The industry painter Alexander Calvelli is having a busy time opening two exhibitions in the Harz area this weekend, both covering motifs found in the natural and cultural heritage of that area.
One at The Cistercian Museum Walkenried Monastery today:
The other opens at the World Heritage Site Rammelsberg tomorrow, see the announcement here, and runs until October 27.
Some local press coverage I just found:
Walkenrieder Nachrichten
Göttinger Tageblatt
Saturday, March 30, 2019
Friday, March 29, 2019
science news 29.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
astrobiology
New evidence of deep groundwater on Mars
ecology
In ancient oceans that resembled our own, oxygen loss triggered mass extinction
430 million years ago
Fungus has decimated the populations of 501 amphibian species worldwide
Harnessing plant hormones for food security in Africa
"Striga is a parasitic plant that threatens the food supply of 300 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. Scientists have found that they can take advantage of Striga's Achilles' Heel: if it can't find a host plant, it dies. The scientists have developed a technique that has potential to reduce the impact of Striga by more than half, helping to safeguard food supplies and farmers' livelihoods."
Sea anemones are ingesting plastic microfibers
Fluorescent plastic microfibers that have been ingested by a bleached sea anemone, Aiptasia pallida.
Credit: Manoela Romanó de Orte
climate change
1 billion people will be newly exposed to diseases like dengue fever as world temperatures rise
bio-inspired
Shrimp claw inspires new method of underwater plasma generation
See also last year's feature on fusion also inspired by the pistol shrimp.
humans
Caffeine on the mind? Just seeing reminders of coffee can stimulate our brain
Thursday, March 28, 2019
science news 28.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
astrobiology
Rivers raged on Mars late into its history
Data flows from NASA's TESS Mission, leads to discovery of Saturn-sized planet
A "hot Saturn" passes in front of its host star in this illustration. Astronomers who study stars used "starquakes" to characterize the star, which provided critical information about the planet.
Credit: Illustration by Gabriel Perez Diaz, Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
environment
Wastewater reveals the levels of antibiotic resistance in a region
Cities under pressure
"Experts at Newcastle University, UK, highlight the challenge we face to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase cities' resilience to extreme weather and also give people quality space to live in."
ecology
Colder temperatures foster greater microbial diversity on amphibian skin
Mount Kilimanjaro: Ecosystems in global change
"Land use in tropical mountain regions leads to considerable changes of biodiversity and ecological functions. The intensity of such changes is greatly affected by the climate."
How light from street lamps and trees influence the activity of urban bats
bees
Codifying the universal language of honey bees
Adhesive formed from bee spit and flower oil could form basis of new glues
humans
Consider non-surgical brain stimulation for severe depression, say experts
Putting the science in science communication: Biology professor measures the impacts of science engagement programs for non-traditional public audiences
--------------
from the news media:
Can we stop robots outsmarting humanity? asks a long read in the Guardian. Based on humanity's present form, I'd suggest robots just have to sit and wait a bit.
astrobiology
Rivers raged on Mars late into its history
Data flows from NASA's TESS Mission, leads to discovery of Saturn-sized planet
A "hot Saturn" passes in front of its host star in this illustration. Astronomers who study stars used "starquakes" to characterize the star, which provided critical information about the planet.
Credit: Illustration by Gabriel Perez Diaz, Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
environment
Wastewater reveals the levels of antibiotic resistance in a region
Cities under pressure
"Experts at Newcastle University, UK, highlight the challenge we face to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase cities' resilience to extreme weather and also give people quality space to live in."
ecology
Colder temperatures foster greater microbial diversity on amphibian skin
Mount Kilimanjaro: Ecosystems in global change
"Land use in tropical mountain regions leads to considerable changes of biodiversity and ecological functions. The intensity of such changes is greatly affected by the climate."
How light from street lamps and trees influence the activity of urban bats
bees
Codifying the universal language of honey bees
Adhesive formed from bee spit and flower oil could form basis of new glues
humans
Consider non-surgical brain stimulation for severe depression, say experts
Putting the science in science communication: Biology professor measures the impacts of science engagement programs for non-traditional public audiences
--------------
from the news media:
Can we stop robots outsmarting humanity? asks a long read in the Guardian. Based on humanity's present form, I'd suggest robots just have to sit and wait a bit.
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
science news 27.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
astrobiology
In hunt for life, astronomers identify most promising stars
climate
Tracing the process of nitrous oxide formation in the ocean
Half a degree more warming may cause dramatic differences on drought-flood compound risks
NB that's the half degree between 1.5 and 2.0 C warming.
ecology
New tool maps a key food source for grizzly bears: huckleberries
Widespread losses of pollinating insects in Britain
'Scuba-diving' lizard can stay underwater for 16 minutes
Study finds people who feed birds impact conservation
Researchers analyzed how people who feed birds notice and respond to natural events at their feeders by collaborating with Project FeederWatch, a program managed by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology that engages more than 25,000 people to observe and collect data on their backyard birds.
A dark-eyed junco, an American goldfinch, and a house finch feed on sunflower seeds on a snowy day. Bird watchers report that cold weather influences how much they feed birds, more so than time or money. Photo by Cynthia Raught.
