Wednesday, 27 August 2025

One of the world’s tallest trees — the centuries-old 'Doerner Fir' — is on fire in Oregon.

By M. Weisberger published Aug. 21, 2025

A 325 foot Douglas-fir (not pictured) in Coquille, Oregon, is on fire. (Image credit: Avalon/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

In coastal Oregon, the state's tallest fir tree is burning.

Douglas-firs (Pseudotsuga menziesii) are Oregon's most common trees, but the tree that's ablaze, known as the Doerner Fir, is special. Measuring 325 feet (99.1 meters) tall and with a diameter of 11.5 feet (3.5 m), it is one of the world's biggest coastal Douglas-fir trees, and one of the largest trees on Earth.

It is thought to be at least 450 years old, and it grows east of Coquille, Oregon, in a forest under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

Oregon's Coos Forest Protective Association (Coos FPA) reported the fire on Sunday (Aug. 17) in a Facebook post. The fire began on Aug. 16 and the Doerner Fir has been burning ever since. According to the Coos FPA, flames were detected at the top of the tree and extended down its trunk. The Doerner Fir was the only tree affected by the blaze.

Firefighters with the Coos FPA worked to control the fire, building a containment line around the base of the tree; dampening the trunk from below to keep the fire from spreading; and using helicopters to douse the top of the tree with buckets of water.

Drones deployed by the BLM captured images of the treetop to help firefighters plan how to extinguish the fire and save the tree, according to a Coos FPA update on Facebook.

On Tuesday evening (Aug. 19), flames were no longer directly visible. However, infrared drone images showed a hot spot inside the trunk where fire still burned, at a height of approximately 250 feet (76 m) from the ground.

Weather this week is expected to become hotter and drier, and firefighters are on alert to make sure the fire does not spread to the surrounding trees, the Coos FPA reported.

So far, about 50 feet (15 m) from the top of the historic fir have been lost to the fire, BLM spokesperson Megan Harper told the Associated Press (AP). Though diminished from its former record-breaking height, the tree will likely survive the fire, Harper added.

"The tree is so big, it's got so much mass that it would take a while for it to burn all the way through the tree," Harper told the AP.

BLM representatives ruled out a lightning strike as the cause of the fire, based on a review of recent weather data. Officials are continuing to investigate how the fire started, according to the Coos FPA.



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Dinosaur Teeth Unlock Secrets of Earth’s Ancient Climate

BY U. OF GÖTTINGEN, AUG. 26, 2025

Teeth of a Camarasaurus, found in the Morrison Formation, USA, which were also analyzed in the research.
 Credit: Sauriermuseum Aathal

A new method allows scientists to reconstruct carbon dioxide levels and photosynthesis from fossilized tooth enamel.

A surprising new line of evidence is providing fresh insights into Earth’s ancient climate. Fossilized dinosaur teeth reveal that the atmosphere during the Mesozoic era (between 252 and 66 million years ago) contained much higher levels of carbon dioxide than today. This conclusion comes from a study led by researchers at the Universities of Göttingen, Mainz, and Bochum, who examined oxygen isotopes preserved in tooth enamel. Their approach relies on a newly developed technique that offers exciting opportunities for studying Earth’s climate history.

The analysis also showed that global photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into energy, was occurring at about twice the rate seen today. According to the researchers, this surge in plant activity likely played a role in shaping the highly dynamic climate that existed during the time of the dinosaurs. The team’s findings were published in the journal PNAS.

To reach these results, the scientists studied dinosaur teeth unearthed in North America, Africa, and Europe from both the late Jurassic and late Cretaceous periods. Tooth enamel, one of the hardest and most resilient biological substances, preserves oxygen isotope signatures that record what dinosaurs inhaled as they breathed. Because the ratio of oxygen isotopes is influenced by atmospheric carbon dioxide and plant photosynthesis, these traces provide a valuable window into both climate conditions and vegetation during the age of the dinosaurs.


Tooth of a Europasaurus, a dinosaur similar to Diplodocus, in limestone, found in the Langenberg quarry in the Harz Mountains which was also analyzed in the study.
 Credit: Thomas Tütken



Evidence of High CO₂ and Climate Spikes

In the late Jurassic period, around 150 million years ago, the air contained around four times as much carbon dioxide as it did before industrialization – that is, before humans started emitting large quantities of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

And in the late Cretaceous period, around 73 to 66 million years ago, the level was three times as high as today. Individual teeth from two dinosaurs – Tyrannosaurus rex and another known as Kaatedocus siberi which is related to Diplodocus – contained a strikingly unusual composition of oxygen isotopes.


Tooth of a Tyrannosaurus rex – like the teeth analyzed in this study – found in Alberta, Canada.
 Credit:Thomas Tütken



This points to CO₂ spikes that could be linked to major events such as volcanic eruptions – for example, the massive eruptions of the Deccan Traps in what is now India, which happened at the end of the Cretaceous period. The fact that plants on land and in water around the world were carrying out more photosynthesis at that time was probably associated with CO₂ levels and higher average annual temperatures.

