<table style="width: 1024px; height: 956px;" id="MainCols"><tbody><tr><td id="Content"><div id="Article"><h2>Japanese to patent transparent frog</h2><h3 class="Standfirst">Boffins in mutant albino batrachian IP brouhaha</h3>
<div class="Byline">By <a href="http://forms.theregister.co.uk/mail_author/?story_url=/2007/09/27/japan_boffins_breed_mutant_transparent_sunroof_frogs/" title="Send email to the author">Lewis Page</a></div><div id="Body">
<p>Japanese boffins have used artificial insemination to
breed mutant frogs with transparent skin. The scientists reckon this
will make biological research - not to mention school biology lessons -
signifcantly less messy and traumatic, as it will no longer be
necessary to cut the slime-filled creatures up in order to examine
their innards.</p>
<p>"You can watch organs of the same frog over its entire life as you
don't have to dissect it," enthused noted Hiroshima University*
sunroof-amphibian man Professor Masayuki Sumida, <a href="http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iPhJK96-Bi8jDR5Qhshe82mnazSA" target="_blank">according to AFP</a>. <br></p><p>Sumida and his team of batrachian-bothering boffins produced the new
see-through-packaged critters by breeding carefully selected mutant
albino frogs. The pale-skinned pond dwellers' offspring came out opaque
owing to the presence of dominant regular-type genes, but by breeding
these genetic carrier frogs together the crafty researchers obtained
breakthrough batrachians with built-in windows.</p>
<p>It seems the new special frogs - derived from regulation <em>rena japonica</em>
japanese browns - are transparent even as tadpoles. This provides hours
of fun for committed frog fanciers as "you can see dramatic changes of
organs when tadpoles mutate into frogs", according to Sumida. He
believes the secret of the see-through creatures will be so
commercially valuable that he plans to patent them.</p>
<p>It might seem impossible to prevent unscrupulous breeders producing
illegally pirated sunroof-frog copies to be sold in supermarket
carparks, but in fact Sumida's biotech has built-in BRM (Batrachian
Rights Management). The glassy frogs can have children, also
transparent, but the following generation die at birth. If you want to
look at a frog's guts without slicing it up, you'll have to pay
licensing.</p>
<p>Sumida's plans don't stop there. He reckons a move forward from
simple eugenics to actual genetic modification could produce new and
still more innovative frog technology. The good professor envisaged an
exciting new type of transparent amphibian which would glow luminously
when it developed cancer, for instance.</p>
<p>Obviously, glowing see-through cancerous batrachians are great; but
indeed this news is no surprise when one considers the other amazing
capabilities of the moist miniature marsh-dwellers (for instance the
ability to <a href="http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s1574722.htm" target="_blank">sweat hallucinogenic drugs, antiseptic ointment, insect repellent, or even glue</a>).</p>
<p>Surely it can't be long until some clever scientist employs Sumida's
patented batrachian boffinry to develop a pocket-sized variety which
can dispense a refreshing mindbending chemical, be used to stick notes
to the fridge, deal with insect bites, and light up a dark hallway. One
would be able to tell how much loopy juice, glue etc was left in the
little fellow's reservoirs simply by looking, of course. And in
extremis the adaptable amphibian could be sold to a passing Frenchman
as a tasty snack.</p>
<p>Frogs. Is there anything they can't do? ®</p>
<p>*There's no connection between local availability of mutant frogs and the 1945 bucket of sunshine from the States, apparently.>></p><p><a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/27/japan_boffins_breed_mutant_transparent_sunroof_frogs/">
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/27/japan_boffins_breed_mutant_transparent_sunroof_frogs/</a></p></div></div></td></tr></tbody></table>