Sunday, 5 July 2026

Chuck's photo corner to July 5th, 2026, 😅🍐🍓⛈🌞

It's been a hot week with many thunder and lightning storms in the afternoons. Plants have grown like crazy. A great start to summer.

Hosta, I can grow them as no deer are around, the big hyway, and the railroad block them from coming this way.

daisys, a natural part of this area

looks like the green peppers are coming along. The after noon storms have been hard on them.

This guy is so bright even from the office window.

Time to harvest and dry for this years chamomile tea.

the black raspberry season has started, they will turn black as they ripen.

I planted a variety of colours of these flowering peas years ago , only this colour has lived on.

This garden has grown beyond my time and ability to weed, sigh.

pretty enough.

one of many spirea shrubs about.

The basic daylily, I call them ditch lilies because that is where they enjoy to grow. Wet in spring, dry in summer.

commonly called gold drops

Monks hood, a poisonous plant

These daylilies are often grown in commercial landscapes as they bloom all summer and are very tolerant to the dry conditions of parking lot planters.

Catalpa tree flowers, a great shade tree, this one just appeared in the yard decades ago, now it shades guests during our summer social.

The catalpa tree has large leaves as well.

currents almost ready to harvest, a weird strain from a garden center.

The norfolk pine in the morning.

Cardinal, at dusk.


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


Scientists Say Intermittent Fasting Could Make Weight Loss Easier

By Adelaide U., July 3, 2026

Intermittent fasting may offer a more sustainable path to weight loss for people who struggle with traditional dieting, according to a new 18-month study from the University of Adelaide. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Intermittent fasting may help some people lose weight without relying as heavily on constant food restriction.

People who repeatedly lose weight and regain it may do better with intermittent fasting than with traditional calorie counting, according to new findings.

A study from Adelaide University examined the psychological effects of intermittent fasting and calorie restriction, comparing how each approach affected eating behaviors, mood, sleep and quality of life.

Both diets produced similar weight loss, but participants following intermittent fasting did not feel they had to make major changes to their eating behaviors, such as closely watching for overeating or counting calories, to lose weight.

The calorie restriction group had a different experience. Those participants said they had to consciously focus on limiting how much they ate and avoiding overeating. That increased sense of control explained 15% of their weight loss.

Fasting may feel less restrictive

“While many diets can result in weight loss, they may be difficult to stick to, and this makes keeping that weight off long-term more challenging,” said Professor Leonie Heilbronn from Adelaide University’s School of Medicine and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute.

“The results of our study indicate intermittent fasting could offer an alternative pathway for people who find conventional dieting challenging.”

Trial compared three approaches

The 18-month trial included more than 200 people with obesity. Participants were assigned to one of three groups: intermittent fasting, continuous calorie restriction or standard care.

Those in the intermittent fasting group ate 30% of their energy needs between 8 am and 12 pm on three nonconsecutive days each week, followed by a 20-hour fast. On days when they were not fasting, they could eat their usual diet.

Participants in the calorie-restricted group ate 70% of their usual diet. Those in the standard care group continued with standard diets but received healthy eating guidelines.

After six months, people in both the intermittent fasting and calorie-restricted groups had lost about seven kilograms, compared with about two kilograms in the standard diet group. Participants also reported improvements in depression and wellbeing, including on fasting days.

Weight loss may follow different paths

The findings, published in Clinical Nutrition, suggest that calorie restriction and intermittent fasting may support weight loss through different psychological and behavioral routes.

“Psychological and behavioral effects have a major influence on people’s abilities to adhere to diets. Intermittent fasting may help people achieve weight loss through ways that are less dependent on consciously restricting intake,” said Professor Heilbronn.

Although intermittent fasting has grown in popularity, its long-term psychological and behavioral effects are still not well understood compared with more traditional dieting methods.

“Future trials should be designed to identify individuals who struggle to improve eating behaviors, as they may do better with intermittent fasting diets, enabling more personalized weight management,” said Professor Heilbronn.


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

Stanford Scientists Reverse Age-Related Memory Loss by Targeting the Gut

By K. Conger, Stanford Medicine, July 5, 2026

A new mouse study suggests that age-related memory decline may be influenced by signals traveling from the gut to the brain rather than by brain aging alone.
 Credit: Shutterstock

Aging changes gut bacteria in mice, weakening communication between the intestines and the brain. Restoring that connection helped older mice form memories as effectively as young mice.

For decades, age-related memory loss has largely been viewed as a problem that begins in the brain. But growing evidence suggests that some of the processes shaping cognition may start much farther south — in the gut, home to trillions of microbes that help regulate everything from digestion to immunity.

A new mouse study from researchers at Stanford Medicine and the Arc Institute in Palo Alto, California, points to a surprising gut-brain connection behind cognitive aging.

The team found that age-related changes in gut bacteria can interfere with signals traveling along the vagus nerve, a major communication highway linking the gastrointestinal tract and the brain. Their findings suggest that memory decline may be influenced by changes outside the brain itself, opening new possibilities for preserving cognitive function later in life.

“Although memory loss is common with age, it affects people differently and at different ages,” said Christoph Thaiss, PhD, assistant professor of pathology. “We wanted to understand why some very old people remain cognitively sharp while other people see significant declines beginning in their 50s or 60s. What we learned is that the timeline of memory decline is not hardwired; it’s actively modulated in the body, and the gastrointestinal tract is a critical regulator of this process.”