A Breakthrough for Paleoclimatology

This study marks a milestone for paleoclimatology: until now, carbonates in the soil and “marine proxies” were the main tools used to reconstruct the climate of the past. Marine proxies are indicators, such as fossils or chemical signatures in sediments, that help scientists understand environmental conditions in the sea in the past. However, these methods are subject to uncertainty. By analyzing oxygen isotopes in tooth fossils, the researchers have now developed the first method that focuses on vertebrates on land.

“Our method gives us a completely new view of the Earth’s past,” explains lead author Dr Dingsu Feng at the University of Göttingen’s Department of Geochemistry. “It opens up the possibility of using fossilized tooth enamel to investigate the composition of the early Earth’s atmosphere and the productivity of plants at that time. This is crucial for understanding long-term climate dynamics.” Dinosaurs could be the new climate scientists, according to Feng: “Long ago their teeth recorded the climate for a period of over 150 million years – finally we are getting the message.”



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Common Pesticide Linked to “Remarkably Widespread” Brain Abnormalities in Children

BY COLUMBIA U.'S MAILMAN SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH., AUG. 26, 2025

Researchers have linked prenatal exposure to the common insecticide chlorpyrifos with lasting disruptions in brain development and motor skills. The results suggest potential risks from continued pesticide use during pregnancy and early childhood. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Prenatal exposure to Chlorpyrifos in the womb disrupts brain development. Risks remain for children in farming communities.

A recent study has identified a connection between prenatal exposure to the commonly used insecticide chlorpyrifos (CPF) and structural changes in the brain, along with reduced motor abilities, in children and adolescents living in New York City.

This research is the first to show that exposure before birth can lead to long-lasting and widespread molecular, cellular, and metabolic alterations in the brain, in addition to impairments in fine motor coordination. The study, conducted by scientists at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and the Keck School of Medicine of USC, appears in the journal JAMA Neurology.
Birth cohort study results

The analysis focused on 270 children and adolescents enrolled in the Columbia Center for Children’s Environmental Health birth cohort study, all of whom were born to Latino and African-American mothers. Chlorpyrifos levels were detected in their umbilical cord blood, and they later underwent brain imaging and behavioral evaluations between the ages of 6 and 14.

The findings revealed that higher prenatal exposure was consistently linked to more pronounced disruptions in brain structure, function, and metabolism, as well as slower motor speed and impaired motor programming. Evidence across multiple neuroimaging methods indicated that the severity of abnormalities increased directly with the level of CPF exposure, suggesting a clear dose-response effect.

Residential pesticide use was the main source of exposure for these children. Although the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) prohibited CPF for indoor household use in 2001, it continues to be applied in agriculture for non-organic crops such as fruits, vegetables, and grains. This ongoing use results in toxic exposure from outdoor air and dust, particularly near farming areas.
Expert warnings on vulnerable groups

“Current widespread exposures, at levels comparable to those experienced in this sample, continue to place farm workers, pregnant women, and unborn children in harm’s way. It is vitally important that we continue to monitor the levels of exposure in potentially vulnerable populations, especially in pregnant women in agricultural communities, as their infants continue to be at risk,” said Virginia Rauh, ScD, senior author on the study and the Jane and Alan Batkin Professor of Population and Family Health at Columbia Mailman School.

“The disturbances in brain tissue and metabolism that we observed with prenatal exposure to this one pesticide were remarkably widespread throughout the brain. Other organophosphate pesticides likely produce similar effects, warranting caution to minimize exposures in pregnancy, infancy, and early childhood, when brain development is rapid and especially vulnerable to these toxic chemicals,” says first author Bradley Peterson, MD, Vice Chair for Research and Chief of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry at at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.




The Life of Earth
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Tuesday, 26 August 2025

Owning a Smartphone Before 13 Linked to Alarming Mental Health Declines, Global Study Finds


A global study of more than 100,000 young people has found that receiving a smartphone before age 13 is linked to poorer mind health in early adulthood, including aggression, detachment from reality, and even suicidal thoughts. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Experts identify four urgent priorities after findings reveal that smartphone users under 13 are more likely to report various problems, including suicidal thoughts.

A worldwide study involving more than 100,000 participants has found that receiving a smartphone before the age of 13 is linked with weaker mental health and lower overall wellbeing in early adulthood.

The research, published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Human Development and Capabilities, reported that individuals aged 18 to 24 who first owned a smartphone at 12 or younger were more likely to experience suicidal thoughts, heightened aggression, feelings of detachment from reality, difficulties with emotional control, and diminished self-worth.

The findings further indicate that these negative outcomes are closely tied to early exposure to social media and increased vulnerability to cyberbullying, poor sleep quality, and strained family relationships later in life.
 
Experts call for urgent action

Researchers from Sapien Labs, the organization behind the world’s largest mental wellbeing database, the Global Mind Project (which provided the data for this study), are urging immediate measures to safeguard the mental health of future generations.

“Our data indicate that early smartphone ownership—and the social media access it often brings—is linked with a profound shift in mind health and wellbeing in early adulthood,” says lead author neuroscientist Dr. Tara Thiagarajan, who is the founder and Chief Scientist of Sapien Labs.

