Tuesday, 2 December 2025

Molecule Vital to Happiness Found in Material From Asteroid Bennu

02 Dec. 2025, By M. STARR

Asteroid Bennu as captured by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. 
(NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio)

A critical nutrient used to produce the neurotransmitter serotonin may have turned up in samples collected from asteroid Bennu by NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission.

Tryptophan is one of the nine essential amino acids that the human body cannot make on its own, and, if confirmed, its detection in Bennu by researchers from NASA and the University of Arizona would mark the first time it has ever been found in an extraterrestrial sample.

It's a discovery that bolsters the theory that rocks from space delivered many of the ingredients for life to early Earth – and even suggests that we may have been underestimating their contribution.

"Our findings," writes a team led by geochemist Angel Mojarro of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, "expand the evidence that prebiotic organic molecules can form within primitive accreting planetary bodies and could have been delivered via impacts to the early Earth and other Solar System bodies, potentially contributing to the origins of life."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42EwbQ3afPA&t=1s

The idea that the chemistry for life was at least partially delivered to a nascent Earth by comets and asteroids is one of the leading theories on how we came to be. The influx of evidence across a range of sources, from deep-space observations to the retrieval and analysis of asteroid samples, has only strengthened this cosmic explanation.

Samples from asteroids Ryugu and Bennu have yielded some truly fascinating ingredients, including extensive inventories of amino acids (which are the building blocks of proteins) and nucleobases (the basic units that make up RNA and DNA).

Only one nucleobase has been found on Ryugu, but all five common nucleobases appeared in Bennu samples.

Now, Mojarro and his colleagues have performed a new analysis of material from Bennu – a space rock as old as the Solar System – focusing on amino acids and nucleobases to gain a greater understanding of extraterrestrial prebiotic chemistry and its origins.

In particular, they wanted to clarify the chemical reaction pathways by which the amino acids may have formed, billions of years ago.

The team examined powdered fragments of the asteroid, testing for the 20 amino acids that build protein in the body (nine of which the body can't make, and must obtain from food), as well as the five common nucleobases that encode our genetic instructions (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, and uracil).

Their analysis confirmed the presence of the 14 amino acids detected in a previous study, as well as the nucleobases. They also found several non-biological amino acids and nucleobases, confirming the extraterrestrial origin of the molecules in the samples.

To their surprise, the researchers also detected a signal for tryptophan – faint, but present across multiple portions of a Bennu sample.

Your brain uses tryptophan to make serotonin, the neurotransmitter that helps, among other functions, to regulate your mood, and feelings of wellbeing and happiness.

People with low serotonin are prone to depression and anxiety. Your brain also uses tryptophan to make melatonin, and your body can use it to make vitamin B3. We can only acquire it from foods such as poultry, fish, dairy, nuts, and eggs.

The amino acid is relatively fragile, making it unlikely to survive inside a meteorite falling to Earth in a blaze of atmospheric entry. This might explain why it hasn't been found in any meteorite samples to date.

However, an asteroid sample retrieved from space and carefully ferried to Earth in a protective canister doesn't undergo the same rigors. The detection, therefore, suggests that there may be prebiotic ingredients hanging about on asteroids that remain undetected in an extraterrestrial context, simply because they're typically too fragile to survive a trip to Earth without help.

This also means that fragile amino acids such as tryptophan can form in a non-biological context, so their mere presence alone cannot be interpreted as a definitive sign of life.

Finally, the researchers carefully examined different mineral compositions in the samples, since Bennu doesn't have a homogeneous composition but is brecciated, like a rich, densely packed fruitcake. They found that different processes, many of which involved water, took place to produce the molecules.

That suggests that no single process can produce the range of prebiotic chemistry observed in the dust of Bennu.

It also gives us a little more insight into how the ingredients for life can come together out of the dusty debris circling a baby star, and points to some promising lines of enquiry for future astrobiology research.

"Additional targeted analyses of tryptophan using other techniques capable of measuring its enantiomeric and isotopic compositions are needed to firmly establish its origin in Bennu and possibly other astromaterials," the researchers write.

"Sample return missions from a variety of planetary bodies are accordingly crucial to enabling new discoveries and elucidating products of cosmochemistry."


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

Seismic Mystery Solved: Scientists Find a New State of Matter at Earth’s Center

BY SCIENCE CHINA PRESS, DEC. 1, 2025

Earth’s inner core may not be a conventional solid at all, but a superionic material where light elements drift like liquid through a rigid iron lattice. New experiments show that this unusual state dramatically softens the core, matching seismic clues that have puzzled scientists for decades.
 Credit: Shutterstock

Chinese researchers have discovered that interstitial carbon in iron-carbon alloys behaves in a superionic, liquid-like state under Earth’s core pressure and temperature conditions.

Beneath Earth’s molten outer core lies a solid central region, the inner core, a compact sphere made of an iron light-element alloy pressed by more than 3.3 million atmospheres and heated to temperatures comparable to the Sun’s surface.

For many years, researchers have struggled to explain its unusual behavior: although it is solid, it behaves like an unexpectedly soft metal, slowing seismic shear waves and displaying a Poisson’s ratio closer to butter than to steel. This has raised a long-standing question about how the planet’s solid center can appear both firm and surprisingly pliable.

A major study published in National Science Review now provides a strong explanation. Scientists have found that Earth’s inner core is not behaving like an ordinary solid at all; instead, it occupies a superionic state, where light elements move through a rigid iron lattice with liquid-like mobility. This finding reshapes scientific views of what is happening deep within the planet.

The research team, led by Prof. Youjun Zhang and Dr. Yuqian Huang of Sichuan University and Prof. Yu He of the Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, demonstrated that iron-carbon alloys shift into a superionic phase when subjected to intense pressure and heat. In this form, carbon atoms travel quickly through the crystal framework of solid iron, greatly reducing its stiffness.