Christoph Thaiss. 
Credit: Stanford Medicine



The study found that the gut microbiome, the natural community of bacteria living in the intestine, changes as mice grow older. Some bacterial species become more common while others decline. Immune cells in the gastrointestinal tract detect these changes and trigger inflammation that weakens signaling through the vagus nerve to the hippocampus, the brain region involved in memory formation and spatial navigation. When researchers stimulated vagus nerve activity in older mice, the animals regained the ability to remember unfamiliar objects and escape mazes as well as younger mice.

“The degree of reversibility of age-related cognitive decline in the animals just by altering gut-brain communication was a surprise,” Thaiss said. “We tend to think of memory decline as a brain-intrinsic process. But this study indicates that we can enhance memory formation and brain activity by changing the composition of the gastrointestinal tract — a kind of remote control for the brain.”

Thaiss, who is also a core investigator at Palo Alto-based Arc Institute, is a senior author of the study, which was published in Nature. Maayan Levy, PhD, an assistant professor of pathology and Arc Institute innovation investigator, is the other senior author. Timothy Cox, a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania, is the lead author of the research.

“Our study emphasizes that processes in the brain can be modulated through peripheral intervention,” Levy said. “Since the gastrointestinal tract is easily accessible orally, modulating the abundance of gut microbiome metabolites is a very appealing strategy to control brain function.”

The call is coming from inside the body

The idea that hundreds of bacterial species live in the intestines once seemed surprising. Today, the gut microbiome receives broad attention because it is understood to influence not only digestion, but also wider health. More than 10 years ago, scientists showed that changing the gut microbiomes of rodents could alter their social and cognitive behavior. Thaiss and Levy wanted to know whether a related mechanism might help explain the memory loss and cognitive difficulties often linked to aging.

Signals that travel from inside the body to the brain, including messages sent from the intestines through the vagus nerve, are part of a process called interoception. By contrast, signals that come from outside the body through taste, touch, smell, vision, and hearing are called exteroception.

“Exteroception is basically how we perceive the outside,” Thaiss said. “We have a lot of detailed knowledge about how this works. But we know much less about how the brain senses what is going on inside the body. We don’t know how many internal senses there are, or even all of what they are sensing. It’s clear that our exteroception capabilities decline with age — we grow to need eyeglasses and hearing aids, for example. And this study shows that aging also affects interoception.”


Maayan Levy. 
Credit: Stanford Medicine



To test whether the gut microbiome contributes to the senior moments many people experience, the researchers housed young (2-month-old) mice with old (18-month-old) mice. Because the animals lived and defecated near one another, the young mice were exposed to the gut microbiomes of the older mice, and the older mice were exposed to those of the younger mice. After one month, the researchers analyzed the animals’ microbiomes.

They found that shared housing caused the microbiomes of young mice to become more similar to those of older animals. When the researchers tested whether the mice could recognize a new object or find the exit of a maze, the young mice with old microbiomes performed much worse than other young mice. They showed less interest in unfamiliar objects and moved through the maze in a way that resembled old animals.

The researchers also compared young and old mice raised from birth in a germ-free environment, meaning neither group had gut bacteria. Young mice kept their ability to form memories. But when young germ-free mice received microbiomes from old mice, they again performed like older animals on memory and cognition tests. Notably, old germ-free mice did not lose memory and cognition as they aged and performed as well as 2-month-old mice.

The results were especially striking when young mice carrying old microbiomes, and therefore showing weaker cognition, were treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics for two weeks. Their cognitive abilities returned, and they explored unfamiliar objects and navigated mazes as well as control mice.

“The object recognition test is like cognitive recognition tests in humans, where you are shown a series of images, then have to remember which ones you’ve seen before after some time passes,” Thaiss said. “And the maze test is like people trying to recall where they parked their car at a large shopping center. What these tasks have in common, in mice and in people, is that they are very strongly dependent on activity in the hippocampus, because that is where memories are encoded.”

What’s different in their guts?

The researchers then looked more closely at how the gut microbiome changes with age in mice. They found that one bacterium, Parabacteroides goldsteinii, becomes relatively more abundant in old mice and is directly linked to cognitive decline in the animals. When young mice were colonized with this bacterial species, they performed worse on the object recognition and maze tests, and that decline was associated with reduced activity in the hippocampus.

When old mice were treated with a molecule that activates the vagus nerve, however, their cognitive performance became indistinguishable from that of young mice.

Additional experiments showed that the rise in Parabacteroides goldsteinii was associated with higher levels of metabolites called medium-chain fatty acids. These metabolites caused myeloid cells, a type of immune cell in the gut, to launch an inflammatory response. That inflammation reduced activity in the vagus nerve, lowered activity in the hippocampus, and weakened the animals’ ability to form lasting memories.

The GI tract is arguably the first organ system to evolve during human evolutionary history, so the evolution of cognitive processes in the brain has undoubtedly been shaped by signals coming from the intestine,” Levy said. “It’s likely that signals from the GI tract play an important role in contextualizing memory formation.”