“These correlations are mediated through several factors, including social media access, cyberbullying, disrupted sleep, and poor family relationships leading to symptoms in adulthood that are not the traditional mental health symptoms of depression and anxiety, and can be missed by studies using standard screeners. These symptoms of increased aggression, detachment from reality, and suicidal thoughts can have significant societal consequences as their rates grow in younger generations.

“Based on these findings, and with the age of first smartphones now well under age 13 across the world, we urge policymakers to adopt a precautionary approach, similar to regulations on alcohol and tobacco, by restricting smartphone access for under 13s, mandating digital literacy education, and enforcing corporate accountability.”

Since the early 2000s, smartphones have transformed the ways young people communicate, learn, and build their sense of identity. At the same time, concerns have intensified about AI-driven social media algorithms that can spread harmful content, promote unhealthy social comparisons, and interfere with important activities like in-person interaction and adequate sleep.
 
Concerns over social media and youth development

Although most social media platforms officially require users to be at least 13 years old, this rule is often poorly enforced. At the same time, the age at which children first receive a smartphone continues to decline, with many now spending several hours a day on their devices.

Approaches to restricting phone use in schools vary widely across countries. In recent years, France, the Netherlands, Italy, and New Zealand have introduced bans or limitations on cell phones in educational settings. While evidence of their effectiveness is limited, a Dutch government study has reported improvements in student focus. In the United States, New York has recently announced it will become the largest state to prohibit smartphones in schools, joining Alabama, Arkansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and West Virginia, which already require schools to adopt at least some restrictions.

Research to date on screen time, social media use, and smartphone access has generally identified negative mental health impacts, yet findings have been inconsistent and sometimes contradictory. This may be due in part to the reliance on screening methods that overlook key associated symptoms.

In the present study, the Sapien team used data from their Global Mind Project and applied the Mind Health Quotient (MHQ), a self-assessment tool designed to measure social, emotional, cognitive, and physical wellbeing, to calculate an overall “mind health” score.
 
Symptoms and mental health outcomes

Their results showed: The symptoms most strongly associated with early smartphone ownership include suicidal thoughts, increased aggression, feelings of detachment from reality, and even hallucinations.

Young adults who first received a smartphone before age 13 consistently showed lower MHQ scores, with scores decreasing further the younger the age of initial ownership. For instance, those who obtained a phone at 13 averaged a score of 30, whereas those who had one by age five averaged only 1.
 
In parallel, the proportion of individuals classified as distressed or struggling (defined as having five or more severe symptoms) rose by 9.5% among females and 7% among males. This pattern appeared consistently across regions, cultures, and languages, suggesting a period of heightened developmental vulnerability.
 
Early ownership was also linked to reduced self-image, confidence, and emotional resilience in females, while males demonstrated lower levels of stability, calmness, self-worth, and empathy.

Further analysis indicated that early access to social media explains about 40% of the association between earlier childhood smartphone ownership and later mind health, with poor family relationships (13%), cyberbullying (10%), and disrupted sleep (12%) also playing significant downstream roles.

The researchers acknowledge the COVID-19 pandemic may have magnified these patterns, but the consistency of these trends across all global regions suggests a broader developmental impact of early smartphone access.

While current evidence does not yet prove direct causation between early smartphone ownership and later mind health and wellbeing, a limitation of the paper, the authors argue that the scale of the potential harm is too great to ignore and justifies a precautionary response. 

Four key areas for policy intervention

They recommend four key areas for policymakers to address: 
 
Introducing mandatory education programs focused on digital literacy and mental health.
 
Improving the detection of underage social media use and enforcing significant consequences for technology companies that fail to comply.
 
Limiting access to social media platforms.
 
Establishing tiered restrictions on smartphone use based on age.

Broader impacts and need for urgent response

“Altogether, these policy recommendations aim to safeguard mind health during critical developmental windows,” states Dr. Thiagarajan, whose research specialism focuses on the impact of environment on the brain and mind, with an interest in understanding and enabling the productive evolution of the human mind and human systems.

“Their implementation requires substantial political and societal will, effective enforcement, and a multi-stakeholder approach, but successful precedents do exist. For example, in the United States, underage alcohol access and consumption is regulated through a combination of parental, commercial, and corporate accountability.”

Concluding she states: “Our evidence suggests childhood smartphone ownership, an early gateway into AI-powered digital environments, is profoundly diminishing mind health and wellbeing in adulthood with deep consequences for individual agency and societal flourishing.

“I was initially surprised by how strong the results are. However, when you give it due consideration, it does begin to make sense that the younger developing mind is more compromised by the online environment, given their vulnerability and lack of worldly experience.

“That said, I think it is also important to point out that smartphones and social media are not the only assault to mental health and crisis facing younger adults. It explains some of the overall decline but not all of it. “Now, while more research is needed to unravel the causal mechanisms, waiting for irrefutable proof in the face of these population-level findings unfortunately risks missing the window for timely, preventative action.”
 
 
 
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Challenging Over 150 Years of Immunotherapy: Scientists Unveil New Weapon That Kills Cancer Without the Immune System


Scientists in Japan have unveiled a revolutionary bacteria-based therapy that eradicates tumors without relying on the immune system, offering fresh hope for patients where standard treatments fail. 
Credit: Stock

Two bacteria working in harmony show powerful antitumor effects. The approach could transform treatment for immunocompromised patients.