Credit: Virginia Tech
humans
Face off -- Cyclists not human enough for drivers: study
"A new Australian study has found that more than half of car drivers think cyclists are not completely human, with a link between the dehumanisation of bike riders and acts of deliberate aggression towards them on the road."
I find this a bit surprising as the human on the bike is in full view - and very worrying ...
astrobiology
In hunt for life, astronomers identify most promising stars
climate
Tracing the process of nitrous oxide formation in the ocean
Half a degree more warming may cause dramatic differences on drought-flood compound risks
NB that's the half degree between 1.5 and 2.0 C warming.
ecology
New tool maps a key food source for grizzly bears: huckleberries
Widespread losses of pollinating insects in Britain
'Scuba-diving' lizard can stay underwater for 16 minutes
Study finds people who feed birds impact conservation
Researchers analyzed how people who feed birds notice and respond to natural events at their feeders by collaborating with Project FeederWatch, a program managed by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology that engages more than 25,000 people to observe and collect data on their backyard birds.
A dark-eyed junco, an American goldfinch, and a house finch feed on sunflower seeds on a snowy day. Bird watchers report that cold weather influences how much they feed birds, more so than time or money. Photo by Cynthia Raught.
Credit: Virginia Tech
humans
Face off -- Cyclists not human enough for drivers: study
"A new Australian study has found that more than half of car drivers think cyclists are not completely human, with a link between the dehumanisation of bike riders and acts of deliberate aggression towards them on the road."
I find this a bit surprising as the human on the bike is in full view - and very worrying ...
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
catalysts for change
Back in December I attended a very intersting one-day symposium on catalysis jointly organised by the relevant topic groups of the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) and the Society of Chemical Industry (SCI). I've summarised some of the things I found exciting in a feature which is out now in Chemistry & Industry:
Catalysts for change
Chemistry & Industry 83, No. 3, pp 18-21
access via:
Wiley Online Library (paywalled)
SCI (members only)
If neither option works, I'm happy to send a pdf file on request.
Also, there have been some book reviews in recent issues of C&I that I forgot to mention, namely
Biotechnology of metals - issue 1
The physics of cancer - issue 2
Catalysts for change
Chemistry & Industry 83, No. 3, pp 18-21
access via:
Wiley Online Library (paywalled)
SCI (members only)
If neither option works, I'm happy to send a pdf file on request.
Also, there have been some book reviews in recent issues of C&I that I forgot to mention, namely
Biotechnology of metals - issue 1
The physics of cancer - issue 2
Monday, March 25, 2019
forest feature
Open Archive Day
Spare a thought for our planet's forests - they only started growing some 400 million years ago, and now we humans are wiping them out in just a few centuries.
In my feature from last year which is now in the open archives, I looked at a few studies that use current biodiversity data to shed light on the evolution of the global forest coverage:
The rise and fall of global forests
The composition of today’s forests contains important clues to their evolution and resilience to environmental change. The image shows Sequoia sempervirens (coast redwood), Great Otway National Park, Victoria (Oceania). (Photo: Steve Bittinger/flickr by CC BY 2.0.)
Spare a thought for our planet's forests - they only started growing some 400 million years ago, and now we humans are wiping them out in just a few centuries.
In my feature from last year which is now in the open archives, I looked at a few studies that use current biodiversity data to shed light on the evolution of the global forest coverage:
The rise and fall of global forests
The composition of today’s forests contains important clues to their evolution and resilience to environmental change. The image shows Sequoia sempervirens (coast redwood), Great Otway National Park, Victoria (Oceania). (Photo: Steve Bittinger/flickr by CC BY 2.0.)
Sunday, March 24, 2019
all things German
Publications in a few German magazines keep happening, I'm just failing miserably in keeping track of them.
So, without any attempt at logic or regular patterns of updates, here is what has come in since the last update:
Synthetische Biologie: Lebensfunktionen neu erdacht
Chemie in unserer Zeit Volume 53, Issue 1, Februar 2019, Page 7
Access via Wiley Online Library
related content in English
Von Mikroben und Mineralien
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 2, Februar 2019, Pages 52-53
Access via Wiley Online Library
related content in English
Ausgeforscht: Mit 150 fängt das Leben an
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 2, Februar 2019, Page 98
Access via Wiley Online Library
Ausgeforscht: Künstliche Dummheit
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 3, March 2019, Page 114
Access via Wiley Online Library
Chemie: Künstliche Intelligenz entdeckt neue Stoffe
Spektrum der Wissenschaft Heft 2/2019, S 24-27
related content in English (the second story mentioned in this blog entry)
Own photo of the event that inspired the Ausgeforscht column published in February (a product launch trying very hard to look cool).
So, without any attempt at logic or regular patterns of updates, here is what has come in since the last update:
Synthetische Biologie: Lebensfunktionen neu erdacht
Chemie in unserer Zeit Volume 53, Issue 1, Februar 2019, Page 7
Access via Wiley Online Library
related content in English
Von Mikroben und Mineralien
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 2, Februar 2019, Pages 52-53
Access via Wiley Online Library
related content in English
Ausgeforscht: Mit 150 fängt das Leben an
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 2, Februar 2019, Page 98
Access via Wiley Online Library
Ausgeforscht: Künstliche Dummheit
Nachrichten aus der Chemie Volume 67, Issue 3, March 2019, Page 114
Access via Wiley Online Library
Chemie: Künstliche Intelligenz entdeckt neue Stoffe
Spektrum der Wissenschaft Heft 2/2019, S 24-27
related content in English (the second story mentioned in this blog entry)
Own photo of the event that inspired the Ausgeforscht column published in February (a product launch trying very hard to look cool).