Thaiss added, “Basically, we’ve identified a three-step pathway toward cognitive decline that starts with gastrointestinal aging and the subsequent microbial and metabolic changes that occur. The myeloid cells in the GI tract sense these changes, and their inflammatory response impairs the connection between the gut and the brain via the vagus nerve. This is a direct driver of memory decline. And if we restore the activity of the vagus nerve, we can restore an old animal’s memory function to that of a young animal.”

The researchers are now studying whether a similar pathway involving the gut microbiome and brain activity exists in people, and whether it also contributes to age-related cognitive decline. Vagus nerve stimulation is already approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat depression or epilepsy and to support recovery after stroke. The researchers also hope to develop noninvasive ways to monitor, and possibly control, the activity of peripheral neurons that influence memory formation and cognition.

“Our hope is that ultimately these findings can be translated into the clinic to combat age-related cognitive decline in people,” Thaiss said.


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

Saturday, 4 July 2026

Neanderthals Were Absolute Freaks of Nature

Edmund Extinction and Dr. Edmund Hale,  Jul 1, 2026 

We've all seen the cartoon — the dim, hunched caveman, the evolutionary runner-up. 

It's one of the most persistent myths in all of science, and it's completely wrong. The real Neanderthal was something closer to a superhuman. 

In this episode we get into the astonishing biology of our closest extinct relative: bones sometimes twice as dense as ours, a build strong enough to wrestle prey to the ground, lungs up to 40% larger, a brain bigger than a modern human's, and eyes built for the dark. These were people engineered for an Ice Age world that would have destroyed us — and they carried that world on their backs for hundreds of thousands of years. Oh, and if you're of European or Asian descent, a piece of them is still inside you right now. 

Let me show you just how extraordinary the Neanderthals really were.



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



Scientists Discover the First-Ever Molecules Preserved Inside a 113-Million-Year-Old Pterosaur Fossil

By L. Wilkinson, Curtin U., July 3, 2026

A pterosaur in flight. 
Credit: UnexpectedDinoLesson, Wikimedia Commons

Ancient microbes may have helped preserve a pterosaur fossil and its chemical clues for more than 100 million years.

An international study led by Curtin University has shed new light on how a prehistoric flying reptile fossil remained exceptionally well preserved for 113 million years, offering scientists a rare view into a long-vanished world.

The fossilized wing phalanx of a pterosaur from northeastern Brazil was preserved in three dimensions and even retained chemical traces that may point to what the animal ate. Kliti Grice and her colleagues link that unusual survival to specialized bacteria and the conditions of an ancient marine environment.

Lead author Kliti Grice, a John Curtin Distinguished Professor and founding Director of the Western Australian Organic and Isotope Geochemistry Centre at Curtin, said the findings reveal a new way to understand how some fossils form.

Molecules reveal ancient diet

“This fossil is a true time capsule — not only is it beautifully preserved, but for the first time we’ve detected traces of steroids in a pterosaur, providing further evidence that these creatures likely fed on fish or squid,” Professor Grice said.

“It also marks the first time molecules have been recovered from a pterosaur fossil, revealing new clues about its diet and highlighting the growing potential of molecular paleontology to unlock secrets from deep time.


Microscope view of a pterosaur fossil section showing carbon coating and mineral layers.
 Credit: Grice et al., iScience (2026)



“Steroid preservation in fossils is exceptionally rare, but what’s even more fascinating is that our findings challenge long-held ideas about fossil preservation itself. Rather than being destroyed by oxygen, some fossils are preserved because of it, through oxidative processes carried out by ancient microbiomes.

“After this pterosaur died and sank to the seabed, a perfect storm of chemistry, biology, and the environment worked to seal its story in stone. Microbes, including sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, began breaking down the soft tissue and fats and triggered mineralization around the body – a process that, over time, helped preserve its structure in incredible detail for more than 100 million years.”

Microbes shaped fossil survival

Pterosaurs were flying reptiles that lived alongside dinosaurs and were the first vertebrates known to achieve powered flight. Some species had wingspans reaching up to 12 meters. Like birds today, they had hollow bones, a feature that can improve the chances of exceptional preservation under the right environmental conditions.

Professor Grice said the work points to a new pathway for unusual fossil preservation, while also offering fresh insight into ancient life and the environmental conditions that can protect fragile remains for immense spans of time.

It adds to the growing evidence that tiny microbes played a major role in fossil survival, a process now being identified at other fossil sites. Professor Grice said this may represent a new global Lagerstätten mechanism, meaning the special conditions that make exceptional preservation possible.


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

This Tiny Bacterial Secret Could Lead to Better Cancer Drugs

By U. of Warwick, July 3, 2026

The docking domain (puzzle pieces) acts as a molecular connector between two separate enzyme systems. One system belongs to the core drug-building machinery, while the other system builds the variable cap that determines which cancers the drug targets. This precise fit between the two enables bacteria to reliably produce multiple anti-cancer drug variants.
 Credit: Dr. Munro Passmore / University of Warwick

Scientists have finally uncovered how bacteria naturally create multiple versions of powerful anti-cancer drugs, solving a mystery that has frustrated researchers for decades.

Researchers from the University of Warwick and Monash University have solved a long-standing mystery about how bacteria naturally produce multiple versions of powerful cancer-fighting compounds. Their discovery could help scientists develop new treatments for cancers that are difficult to treat by revealing how nature creates a wide variety of drug molecules from the same biological machinery.

