The Economist April 30th 2022 Science & technology 73
ma”. This renders the margin for error
slim.Were thestagetotip slightly,and
touchthisplasmaknife,hesays,itwould
becutthroughalmostasif it werebutter.
FrictionfrompassingthroughtheWall
willslowthestage,butnotenoughforit to
deploy itsmain parachute immediately.
Instead,atan altitude ofabout13km, a
pneumaticmortarwillshootouta smaller
droguechute.Onlywhenthedescending
stagehasreachedanaltitudeof6kmwill
thebigparachutebereleased.Eventhen,a
circular “reefing” cord will restrict its
openingtoa quarterofitsmaximumsur
facearea.Roughlya minutelater,thatcord
willbesevered,topermittheparachuteto
inflatefully.Thiswillslowthestage’sde
scenttojusttenmetresa second.Asthe
earliertrialshaveshown,atthatspeedthe
helicopter’spilotisabletosnagthespent
stagewithneither greatdifficultynor a
dangerousdownwardyankontheaircraft.
Rocket Labis notthe only company
whichhopestoemulateSpaceX’sfeatofre
cycling.QuiltyAnalytics,a firmthatadvis
esthespaceindustry,isawareofatleast
five others—though none is as far ad
vanced as Rocket Lab.Asto how much
moneythefirmmightsaveif allthisproves
successful,MrBeckremainscoy.However,
Chris Quilty, Quilty Analytics’ founder,
reckonstheElectron’sfirststagemaywell
accountformorethantwothirdsofthe
launcher’scost,soreusingitwillcheapen
thingsconsiderably.Itisa fairbet,then,
thatRocketLab’scompetitorswillbeal
mostaskeenasthefirmitselftoseejust
howwelltheoperationsucceeds. n
EastCoastFever
Cowabunga!
I
t beginswitha bitenearthecow’sear.
In the next few days, the animal’s lym
phocytes multiply. Its lymph nodes swell.
It stops feeding and starts coughing as flu
id fills its lungs. It develops a fever as high
as 41°C. A few weeks after the bite, it dies.
Such a story is common in African
countries where East Coast Fever (ecf) is
rampant. ecf, which is caused by proto
zoan parasites spread by ticks, kills around
1m cattle a year. It also prevents the intro
duction of fastergrowing, higheryielding
European breeds, which are much more
susceptible to the illness than their African
kin.Thougha vaccine is available, and the
ticks can be attacked with sprayed pesti
cides (see picture), both of these approach
es are costly. Most farmers thus continue
to use lessproductive local varieties—cur
tailing their incomes and reducing agricul
tural output. The difference is stark: a Ken
yan cow produces around a tenth as much
milk as one in Britain.
New research may offer a solution. Vet
erinary scientists led by Phil Toye of the In
ternational Livestock Research Institute’s
campus in Nairobi and James Prendergast
of the Roslin Institute, in Edinburgh, have
found a gene variant associated with resis
tance to ecf. This result, published in plos
Genetics, opens up the possibility of breed
ing—or even geneediting into existence—
cattle that can beat it.
The variant’s discovery came about ser
endipitously. While observing a small ecf
vaccination trial in 2013, researchers at the
International Livestock Research Institute
noticed that of the 12 unvaccinated animals
involved, all three survivors had been sired
by the same bull. Further investigation
suggested the specific genetic element re
sponsible was a version of a gene called
faf1, which they dubbed faf1b. faf1is part
of a process of programmed cellular sui
cide called apoptosis, which helps regulate
cell numbers.
The current study examined 20 animals
carrying two copies of the variant version.
Just one of these succumbed to ecf. In con
trast, 44 of 97 cows without the variant
succumbed. The results, says Dr Prender
gast, suggest that faf1bhas a “dispropor
tionately large effect” on cattle’s ecftoler
ance. He and his colleagues, though not
sure exactly why that might be, think this
variant may stop cattle lymphocytes from
multiplying as quickly.
Their discovery could soon lead to bet
ter selective breeding. Once researchers
are sure the variant does not have adverse
sideeffects, African cattle breeders can
test their animals’ dnafor it and breed
from those carrying it, thus producing ecf
resistant offspring. In the longer term,
geneediting techniques such as crispr
Cas9 may permit the protective version to
be spliced into productive European
breeds, which can then be raised far more
successfully in Africa.
Such geneediting programmes are
increasingly common, and are achieving
official acceptance. In March, regulators in
America approved the first sales to con
sumers of meat from geneedited cattle.
(The modification in question gives the an
imals short, slick hair, to help them cope
with a warming climate.) The Internation
al Livestock Research Institute and Roslin,
meanwhile, are designing livestock resis
tant to other diseases, including trypano
somiasis, a protozoan illness spread by
tsetse flies.
By reducing mortality and increasing
productivity, geneedited European live
stock could have a useful effect in Africa—
though some worry the benefits are over
stated. Dr Prendergast points to the many
other animal diseases prevalent on the
continent, to which such cattle would still
be susceptible. He suggests farmers might
be better off breeding local varieties for re
sistance (and also higher productivity). But
no matter whether disease resistance is
brought about by conventionalbreeding or
gene editing, it should lead tohealthier
cattle—and happier farmers.n
A genetic discovery could help Africa’s cattle farmers
Ticked off about cattle fever