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News Release 15-001
Treatment for parasitic worms helps animals survive infectious diseases--and spread them
Scientists discover unanticipated consequences of some disease remedies
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African buffalo at a watering hole in South Africa.
Credit: Vanessa Ezenwa
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Buffalo herd on the move, with a young male peering at the camera.
Credit: Simon Mitchell, University of Kent
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Buffalo being darted from a helicopter at the beginning of the study.
Credit: Vanessa Ezenwa
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Researchers Rob and Jo Spaan collecting samples during a routine buffalo capture.
Credit: Vanessa Ezenwa
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A radio-collared buffalo walks off the research site scene.
Credit: Rob Spaan, Oregon State University
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The researchers' findings are described in the Jan. 9, 2015 issue of the journal Science. On the cover: Computational results for the dynamic transformation of a planar, two-dimensional structure into an extended, three-dimensional open framework. Controlled buckling follows from compressive forces that act at precise locations across the structure upon release of prestrain in an elastomeric substrate. This example uses microscale ribbons of silicon, with potential applications in electronic circuits, battery anodes, photodetectors, and other semiconductor devices.
Credit: Copyright AAAS 2015. Illustration: John Rogers, Yihui Zhang and C. Bickel/Science
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