For years, researchers have wanted to harness bacterial enzymes to produce new drug variants through a process known as combinatorial biosynthesis. However, progress has been limited because scientists did not understand how the enzymes worked together to assemble different compounds.

Now, in a study published in Nature Communications, the research team has uncovered how bacterial enzymes communicate and cooperate to build an entire family of related anti-cancer molecules. One member of this family is Romidepsin (Istodax), an FDA-approved treatment for certain blood cancers. By decoding this natural “mix and match” system and recreating its principles in the laboratory, the researchers say they have established a new strategy for designing future cancer therapies.

“For decades, we’ve known that bacteria can naturally produce multiple versions of powerful anti-cancer drugs, yet we had no idea how they achieved this,” said first author Dr. Munro Passmore, Research Fellow, Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick. “This work finally cracks that code. We’ve identified how the different enzymes communicate and cooperate to produce these drug variants, something that has eluded researchers because the system is so elegantly economical. It’s the breakthrough we needed to actually engineer these drugs ourselves.”

Tiny Molecular Connectors Unlock Nature’s Drug Factory

The researchers discovered that small protein regions known as ‘docking domains’ serve as molecular connectors between the main drug-producing machinery and the enzymes responsible for adding different chemical components.

These docking domains share a common connection point that allows them to interact with several different enzyme partners. That flexibility enables bacteria to generate a variety of closely related drug molecules while maintaining the precision needed for the compounds to remain effective.

The study also sheds light on how these drug-producing systems evolved over time. According to the researchers, the newly identified compound most likely originated from a related drug-producing pathway through a series of gene duplications and genetic recombination events.

Prof. Greg Challis, Monash Warwick Alliance Professor of Sustainable Chemistry, University of Warwick and Monash University, concludes: “This research gives us a blueprint to do what nature does, but better and faster. By reverse-engineering nature’s evolutionary logic, we can now design synthetic pathways that generate new anti-cancer drug candidates with properties optimized for clinical use, such as superior potency, improved selectivity, fewer side effects. Our immediate goal is to build an expanded library of candidates for various cancers where new treatments are urgently needed. This discovery is moving us from understanding how the systems work to building new ones.”

How the Discovery Could Improve Cancer Drug Development

The research focuses on a group of medicines called HDAC inhibitors, which work by blocking histone deacetylases, enzymes that regulate which genes inside a cell are switched on or off. Romidepsin (Istodax), one of the best-known drugs in this class, is already approved to treat T-cell lymphomas.

Another closely related compound, FR-901375, has puzzled scientists for decades because researchers could never determine exactly how bacteria produced it. This study finally identifies that missing biosynthetic pathway.

Like other HDAC inhibitors in this family, FR-901375 belongs to a class of complex ring-shaped molecules called depsipeptides. Bacteria manufacture these compounds using massive protein complexes known as PKS-NRPS hybrids, which combine polyketide synthase (PKS) and nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) activities to assemble the drug from smaller molecular building blocks.

The newly identified docking domains act like connectors along this biological assembly line, allowing one section of the machinery to pass its partially built product to the next. This molecular handoff explains how bacteria naturally create multiple related drugs through combinatorial biosynthesis.

How Researchers Solved the Mystery

To uncover this mechanism, the team combined structural biology, biochemistry, genetics, and computational analysis.

Their research included:

Bioinformatic searches of public databases to identify the FR-901375 biosynthetic gene cluster in Pseudomonas chlororaphis subsp. piscium, followed by mass spectrometry analysis to confirm the metabolites produced.

Laboratory experiments using purified protein domains that demonstrated productive enzyme interactions, verified through intact protein mass spectrometry.

AlphaFold computational modeling to predict protein complex structures, with those predictions confirmed experimentally using carbene footprinting mass spectrometry to map where the proteins interact.

Site-directed mutagenesis to verify the importance of key binding residues predicted by the models.
Gene deletion experiments in bacterial strains showing that the docking domains are essential for the drug-producing process inside living cells.

Comparative studies of biosynthetic gene clusters from multiple HDAC inhibitor-producing bacteria, revealing conserved evolutionary features shared across these systems.

The researchers believe the findings provide a powerful framework for engineering new generations of anti-cancer drugs by borrowing and improving upon nature’s own methods for building complex medicines.


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

Friday, 3 July 2026

NASA Satellites Spot Rare Underwater Volcano Eruption That Could Create Earth’s Newest Island

By NASA, July 2, 2026

Closely spaced volcanic plumes, surrounded by clouds, stream from a growing underwater volcanic platform in this natural-color image captured by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 9 on May 11, 2026, three days after the eruption began. The right image emphasizes the infrared signature of the eruption. 
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison

A submarine eruption north of Papua New Guinea may be building new land while satellites track its evolution from above.

Oceanographers often point out that the surfaces of the Moon and Mars are mapped more precisely than much of the deep seafloor on Earth. That gap is especially clear in the Bismarck Sea, a deep basin north of Papua New Guinea. Its seafloor is geologically complex, with faults, volcanic structures, rifts, scarps, active subduction zones, and spreading zones lying at depths that are difficult to map in fine detail with sonar.

On May 8, 2026, satellites picked up signs of an unexpected underwater volcanic eruption in the Central Bismarck Sea. For volcanologists, the event highlighted a major problem: there were no detailed maps of the region, and the deep water setting of the eruption remains poorly understood.