Saturday, March 23, 2019
tarka flute
All our instruments series, episode 9
Here's another recorder-type instrument that I've had since the 1980s at least, but I never even knew a thing about it (we didn't have wikipedia back then!). Based on the decoration style I assumed it was Mesoamerican, but I now found out it is a Tarka and they are believed to originate in Bolivia.
You can see immediately that the six holes are at equal distances and of equal size, so there is no way I could play notes of a Western type melody or scale, but it does allow some nice contrasting sounds. I am told in Bolivia it is used in carnival festivities. But as carnival has been and gone, I improvised some more subdued sounds on it:
Hey, I actually like the video. I should do improvised sounds more often in this series, rather than trying a set piece and making lots of mistakes.
Here's another recorder-type instrument that I've had since the 1980s at least, but I never even knew a thing about it (we didn't have wikipedia back then!). Based on the decoration style I assumed it was Mesoamerican, but I now found out it is a Tarka and they are believed to originate in Bolivia.
You can see immediately that the six holes are at equal distances and of equal size, so there is no way I could play notes of a Western type melody or scale, but it does allow some nice contrasting sounds. I am told in Bolivia it is used in carnival festivities. But as carnival has been and gone, I improvised some more subdued sounds on it:
Hey, I actually like the video. I should do improvised sounds more often in this series, rather than trying a set piece and making lots of mistakes.
Friday, March 22, 2019
science news 22.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
earth
Hundreds of bubble streams link biology, seismology off Washington's coast
evolution
Ancient birds out of the egg running
"Using their own laser imaging technology, Dr Michael Pittman from the Department of Earth Sciences at The University of Hong Kong and Thomas G Kaye from the Foundation for Scientific Advancement in the USA determined the lifestyle of a special hatchling bird by revealing the previously unknown feathering preserved in the fossil specimen found in the ~125 million-year-old Early Cretaceous fossil beds of Los Hoyas, Spain."
Half-a-billion-year-old fossil reveals the origins of comb jellies
ecology
Low-cost and energy efficient recording of biodiversity soundscapes
see also my recent feature on soundscape ecology
behaviour
World's smallest bears' facial expressions throw doubt on human superiority
"The world's smallest bears can exactly mimic another bear's facial expressions, casting doubt on humans and other primates' supremacy at this subtle form of communication. It is the first time such exact facial mimicry has been seen outside of humans and gorillas."
This is a mature female sun bear in Malaysia.
Copyright: Daniela Hartmann
technology
Dynamic hydrogel used to make 'soft robot' components and LEGO-like building blocks
humans
When more women make decisions, the environment wins
"When more women are involved in group decisions about land management, the group conserves more - particularly when offered financial incentives to do so, according to a new University of Colorado Boulder study published this week in Nature Climate Change."
New membrane class shown to regenerate tissue and bone, viable solution for periodontitis
---------------
From the news media
The UK will miss almost all the 2020 nature targets it signed up to a decade ago, reports The Guardian.
earth
Hundreds of bubble streams link biology, seismology off Washington's coast
evolution
Ancient birds out of the egg running
"Using their own laser imaging technology, Dr Michael Pittman from the Department of Earth Sciences at The University of Hong Kong and Thomas G Kaye from the Foundation for Scientific Advancement in the USA determined the lifestyle of a special hatchling bird by revealing the previously unknown feathering preserved in the fossil specimen found in the ~125 million-year-old Early Cretaceous fossil beds of Los Hoyas, Spain."
Half-a-billion-year-old fossil reveals the origins of comb jellies
ecology
Low-cost and energy efficient recording of biodiversity soundscapes
see also my recent feature on soundscape ecology
behaviour
World's smallest bears' facial expressions throw doubt on human superiority
"The world's smallest bears can exactly mimic another bear's facial expressions, casting doubt on humans and other primates' supremacy at this subtle form of communication. It is the first time such exact facial mimicry has been seen outside of humans and gorillas."
This is a mature female sun bear in Malaysia.
Copyright: Daniela Hartmann
technology
Dynamic hydrogel used to make 'soft robot' components and LEGO-like building blocks
humans
When more women make decisions, the environment wins
"When more women are involved in group decisions about land management, the group conserves more - particularly when offered financial incentives to do so, according to a new University of Colorado Boulder study published this week in Nature Climate Change."
New membrane class shown to regenerate tissue and bone, viable solution for periodontitis
---------------
From the news media
The UK will miss almost all the 2020 nature targets it signed up to a decade ago, reports The Guardian.
Thursday, March 21, 2019
science news 21.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
earth
Changes in ocean 'conveyor belt' foretold abrupt climate changes by four centuries
"In the Atlantic Ocean, a giant 'conveyor belt' carries warm waters from the tropics into the North Atlantic, where they cool and sink and then return southwards in the deep ocean. This circulation pattern is an important player in the global climate. Evidence increasingly suggests that this system is slowing down, and some scientists fear it could have major effects. A new study published in Nature Communications provides insight into how quickly such changes could take effect if the system continues weakening."