“For the first time, we’ve experimentally shown that iron–carbon alloy under inner core conditions exhibits a remarkedly low shear velocity.” said Prof. Zhang. “In this state, carbon atoms become highly mobile, diffusing through the crystalline iron framework like children weaving through a square dance, while the iron itself remains solid and ordered. This so-called “superionic phase” dramatically reduces alloy’s rigidity.

From Theory to Experiment

While computer models had hinted at such a state in 2022, direct experimental proof remained elusive — until now. Using a dynamic shock compression platform, the team accelerated iron–carbon samples to speeds of 7 kilometers per second, creating pressures up to 140 gigapascals and temperatures near 2600 kelvin — conditions similar to those in the inner core.

Iron atoms form a rigid hexagonal close-packed (hcp) structure, with a subset of these atoms exhibiting collective motion along the [100] and [010] directions. Within this hcp iron lattice, interstitial light elements diffuse freely in a liquid-like manner, while substitutional light elements remain confined to their respective substitutional lattice sites. Consequently, the Earth’s inner core exists in a hybrid state of solid and liquid-like behavior. 
Credit: Huang et al.



By combining in-situ sound velocity measurements with advanced molecular dynamics simulations, the scientists observed a sharp drop in shear wave velocity and a spike in Poisson’s ratio — matching the “soft” seismic signals detected deep within Earth. On the atomic scale, the results revealed carbon atoms slipping freely through the iron lattice, weakening its rigidity without destroying its structure.

A Dynamic Core with Global Impact

The superionic model not only explains the core’s puzzling seismic properties but also opens new perspectives on Earth’s internal dynamics. The movement of light elements could help account for seismic anisotropy — variations in wave speeds depending on direction — and may even influence Earth’s magnetic field.

Atomic diffusion within the inner core represents a previously overlooked energy source for the geodynamo,” said Dr. Huang. “In addition to heat and compositional convection, the fluid-like motion of light elements may help power Earth’s magnetic engine.”

The findings also settle long-standing debates about how light elements behave under extreme pressures. Previous studies focused on compounds or substitutional alloys, but this research highlights the importance of interstitial solid solutions — especially those involving carbon — in determining the core’s properties.

Rethinking the Planet’s Heart

According to Prof. Zhang, the discovery signals a shift in how scientists view Earth’s center. “We’re moving away from a static, rigid model of the inner core toward a dynamic one,” he explained.

Beyond Earth, the discovery of a superionic phase could also shed light on the magnetic and thermal evolution of other rocky planets and exoplanets. As Zhang notes, “Understanding this hidden state of matter brings us one step closer to unlocking the secrets of Earth-like planetary interiors.”


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

Fat Stem Cells Heal Broken Spines in a Breakthrough Study

BY OSAKA METROPOLITAN U., DEC. 1, 2025

Fat stem cells may hold the key to repairing fragile spines and reversing bone loss. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Fat tissue stem cells have shown a remarkable ability to heal spinal fractures and restore bone strength in rats.

The discovery could pave the way for safer, less invasive treatments for osteoporosis and other bone diseases.

Fat-Derived Stem Cells Tested for Spinal Fracture Repair

A research group at Osaka Metropolitan University has explored the use of stem cells taken from adipose tissue, the fat stored in the body, to repair spinal fractures in rats. These injuries were designed to resemble the vertebral fractures commonly associated with osteoporosis in humans. The fat-derived cells are simple to obtain, even from older adults, and place very little strain on the donor, which points to a possible non-invasive strategy for treating bone disorders.
Growing Burden of Osteoporosis in an Aging Population

Osteoporosis weakens bones and increases the likelihood of fractures. As Japan’s population continues to age, the number of people affected is expected to rise above 15 million. Among all osteoporosis-related injuries, compression fractures of the spine, known as osteoporotic vertebral fractures, occur most frequently. These fractures often require extended care and can greatly reduce overall quality of life, making improved treatments a critical need.

Treatment of a mouse with a disease similar to osteoporosis using bone-differentiated spheroids. At 8 weeks post-treatment, the bone’s strength was significantly improved. 
Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University

How ADSCs Support Bone Regeneration

Adipose tissue stem cells (ADSCs) offer a potential path forward. ADSCs are multipotent, meaning they can develop into a variety of cell types. When these cells are organized into three-dimensional spheres called spheroids, their tissue-repair abilities increase. Guiding these spheroids toward becoming bone-forming cells strengthens their capacity to support bone healing.

Testing a New Cell-Based Therapy in Rats

Graduate School of Medicine student Yuta Sawada and Dr. Shinji Takahashi led the Osaka Metropolitan University team in applying ADSCs to osteoporotic vertebral fractures. The researchers generated bone-differentiated ADSC spheroids and combined them with β-tricalcium phosphate, a commonly used material in bone reconstruction. This combination was then used to treat rats with spinal fractures, resulting in clear improvements in bone strength and regrowth.

The team also observed increased activity in genes linked to bone formation and repair, suggesting that the treatment encourages natural biological healing processes.
Promising Potential for Future Patient Care

“This study has revealed the potential of bone differentiation spheroids using ADSCs for the development of new treatments for spinal fractures,” Sawada said. “Since the cells are obtained from fat, there is little burden on the body, ensuring patient safety.”

“This simple and effective method can treat even difficult fractures and may accelerate healing,” Dr. Takahashi added. “This technique is expected to become a new treatment that helps extend the healthy life of patients.”

The study was published recently in the journal Bone & Joint Research.