A research team led by Professor Eijiro Miyako at the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST), working in collaboration with Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. and the University of Tsukuba, has created a pioneering bacterial therapy for cancer that operates independently of the immune system. This new approach relies on a specially designed microbial consortium called AUN.

The concept of bacterial cancer therapy dates back to 1868, when German physician Busch reported that intentionally infecting a patient with bacteria led to tumor regression. Later, in 1893, Dr. William Coley proposed bacterial injections as a treatment, laying the foundation for cancer immunotherapy. Over the past 150 years, these early ideas evolved into advanced treatments such as checkpoint inhibitors and CAR-T cells. While effective for some, these therapies all depend on immune cell activity, which limits their effectiveness in patients whose immune systems are weakened by chemotherapy or radiotherapy.



Schematic illustration of A-gyo and UN-gyo. Credit: Eijiro Miyako from JAIST

The new AUN therapy overcomes this challenge by combining two naturally occurring bacterial strains: Proteus mirabilis (A-gyo), a microbe that thrives within tumors
Rhodopseudomonas palustris (UN-gyo), a photosynthetic bacterium
Mechanisms of tumor eradication

Working in close cooperation, the “AUN” bacterial pair achieved remarkable tumor clearance in both mouse and human cancer models, even under immunocompromised conditions—all without relying on immune cells. The therapy demonstrated strong biocompatibility and very limited side effects, notably preventing cytokine release syndrome (CRS).


Therapeutic efficacy and safety profile of AUN (representative data shown). 
Credit: Eijiro Miyako from JAIST

 
 
In this study, AUN’s potent antitumor activity was driven by several coordinated bacterial mechanisms, including: Precise targeting and destruction of tumor vasculature and cancer cells
Structural transformation of A-gyo (filamentation) induced by tumor metabolites, which increased its cancer-fighting capacity
Dynamic intratumoral population shifts, where the initial bacterial ratio of A-gyo : UN-gyo ≈ 3:97 rapidly changed to 99:1 within the tumor microenvironment
Reduced pathogenicity and minimized side effects, including effective prevention of CRS



The remarkable transformation and tumor-hunting behavior of A-gyo. 
Credit: Eijiro Miyako from JAIST

Harmony between bacterial partners

Notably, UN-gyo functions as a regulatory partner only when coexisting with A-gyo, helping to suppress the pathogenicity of both strains while simultaneously enhancing their tumor-specific cytotoxicity. This “cooperation of labor” mirrors the Japanese philosophical concept of “AUN”—perfect harmony between opposites. It is this delicate and dynamic interplay between the two bacterial species that unlocks the remarkable antitumor efficacy—a feat previously unattainable through conventional therapies.

“To accelerate the social implementation of this research, we are preparing to launch a startup and aim to begin clinical trials within six years,” said Professor Eijiro Miyako, lead author of the study.
“A new chapter in bacteria-based cancer therapy—pursued for over 150 years—is finally beginning.”

This revolutionary approach represents a paradigm shift for immunocompromised cancer patients. It offers a long-awaited therapeutic solution in cases where conventional immunotherapies fail—ushering in the dawn of truly immune-independent cancer treatment.
 
 
 
 
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The Words Humans Use to Describe Nature Are Vanishing, Study Finds


(Lisa5201/Getty Images)

Even the words we use to express our connection to nature are dwindling as the demands of modern life isolate us from the non-human world, according to a new study by psychologist Miles Richardson of the University of Derby in the UK.

As a proxy for humans' connection to nature across time, Richardson turned to books, specifically data lifted from Google Books Ngram Viewer for the period 1800-2019. He mapped the frequency with which authors used 28 words associated with nature: words like river, meadow, beak, coast, and bough.

He avoided species names because, he reasons, they "tend to be more technical or impersonal… [and] are also more susceptible to reflecting wildlife population trends or being influenced by factors like the proliferation of identification guides."

"These words reflect what people noticed, valued, and wrote about," Richardson writes in a blog post. "And when their use is plotted over time, a clear decline of around 60 percent is revealed, particularly from 1850, a time when industrialization and urbanization grew rapidly."

This approach has many limitations: bias arises, for instance, from the selection of texts available in the Google dataset, and from the words Richardson chose as signifiers of the natural world (for instance, the exclusion of more liminal keywords, where nature overlaps with human life, like 'crops' or 'garden').

But it's not the only study that's found references to nature have been disappearing from our culture: researchers from the London Business School came to similar conclusions in their 2017 analysis of fiction books, song lyrics, and even film storylines.

Interestingly, the book data closely correlates with a computer model Richardson developed to simulate how our connection with nature has declined from 1800 to 2020.

"Here's the remarkable part: the model (red line), built from the ground up to simulate human–nature interactions, closely mirrored, with less than 5 percent error, the actual decline in nature word use," Richardson writes.

"Despite the uncertainties of using language as a proxy, the fit was striking."

It suggests the simulation could be close to the truth. If so, our connection to nature has declined by more than 60 percent in the past two centuries.