Predicted deforestation in Brazil could lead to local temperature increase up to 1.45 C
by 2050
evolution
New Cretaceous fossil sheds light on avian reproduction
"... the first fossil bird ever found with an egg preserved inside its body."
Photograph of the holotype of Avimaia schweitzerae.
Credit: Barbara Marrs
ecology
The recent spread of coyotes across North America did not doom deer populations
New short-tailed whip scorpion species discovered in Amazon
... and their "mating march"
nanoworld
Computer scientists create reprogrammable molecular (DNA) computing system
UIC researchers find hidden proteins in bacteria
hidden protein genes more like, thanks to multiple translation start codons on the same stretch of the genome.
Princeton scientists discover chiral crystals exhibiting exotic quantum effects
Fish-inspired material changes color using nanocolumns
humans
Complex societies gave birth to big gods, not the other way around
US indoor climate most similar to northeast African outdoors
"Americans are most comfortable when their indoor climate is like the northeast African outdoors -- warm and relatively dry."
--------------
from the news media:
rewilding plans in Scotland (The Guardian)
earth
Changes in ocean 'conveyor belt' foretold abrupt climate changes by four centuries
"In the Atlantic Ocean, a giant 'conveyor belt' carries warm waters from the tropics into the North Atlantic, where they cool and sink and then return southwards in the deep ocean. This circulation pattern is an important player in the global climate. Evidence increasingly suggests that this system is slowing down, and some scientists fear it could have major effects. A new study published in Nature Communications provides insight into how quickly such changes could take effect if the system continues weakening."
Predicted deforestation in Brazil could lead to local temperature increase up to 1.45 C
by 2050
evolution
New Cretaceous fossil sheds light on avian reproduction
"... the first fossil bird ever found with an egg preserved inside its body."
Photograph of the holotype of Avimaia schweitzerae.
Credit: Barbara Marrs
ecology
The recent spread of coyotes across North America did not doom deer populations
New short-tailed whip scorpion species discovered in Amazon
... and their "mating march"
nanoworld
Computer scientists create reprogrammable molecular (DNA) computing system
UIC researchers find hidden proteins in bacteria
hidden protein genes more like, thanks to multiple translation start codons on the same stretch of the genome.
Princeton scientists discover chiral crystals exhibiting exotic quantum effects
Fish-inspired material changes color using nanocolumns
humans
Complex societies gave birth to big gods, not the other way around
US indoor climate most similar to northeast African outdoors
"Americans are most comfortable when their indoor climate is like the northeast African outdoors -- warm and relatively dry."
--------------
from the news media:
rewilding plans in Scotland (The Guardian)
Wednesday, March 20, 2019
science news 20.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
astrobiology
SwRI-led team identifies water-bearing minerals on asteroid Bennu
This mosaic image of the asteroid Bennu is composed of 12 PolyCam images collected by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft from 15 miles away. An SwRI-led team is looking at the spectral data from the surface to better understand the composition of the asteroid.
Credit: Courtesy of NASA/GSFC/University of Arizona
nanoworld
Starving bacteria can eject their flagella to save energy and stay alive
Not sure I believe that energy saving is the reason for the loss of flagella - it will be horrendously expensive for the bacteria to replace the flagella later. Also, survival of the individual isn't necessarily a big issue in bacteria.
... and speaking of flagella:
Mathematicians reveal secret to human sperm's swimming prowess
ecology
Across North America and the Atlantic, an enormous migration journey for a tiny songbird
"Blackpoll warblers that breed in western North America may migrate up to 12,400 miles roundtrip each year, some crossing the entire North American continent before making a nonstop trans-ocean flight of up to four days to South America. Now a new study led by first author Bill DeLuca at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and project lead Ryan Norris at the University of Guelph, Ontario offers details of the feat."
conservation
When development and conservation clash in the Serengeti
food and drink
New report discusses role of polyphenols, found in coffee, in reducing CVD risk
Many pet owners keen to have vegan pets, University of Guelph study finds
I think 'vegan pet' is a bit of an oxymoron, as it is against the vegan spirit for a human to keep an animal for their own emotional needs, am I wrong?
humans
First Anatolian farmers were local hunter-gatherers that adopted agriculture
Deep brain stimulation provides sustained relief for severe depression
astrobiology
SwRI-led team identifies water-bearing minerals on asteroid Bennu
This mosaic image of the asteroid Bennu is composed of 12 PolyCam images collected by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft from 15 miles away. An SwRI-led team is looking at the spectral data from the surface to better understand the composition of the asteroid.
Credit: Courtesy of NASA/GSFC/University of Arizona
nanoworld
Starving bacteria can eject their flagella to save energy and stay alive
Not sure I believe that energy saving is the reason for the loss of flagella - it will be horrendously expensive for the bacteria to replace the flagella later. Also, survival of the individual isn't necessarily a big issue in bacteria.