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

Monday, 1 December 2025

Extreme 'Fire Amoeba' Smashes Record For Heat Tolerance

01 Dec. 2025, By M. STARR
https://www.sciencealert.com/extreme-fire-amoeba-smashes-record-for-heat-tolerance


Colorized micrograph of cell in amoeboid form.
 (Rappaport et al., bioRxiv, 2025)



A single-celled organism squirming about in the searing waters of California's Lassen Volcanic National Park has just set a record for heat tolerance.

The newly named Incendiamoeba cascadensis – meaning "fire amoeba from the Cascades", as described in a preprint on bioRxiv – grows and divides at temperatures up to 63 degrees Celsius (145 Fahrenheit), the highest known temperature for a eukaryotic organism.


Moreover, it doesn't start growing until temperatures reach at least 42 degrees Celsius. This makes it an obligate thermophile – a creature that requires conditions far hotter than most eukaryotic organisms can endure.

"Our findings," writes a team led by biologists H. Beryl Rappaport and Angela Oliverio of Syracuse University in New York, "challenge the current paradigm of temperature constraints on eukaryotic cells and reshape our understanding of where and how eukaryotic life can persist."

Life on Earth tends to cluster around specific conditions, with the optimum temperature for most organisms, including humans, hovering around 20 degrees Celsius.

Some organisms, however, have adapted to conditions far harsher than the norm, from scorching volcanic vents under crushing ocean pressures, to acidic geothermal pools, to the driest desert on Earth.



I. cascadensis in its elongated vermiform state for faster motion (B, E) 
and amoeboid state for feeding and exploring (C, D). 
(Rappaport et al., bioRxiv, 2025)



The overwhelming majority of these extremophile organisms are prokaryotes, a group that includes bacteria and archaea. These are single-celled organisms, too, but they are dramatically different from eukaryotic organisms.

Prokaryotes are simpler, more primitive; they don't pack genetic material into nuclei or organelles such as mitochondria, but basically consist of just a cell membrane containing some rugged proteins and free-floating DNA, as well as a can-do approach to extreme environments.

The most heat-tolerant known organism on Earth is a carbon dioxide-munching archaeon called Methanopyrus kandleri that lives on undersea vents at temperatures up to 122 degrees Celsius, at a depth where ocean pressure keeps the water from boiling.

Eukaryotic life consists of all organisms, from amoeba to humans, that have nuclei, organelles, delicate internal membranes, and more complex genomes in their cells.

Eukaryotes are much more fragile than prokaryotes, with their cells and organelles easily rupturing or breaking down in hostile conditions. This makes the eukaryotic I. cascadensis all the more impressive.

The creature was found in steaming hot water collected from Lassen Volcanic National Park between 2023 and 2025. Rappaport, Oliveria, and their team recovered specimens of I. cascadensis from 14 of the 20 locations sampled.

The researchers then cultured the samples to understand how this heat-loving amoeba manages to survive.

They separated the samples and grew them in different flasks, adding wheatberry to feed the bacterial communities inside so the bacterivorous amoeba would have something to eat.

They also changed the temperature of each flask to test the limits of I. cascadensis's endurance – trying out 17 different temperatures from 30 to 64 degrees Celsius, with four flasks at each temperature.

This is where things get truly mind-boggling.

Below 42 degrees Celsius, the amoeba didn't grow at all; the temperatures just weren't warm enough.

The best temperature range for growth was around 55 to 57 degrees Celsius, and mitosis – where a cell divides into two daughter cells – was directly observed at 58 and 63 degrees Celsius.

At 64 degrees Celsius, I. cascadensis was still moving around. It smashed the previous amoeba record of 57 degrees Celsius set by Echinamoeba thermarum, and even surpasses the long-assumed 60-degree upper limit for eukaryotic growth.

At 66 degrees Celsius, I. cascadensis started forming protective cysts, a strategy that allows amoebae to enter dormancy during challenging conditions.

It also formed cysts at 25 degrees Celsius. That's an unusually high lower limit, considering that most eukaryotes prefer temperatures well below that – and many thrive best at room temperature.

More experiments revealed that the amoeba stops moving at 70 degrees Celsius, but can revive if temperatures are brought back down.

Only when temperatures reached 80 degrees Celsius did I. cascadensis finally give up its tiny ghost.

An analysis of the genome provided clues about how the tiny organism can withstand such extreme conditions. It has adaptations for rapid signaling and heat-response pathways, as well as an expanded set of particularly heat-resistant proteins and heat-shock chaperones.

Finally, almost identical DNA sequences appeared in environmental DNA samples obtained in Yellowstone National Park and the Taupō Volcanic Zone in New Zealand.

Although DNA fragments don't make an organism, it suggests that I. cascadensis is not alone. Its discovery implies that life can be far more capable of adapting to extreme conditions than we thought, and one that may be useful for assessing the potential habitability of alien worlds.

"Incendiamoeba cascadensis proliferates at temperatures beyond what was thought possible for any eukaryotic organism. This discovery raises new questions about the true maximum temperature a eukaryotic cell can endure," the researchers write.

"These results have profound implications for our understanding of the evolutionary constraints on eukaryotic cells and the set of abiotic parameters that inform the search for life elsewhere in the Universe."


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

It Rivaled Ancient Egypt, Then Vanished: New Study Pinpoints Why the Indus Valley Fell

BY SPRINGER NATURE, NOV. 30, 2025

New climate simulations suggest that a series of unusually long, region-wide droughts may have quietly reshaped the Indus Valley Civilization’s fate. 
Credit: Shutterstocknbs

Long drought cycles reshaped settlement choices in the Indus region. These climate stresses likely contributed to its slow collapse.

A series of severe droughts, each extending for more than 85 years, was likely a major contributor to the gradual decline of the Indus Valley Civilization, according to research published in Communications Earth & Environment.