Time-series plot of modelled nature connectedness (red line) 
and the nature connectedness target (blue line). 
(Miles Richardson)

This simulation showed a substantial decline in nature connectedness driven primarily by a breakdown across generations. It shows the importance of sharing a connection with nature with children, something that's easier said than done as our surroundings become increasingly urbanized and ecologically degraded.

"Nature connectedness is now accepted as a key root cause of the environmental crisis," Richardson told Guardian journalist Patrick Barkham. "It's vitally important for our own mental health as well. It unites people and nature's wellbeing. There's a need for transformational change if we're going to change society's relationship with nature."
 
 
 
 
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Monday, 25 August 2025

No Pills, No Surgery: Scientists Discover Simple Way To Relieve Arthritis Pain


A simple change in walking style may help people with knee osteoarthritis reduce pain and protect their joints. Researchers found that personalized gait retraining rivaled medication in effectiveness, opening the door to a new kind of treatment. 
Credit: Stock
 
A new study led by a Utah engineering professor shows that gait retraining can reduce pain and slow cartilage damage.

Almost one in four adults over the age of 40 live with painful osteoarthritis, a condition that has become one of the leading causes of disability. The disease gradually wears away the cartilage that cushions joints, and there is currently no way to restore this damage. For now, treatment typically focuses on pain management with medication, followed eventually by joint replacement.

Scientists from the University of Utah, New York University, and Stanford University are now pointing to a promising alternative: gait retraining.

In a year-long randomized controlled trial, participants who adjusted the angle of their foot while walking reported pain relief comparable to medication. Importantly, these individuals also showed slower cartilage deterioration in their knees compared with those who received a placebo treatment.


At the beginning of the study, participants received a baseline MRI and walked on a force-sensitive treadmill while motion-capture cameras recorded their walking mechanics. 
Credit: Utah Movement Bioengineering Lab 

First placebo-controlled proof

Published in The Lancet Rheumatology and co-led by Scott Uhlrich of Utah’s John and Marcia Price College of Engineering, these findings come from the first placebo-controlled study to demonstrate the effectiveness of a biomechanical intervention for osteoarthritis.

“We’ve known that for people with osteoarthritis, higher loads in their knee accelerate progression, and that changing the foot angle can reduce knee load,” said Uhlrich, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering. “So the idea of a biomechanical intervention is not new, but there have not been randomized, placebo-controlled studies to show that they’re effective.” 

Tailoring treatment to each patient

Backed by the National Institutes of Health and other federal agencies, the researchers focused on patients with mild-to-moderate osteoarthritis in the medial compartment of the knee (the inner side of the leg), which carries more weight than the lateral, outer compartment. This type of osteoarthritis is the most widespread, but the best foot angle to lessen stress on the medial knee varies for each individual, depending on their natural gait and how it shifts when they adopt a new walking style.

“Previous trials prescribed the same intervention to all individuals, resulting in some individuals not reducing, or even increasing, their joint loading,” Uhlrich said. “We used a personalized approach to selecting each individual’s new walking pattern, which improved how much individuals could offload their knee and likely contributed to the positive effect on pain and cartilage that we saw.”

Using motion capture cameras, the researchers tracked the degree to which participants walked with their toes pointed inward or outward. Researchers could then calculate the loading in participants’ knees and prescribe the change in foot angle that reduced each individual’s loading. During weekly gait training visits, participants received vibrations on their lower leg after each step, teaching them to walk precisely with their prescribed foot angle. 
 
During their first two sessions, participants underwent a baseline MRI and practiced walking on a pressure-sensitive treadmill while motion-capture cameras tracked their movements. These assessments revealed whether turning the foot inward or outward reduced knee loading more effectively, and whether a 5° or 10° adjustment was most suitable.

This individualized evaluation also excluded participants for whom no foot angle adjustment could reduce knee stress. Including such individuals in earlier studies may explain why those trials produced inconclusive results on pain reduction. 

Placebo versus intervention

After the initial intake sessions, the 68 participants were divided into two groups. Half were placed in a sham treatment group designed to measure the placebo effect. These individuals were instructed to walk with foot angles that were identical to their natural gait. In contrast, participants in the intervention group were assigned a foot angle adjustment that most effectively reduced stress on their knees.

Both groups then took part in six weekly lab-based training sessions. During these sessions, participants received biofeedback in the form of gentle vibrations from a device attached to the shin, which guided them in maintaining the prescribed foot angle while walking on a treadmill. Following the training phase, participants were asked to continue practicing their new gait for at least 20 minutes each day until it became habitual. Regular follow-up visits confirmed that participants were sticking closely to their assigned gait, typically within a one-degree margin.

After a year, all participants self-reported their experience of knee pain and had a second MRI to quantitatively assess the damage to their knee cartilage.



Lead researcher Scott Uhlrich measures a participant’s gait. At the beginning of the study, participants received a baseline MRI and walked on a force-sensitive treadmill while motion-capture cameras recorded their walking mechanics. 
Credit: Utah Movement Bioengineering Lab

 
 “The reported decrease in pain over the placebo group was somewhere between what you’d expect from an over-the-counter medication, like ibuprofen, and a narcotic, like oxycontin,” Uhlrich said. “With the MRIs, we also saw slower degradation of a marker of cartilage health in the intervention group, which was quite exciting.”