The eruption is believed to be taking place along Titan Ridge, about 16 kilometers (10 miles) southeast of a submarine eruption recorded in 1972. Still, scientists do not yet agree on exactly which volcanic feature is active, how deep the vent was before the eruption, or when it last erupted.

“The good news is that there are huge opportunities to explore and learn using both government and commercial satellite platforms already in orbit,” said Jim Garvin, the chief scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.


Closely spaced volcanic plumes, surrounded by clouds, stream from a growing underwater volcanic platform in this natural-color image captured by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 9 on May 11, 2026, three days after the eruption began. The right image emphasizes the infrared signature of the eruption. 
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison



Satellites reveal the eruption

The clearest early evidence began with a small cluster of earthquakes detected by seismometers on May 8. Soon afterward, satellite observations showed unmistakable signs of a submarine eruption. Starting May 9, NASA’s Aqua and Terra satellites recorded optical images of white, steam-rich volcanic plumes rising into the atmosphere. NASA’s PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean Ecosystem) satellite also detected discolored, disturbed water around the eruption site with its ocean color sensor.

Additional satellites saw ash plumes rising several kilometers into the air. More detailed imagery from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel 2 and NASA/USGS Landsat 9 (top), collected on May 10 and 11, respectively, showed activity close to the ocean surface. The image at the top right shows the same area in false color (bands 7-6-5), with the inset revealing the eruption’s infrared signal. On May 12, the VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite) instrument on Suomi NPP detected heat anomalies spread across roughly seven square kilometers.

“There must be a lot of hot material near the surface to generate so many thermal anomalies,” said Simon Carn, a volcanologist at Michigan Tech. “This suggests a fairly shallow eruption vent—much shallower than what’s implied by the existing bathymetry, which shows water depths of several hundred meters or more.”

A new island may form

Optical satellite images show vigorous activity in shallow water, including large areas of discolored water and many steam and ash vents spread across the surface. Medium and high resolution sensors from government programs and commercial satellite companies have also captured broad pumice rafts (floating volcanic rocks) forming long streaks in surface currents in recent days.

Floating pumice and green, discolored water extend southwest from the eruption site as a white volcanic plume drifts west overhead in this image acquired by the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s Terra satellite on May 15, 2026. 
Credit: NASA Earth Observatory/Michala Garrison



“We’re now eagerly waiting to see if a new island is about to be born—something that we’ve only rarely been able to observe with satellites as it happens,” Garvin said. If new land appears, volcanologists will monitor how it changes. It might grow into a tuff cone with a vent crater that lasts for some time, or it could quickly collapse and wear away. The eruption could also become far more explosive if seawater reaches the shallow magma chamber that has pushed up within the growing underwater feature.

Explosive risk appears limited

So far, this eruption has been much less explosive than recent submarine eruptions such as Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha’apai in 2022 and Fukutoku Okanobain in 2021. Carn said the event is unlikely to become highly explosive because it appears to be linked to a volcanic ridge near the meeting point of a transform fault and a back arc spreading center. “Spreading centers are associated with less explosive activity, while the most explosive eruptions are usually along subduction zones and involve large stratovolcanoes.”

It is not yet clear how long the eruption will continue. The 1972 eruption in the same general region lasted only four days, while another submarine eruption about 100 kilometers away in the St. Andrew Strait in 1957 continued for nearly four years.

A rare natural laboratory

Garvin and scientists at other institutions are watching the eruption closely. He plans to study radar data from the NASA ISRO NISAR satellite and the Canadian Space Agency’s RADARSAT Constellation Mission to map any new land that appears and track how its shape changes. If a lasting island forms, Garvin also sees a chance for researchers, or “island-nauts,” to visit and study how a young island responds to plant and animal colonization, rainfall, chemical weathering, and other forms of erosion, similar to work carried out after the Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha‘apai eruption.

“This new eruption could present an even better opportunity for ‘island-naut’ exploration as we prepare to return to the Moon with women and men via Artemis IV,” he said.


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

Scientists Uncover the Hidden Force Making Sea-Level Rise Far Worse Than Expected

By Technical U. of Munich, July 2, 2026

The weight of growing cities and falling groundwater levels can make the impacts of climate change worse. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Sea-level rise is not just about the oceans. New research shows that sinking land is dramatically increasing flood risk in many coastal cities.

As climate change pushes oceans higher, many of the world’s biggest coastal cities are confronting a second, less visible threat beneath their streets. In places where millions of people live, the ground itself is sinking, increasing flood risk and causing local sea levels to rise faster than global averages.

Now, researchers from the German Geodetic Research Institute at the Technical University of Munich (DGFI-TUM) and Tulane University have quantified just how much this hidden process is amplifying the problem.

Writing in Nature Communications, they report that densely populated coastal regions experience an average relative sea-level rise of about 6 millimeters per year—nearly twice the rate of climate-driven sea-level rise alone and roughly three times the coastline-weighted global average. Their findings suggest that human-driven land subsidence has become a major contributor to coastal flood risk, but one that can often be slowed through local policies.

Key drivers of land subsidence: groundwater extraction, resource use, ice loss, and tectonics

The exact causes of subsidence are not always easy to identify in every location, according to the researchers. Still, several major factors stand out, including heavy groundwater extraction, oil and gas production, the compaction of young sediments in deltas, and the load from buildings and infrastructure in fast-growing cities. Longer-term geological processes, including tectonic movement and post-glacial adjustment, can also contribute.