These results offer new insight into why this influential ancient society — a contemporary of ancient Egypt located near the present-day India-Pakistan border — weakened over time and demonstrate how environmental pressures can shape the course of early civilizations.

Background on the Indus Valley Civilization

The Indus Valley Civilization (IVC) was among the world’s earliest urban cultures, flourishing between 5,000 and 3,500 years ago along the Indus River system in what is now Pakistan and northwest India. At its height, between 4,500 and 3,900 years ago, the society featured well-planned cities and advanced water management. Despite this sophistication, the factors behind the civilization’s slow decline have remained uncertain.

Vimal Mishra and his team reconstructed climate patterns across the IVC region from 5,000 to 3,000 years ago. Their analysis combined climate simulations with evidence from several indirect records of past environmental conditions, including the geochemical signatures of stalactites and stalagmites in two Indian caves and water level data from five lakes in northwest India.

Their findings point to a regional temperature rise of about 0.5 degrees Celsius and a drop in annual rainfall of between 10% and 20%. They also identified four extended droughts occurring between 4,450 and 3,400 years ago, each lasting more than 85 years and affecting between 65% and 91% of the region occupied by the IVC.

Settlement shifts linked to prolonged water shortages

The authors suggest that these droughts influenced settlement location choice in the IVC. Between 5,000 and 4,500 years ago, they report that settlements were concentrated in areas with more rainfall. However, from 4,500 years ago onwards, settlements shifted closer to the Indus River, probably as the droughts started to affect water availability. The final 113-year-long drought that they identify, between 3,531 and 3,418 years ago, coincides with archaeological evidence of major deurbanization in the IVC. The authors conclude that the IVC likely did not collapse suddenly as a result of any one climate event, but instead declined slowly, with the prolonged droughts a major contributory factor.


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

Using AI to Find Information Could Diminish Your Knowledge, Study Finds

01 Dec. 2025, By S. MELUMAD, THE CONVERSATION

(Yuichiro Chino/Getty Images)

Since the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, millions of people have started using large language models to access knowledge. And it's easy to understand their appeal: Ask a question, get a polished synthesis, and move on – it feels like effortless learning.

However, a new paper I co-authored offers experimental evidence that this ease may come at a cost: When people rely on large language models to summarize information on a topic for them, they tend to develop shallower knowledge about it compared to learning through a standard Google search.

Co-author Jin Ho Yun and I, both professors of marketing, reported this finding in a paper based on seven studies with more than 10,000 participants.

Most of the studies used the same basic paradigm: Participants were asked to learn about a topic – such as how to grow a vegetable garden – and were randomly assigned to do so by using either an LLM like ChatGPT or the "old-fashioned way," by navigating links using a standard Google search.

No restrictions were put on how they used the tools; they could search on Google as long as they wanted and could continue to prompt ChatGPT if they felt they wanted more information.


Using Google 'the old-fashioned way' involves reading more broadly.
 (AS Photography/Pexels/Canva)



Once they completed their research, they were then asked to write advice to a friend on the topic based on what they learned.

The data revealed a consistent pattern: People who learned about a topic through an LLM versus web search felt that they learned less, invested less effort in subsequently writing their advice, and ultimately wrote advice that was shorter, less factual, and more generic.

In turn, when this advice was presented to an independent sample of readers, who were unaware of which tool had been used to learn about the topic, they found the advice to be less informative, less helpful, and they were less likely to adopt it.

We found these differences to be robust across a variety of contexts. For example, one possible reason LLM users wrote briefer and more generic advice is simply that the LLM results exposed users to less eclectic information than the Google results.

To control for this possibility, we conducted an experiment where participants were exposed to an identical set of facts in the results of their Google and ChatGPT searches.

Likewise, in another experiment, we held constant the search platform – Google – and varied whether participants learned from standard Google results or Google's AI Overview feature.

The findings confirmed that, even when holding the facts and platform constant, learning from synthesized LLM responses led to shallower knowledge compared to gathering, interpreting, and synthesizing information for oneself via standard web links.

Why it matters

Why did the use of LLMs appear to diminish learning? One of the most fundamental principles of skill development is that people learn best when they are actively engaged with the material they are trying to learn.

When we learn about a topic through Google search, we face much more "friction": We must navigate different web links, read informational sources, and interpret and synthesize them ourselves.

While more challenging, this friction leads to the development of a deeper, more original mental representation of the topic at hand. But with LLMs, this entire process is done on the user's behalf, transforming learning from a more active to a passive process.

What's next?

To be clear, we do not believe the solution to these issues is to avoid using LLMs, especially given the undeniable benefits they offer in many contexts.

Rather, our message is that people simply need to become smarter or more strategic users of LLMs – which starts by understanding the domains wherein LLMs are beneficial versus harmful to their goals.

Need a quick, factual answer to a question? Feel free to use your favorite AI co-pilot. But if your aim is to develop deep and generalizable knowledge in an area, relying on LLM syntheses alone will be less helpful.


Want a more in-depth understanding? LLMs might not be the right approach.
 (Karola G/Pexels/Canva)



As part of my research on the psychology of new technology and new media, I am also interested in whether it's possible to make LLM learning a more active process. In another experiment, we tested this by having participants engage with a specialized GPT model that offered real-time web links alongside its synthesized responses.

There, however, we found that once participants received an LLM summary, they weren't motivated to dig deeper into the original sources. The result was that the participants still developed shallower knowledge compared to those who used standard Google.

Building on this, in my future research, I plan to study generative AI tools that impose healthy frictions for learning tasks – specifically, examining which types of guardrails or speed bumps most successfully motivate users to actively learn more beyond easy, synthesized answers.

