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Shifting on his lab stool, Warnecke began to settle into the process he'd spend the rest of the day finishing. He readjusted his safety glasses and latex gloves, picked up another termite, and started the degutting process all over again. This termite, a Nasutitermes corniger, was brown like the others and had a shiny, ribbed abdomen. Its eyeless, round head had two pincers sticking out from the top. Termites in the genus Nasutitermes feed on dry dead wood. This one, before it was frozen and shipped here from Florida, had been a worker, a member of the caste charged, in part, with finding and processing cellulose to feed a nest's soldiers and reproductive royalty.
Nasutitermes is a genus close to Warnecke's heart. A metagenomic study he did with the genus in 2007 uncovered a trove of new information about what goes on inside the insects' bellies. Not only did he and his colleagues discover previously unknown enzymes, but they also confirmed that in the class of so-called "higher" termites, hindgut-dwelling bacteria synthesize those enzymes—merely a speculation before Warnecke's study. That work garnered him first-authorship on a paper in the prestigious journal Nature. After that came a flurry of media interest, lecture requests, and now a $240,000 grant from the Energy Biosciences Institute—UC Berkeley's new biofuel venture with BP—to spend the next two years further exploring termite guts, this time with three different grass-fed species.
Warnecke's relationship with termites has the mark of a genial obsession. On weekend walks through Tilden Park in the Berkeley hills, Warnecke slips sticks and handfuls of soft forest litter into his pockets. He takes the debris back to his apartment and sprinkles it into a terrarium, home to a few hundred termites he's collected from the California wild. These insects are not for splitting apart, but simply to care for. "I don't really know what to feed them," he said, "but I think they are happy." Warnecke is a dutiful curator of the tiny; he serves small organisms and their microscopic inner seas.
In the lab, Warnecke swept up a pile of now-thawed termite bits with his hand and tossed them into a biohazard bin . He'd finished degutting his first set—fifty per tube—and went to retrieve a fresh collection from the freezer on the other side of the room. He is violent with them, but his affection for termites is obvious. His work's green energy potential, however, leaves Warnecke mostly unmoved. He'll happily debate biofuel feasibility, but says the topics don't animate him.
He opened the new tube of termites and poured a small pile onto the metal block. He'd fly the next day to Europe to give a round of talks on his termite work to academics eager to be on the forefront of cellulose-degradation research. "It's nice to have an applied aspect and I hope it will be a useful contribution," said Warnecke, seeming a bit weary of all the excitement. "But I'm first of all interested in the basic science, the microbial diversity and the symbiosis." Then he picked up another termite, and split it in two.


Comments
Fascinating article. The author has captured not only the interesting details (and potential application) of the research, but also the personal bond between the scientist and these creatures he spends his time with.
Posted by Teresa Cryan on July 25,2008 | 12:11PM
interesting stuff. i want to know more about this guy.
Posted by Sierra on July 25,2008 | 12:15PM
This report is an interesting story of science and the scientist.The reporter has depicted a dynamic picture of a laboratory and the surrounding elements in such a way that it becomes impossible to leave the reading.I applaud the reporter for her affectionate attempt to highlight a very promising scientific activity with often despised and neglected little animal,termite. I must appreciate the great microbiologist,WARNECKE, for his devotion to develop a protocol for supplying biofuel through an ingenious and environment friendly way. Wish great success to all concerned.
Posted by DR. SYED MD. ZAINUL ABEDIN on July 25,2008 | 06:32PM
Bring those little suckers to Colorado. We have several millon acres of dieing lodgepole, that termites can have.
Posted by Wayne Nelson on July 27,2008 | 12:12AM
Way to Vladamir, uh I mean Falk. I remember dissecting termites in AP Biology my senior year of high school in 1982 kiddo, uh Old Termite Microbial Jedi Master! Totally, kudos my friend. da Teacher
Posted by Rockin' Randy Monroe on July 28,2008 | 02:58PM
Very interesting research. I am one of few who applaud the oil crisis because it is bringing about inovations that will change the worlds dependence on oil as an energy source.
Posted by Charlee Ann Lewis on August 9,2008 | 12:13AM
Very interesting. Thanks JLF
Posted by James L. Freeman on August 9,2008 | 06:23PM
very lovely writing julia. i hope this is one in a series.
Posted by Jaimal Yogis on August 21,2008 | 08:08AM
Who would guess that the gut of termites have the potential to solve our energy crisis.Kudos to F.W.
Posted by jerri Wilson on August 27,2008 | 10:39AM
i hope that this research be finished as soon as possibly so that the wolrd will benefit from it. thumbs up to all the scientist dedecating thier lives to thier works even they are not been given much attention.
Posted by cesar b. rago jr. on September 8,2008 | 06:44PM
This is so interesting. I wish this reading would be in the old weekly reader type articles for junior high school students. Hopefully, high school science teachers have funding to subscribe to this magazine and sights like this are easy access. Our country needs good scientists and this looks like a great new field for discovery.
Posted by patty mccubbins on October 9,2008 | 01:30PM
These are difficult times in our national economy for continued funding of basic research. But you'll never know what will turn up if you don't look.
Posted by Carol Goetter on October 9,2008 | 04:20PM
Great article. I hope Dr. Warneke gets all the support he needs to complete his research. God bless him for his committment to such a worthy project.
Posted by Sharon Sheffield on October 9,2008 | 05:22PM
This is so interesting. I am a lecture on Faculty of Forestry Tanjungpura University West Borneo, Indonesia. I have conducted the research about termites for my PhD disertation. I used Coptotermes curvignathus Holmgren, especially on soldier defensive secretions. This secretions can be used as antifungi and as wood preservation. I think the gut of Coptotermes sp also can be used as biofuels. Would you like to conduct the coolaboration research with me ?
Posted by Farah Diba on October 11,2008 | 07:53AM
Dear Farah Diba - your work sounds really interesting! Feel free to contact me! Cheers Falk (FWarnecke@lbl.gov)
Posted by Falk Warnecke on October 19,2008 | 08:03PM
I am just a "civilian" as in i have no scientific training but I do admit to a "love of bugs". I was given the book "For Love of Insects" by Thomas Eisner (with a forward by E.O. Wilson) and my eyes are opening to the power and majesty of our little friends. This article was exciting and I am thrilled when great like minded people connect... (Farah Diba and Falk Warnecke)... I think this is exactly what the new Obama Administration is encouraging... like minds and energies connecting to aid the human condition... lets here it for science and people working together!
Posted by wila kent on January 21,2009 | 01:45PM