“If we want to understand sea-level rise along coastlines and respond effectively, we must not only observe the ocean but also the land itself. Especially in densely populated coastal regions, human activities cause the land to subside more strongly – often due to excessive extraction of water and resources that previously stabilized the subsurface. The sheer weight of cities, along with long-term geological processes, can further intensify this subsidence. In doing so, we significantly amplify the effects of climate-driven sea-level rise,” says Dr. Julius Oelsmann, lead author of the study and researcher at DGFI-TUM.

Subsidence of Up to 42 Millimeters per Year

The countries with the highest relative sea level rise include Thailand, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Egypt, China, and Indonesia. In those places, the population-weighted coastal averages were about 7 to 10 millimeters per year. The United States, the Netherlands, and Italy also showed elevated rates, at about 4 to 5 millimeters per year.

Major subsidence hot spots include Jakarta at 13.7 millimeters per year, Tianjin at 13.5 millimeters per year, Bangkok at 8.5 millimeters per year, Lagos at 6.7 millimeters per year, and Alexandria at 4 millimeters per year. Subsidence can differ sharply within the same city. In Jakarta, some areas are sinking by as much as 42 millimeters per year, while other parts are rising.

In some regions, the opposite is happening. Geological uplift is causing the relative sea level to fall along parts of the coast, including in Sweden and Finland. There, the land is still rising after the last Ice Age because of post-glacial rebound, and it is rising faster than sea levels are increasing.

Groundwater Management as a Countermeasure

“In many large coastal cities, groundwater extraction is a major driver of land subsidence. This means that local political and water-management decisions can make a significant difference. Improved groundwater management, stricter regulation of withdrawals, or targeted recharge of aquifers can at least slow subsidence rates and, in some cases, largely halt them,” says Florian Seitz, Professor of Geodetic Geodynamics and Director of the German Geodetic Research Institute at TUM (DGFI-TUM).

Tokyo and the Houston metropolitan region in Texas show that subsidence can be reduced. In Tokyo, subsidence once exceeded 10 centimeters per year and reached about 24 centimeters per year in the hardest hit areas. Government action and alternative water supplies greatly reduced those rates.

In the Harris-Galveston region of Texas, heavy groundwater pumping was also the main cause of sinking land. To address the problem, the Harris-Galveston Subsidence District was created in 1975 to regulate groundwater withdrawals, encourage alternative water sources, and support water conservation.


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

Mites Live on Your Face And, in a Horrifying Turn of Events, They're Starting to Merge With Humans

03 July 2026, By M. Starr

Microscope image showing Demodex folliculorum on human skin. 
(University of Reading)

If you are reading this, you are probably not alone.

Most people on Earth are habitats for mites that spend the majority of their brief lives burrowed, head-first, in our hair follicles, primarily on the face.

In fact, humans are the only habitat for Demodex folliculorum. They are born on us, they feed on us, they mate on us, and they die on us.

Their entire life cycle revolves around munching your dead skin cells before kicking the teeny tiny bucket.

So reliant is D. folliculorum on humans for its survival, research suggests, that the microscopic mites are in the process of evolving from an ectoparasite into an obligate symbiont – possibly one that shares a mutually beneficial relationship with its hosts (that's us).

In other words, these mites may be gradually 'merging' with our bodies, becoming so specialized to their human habitat that they can no longer survive independently, according to a 2022 paper published in Molecular Biology and Evolution.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yetqP236E2o

In the study, scientists sequenced the genomes of these ubiquitous little beasts, and the results show that their human-centered existence could be wreaking changes not seen in other mite species.

"We found these mites have a different arrangement of body part genes to other similar species due to them adapting to a sheltered life inside pores," explained invertebrate biologist Alejandra Perotti of the University of Reading in the UK.

"These changes to their DNA have resulted in some unusual body features and behaviors."

D. folliculorum is actually a fascinating little creature. Human skin detritus is its sole food source, and it spends the majority of its three-week lifespan in pursuit thereof.

The individuals emerge only at night, in the cover of darkness, to crawl painstakingly slowly across the skin to find a mate, and hopefully copulate before returning to the safe darkness of a follicle.

D. folliculorum seen in a potassium hydroxide preparation of human skin. 
(K.V Santosh/Flickr/CC BY 2.0)



Their tiny bodies are just a third of a millimeter in length, with a cluster of tiny legs and a mouth at one end of a long, sausage-shaped body – just right for scooching down human hair follicles to get at the tasty noms therein.

The work on the mite's genome, co-led by geneticist Gilbert Smith of Bangor University in the UK and biologist Alejandro Manzano-Marin of the University of Vienna, revealed some of the fascinating genetic characteristics that drive this lifestyle.

Because their lives are so cruisy – they have few natural threats, little competition, and limited exposure to other mites – their genome has been reduced down to just the bare essentials.

Each leg is powered by just three single-cell muscles, and their bodies have the absolute minimum number of protein-coding genes, only what is needed for survival. It's the smallest number ever seen in its wider group of related species.

This pared-down genome is the reason for some of D. folliculorum's other strange peccadilloes, too.

For instance, the reason it only comes out at night. Among the genes lost are those involved in UV protection and those that wake animals up at daylight.