Such tools would seem particularly critical in secondary education, where a major challenge for educators is how best to equip students to develop foundational reading, writing, and math skills while also preparing for a real world where LLMs are likely to be an integral part of their daily lives.


The birth of modern Man
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

Sunday, 30 November 2025

Study Challenges Long-Held Beliefs: Scavenging Carcasses May Have Made Us Human

BY CATALAN INST. OF HUMAN PALEOECOLOGY AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION, NOV. 28, 2025

A new study proposes that scavenging was a central, enduring force in human evolution, reshaping how we understand the origins of our survival strategies.
 Credit: Shutterstock

A study with IPHES CERCA redefines the role of scavenging in human evolution and shows that it was an efficient strategy that complemented hunting and gathering.

A research group from IPHES-CERCA took part in a project led by the National Research Center on Human Evolution (CENIEH) that revisits how consuming carrion shaped human history. The study, published in the Journal of Human Evolution, examines scavenging from the earliest hominins to modern times and concludes that feeding on carcasses was a consistent and essential survival strategy throughout our evolution.

Carrion refers to the decaying flesh of dead animals, typically in progressive stages of decomposition.

The work included contributions from Dr. Jordi Rosell, a professor at the Universitat Rovira i Virgili and researcher at IPHES-CERCA, and Dr. Maite Arilla, also from IPHES-CERCA, along with collaborators from CENIEH, IREC-CSIC, IPE-CSIC, Universidad Miguel Hernández, and the universities of Alicante, Granada, and Málaga.

Ecological benefits and evolutionary advantages
The authors explain that scavenging provided early humans with important benefits. It allowed them to gather food with much less effort than hunting and became especially useful during times when other resources were

Graphical abstract of the study. 
Credit: Carmen Cañizares

The team also points out that humans possess several features that make scavenging effective. “The acidic pH of the human stomach may act as a defense against pathogens and toxins, and the risk of infection decreased considerably when we began to use fire for cooking. Moreover, our ability to travel long distances with low energy expenditure was key to finding food opportunities,” they explain.
Tools, cooperation, and behavioral adaptations

Language and stone tools —even the simplest ones— facilitated collective organization to locate carcasses and gain access to meat, fat, and bone marrow. This combination of factors made scavenging a highly efficient activity, complementary to hunting and plant gathering.

In the 1960s, the discovery in Africa of the earliest evidence that ancient hominins ate meat sparked an intense debate: did they hunt these animals, or did they simply exploit the carcasses they found? For decades, scavenging was considered a “primitive” stage that humans had left behind once they learned to hunt. However, current studies have completely overturned this view: all carnivorous species consume carrion to some extent, and many modern hunter-gatherer groups continue to practice scavenging as part of their subsistence behavior.

The authors conclude that scavenging was not merely a transitional stage but a fundamental and recurrent strategy throughout human evolution, complementary to hunting and plant gathering. Ultimately, eating carrion (far from being a marginal behavior) was key to making us human.


The birth of modern Man
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/

750 Million at Risk: New Study Warns Extreme Water Scarcity Is Closer Than We Think

BY INST. FOR BASIC SCIENCE, NOV. 29, 2025

Illustration of extreme drought conditions and projected water shortage in urban areas. 
Credit: Institute for Basic Science

Climate simulations reveal that Day Zero Drought conditions are approaching rapidly worldwide, putting vast populations at risk of severe water scarcity.

A new study in Nature Communications from researchers at the IBS Center for Climate Physics (ICCP) at Pusan National University in the Republic of Korea finds that global warming is speeding up the likelihood of multi-year droughts. These prolonged dry periods can push regions toward severe water shortages, putting pressure on drinking water supplies, agriculture, and communities around the world within the next few decades.

To investigate this risk, the team used state-of-the-art climate model simulations to estimate when local water demand will surpass the available supply from rainfall, rivers, and reservoirs. This tipping point is known as the Day Zero Drought (DZD). Recent close calls in Cape Town (South Africa) in 2018 and Chennai (India) in 2019 have already demonstrated how vulnerable cities are to running out of water.

Identifying when and where these thresholds will occur is essential for planning effective water management for both urban and rural regions. According to the study, DZD events are projected to rise rapidly in the coming years, happening far earlier than once expected.
Climate model projections reveal accelerating Day Zero Drought events

The team relied on climate simulations based on the SSP3-7.0 and SSP2-4.5 greenhouse gas scenarios. By examining prolonged rainfall shortages, declines in river flow, and growing water use, the researchers identified clear DZD hotspots across the Mediterranean, southern Africa, and sections of North America. The analysis shows that cities in these regions are especially at risk.

Time of First Emergence (ToFE) of Day Zero Drought (DZD) conditions and global hotspot regions. 
(a) Spatial distribution of the decadal ToFE of DZD events across the globe from 1900 to 2100. Color shading indicates the first decade during which DZD becomes statistically attributable to anthropogenic climate change, defined as the first decade in which the Fraction of Attributable Risk is greater than 0.99 (FAR ≥ 0.99). Gray regions indicate grid cells where no DZD event attributable to anthropogenic climate change is projected to emerge before 2100.
 (b) Circular diagram illustrating the temporal distribution of ToFE by decades. The color scale indicates the percentages of DZD grid cells (land areas) experiencing their ToFE distribution in each decade from 1900 to 2100. It provides a temporal overview of how the ToFE is distributed over time and the trends in DZD emergence.
 Credit: Institute for Basic Science

According to the simulations, DZDs are likely to emerge in 35% of the vulnerable regions already within the next 15 years (Figure 1). By the end of this century, DZD conditions could threaten about 750 million people globally, including 470 million city residents and 290 million people in rural areas. The Mediterranean region is projected to have the highest urban exposure, whereas Northern and Southern Africa and parts of Asia face the most severe rural impacts.