Beyond the quantitative measures of effectiveness, participants in the study expressed enthusiasm for both the approach and the results. One participant said: “I don’t have to take a drug or wear a device…it’s just a part of my body now that will be with me for the rest of my days, so that I’m thrilled with.” 

A long-term option

Participants’ ability to adhere to the intervention over long periods of time is one of its potential advantages.

“Especially for people in their 30’s, 40’s, or 50’s, osteoarthritis could mean decades of pain management before they’re recommended for a joint replacement,” Uhrlich said. “This intervention could help fill that large treatment gap.”

Before this intervention can be clinically deployed, the gait retraining process will need to be streamlined. The motion-capture technique used to make the original foot angle prescription is expensive and time-consuming; the researchers envision this intervention to eventually be prescribed in a physical therapy clinic and retraining can happen while people go for a walk around their neighborhood.

“We and others have developed technology that could be used to both personalize and deliver this intervention in a clinical setting using mobile sensors, like smartphone video and a ‘smart shoe’,” Uhlrich said. Future studies of this approach are needed before the intervention can be made widely available to the public.

Those interested in participating in future studies can contact Uhlrich’s Movement Bioengineering Lab by filling out this web form.
 
 
 
 
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Socializing Could Add Years to Your Life, Study Finds


A new study reveals that social connections may play a vital role in extending life expectancy among older adults. Researchers found that activities like volunteering, spending time with grandchildren, and joining clubs were linked to significantly lower mortality rates. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Older adults who stay socially engaged may live longer, a new study reveals. 

A new study published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society suggests that staying socially connected may play an important role in helping older adults live longer.

Researchers analyzed data from 2,268 people in the United States who were 60 years of age or older. Participants completed the Psychosocial and Lifestyle Questionnaires and provided blood samples in 2016. When researchers followed up four years later, they found a clear connection between higher levels of social involvement and lower mortality risk. Older adults who were highly engaged in social activities were 42% less likely to die within that period compared to those with low engagement.

Certain types of interaction appeared especially beneficial. Volunteering, spending time with grandchildren, and joining sports teams or social clubs were strong indicators of improved survival.
 
Biological and Physical Factors

Also, analyses indicated that decelerated biological aging and greater physical activity levels played key roles in facilitating the beneficial relationship between social engagement and lower mortality rates.

“Staying socially active is more than a lifestyle choice. It is closely linked to healthier aging and longevity,” said corresponding author Ashraf Abugroun, MBBS, MPH, of the University of California, San Francisco. “These results underscore how participating in community life contributes to better health in older adults.”
 
 
 
 
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Compounds in Cannabis Promote Healthy Aging, New Study Discovers


(RgStudio/Getty Images Signature/Canva)
 
Cannabis compounds are showing early promise for healthy aging, a new study has found. However, much more research is needed to learn how results might differ depending on the frequency of use and the individual.

Researchers in the UK reviewed 18 different studies across 15 years of research (2008 to 2023), involving both animal models and human participants.

"By synthesizing findings from preclinical models, clinical studies, and real-world evidence, we aimed to elucidate the potential of cannabinoids, in fostering healthy aging, mitigate age-related decline, and promote well-being in older populations," write the researchers in their published paper.

The scientists focused on the key cannabis compounds cannabidiol (CBD) and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), finding some strong results for anti-aging effects in animal tests, and more mixed results in humans.

Overall, the statistics are "promising" in terms of how cannabis can reduce inflammation and protect the brain, the researchers say. In animals, cannabis doses were linked to longer lifespans, improved learning, and reduced inflammation.

However, the researchers caution against overhyping these positive signs.


Cannabis use has been linked to both positive and negative health effects. 
(Wesley Gibbs/Unsplash)

We know from previous studies that cannabis can have an anti-aging effect on mouse brains. In people, we've seen it have the potential to damage memory function in one study, while also protecting against cognitive decline in another. These aren't easy results to interpret.

The researchers are also keen to acknowledge that staying healthy into old age is dependent on a whole host of factors, including what we eat and how much sleep we get. Cannabis is only part of the story.

"While these compounds show promise in addressing specific age-related challenges, maintaining a healthy lifestyle through a balanced diet, regular exercise, good sleep hygiene, and stress management remains crucial for promoting healthy aging and overall well-being," writes the team.

It's cautious optimism, and the review does highlight a gap in our knowledge: we need more research into the effects of cannabis on people, involving greater numbers of participants, longer periods of time, and clearer signs of cause and effect when it comes to anti-aging.

We know that the drug is now being used more and more for medicinal purposes, and is legal in an increasing number of places in the world. However, there are still plenty of questions over just how cannabis use impacts us – based on age, dosage amount, and accompanying health conditions.

The world's population is getting older, and our bodies are being asked to live for longer than ever before, on average. Scientists are keen to figure out ways to ensure that longer lifespans can be enjoyed in good health, and careful cannabis use could be something worth investigating.

"With aging emerging as a global challenge linked to chronic diseases, identifying interventions that support a healthy lifespan and healthspan has become imperative," write the researchers.
 
