),
from chronic nephritis. Czech composer Leoš
Janáček played the organ at his funeral. After his death,
the succeeding abbot burned all papers in Mendel's
collection, to mark an end to the disputes over taxation.
Mendel's law
1. One of two principles of heredity first formulated by Gregor
Mendel, founded on hisexperiments with pea plants and statin
g that the members of a pair of homologouschromosomes seg
regate during meiosis and are distributed to different gametes.
Alsocalled law of segregation, principle of segregation.
2. The second of these two principles, stating that each memb
er of a pair of homologouschromosomes segregates during m
eiosis independently of the members of other pairs,with the re
sult that alleles carried on different chromosomes are distribut
ed randomly to thegametes. Also called law of independent as
sortment, principle of independent assortment.