They are also unable to produce melatonin, a hormone found in most living organisms and with various functions. In humans, melatonin is important for regulating the sleep cycle, whereas in small invertebrates it promotes mobility and reproduction.

This hasn't seemed to have hindered D. folliculorum, however; instead, the researchers suggest it may use melatonin secreted by human skin at dusk.


The position of D. folliculorum's penis. This is not convenient.
 (University of Reading)



Unlike other mites, the reproductive organs of D. folliculorum have moved towards the front of their bodies, with male mites' penises pointing forwards and upwards from their backs.

This means he has to arrange himself underneath the female as they perch precariously on a hair for mating, which they do all night, AC/DC-style (presumably).

Although mating is pretty important, the potential gene pool is very small; there is very little opportunity to expand genetic diversity. The researchers suggest this could put the mites on track for an evolutionary dead end.

Interestingly, the team also found that the nymph stage of development, between the larva and adult, is when mites have the greatest number of cells in their bodies.

When they advance to the adult stage, they lose cells – which the researchers interpret as the first evolutionary step in the march of an arthropod species toward a symbiotic lifestyle.

One might wonder what possible benefits humans can gain from these peculiar animals; something else the researchers found might partially hint at the answer.

The arrow points to the mite's anus, and now you're probably on some kind of watch list.
 (University of Reading)



For years, scientists have thought that D. folliculorum doesn't have an anus, instead accumulating waste in its body to explode out when the mite dies, and thus causing skin conditions.

The team found that this is simply not the case. The mites do indeed have tiny little buttholes; your face probably isn't full of mite poop expelled posthumously.

"Mites have been blamed for a lot of things," said zoologist Henk Braig of the University of Bangor and the National University of San Juan in Argentina.

"The long association with humans might suggest that they also could have simple but important beneficial roles, for example, in keeping the pores in our face unplugged."


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

Thursday, 2 July 2026

Ovaries Appear to Develop an Incredible Second Role After Menopause

01 July 2026, By J. Cockerill


Producing follicles isn’t the only task for ovaries, new research suggests. 
(Steve Gschmeissner/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)


We've all heard of menopause: a supposedly terminal moment for the female reproductive system, in which the ovaries stop releasing eggs and presumably call it a day.

But reproductive biologist Francesca Duncan is not content with this simplified image of ovarian retirement.

She has been trying to understand what ovaries get up to once they stop pumping out eggs. It turns out it's much less like retirement, and more like a career change.

Life expectancies are generally stretching further than ever before, which means there's now far more post-menopausal people wandering around, whose bodies we still don't fully understand.

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

A new study of mice, published in Molecular Human Reproduction by Duncan at Northwestern University in Illinois and a team of researchers across the US, suggests that the post-menopausal ovary is far from inert.

This new research reflects what Duncan found in another study of post-menopausal women, which is yet to be peer-reviewed. It showed that the proteins produced by ovarian tissue in 28 post-menopausal women differed across age groups.

If ovaries were 'inert' after their reproductive years, that shouldn't be the case.

Mouse studies obviously can't tell us exactly what is going on in the human body, but because we share a similar evolutionary history, they can offer hints.

In the animal study, Duncan and team removed the ovaries of 2-month, 18-month, and 24-month mice for close study. Each of these ages was chosen to represent a different phase of the mouse reproductive cycle.


Stained ovarian sections from different-aged mouse ovaries 
(Converse et al., Mol. Hum. Reprod., 2026)



Mouse ovaries typically shut down around two years into the animal's short lifespan. Their menopause is not accompanied by the sharp estrogen drop humans experience, but it bears other similarities.

Tissue from one ovary of each mouse was closely examined under the microscope to better understand the anatomy of the ovarian tissues at each of these phases of life.

With the second ovary, the researchers conducted bulk RNA sequencing, which tells us not only what genes are present within certain tissues, but which genes are actively involved in protein production.

Unsurprisingly, these samples showed that the machinery of reproductive function slowed down with age. Older mice had fewer follicles and changes in the way cell tissue and collagen were arranged.

But that doesn't mean the entire 'factory' was shut down. In fact, ovaries seem to step into a new role.

"Transcriptomic analyses revealed a shift from reproductive functionality to an immune-dominant signature with age," the team reports.

"Correspondingly, post-reproductive ovaries exhibited increased infiltration of T cells, macrophages, and multinucleated giant cells."

Though old and post-reproductive ovaries looked and functioned very differently from those of young mice, they also had distinct transcriptome profiles, much like what Duncan saw in postmenopausal women.

It suggests that ovaries continue to undergo molecular changes, even after their reproductive role has wound down. They appear to take on the role of an immune-like inflammatory organ, the team says.

"These findings challenge the assumption that the post-reproductive ovary is inert, instead indicating that it acquires an immune identity with potential endocrine and paracrine influence on whole-body aging," Duncan and team conclude.

This could have important implications for healthcare in post-reproductive years, and especially for people who have their ovaries removed.


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

This Extraordinary Desert Mouse Defies Aging – and It Could Change Human Longevity

By M. Locklear, Yale School of Medicine, July 1, 2026

Golden spiny mice appear to defy many of the biological changes normally associated with aging, maintaining their physical abilities, memory, and immune function while living far longer than typical wild mice.
 Credit: Shutterstock

A wild mouse with an unusually long life may reveal clues to healthy aging.