... and speaking of flagella:
Mathematicians reveal secret to human sperm's swimming prowess
ecology
Across North America and the Atlantic, an enormous migration journey for a tiny songbird
"Blackpoll warblers that breed in western North America may migrate up to 12,400 miles roundtrip each year, some crossing the entire North American continent before making a nonstop trans-ocean flight of up to four days to South America. Now a new study led by first author Bill DeLuca at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and project lead Ryan Norris at the University of Guelph, Ontario offers details of the feat."
conservation
When development and conservation clash in the Serengeti
food and drink
New report discusses role of polyphenols, found in coffee, in reducing CVD risk
Many pet owners keen to have vegan pets, University of Guelph study finds
I think 'vegan pet' is a bit of an oxymoron, as it is against the vegan spirit for a human to keep an animal for their own emotional needs, am I wrong?
humans
First Anatolian farmers were local hunter-gatherers that adopted agriculture
Deep brain stimulation provides sustained relief for severe depression
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
science news 19.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
evolution
Mammals' unique arms started evolving before the dinosaurs existed
Alligator study supports convergent evolution of spatial hearing
American alligator (A. mississippiensis), hiding. At Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge. The ears of Alligators are hidden under skin flaps right behind the eyes. Alligators use sounds for communication and to locate prey. The neural mechanisms underlying sound localization are an evolutionary stable feature across archosaurs, which include birds, the closest living relatives to crocodilians.
Credit: Ruth Elsey, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
ecology
Microbes can grow on nitric oxide
humans
Evidence for ancient magnetic sense in humans
Now that would be surprising and interesting.
Research into aphasia reveals new interactions between language and thought
evolution
Mammals' unique arms started evolving before the dinosaurs existed
Alligator study supports convergent evolution of spatial hearing
American alligator (A. mississippiensis), hiding. At Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge. The ears of Alligators are hidden under skin flaps right behind the eyes. Alligators use sounds for communication and to locate prey. The neural mechanisms underlying sound localization are an evolutionary stable feature across archosaurs, which include birds, the closest living relatives to crocodilians.
Credit: Ruth Elsey, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
ecology
Microbes can grow on nitric oxide
humans
Evidence for ancient magnetic sense in humans
Now that would be surprising and interesting.
Research into aphasia reveals new interactions between language and thought
Monday, March 18, 2019
a billion-year history
The press releases on which I filter-feed on a daily basis are always a mixed bag. They include the good, the bad and the ugly along with a few hilarious ones, and if a major genomics study involved ten separate organisations, I may well receive ten separate press releases about the same paper.
An example of a good story that caught my attention immediately, with the headline alone, arrived in February from Virginia Tech. The winning headline was:
Researchers investigate a billion years of coexistence between plants and fungi
A billion years is a very long time, even in evolutionary biology, and if you look closer it means that the cooperation between the lineages of plants and fungi is older than the spread of either lineage on dry land. So did they help each other conquer land? Did their cooperation which is still happening in many shapes and sizes today make life on the continents possible? These questions are discussed in my feature, which is out in today's issue of Current Biology:
The success story of plants and fungi
Current Biology Volume 29, issue 6, pages R183-R185, March 18, 2019
FREE access to full text and PDF download
Root samples labelled with a fluorescent dye to determine the fungal colonisation rates and mycorrhizal structures. (Photo: © Ming Wang, MPI for Chemical Ecology.
An example of a good story that caught my attention immediately, with the headline alone, arrived in February from Virginia Tech. The winning headline was:
Researchers investigate a billion years of coexistence between plants and fungi
A billion years is a very long time, even in evolutionary biology, and if you look closer it means that the cooperation between the lineages of plants and fungi is older than the spread of either lineage on dry land. So did they help each other conquer land? Did their cooperation which is still happening in many shapes and sizes today make life on the continents possible? These questions are discussed in my feature, which is out in today's issue of Current Biology:
The success story of plants and fungi
Current Biology Volume 29, issue 6, pages R183-R185, March 18, 2019
FREE access to full text and PDF download
Root samples labelled with a fluorescent dye to determine the fungal colonisation rates and mycorrhizal structures. (Photo: © Ming Wang, MPI for Chemical Ecology.
Friday, March 15, 2019
science news 15.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
earth
Sources and sinks
"For the entire history of our species, humans have lived on a planet capped by a chunk of ice at each pole. But Earth has been ice-free for about 75 percent of the time since complex life first appeared. This variation in background climate, between partly glaciated and ice-free, has puzzled geologists for decades."
nanoworld
From mirror-image biology to enhanced therapeutic proteins
"Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have succeeded in reconstructing biomolecules in their mirror-image form. The researchers' goal is to create a mirror-image artificial protein synthesis system. Their aim is to produce mirror-image therapeutic proteins, such as antibodies, which would be protected from biological breakdown in the body and do not provoke any immune response."
I don't believe that therapeutic proteins made of D amino acids would not trigger an immune response. They would be recognised by different antibodies compared to the L version, but still be marked as foreign.
Can an antifreeze protein also promote ice formation?
"Antifreeze is life's means of surviving in cold winters: Natural antifreeze proteins help fish, insects, plants and even bacteria live through low temperatures that should turn their liquid parts to deadly shards of ice. Strangely enough, in very cold conditions, the same proteins can also promote the growth of ice crystals."