Projected impacts on reservoirs and global communities

“Our study shows that global warming causes and accelerates Day Zero Drought conditions worldwide. Even if we meet the 1.5°C target, hundreds of millions of people will still face unprecedented water shortages,” says PhD candidate Ms. Ravinandrasana, first author of the study.

“According to our calculations, and due to the increasing severity of hydrological stress, 14% of major water reservoirs could dry out already during their first DZD events, with severe impacts on people’s livelihoods,” says corresponding author Prof. Christian Frankze from the IBS Center for Climate Physics.

“Day Zero Droughts are no longer a distant scenario: they are already happening. Without immediate adaptation and sustainable water management, hundreds of millions of people are likely to face unprecedented future water shortages,” says Ms. Ravinandrasana.


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

Chernobyl Fungus Appears to Have Evolved an Incredible Ability

30 Nov. 2025, By M. STARR

Cladosporium sphaerospermum, cultured at the Coimbra University Hospital Centre in Portugal.
 (Rui Tomé/Atlas of Mycology, used with permission)

The Chernobyl exclusion zone may be off-limits to humans, but ever since the Unit Four reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded nearly 40 years ago, other forms of life have not only moved in but survived, adapted, and appeared to thrive.

Part of that may be the lack of humans… but for one organism, at least, the ionizing radiation lingering inside the reactor's surrounding structures may be an advantage.

There, clinging to the interior walls of one of the most radioactive buildings on Earth, scientists have found a strange black fungus curiously living its best life.

That fungus is called Cladosporium sphaerospermum, and some scientists think its dark pigment – melanin – may allow it to harness ionizing radiation through a process similar to the way plants harness light for photosynthesis. This proposed mechanism is even referred to as radiosynthesis.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRk_Q_g3Ysc

But here's the really funky thing about C. sphaerospermum: Although scientists have shown that the fungus flourishes in the presence of ionizing radiation, no one has been able to pin down how or why. Radiosynthesis is a theory, one that's difficult to prove.

The mystery began back in the late 1990s, when a team led by microbiologist Nelli Zhdanova of the Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences embarked on a field survey in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone to find out what life, if any, could be found in the shelter surrounding the ruined reactor.

There, they were stunned to find a whole community of fungi, documenting an astonishing 37 species. Notably, these organisms tended to be dark-hued to black, rich with the pigment melanin.

C. sphaerospermum dominated the samples, while also demonstrating some of the highest levels of radioactive contamination.

As surprising as the discovery was, what happened next deepened the intrigue.

Radiopharmacologist Ekaterina Dadachova and immunologist Arturo Casadevall — both with posts at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the US – led a team of scientists that found exposing C. sphaerospermum to ionizing radiation doesn't harm the fungus the way it would other organisms.


Melanized C. sphaerospermum.
 (Rui Tomé/Atlas of Mycology, used with permission)



Ionizing radiation describes emissions of particles powerful enough to knock electrons from their atoms, turning them into their ionic forms.

That sounds pretty benign on paper, but in practice, ionization can break apart molecules, interfering with biochemical reactions and even shredding DNA. None of that is a good time for a human, although it can be exploited to destroy cancer cells, which are particularly vulnerable to its effects.

However, C. sphaerospermum seemed strangely resistant and even grew better when bathed in ionizing radiation. Other experiments showed ionizing radiation changed the behavior of fungal melanin – an intriguing observation that warranted further investigation.

The follow-up paper by Dadachova and Casadevall in 2008 is where they first proposed a biological pathway similar to photosynthesis.

The fungus – and others like it – appeared to be harvesting ionizing radiation and converting it into energy, with melanin performing a similar function to the light-absorbing pigment chlorophyll.

At the same time, the melanin behaves as a protective shield against the more harmful effects of that radiation.


C. sphaerospermum under the microscope.
 (Rui Tomé/Atlas of Mycology, used with permission)



This appears to be supported by the findings of a 2022 paper, in which scientists describe the results of taking C. sphaerospermum into space and strapping it to the exterior of the ISS, exposing it to the full brunt of cosmic radiation.

There, sensors placed beneath the petri dish showed that a smaller amount of radiation penetrated through the fungi than through an agar-only control.

The aim of that paper was not to demonstrate or investigate radiosynthesis, but to explore the fungus's potential as a radiation shield for space missions, which is a cool idea. But, as of that paper, we still don't know what the fungus is actually doing.

Scientists have been unable to demonstrate carbon fixation dependent on ionizing radiation, metabolic gain from ionizing radiation, or a defined energy-harvesting pathway.

"Actual radiosynthesis, however, remains to be shown, let alone the reduction of carbon compounds into forms with higher energy content or fixation of inorganic carbon driven by ionizing radiation," writes a team led by engineer Nils Averesch of Stanford University.

The idea of radiosynthesis is so cool – like something out of science fiction. But it's maybe even cooler that this weird fungus is doing something we don't understand to neutralize something so dangerous to humans.

It's not the only one, either. A black yeast, Wangiella dermatitidis, demonstrates enhanced growth under ionizing radiation. Meanwhile, another fungus species, Cladosporium cladosporioides, exhibits enhanced melanin production but not growth under gamma or UV radiation.

So the behavior observed in C. sphaerospermum is not universal to melanized fungi.

Does that suggest that it's an adaptation allowing the fungus to feast on powerful light that can kill other organisms? Or is it a stress response that enhances survival under extenuating, but not ideal, conditions?

At this point, it's impossible to tell.

What we do know is that this humble, velvety black fungus is doing something clever with ionizing radiation to survive and maybe even proliferate in a place too dangerous for humans to safely tread; that life does, indeed, find a way.