 
 
 
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Sunday, 24 August 2025

Want to Cool the Planet? Plant Trees Here

By J. Bernstein, U. of California - Riverside, Aug. 24, 2025
https://scitechdaily.com/want-to-cool-the-planet-plant-trees-here/

Tropical trees do more than absorb carbon — they cool the air, increase cloud cover, and resist fires, giving them far greater impact than trees planted elsewhere. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Planting trees helps cool the planet, but not all locations deliver the same benefits.

New research shows that tropical forests are the real climate champions — pulling in carbon, releasing cooling water vapor, and even helping to suppress fires. While planting at higher latitudes can sometimes trap more heat than it prevents, tropical trees offer the strongest returns for both climate stability and fire resistance, making them nature’s most effective frontline defenders.
Tropical Planting Brings Biggest Climate Benefits

Planting more trees can help lower global temperatures and reduce fire risk, but the biggest benefits come when they are grown in the tropics, according to new research from UC Riverside.

The study, published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, confirms that planting trees is generally good for the climate because they remove warming carbon dioxide from the air. Yet the local temperature effects vary greatly depending on where the trees are planted. In higher latitudes, forests can sometimes create a slight warming effect, while in tropical regions they tend to provide stronger cooling.

Why Tropics Are the Sweet Spot for Tree Growth

“Our study found more cooling from planting in warm, wet regions, where trees grow year-round. Tropical trees not only pull carbon dioxide from the air, they also cool while releasing water vapor,” said study first author and UCR graduate student James Gomez. “It’s not that planting elsewhere doesn’t help – it does – but the tropics offer the strongest returns per tree.” 
These results align with an earlier UCR investigation suggesting that tree planting could cool Earth’s surface more than scientists once thought. That earlier work focused on the chemical ways trees interact with the atmosphere, while the new study highlights the physical processes that contribute to cooling.


Trees have different cooling effects depending on where they’re planted. 
Credit: Stan Lim/UCR



The Cooling Power of Tree ‘Sweating’

These effects include “tree sweating,” or evapotranspiration. Tree roots pull water from the soil, which then travels up through the trunk and into the leaves. When pores in the leaves open up so the tree can take in carbon dioxide for photosynthesis, some of the water in the leaves evaporates into the air. This process cools the air on Earth’s surface and cools the tree, too.

“It’s just like the way sweating cools your body,” Gomez said. “In the tropics, there is constantly water available for trees, and that increases transpiration.” 

Clouds, Humidity, and Sunlight Blocking

Trees can also reduce the amount of sunlight that reaches the planet’s surface. As they give off water vapor, the air can become more humid. More humidity can mean more clouds, and water vapor itself can soak up some sun. Both of these effects reduce the amount of sun that reaches the ground, giving a cooling effect.

The physical effects of the added trees yield weak global mean cooling of 0.01° F, although this cooling does become significant in the tropics at about 0.1° F, with some tropical regions like central Africa experiencing cooling up to 0.8° F. 

Carbon Storage Adds Even More Cooling

Accounting for the carbon sequestration of the added trees is expected to amplify these cooling effects by about 0.15° F globally. The researchers note that better estimates of the carbon sequestration effects will be explored in a future study, where both the physical and carbon cycle effects of establishing new forests are interactively simulated.

“Though the non-CO2 effects are small, it is good news that they are not warming, which prior studies have indicated is likely,” Gomez said.
A Realistic Scenario for Global Tree Planting

For this study, the researchers also used a relatively realistic scenario, planting trees in places where they have been removed, avoiding deforestation, and limiting new trees to places where they would not displace people or too much agricultural land. In addition, the experiment used data from 12 climate models commonly used for international policy analysis, so the results would be more reliable than relying on a single model.

The researchers also found that, in some cases, trees can have a fire suppression effect. “In tropical savannahs, and in other places around the world, trees are much more fire resistant than grasses,” Gomez said.

However, the study found that in parts of Canada and the northeastern U.S., trees would likely cause more fires and reduce cooling by absorbing too much sun. 

Finding the Goldilocks Zone for Forests

“This is not an invitation to get rid of the trees growing there! They provide multiple benefits for ecosystems and diversity, reducing CO2 and cooling the surrounding areas,” Gomez said.

“What we need is a Goldilocks zone of trees in each region. Just the right amount to have the strongest and most positive climate effects.” 
 
 
 
 
The Life of Earth 
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com

Surprising Study Finds Meat May Protect Against Cancer Risk


New research challenges long-standing assumptions about protein, finding that eating animal-based sources is not tied to higher mortality.
Credit: Stock
 
A large study found that animal protein is not linked to higher mortality and may even help lower cancer-related deaths.

Eating foods that contain animal protein is not connected to a higher chance of death and may even provide some protection against cancer-related mortality, according to new research.

The findings, published in Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, are based on an analysis of data from nearly 16,000 adults aged 19 and older who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHAMES III).

Researchers looked at how much animal and plant protein participants consumed and compared those patterns with their risk of dying from cancer, heart disease, or any cause. The results revealed no elevated risk of death linked to greater animal protein intake. Instead, the data pointed to a small but meaningful decrease in cancer-related deaths among people who consumed more animal protein.

“There’s a lot of confusion around protein – how much to eat, what kind and what it means for long-term health. This study adds clarity, which is important for anyone trying to make informed, evidence-based decisions about what they eat,” explains Stuart Phillips, Professor and Chair of the Department of Kinesiology at McMaster University, who supervised the research. 

Ensuring Reliable Results

To ensure reliable results, the team employed advanced statistical methods, including the National Cancer Institute (NCI) method and multivariate Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) modelling, to estimate long-term dietary intake and minimize measurement error.

“It was imperative that our analysis used the most rigorous, gold standard methods to assess usual intake and mortality risk. These methods allowed us to account for fluctuations in daily protein intake and provide a more accurate picture of long-term eating habits,” says Phillips.

The researchers found no associations between total protein, animal protein, or plant protein and risk of death from any cause, cardiovascular disease, or cancer. When both plant and animal protein were included in the analysis, the results remained consistent, suggesting that plant protein has a minimal impact on cancer mortality, while animal protein may offer a small protective effect.

Broader Implications

Observational studies like this one cannot prove cause and effect; however, they are valuable for identifying patterns and associations in large populations. Combined with decades of clinical trial evidence, the findings support the inclusion of animal proteins as part of a healthy dietary pattern.

“When both observational data like this and clinical research are considered, it’s clear both animal and plant protein foods promote health and longevity,” says lead researcher Yanni Papanikolaou, MPH, president, Nutritional Strategies. 



The Life of Earth
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com

Study of Over 400,000 People Links Gut Bacteria With Insomnia Risk

24 August 2025, By David Nield

 https://www.sciencealert.com/study-of-over-400000-people-links-gut-bacteria-with-insomnia-risk

 

(Ekaterina Goncharova /Moment/Getty Images)

We're learning more and more about how parts of our bodies are linked and working together – and now a new study reveals connections between gut bacteria and the risk of insomnia.

The research, from scientists in China and the US, suggests that being unable to sleep at night could be at least partly down to the mix of microbes in our digestive system.

What's more, the relationship appears to go both ways: poor sleep can disrupt the gut's microbial balance, creating a feedback loop that could make insomnia harder to shake. With further investigation, we may be able to develop treatments based on these findings.

"Changes in the composition and function of the gut microbiota are commonly noted in patients with insomnia," write the researchers in their published paper.

"However, their causal connections to insomnia phenotypes are far from being clear."

The team, led by psychiatrist Shangyun Shi of Nanjing Medical University, used a statistical approach called Mendelian randomization. This method looks at genetic variations – which are set at birth and unaffected by lifestyle and other factors – to help determine whether one factor is truly influencing another.

By analyzing genetic and health data from more than 400,000 people, the researchers found several clear matches. Certain types of bacteria were associated with increased insomnia risk, while others seemed to lower the odds.

The strongest evidence pointed to the Clostridium innocuum group of bacteria being linked to a greater risk of insomnia. It's not normally a dangerous kind of bacteria, but it appears to be contributing to sleepless nights for some.

"We identified a total of 14 and 8 bacterial taxa, respectively, as positively and negatively correlated with insomnia," write the researchers. "In addition, there were reverse effects of insomnia correlated with 19 identified microbial taxa." 


The team found signs of gut bacteria affecting insomnia, as well as insomnia affecting gut bacteria. (Shi et al., Gen. Psychiatry, 2025)

Scientists already know the gut-brain axis works in two directions, and previous research has linked it to stress levels, neurodegenerative diseases, and conditions such as autism and ADHD.

The researchers behind this study think that some of the chemical reactions that certain bacteria start or stop might explain the new findings. We're still at the early stages here, and further studies are going to be required in diverse populations – all the participants in this study were of European descent.

It's worth noting that gut microbes are only one piece of the insomnia puzzle. Other factors can contribute, from stress at work to drinking habits. But it appears that gut bacteria are definitely a factor to look at in more detail.

Eventually, prebiotics and probiotics could be developed to take advantage of this link, and poop transplants might also work as a way of treating insomnia – something that's being looked at for multiple conditions.

"Overall, the intertwined effects of insomnia on gut microbiota and vice versa represent a complex bidirectional relationship involving immune regulation, inflammatory response, release of neurotransmitters, and other molecular and cellular pathways," write the researchers.
 
 
 
 
The Life of Earth 
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com 

Saturday, 23 August 2025

Chuck's photo corner, to Aug. 23, 2025

Another dry week with hot high temps and very cool night temps. That means lots of morning dew but still little to no rain.

Rachelle's first harvest, (besides the broccoli and radish we have already eaten)

This guy waits till its plenty hot to bloom

some of the roma ready for the pot this week

Doggy helping me in the garden, lol

a sure sign of fall the wild asters beginning to bloom.

finally my late planted nasturtiums starting to flower

these guys a a spicy eat, lol

morning dew

my walking trail is getting a little crowded

a weed at Rachelle's

I forget the name of these guys but a wonder flower for the garden.

for my first bacon tomato sandwich of the season.

front deck

Man this guy is blooming along.  These blooms will stay around till christmas.

these alstroemeria are commonly used in flower arrangements.

This weeks rain collection off the barn roof.

a basil harvest drying.


Enjoy your weekend
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/