I'm not terribly surpised by this as we've known about ice nucleation proteins for decades, and the two functions are similar in a way.
evolution
Researchers uncover new clues to surviving extinction
ecology
Narwhals spend at least half time diving for food, can fast for several days after meal
Sea otters' tool use leaves behind distinctive archaeological evidence
Wild sea otter at Bennett Slough Culverts opening mussels using emergent anvil stone.
Credit: Monterey Bay Aquarium, Jessica Fujii. Haslam et al. 2019. Wild sea otter mussel pounding leaves archaeological traces. Scientific Reports.
behaviour
Wild African ape reactions to novel camera traps
They'll set up their own instagram accounts in no time, but - see also the following:
New study shows human impact erodes chimpanzee behavioral diversity
Wolves lead, dogs follow -- And both cooperate with humans
food and drink
Scientists crack genome of superfood seaweed, ito-mozuku
Looks revolting to me, so I'm not sharing the photo that came with the PR.
humans
Ancient DNA research shines spotlight on Iberia
There's another PR on the same Science paper, also discussing a Curr Biol paper on Iberian genomes:
Unique diversity of the genetic history of the Iberian Peninsula revealed by dual studies
Poor pitch singing could be a matter of the tune in your head
---------------
From the news media:
Rebecca Solnit on the climate strike happening today.
earth
Sources and sinks
"For the entire history of our species, humans have lived on a planet capped by a chunk of ice at each pole. But Earth has been ice-free for about 75 percent of the time since complex life first appeared. This variation in background climate, between partly glaciated and ice-free, has puzzled geologists for decades."
nanoworld
From mirror-image biology to enhanced therapeutic proteins
"Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have succeeded in reconstructing biomolecules in their mirror-image form. The researchers' goal is to create a mirror-image artificial protein synthesis system. Their aim is to produce mirror-image therapeutic proteins, such as antibodies, which would be protected from biological breakdown in the body and do not provoke any immune response."
I don't believe that therapeutic proteins made of D amino acids would not trigger an immune response. They would be recognised by different antibodies compared to the L version, but still be marked as foreign.
Can an antifreeze protein also promote ice formation?
"Antifreeze is life's means of surviving in cold winters: Natural antifreeze proteins help fish, insects, plants and even bacteria live through low temperatures that should turn their liquid parts to deadly shards of ice. Strangely enough, in very cold conditions, the same proteins can also promote the growth of ice crystals."
I'm not terribly surpised by this as we've known about ice nucleation proteins for decades, and the two functions are similar in a way.
evolution
Researchers uncover new clues to surviving extinction
ecology
Narwhals spend at least half time diving for food, can fast for several days after meal
Sea otters' tool use leaves behind distinctive archaeological evidence
Wild sea otter at Bennett Slough Culverts opening mussels using emergent anvil stone.
Credit: Monterey Bay Aquarium, Jessica Fujii. Haslam et al. 2019. Wild sea otter mussel pounding leaves archaeological traces. Scientific Reports.
behaviour
Wild African ape reactions to novel camera traps
They'll set up their own instagram accounts in no time, but - see also the following:
New study shows human impact erodes chimpanzee behavioral diversity
Wolves lead, dogs follow -- And both cooperate with humans
food and drink
Scientists crack genome of superfood seaweed, ito-mozuku
Looks revolting to me, so I'm not sharing the photo that came with the PR.
humans
Ancient DNA research shines spotlight on Iberia
There's another PR on the same Science paper, also discussing a Curr Biol paper on Iberian genomes:
Unique diversity of the genetic history of the Iberian Peninsula revealed by dual studies
Poor pitch singing could be a matter of the tune in your head
---------------
From the news media:
Rebecca Solnit on the climate strike happening today.
Thursday, March 14, 2019
science news 14.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
ecology
What do gardens bring to urban ecosystems?
Hungry moose more tolerant of wolves' presence
A GPS-collared moose in western Wyoming moves into its desired habitat. New University of Wyoming research has documented interactions between moose and wolves in the region.
Credit: Mark Gocke
conservation
Measuring the success of East African protected areas
Tunas, sharks and ships at sea
"Researchers combine maps of marine predator habitats with satellite tracks of fishing fleets to identify regions where they overlap -- a step toward more effective wildlife management on the high seas."
See also my feature on satellite methods in marine conservation, now on open access.
humans
Thanks to pig remains, scientists uncover extensive human mobility to sites near Stonehenge
ecology
What do gardens bring to urban ecosystems?
Hungry moose more tolerant of wolves' presence
A GPS-collared moose in western Wyoming moves into its desired habitat. New University of Wyoming research has documented interactions between moose and wolves in the region.
Credit: Mark Gocke
conservation
Measuring the success of East African protected areas
Tunas, sharks and ships at sea
"Researchers combine maps of marine predator habitats with satellite tracks of fishing fleets to identify regions where they overlap -- a step toward more effective wildlife management on the high seas."
See also my feature on satellite methods in marine conservation, now on open access.
humans
Thanks to pig remains, scientists uncover extensive human mobility to sites near Stonehenge
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
science news 13.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
earth
Scientists go to extremes to reveal make-up of Earth's core
ecology
Desert plants provided by homeowners offer habitat for desert bird species
New species of frog sheds light on major biodiversity hotspot in southern India
New study explores impacts of marine and freshwater predators on ecosystems and society
Little owls on the move
"New study on an owl's re-colonization of northern Switzerland."