Aging is often treated as an unavoidable biological process, but evolution tells a more complicated story. Across the animal kingdom, species age at dramatically different rates, with some rapidly declining after reaching adulthood while others remain healthy and active for years or even decades. Understanding what separates these species has become one of the biggest questions in aging research, offering clues to how the body naturally resists disease and deterioration.

Researchers are now turning to an unlikely candidate: the golden spiny mouse. Native to the rocky deserts of the Middle East, this small wild rodent not only lives far longer than most mice but also appears to preserve its health throughout much of its life, avoiding the physical, cognitive, and immune decline that normally accompanies aging.

In a study published in Science Advances, scientists at Yale School of Medicine began uncovering the biological mechanisms behind this exceptional resilience. Their findings suggest the mouse has evolved natural pathways that keep age-related inflammation under control and maintain key tissues and organs well into old age, discoveries that could eventually inform new treatments to promote healthier aging in people.

“Mice in the wild typically live around nine months,” says senior author Vishwa Deep Dixit, DVM, PhD, Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Pathology at YSM. “But some of these golden spiny mice are living out in the desert for up to five years. And that’s just what we’ve been able to observe; their maximum lifespan is unknown.”


Vishwa Deep Dixit, DVM, PhD, Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Pathology and Professor of Immunobiology. 
Credit: Yale School of Medicine



“In order to live that long, they have to forage, they have to avoid predators,” says Dixit, who is also a professor of comparative medicine and of immunobiology at YSM and director of the Yale Center for Research on Aging (Y-Age). “So it’s not like they’re living this long in a way that we would think of as ‘aged.’”

Lead author Hee Hoon Kim, PhD, a postdoctoral associate in Dixit’s lab, says the central question is why certain species, including the golden spiny mouse, can age with so little apparent decline while others cannot.

Reduced physical and cognitive aging

Working with collaborators at Tel Aviv University, Dixit, Kim, and colleagues studied both young and old golden spiny mice and compared them with closely related species.

The analysis revealed several traits that set the golden spiny mouse apart. Three were especially notable and may help explain how the species ages so well.

One ability was already known: golden spiny mice can heal skin injuries without visible scarring. The new work showed that this regenerative capacity does not disappear with age. Older golden spiny mice kept the same ability.

A second striking feature involved the thymus. In humans, this gland sits above the heart and makes a type of white blood cell that is essential for immune function. Across vertebrates, the thymus usually shrinks and deteriorates quickly as animals get older.

“Aging of the thymus actually precedes aging of all the other organs,” says Dixit. “But even in very old golden spiny mice, the thymus is structurally and functionally intact. And perhaps this gives the mice a much stronger immune system into old age.”

Dixit, Kim, and colleagues also found that older golden spiny mice did not show the expected loss of learning and memory that is commonly seen in aging animals.

“These are all of the major pathways that decline with age,” says Dixit. “Understanding how they’re maintained through age in this species could be of extreme importance.”

Keeping inflammation in check

As the body ages, chronic low-grade inflammation tends to increase, a process known as “inflammaging.” Much of that inflammation develops in fat tissue. To look for clues, Dixit, Kim, and colleagues examined gene activity in golden spiny mouse fat tissue and identified a protein called clusterin.

Clusterin helps clear misfolded proteins from the body, which can reduce their harmful effects. The protein has been associated with lower neuroinflammation in Alzheimer’s disease and longer lifespan in many mammals, including humans (people 100 years or older tend to have higher concentrations of clusterin, for instance). In older golden spiny mice, immune cells in fat tissue showed high activity in the gene that produces clusterin.

To test whether clusterin itself could produce some of these effects, Dixit, Kim, and colleagues gave the protein to standard lab mice. The treated mice showed some of the same healthy aging traits observed in golden spiny mice. They had less decline in movement and healthier organs than mice that did not receive clusterin. They also showed signs of reduced inflammaging. Similar benefits were seen when human white blood cells were exposed to clusterin.

“We think that clusterin is one of the key operators of how golden spiny mice resist age-related decline,” says Kim. “This is a small start to a big narrative.”

Evolutionary advantages

Wild animals usually do not die simply because they are old. Predators, food shortages, and infections often kill them first. For that reason, healthy aging is not usually a trait that natural selection can strongly favor, since many animals do not live long enough for those traits to improve survival across generations.

Golden spiny mice, however, have several adaptations that may help them survive long enough for healthy aging traits to matter. Unlike many mice, they are active during the day. This helps them avoid competing with other mouse species for food and reduces contact with predators that hunt at night when other mice are active.

They also tolerate toxins and can survive long periods without food by lowering their energy use. This allows them to conserve energy while still remaining active enough to search for food. Their offspring also begin life at a more advanced developmental stage than other mice, and several females help care for pups, improving their chances of survival.

“So they have many ways of avoiding death,” says Dixit. “And we think that natural selection is then able to endow those healthy aging traits, which are then passed on from generation to generation.”

Dixit, Kim, and colleagues say the evidence points to metabolic pathways in golden spiny mice that help control resistance to aging. Similar pathways may also exist in other mice and in humans, but may have become inactive for reasons that are not yet clear. Proteins such as clusterin may be able to turn some of those pathways back on.

Dixit says these pathways could eventually point toward ways to improve aging and longevity in people. “We think that these are going to be stepping stones for new drugs in the future.”


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