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

Saturday, 29 November 2025

Scientists Stunned As Rare Killifish Thought Extinct Is Found Alive in Bolivia

BY PENSOFT PUBLISHERS, NOV. 28, 2025

Moema claudiae. 
Credit: Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz

A long-lost Bolivian killifish has been found alive, revealing a globally important hotspot for seasonal killifish diversity at risk from deforestation.

Researchers have confirmed the rediscovery of Moema claudiae, a seasonal killifish from Bolivia that had been considered possibly extinct. Finding this species again brings renewed optimism for its protection and for the conservation of the region’s wetland ecosystems.

Moema claudiae had not been observed for more than 20 years at its original site, which has since been destroyed and converted into farmland. Despite extensive surveys over the past two decades, no additional individuals were found, leading to its classification as Critically Endangered under IUCN criteria and its assumption of being possibly extinct.


Moema claudiae habitat.
 Credit: Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz
Discovery in a remnant forest pond



During a recent field expedition, researchers Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz located a surviving group of the fish in a small temporary pond preserved within a fragment of forest surrounded by agricultural land.

The rediscovery, published in the open-access journal Nature Conservation, marks the first confirmed sighting of the species in over twenty years. It allowed scientists to capture the first live photographs, document its behavior, and investigate aspects of its natural history that had never been recorded before.


Moema claudiae. 
Credit: Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz



Thomas Litz, one of the co-authors, said: “For me, it is something special to have rediscovered Moema claudiae. This has shown that we now have the opportunity to preserve this species in the wild. I am all the more pleased because Prof. Wilson Costa named this species after his wife Claudia, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank him especially for decades of collaboration and support.”

The site where the fish was found contained not only Moema claudiae but also six additional species of seasonal killifish. This makes it the most genetically diverse group of these fish recorded anywhere in the world.

The area’s distinctive environment, located at the transition between the Amazon forest and the Llanos de Moxos savannas, seems to foster this remarkable variety. However, fast-moving deforestation and the spread of agriculture are putting these habitats under severe pressure.

Heinz Arno Drawert. 
Credit: Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz



Ecological pressures and habitat loss

Following this discovery, scientists emphasize the urgent need to protect the area, as it is now the only known site harboring a wild population of Moema claudiae, as well as an exceptional global hotspot for seasonal killifish diversity.

Over the last 25 years, nearly 10 million hectares of forest were lost in Bolivia, including vital wetland habitats. Deforestation has accelerated dramatically in recent years, raising serious concerns for the future of many unique species and ecosystems.


Thomas Otto Litz. 
Credit: Heinz Arno Drawert and Thomas Otto Litz



“Without rapid and effective action to curb the irrational expansion of the agricultural frontier in Bolivia’s lowlands, we risk losing some of the world’s most important terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, and with them the irreplaceable goods and services they provide,” added co-author Heinz Drawert. “We cannot hope to achieve true social and economic wellbeing unless we also maintain the functionality of the ecosystems that sustain it.”


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

New Study Reveals the Hidden Source of Rainfall That Could Make or Break Global Crops

BY C. CLARK, U. OF CALIFORNIA - SAN DIEGO, NOV. 28, 2025

Researchers have uncovered an overlooked link between atmospheric moisture sources and the reliability of rainfall that sustains major food-producing regions. Their work hints at feedback loops and land-use changes that could amplify drought risk in ways policymakers are only beginning to grasp. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

UC San Diego–led research shows that knowing the origins of rainfall could transform how drought planning and land management are approached worldwide.

A new study from the University of California San Diego reveals an overlooked factor that shapes crop vulnerability worldwide: the original source of the rain that falls on farmland.

Published in Nature Sustainability, the research tracks atmospheric moisture back to where it evaporated, whether it began over the ocean or over land areas such as soil, lakes, and forests. As sunlight heats these surfaces, water becomes vapor, rises into the atmosphere, and later returns as rain.

Moisture that comes from the ocean can travel vast distances on global winds and often moves through large-scale weather systems including atmospheric rivers, monsoons, and tropical storms. Moisture that comes from land, sometimes referred to as recycled rainfall, evaporates from nearby soils and vegetation and fuels local weather events. The study shows that the mix of moisture sourced from land versus ocean strongly affects drought risk and agricultural productivity.

“Our work reframes drought risk—it’s not just about how much it rains, but where that rain comes from,” said Yan Jiang, the study’s lead author and postdoctoral scholar at UC San Diego with a joint appointment at the School of Global Policy and Strategy and Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “Understanding the origin of rainfall and whether it comes from oceanic or land sources, gives policymakers and farmers a new tool to predict and mitigate drought stress before it happens.”

A New Way to Forecast Drought Risk

Using nearly two decades of satellite observations, Jiang and co-author Jennifer Burney of Stanford University estimated how much of global rainfall originates from land evaporation. They found that when more than about one-third of rainfall comes from land, crop-producing regions face a much higher risk of drought, soil drying, and yield losses. This is likely because ocean-driven systems tend to bring heavier rainfall, whereas land-driven systems produce lighter and less dependable showers, increasing the chance of water shortages during critical periods of plant growth.


Yan Jiang, lead author of the Nature Sustainability study and postdoctoral scholar at UC San Diego with a joint appointment at the School of Global Policy and Strategy and Scripps Institution of Oceanography. 
Credit: University of California San Diego



These findings offer a new way for farmers and decision-makers to identify which areas face the greatest risk and to prepare more effectively for future drought conditions.

“For farmers in areas that rely heavily on land-originating moisture — like parts of the Midwest or eastern Africa — local water availability becomes the deciding factor for crop success,” Jiang explained. “Changes in soil moisture or deforestation can have immediate, cascading impacts on yields.”