A natural resettlement of little owls in northern Switzerland is generally possible.
Credit: Ralph Martin
environment
Air pollution causes 800,000 extra deaths a year in Europe and 8.8 million worldwide
humans
From Stone Age chips to microchips: How tiny tools may have made us human
Experiences of nature boost children's learning
The world's adolescents -- large unmet needs and growing inequalities
"The first detailed global study of adolescent health reveals: growing inequality with a large disease burden in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and the Pacific, obesity rates have doubled, with countries in the Pacific region having among the highest prevalence, anemia remains unchecked, India bearing heavy burden, investments in health, education, legal systems have not kept pace with needs, and gender inequity is a powerful driver of poor adolescent health."
-------------------
From the news media:
long read about ethology and politics from Frans de Waal
earth
Scientists go to extremes to reveal make-up of Earth's core
ecology
Desert plants provided by homeowners offer habitat for desert bird species
New species of frog sheds light on major biodiversity hotspot in southern India
New study explores impacts of marine and freshwater predators on ecosystems and society
Little owls on the move
"New study on an owl's re-colonization of northern Switzerland."
A natural resettlement of little owls in northern Switzerland is generally possible.
Credit: Ralph Martin
environment
Air pollution causes 800,000 extra deaths a year in Europe and 8.8 million worldwide
humans
From Stone Age chips to microchips: How tiny tools may have made us human
Experiences of nature boost children's learning
The world's adolescents -- large unmet needs and growing inequalities
"The first detailed global study of adolescent health reveals: growing inequality with a large disease burden in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and the Pacific, obesity rates have doubled, with countries in the Pacific region having among the highest prevalence, anemia remains unchecked, India bearing heavy burden, investments in health, education, legal systems have not kept pace with needs, and gender inequity is a powerful driver of poor adolescent health."
-------------------
From the news media:
long read about ethology and politics from Frans de Waal
Monday, March 11, 2019
re-ge-ne-rate!
Open Archive Day
Last year's feature on regeneration and the axolotl is now in the open archives:
Regeneration lessons from the axolotl
Last year's feature on regeneration and the axolotl is now in the open archives:
Regeneration lessons from the axolotl
Wednesday, March 06, 2019
science news 6.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
evolution
Dingoes should remain a distinct species in Australia
looks like they don't descend from feral dogs after all ...
ecology
Rethinking old-growth forests using lichens as an indicator of conservation value
Sphaerophorus globosus (coral lichen), a readily identifiable lichen, on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland and Labrador. This lichen has been demonstrated to usefully discriminate between old-growth and second-growth forests in Nova Scotia, Canada).
Credit: Troy McMullin
Capturing bacteria that eat and breathe electricity
food & drink
Modern beer yeast emerged from mix of European grape wine, Asian rice wine yeast
Source of citrus' sour taste is identified
humans
Analysis of billions of Wikipedia searches reveals biodiversity secrets
and seasonal patterns etc. - loving this!
A silver lining like no other
New technology from the University of South Australia is revolutionizing safe vaccination practices through antibacterial, silver-loaded dissolvable microneedle patches, which not only sterilize the injection site to inhibit the growth of bacteria, but also physically dissolve after administration.
The grassroots revolution making it normal for children to 'play out' again
-------------------
From the news media
Machines reading our emotions, in the Guardian
evolution
Dingoes should remain a distinct species in Australia
looks like they don't descend from feral dogs after all ...
ecology
Rethinking old-growth forests using lichens as an indicator of conservation value
Sphaerophorus globosus (coral lichen), a readily identifiable lichen, on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland and Labrador. This lichen has been demonstrated to usefully discriminate between old-growth and second-growth forests in Nova Scotia, Canada).
Credit: Troy McMullin
Capturing bacteria that eat and breathe electricity
food & drink
Modern beer yeast emerged from mix of European grape wine, Asian rice wine yeast
Source of citrus' sour taste is identified
humans
Analysis of billions of Wikipedia searches reveals biodiversity secrets
and seasonal patterns etc. - loving this!
A silver lining like no other
New technology from the University of South Australia is revolutionizing safe vaccination practices through antibacterial, silver-loaded dissolvable microneedle patches, which not only sterilize the injection site to inhibit the growth of bacteria, but also physically dissolve after administration.
The grassroots revolution making it normal for children to 'play out' again
-------------------
From the news media
Machines reading our emotions, in the Guardian
Tuesday, March 05, 2019
science news 5.3.2019
Today's selection of science news. Links are normally to press releases on EurekAlert (at the bottom end I may also add a couple of newspaper stories). I include quotes from the summary (using quotation marks) in cases where the title alone doesn't reveal what the story is about. My own thoughts appear without quotation marks, if I have any.
astrobiology
The case of the over-tilting exoplanets
climate & environment
Forecasting mosquitoes' global spread
New prediction models factoring in climate, urbanization and human travel and migration offer insight into the recent spread of two key disease-spreading mosquitoes -- Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. The models forecast that by 2050, 49 percent of the world's population will live in places where these species are established if greenhouse gas emissions continue at current rates.