Two Global Hotspots: The U.S. Midwest and East Africa

The study highlights two striking hotspots of vulnerability: the U.S. Midwest and tropical East Africa.

In the Midwest, Jiang notes, droughts have become more frequent and intense in recent years — even in one of the world’s most productive and technologically advanced farming regions.

“Our findings suggest that the Midwest’s high reliance on land-sourced moisture, from surrounding soil and vegetation, could amplify droughts through what we call ‘rainfall feedback loops,’” Jiang said. “When the land dries out, it reduces evaporation, which in turn reduces future rainfall—creating a self-reinforcing drought cycle.”

Because this region is also a major supplier to global grain markets, disruptions there have ripple effects far beyond U.S. borders. Jiang suggests that Midwestern producers may need to pay closer attention to soil moisture management, irrigation efficiency, and timing of planting to avoid compounding drought stress.

In contrast, East Africa faces a more precarious but still reversible situation. Rapid cropland expansion and loss of surrounding rainforests threaten to undermine the very moisture sources that sustain rainfall in the region.

“This creates a dangerous conflict,” Jiang said. “Farmers are clearing forests to grow more crops, but those forests help generate the rainfall that the crops depend on. If that moisture source disappears, local food security will be at greater risk.”

However, Jiang sees opportunity as well as risk:

“Eastern Africa is on the front line of change, but there is still time to act. Smarter land management — like conserving forests and restoring vegetation — can protect rainfall and sustain agricultural growth.”
Forests as Rainmakers

The research underscores that forests and natural ecosystems are crucial allies in farming. Forests release vast amounts of water vapor into the atmosphere through evaporation and transpiration (when plants produce moisture), effectively seeding the clouds that bring rain to nearby croplands.

“Upland forests are like natural rainmakers,” Jiang said. “Protecting these ecosystems isn’t just about biodiversity—it’s about sustaining agriculture.”

A Tool for Smarter Land and Water Management

Jiang’s research provides a new scientific framework connecting land management, rainfall patterns, and crop planning — a relationship that could become central to future drought resilience strategies.

The study’s novel satellite-based mapping technique could help governments and farmers identify where to invest in irrigation infrastructure, soil water storage, and forest conservation to maintain reliable rainfall.


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

These Giant Whales Eat up to 202 Squid a Day

BY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, NOV. 28, 2025

Scientists have revealed how much squid Hawaiian short-finned pilot whales must harvest from the deep each day, using high-tech tags to track their demanding foraging behavior. 
Credit: Shutterstock
There are plenty more squid in the sea for Hawaiian short-finned pilot whales.

How much squid do short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) living off Hawai‘i need each day, and is the local ecosystem able to support their appetite? Understanding these fundamental details is key to protecting the species.

Scientists from the USA, Spain, Australia, and Denmark report in the Journal of Experimental Biology that each whale consumes between 82 and 202 squid daily. When multiplied across the entire Hawaiian population, this comes to roughly 88,000 tonnes of squid per year, which remains a small fraction of the region’s overall squid resources.

Determining an animal’s daily food needs is an essential part of assessing its long-term survival, especially when declining prey could place a species at risk. Pilot whales are a particularly intriguing example, as they routinely descend as far as 1700m in search of squid, their primary food source.

“These animals have been studied in locations around the world, but relatively little is known about them in Hawaiian waters,” says William Gough (University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, USA), who teamed up with colleagues to solve the riddle of just how much Hawaiian squid short-finned pilot whales consume.


An aerial view of Hawai’i short-finned pilot whales at the surface.
 Credit: HIMB Marine Mammal Research Program



Tagging Whales in the Open Ocean

The researchers began their work by heading into the Pacific Ocean, where they placed data-logging tags held on by detachable suction cups onto eight short-finned pilot whales.

“Short-finned pilot whales are fairly small and quick, so we really have to pick our moment,” recalls Gough, adding that each tag was equipped with motion sensors, a camera with a light, hydrophones to record echolocation clicks, and GPS.

“Ideally, we attached the tag right behind the blowhole facing the head, so we could see any foraging at depth,” says Gough.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aj8AtBCmoH4&t=1s
A tagged short-finned pilot whale films other whales in its pod.
 Credit: HIMB Marine Mammal Research Program and Pacific Whale Foundation

To estimate each animal’s size, the team also flew a drone 25m above the whales and recorded overhead footage.

When the tags later detached and drifted, sometimes traveling as far as 50 miles through rough seas, the researchers retrieved them. The recordings revealed 118 deep dives that reached depths of up to 864m, with each whale averaging about 39 dives per day.

The researchers then analyzed the whales’ tail beats as the animals descend and calculated that short-finned pilot whales use 73.8kJ/min of energy while diving and only 44.4 kJ/min when at the surface. But what would that equate to in terms of the number of squid that the whales would need to consume to survive?


A pod of Hawai’i short-finned pilot whales below the surface.
 Credit: HIMB Marine Mammal Research Program



Squid on the Menu

Listening for the tell-tale echolocation clicks on the hydrophone recordings as the whales intercepted a squid, the team estimated that the whales consume approximately 4 squid per dive and that each squid provides around 560kJ of energy when digested.

Gough then calculated that each whale must eat between 82 and 202 squid per day, totalling as many as 73,730 squid per whale per year.

But how many squid does the whole population of short-finned pilot whales around Hawaiʻi actually consume over a year? Based on estimates that the population is up to 8,000 individuals, the team calculated that the pilot whales together consume as many as 88,000 tonnes of squid each year, which is fortunately, a drop in the ocean for the local squid population.

“These results show that short-finned pilot whales are in relatively good shape in Hawaiʻi, having found an abundant and reliable source of food,” says Gough, who is optimistic about the future of Hawaiian pilot whales.


The Life of Earth
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