Turning algae into fuel
A team of University of Utah chemical engineers have developed a new kind of jet mixer for creating biomass from algae that extracts the lipids from the watery plants with much less energy than the older extraction method. This key discovery now puts this form of energy closer to becoming a viable, cost-effective alternative fuel
Human 'footprint' on Antarctica measured for first time
The full extent of the human 'footprint' on Antarctica has been revealed for the first time by new IMAS-led research which used satellite images to measure stations, huts, runways, waste sites and tourist camps at 158 locations. The study, which also included researchers from the Australian Antarctic Division and University of Wollongong, found that more than half of all large ice-free coastal areas of Antarctica have now been disturbed by human activity.
Due to humans, extinction risk for 1,700 animal species to increase by 2070
sounds like a conservative estimate to me ...
evolution
Ancient mammal remains digested by crocodiles reveal three new species
Cuban hutia Capromys pilorides, closest living relative to the newly described mammals.
Credit: Nancy Albury
nanoworld
Exploring charge flow through proteins
Swimming microbes steer themselves into mathematical order
humans
When it comes to hearing words, it's a division of labor between our brain's two hemispheres
astrobiology
The case of the over-tilting exoplanets
climate & environment
Forecasting mosquitoes' global spread
New prediction models factoring in climate, urbanization and human travel and migration offer insight into the recent spread of two key disease-spreading mosquitoes -- Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. The models forecast that by 2050, 49 percent of the world's population will live in places where these species are established if greenhouse gas emissions continue at current rates.
Turning algae into fuel
A team of University of Utah chemical engineers have developed a new kind of jet mixer for creating biomass from algae that extracts the lipids from the watery plants with much less energy than the older extraction method. This key discovery now puts this form of energy closer to becoming a viable, cost-effective alternative fuel
Human 'footprint' on Antarctica measured for first time
The full extent of the human 'footprint' on Antarctica has been revealed for the first time by new IMAS-led research which used satellite images to measure stations, huts, runways, waste sites and tourist camps at 158 locations. The study, which also included researchers from the Australian Antarctic Division and University of Wollongong, found that more than half of all large ice-free coastal areas of Antarctica have now been disturbed by human activity.
Due to humans, extinction risk for 1,700 animal species to increase by 2070
sounds like a conservative estimate to me ...
evolution
Ancient mammal remains digested by crocodiles reveal three new species
Cuban hutia Capromys pilorides, closest living relative to the newly described mammals.
Credit: Nancy Albury
nanoworld
Exploring charge flow through proteins
Swimming microbes steer themselves into mathematical order
humans
When it comes to hearing words, it's a division of labor between our brain's two hemispheres
Monday, March 04, 2019
rising waters
There has been a deluge of papers on the shrinking continental ice caps in the last couple of months, warning of the imminent more literal deluge which will threaten major coastal cities and indeed countries within decades.
I've tried to compile all these rather scary developments from both polar regions and even the high mountain glaciers in my latest feature which is out now in today's issue of Current Biology:
Shrinking ice caps, rising oceans
Current Biology Volume 29, issue 5, pages R137-R140, March 4, 2019
FREE access to full text and PDF download
Studies of the Antarctic ice sheet increasingly detect the accelerating disappearance of ice. (Photo: Commander John Bortniak, NOAA Corps.)
I've tried to compile all these rather scary developments from both polar regions and even the high mountain glaciers in my latest feature which is out now in today's issue of Current Biology:
Shrinking ice caps, rising oceans
Current Biology Volume 29, issue 5, pages R137-R140, March 4, 2019
FREE access to full text and PDF download
Studies of the Antarctic ice sheet increasingly detect the accelerating disappearance of ice. (Photo: Commander John Bortniak, NOAA Corps.)
Saturday, March 02, 2019
echo of my heart
All our instruments series, episode 8
Here comes an instrument I am really quite fond of, my Hohner Echo harp in G and C (you just flip it around to change the key). Not sure when or how I got it but I must have had it for at least 40 years. Recently I checked the web and found that Hohner are still selling the same model, and even the cardboard box looks the same.
I now carry this in my bag as an emergency musical instrument (you never know, there might be rodents to catch or people to scare away), so I had it with me when on my recent travel I climbed on top of one of the many Bismarck towers in Germany, and recorded my video right there (but the internet connection in the sticks was rubbish, so I couldn't upload it and had to skip a week in this series). I am, again, making a mess of Fisterra, need to practice this for our sessions, which no longer have a regular melodeon playern, and the tune wants some metal reeds. Anyhow, here goes:
Here comes an instrument I am really quite fond of, my Hohner Echo harp in G and C (you just flip it around to change the key). Not sure when or how I got it but I must have had it for at least 40 years. Recently I checked the web and found that Hohner are still selling the same model, and even the cardboard box looks the same.
I now carry this in my bag as an emergency musical instrument (you never know, there might be rodents to catch or people to scare away), so I had it with me when on my recent travel I climbed on top of one of the many Bismarck towers in Germany, and recorded my video right there (but the internet connection in the sticks was rubbish, so I couldn't upload it and had to skip a week in this series). I am, again, making a mess of Fisterra, need to practice this for our sessions, which no longer have a regular melodeon playern, and the tune wants some metal reeds. Anyhow, here goes: