Sunday, 26 April 2026

Chuck's picture corner to Apl. 26, 2026

Temps are still below average, with days getting sunnier. The basement flooding is receding, now the snow has all gone and it's stopped raining. I'm gonna start moving a few of the more cold tolerant seedlings out to the barn starting tomorrow, as temps tonight are down to just a degree above freezing.

I am so enjoying the spring soundscape, birds, and now a few frogs, this morning a fog rolled by and a big boat on the St. Lawrence was sounding it's horn. Spring is arriving.

still more peppers to spread out into flats

recent transplants

the seed flats are cosmos, viola, british basil, strawberries

the first transplants are really getting going now

just a branch off of the cedar growing on the north of the house.

where I cut the branch, grown because I topped the cedar a decade ago.

window space in the barn

waiting for new arrivals,

the duck pond just back of the barn, the last few days only the male has been around, mama's nesting

went for a look at the river and saw the Osprey starting to nest.

interesting.

water level in the river is high

The Johnstown bridge to the US in the distance


Enjoy the 
Day
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/


40 Years After Chernobyl, Wolves May Be Adapting to Live With Radiation

26 April 2026, By M. Starr

The population density of wolves in the Chernobyl exclusion zone is disproportionate. 
(Film Studio Aves/Creatas Video/Getty Images)

In the isolated forests encroaching on the ruins of the Chernobyl exclusion zone, too dangerous for humans to inhabit, wolves are mysteriously thriving.

In the 40 years since the 26 April 1986 catastrophic explosion of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant's Unit Four reactor near the town of Pripyat, Ukraine, large numbers of animals have moved in to take advantage of a habitat free of humans.

Among those are the gray wolves (Canis lupus), top predators whose population density in the exclusion zone has boomed since 1986.

Now, a new genetic study might be helping scientists understand why.

The wolves, according to researchers led by evolutionary biologists Cara Love and Shane Campbell-Staton of Princeton University, have genetic differences from wolves in other parts of the world that suggest they may be developing traits that help them cope with the region's pervasive ionizing radiation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PkU57AZhWI

"There may be genetic variation within the population that may allow some individuals to be more resistant or resilient in the face of that radiation, in which case they may still get cancer at the same rate, but it may not impact their function as much as it would, you know, an individual outside of the exclusion zone," Campbell-Staton told NPR Short Wave in 2024.

What we still don't really know is how that possible resistance or resilience works.

"They're just able to take that burden better for some reason. Or it could be resistance," Campbell-Staton said, "and despite that pressure – that radiation exposure – they just don't get cancer as much."

In the decades since the nuclear disaster, humans in the region have been scarce.

The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Zone of Alienation in Ukraine and the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve across the border in Belarus have been declared off-limits to most, with special permissions required to enter, usually for research purposes.


Wolf cubs in an abandoned village in the Chernobyl exclusion zone.
 (Film Studio Aves/Creatas Video/Getty Images)



This seems to have created a sort of radioactive Garden of Eden.

Animals in droves have taken over the 4,200 square kilometers (1,620 square miles) covered by the reserves, including wild animals such as deer, bison, boar, and wolves, as well as packs of dogs descended from the pets left behind by the many thousands of evacuees from the towns and villages.

However, according to a 2015 census of animal populations in the zone, one population really stands out.

"Relative abundances of elk, roe deer, red deer, and wild boar within the Chernobyl exclusion zone are similar to those in four (uncontaminated) nature reserves in the region," writes a team led by wildlife ecologist Tatiana Deryabina of the Polesie State Radioecological Reserve.

"Wolf abundance is more than seven times higher."

The work of Love, Campbell-Staton, and their colleagues sought to answer the question of why wolf populations had ballooned while other animal populations remained relatively consistent.

In 2024, they entered the exclusion zone and collected blood samples from several wolves. They also took blood samples from wolves in Belarus, where radiation levels are lower, and from wolves in Yellowstone National Park in the US, where ionizing radiation is at Earth's normal baseline.

They found 3,180 genes that behave differently in the Chernobyl wolves compared to the other populations.

Next, they compared this genetic dataset with human genetic data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), looking for markers of 10 types of tumors that humans and canines share.


A map of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Zone of Alienation.
 (Nzeemin/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 2.0)



Crucially, they found 23 cancer-related genes that are more active in Chernobyl wolves – and these genes are associated with better survival rates for some cancers in humans. The fastest-evolving regions were in and around genes associated with anti-cancer and anti-tumor responses in mammals.

The genetic profile of the Chernobyl wolves is likely shaped by prolonged radiation exposure over many generations, the researchers said. These animals are living in a radioactive area, eating radiation-exposed herbivores that eat radiation-exposed plants, all of which accumulate over time.

"Gray wolves offer a really interesting opportunity to understand the impacts of chronic, low-dose, multigenerational exposure to ionizing radiation because of the role that they play in their ecosystems," Campbell-Staton said.


Wolves in the zone prey on other animals, such as bison and deer. 
(Film Studio Aves/Creatas Video/Getty Images)



It's not clear exactly how this genetic profile works in practice. The wolves may get less cancer, or they may have better cancer survival rates, or a combination of both.

The researchers have prepared a paper describing their findings, first detailed in a conference presentation in 2024. The hope is that, as well as yielding insights into animal resilience, this may also be relevant to human cancer research.

"We have started collaborating with cancer biologists and cancer companies to help us to interpret these data and then try to figure out if there are any directly translatable differences that may offer, like, novel therapeutic targets for cancer in humans, for instance," Campbell-Staton said.


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

Scientists Stunned After Finding Plant Thought Extinct for 60 Years

By T. Melville, U. of New South Wales, April 25, 2026

An unlikely chain of events led to the rediscovery of a plant species long presumed extinct.
 Credit: Shutterstock

Citizen science platforms, including iNaturalist, are driving major discoveries and becoming essential tools for researchers. How can we improve them further?

A plant missing for nearly 60 years has been found again in one of Australia’s most remote landscapes, and the rediscovery started with a sharp-eyed bird bander, a phone camera, and a citizen science app.

Aaron Bean was working on a vast outback property in northern Queensland, banding birds, when he noticed a plant that seemed unusual. Bean, a professional horticulturalist, photographed it and later uploaded the images to iNaturalist once he was back in phone range.

That simple upload set off an extraordinary chain of events.

iNaturalist, one of the world’s biggest citizen science platforms, now includes nearly 300 million observations from around four million users covering more than five hundred thousand species. Among the people who saw Bean’s photos was Anthony Bean, a botanist at the Queensland Herbarium.

He immediately recognized the plant as Ptilotus senarius, a species believed extinct and not recorded since the 1960s. He had even described the species himself a decade earlier.

“It was very serendipitous,” says Thomas Mesaglio from the UNSW School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, who has written about the rediscovery for the Australian Journal of Botany.

“Aaron Bean is an avid iNaturalist user who opportunistically took some photos of a few plants that were interesting on the property.”

A chance find

Ptilotus senarius is a delicate shrub with slender stems and striking purple pink flowers that resemble a feathery firework.

The plant occurs only in a narrow stretch of rugged terrain near the Gulf of Carpentaria and had not been collected since 1967. It had been assumed to be among the roughly 900 plant species worldwide considered extinct in the wild since the mid-eighteenth century.

First known field photographs of Ptilotus senarius.
 (a) Inflorescences and slender stems. 
(b) Close up of inflorescence showing one open flower. 
(c) Habit and habitat. 
Credit: Photographs by Aaron Bean, DOI: 10.1071/BT25063

Thanks to the sharp observation skills of both Aaron and Anthony Bean, along with the cooperation of a landowner who collected a specimen, the species has now been confirmed to survive. It has since been placed on the critically endangered list, opening the door for conservation efforts.

“It’s one of these situations where everything had to fall into place and there was a bit of good fortune involved,” says Mesaglio.

This case reflects a growing pattern: members of the public documenting plants and animals they encounter, uploading images to platforms such as iNaturalist, and unexpectedly contributing to rediscoveries or entirely new scientific records.

For researchers like Thomas Mesaglio, these contributions are increasingly valuable. In a country as vast and ecologically varied as Australia, it is impossible for scientists to survey every region themselves.

Access also presents a challenge. Around one-third of Australia is privately owned, which can limit where scientists are able to conduct fieldwork.

“If you are the property owner or you’re someone who has permission from the owner to be there then suddenly it opens up this whole new world,” Mesaglio says.

Farmer wants a scientific discovery

To build on this momentum, scientists are encouraging greater public participation, particularly from landowners, and emphasizing the importance of collecting detailed, high-quality observations.

In New South Wales, the Land Libraries project, run by the Biodiversity Conservation Trust, equips landowners with tools and training to document biodiversity on their land and share it through citizen science platforms.

Mesaglio supports initiatives like this, not only because they expand access to otherwise unreachable areas, but also because they foster a deeper connection between people and their local environments.

“Engaging landholders themselves with science and the natural world and getting them more passionate about diversity makes them far more likely to be interested and invested in protecting that diversity,” Mesaglio says.

For newcomers to iNaturalist, Mesaglio advises capturing as much detail as possible. A single close-up image of a flower may not be enough, especially when many species share similar features. Broader context, such as images of the full plant, bark, and leaves, can make identification far more reliable.
Improving the dataset

He also highlights the importance of recording details that may not be visible in photographs, including soil conditions, nearby plant species, and whether pollinators were present.

Even characteristics such as scent can provide important clues for identification.

“The more information you can provide and the more context you can provide, the more potential uses that record will have in the future.”

In separate research, Mesaglio found that iNaturalist data has been cited in scientific studies across 128 countries and thousands of species, illustrating its growing importance in research.

As more observations are added and data quality continues to improve, Mesaglio expects that many more discoveries are still waiting to be uncovered.


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

Saturday, 25 April 2026

Argentina Released 3 Jaguars Into a Dead Wetland — What They Did With Mud and Reeds Was Unbelievable

Apex Origin, Apr 13, 2026

Argentina reintroduced three jaguars into a lifeless wetland—and what happened next shocked everyone. Using nothing but mud, reeds, and instinct, these apex predators began transforming the ecosystem in ways scientists didn’t expect.

This is the unbelievable story of nature restoring itself.




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


Breakthrough to Restore Aging Joints Could Help Treat Osteoarthritis

24 April 2026, By D. Nield

(angkhan/Canva)

A study in mice traced the loss of cartilage that accompanies aging to a single protein, pointing to treatments that may one day restore mobility and ease discomfort in seniors.

The protein, called 15-PGDH, has been extensively linked to aging.

It becomes more abundant as we get older and interferes with the molecules that repair tissue and reduce inflammation.

That led researchers at Stanford University to consider whether 15-PGDH might be involved in osteoarthritis, in which joint stress leads to the breakdown of cartilage collagen, causing inflammation and pain.

In tests on old mice, knee cartilage that had previously worn down thickened following the introduction of a 15-PGDH inhibitor. In similar tests on young, injured mice, the inhibitor protected against the typical effects of injury-induced osteoarthritis.

When the researchers induced the equivalent of an anterior cruciate ligament injury in mice and subsequently applied the treatment, osteoarthritis didn't develop as would normally be expected.

Treated aged cartilage (far right, stained red) looked much more like young, healthy cartilage (far left, stained red). 
(Singla et al., Science, 2025)

Previous attempts at cartilage regeneration included the use of stem cells, which were no longer necessary when 15-PGDH was inhibited. Instead, chondrocytes that make and maintain cartilage were being transformed into a healthier, more functional state.

"This is a new way of regenerating adult tissue, and it has significant clinical promise for treating arthritis due to aging or injury," Stanford University microbiologist Helen Blau said in November when the research was published.

"We were looking for stem cells, but they are clearly not involved. It's very exciting."

Treated mice had a steadier gait, suggesting they were experiencing less pain, and were observed to place more weight on their injured legs – signs that the cartilage restoration improved physical health.

The same experiment was also conducted on human tissue samples from people undergoing knee replacement surgery. Again, there were clear signs of regeneration, with the cartilage becoming stiffer and showing less inflammation.

"The mechanism is quite striking and really shifted our perspective about how tissue regeneration can occur," explained orthopedic scientist Nidhi Bhutani.

"It's clear that a large pool of already existing cells in cartilage are changing their gene expression patterns.

"And by targeting these cells for regeneration, we may have an opportunity to have a bigger overall impact clinically."

While there's still plenty of work to do, this could eventually lead to effective treatments to roll back the damage caused by arthritis or aging in general. We could be heading towards a future without hip and knee replacements.

Given how common osteoarthritis is, how painful it can be, and how much it limits mobility and day-to-day activities, numerous research efforts are underway.

It's known that obesity, metabolic disorders such as diabetes, and inflammation are major contributors to osteoarthritis progression. Intriguingly, a 2026 study found that semaglutide appears to protect joints through a mechanism that's not about easing pressure through weight loss.

Instead, the team from China and the US found that the drug reprograms the metabolism of cells that synthesize and maintain healthy cartilage, allowing them to generate more energy.

In mice and humans with obesity and osteoarthritis, treatment with semaglutide reduced pain and decreased cartilage degeneration. Mice also had fewer bone spurs and less severe lesions in their joint membranes.

When the researchers compared cartilage from treated and untreated mice, they detected changes in the expression of nearly 8,300 proteins.

They included a 'pair-feeding' control group that ate the same amount as the semaglutide-treated mice. Even with comparable weight changes, the pair-feeding group did not receive the same cartilage protection, suggesting a weight-loss-independent effect on the joint itself.

Their work adds to growing evidence that GLP-1 drugs may have benefits beyond weight loss, and it sharpens the search for new osteoarthritis treatments that target metabolism inside the joint.

We don't yet have anything that tackles the root cause, despite promising progress. Besides replacing the joints affected, current treatment options for osteoarthritis are limited to pain management.

But even more positive news on osteoarthritis has appeared this year.

Research (which is yet to be published or peer-reviewed) suggests that injecting a carefully engineered, slow-release drug-delivery system into the damaged joint can coax the body's own cartilage and bone cells to carry out an effective repair job in just a few weeks.

This is based on ongoing animal experiments, and while it will take some time for actual treatments to be developed, the findings are encouraging.

"In two years, we were able to go from a moonshot idea to developing these therapies to demonstrating that they reverse osteoarthritis in animals," said chemical and biological engineer Stephanie Bryant, from the University of Colorado Boulder.

"Our goal is not just to treat pain and halt progression, but to end this disease."

Bryant and the team behind that treatment are hopeful that clinical trials can get underway within the next 18 months.

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

The next steps for the Stanford-led research could also include a clinical trial. A previous trial of a 15-PGDH blocker to combat muscle weakness didn't raise any red flags for health and safety, which should speed up the trial process for similar drugs.

"We are very excited about this potential breakthrough," said Blau.

"Imagine regrowing existing cartilage and avoiding joint replacement."



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

Friday, 24 April 2026

The Neanderthal “Love Story” Isn’t What It Seems

BY L. SLIMAK, U. OF TOULOUSE, APRIL 23, 2026

Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis) were a distinct group of archaic humans who lived across Europe and parts of western Asia until about 40,000 years ago. They were well adapted to cold environments, with robust bodies, large brains, and sophisticated tool use, and they engaged in behaviors such as hunting large game, caring for the injured, and possibly symbolic practices. Genetic evidence shows that Neanderthals interbred with modern humans, leaving traces of their DNA in many populations today. 
Credit: Shutterstock

New interpretations suggest that Neanderthal and Sapiens interactions were shaped by biology and social structure, not simple romantic preference.

Media portrayals have turned a nuanced genetic finding into a narrative of prehistoric romance, despite the research offering only cautious, model-based explanations for patterns in Neanderthal DNA. When viewed alongside archaeological and anthropological evidence, these patterns may instead reflect complex social structures, biological constraints, and potentially unequal interactions between Neanderthals and Sapiens.

Media coverage has quickly framed the issue as resolved. El País claims that Neanderthal men “chose” Sapiens women. Science journal refers to a “partner preference.” National Geographic envisions the “Romeos” of prehistory. The Telegraph suggests that Neanderthals “had designs on” Sapiens women.

In a matter of hours, a statistical result was transformed into a story about desire. The supposed “sex lives” of ancient humans became an accessible and clickable narrative. This shift is significant because it converts a technical pattern in genetic inheritance into a story centered on emotions, attraction, and imagined relationships in prehistory.

The result is a familiar scene: a Neanderthal “Romeo” winning over a Sapiens “Juliet.” In this framing, human origins are recast as a kind of romantic drama.

Back in the day, how did Neanderthal men get on with Sapiens women? 
Credit: From Néandertal nu. A comic book by Frédéric Bihel and Ludovic Slimak/©Odile Jacob, 2026

However, the research published in Science does not support this interpretation. Instead, it examines a well-established genetic pattern. In modern humans outside Africa, Neanderthal DNA is unevenly distributed, appearing more often on non sex chromosomes and being much rarer on the X chromosome.

To explain this contrast, the authors compare several hypotheses: natural selection, sex-biased demographic processes, or partner preference. Their conclusion remains cautious: partner preference is one possible parsimonious mechanism, but it excludes neither demographic bias nor more complex scenarios.

The study, therefore, shows neither an observed attraction nor any direct preference. It proposes something much narrower: within the space of models it tests, certain scenarios make an asymmetry of the Neanderthal male/Sapiens female type more plausible. In such a scheme, Neanderthal DNA can be transmitted widely through the ordinary chromosomes, while the Neanderthal X chromosome circulates less easily, since a father passes it on only to his daughters. This is not trivial. But neither is it the direct observation of attraction between populations, and showing that a statistical model can produce a genetic pattern is not the same as proving that this model was historically true.

What the X chromosome does not tell us about social life

As soon as we move from genetic data to their historical and social implications, interpretations become fragile. Chromosomes do not carry a faithful memory of our ancestors’ social lives. The fact that Neanderthal DNA is rare on the X chromosome does not, in itself, allow us to reconstruct Paleolithic social organization or the sexual preferences of these populations.


The cannibalism enigma for Neanderthals. Extract taken from ‘Néandertal nu’, comic book by Frédéric Bihel and Ludovic Slimak. The text reads: “Or was it broken, smashed by the members of the group, crushed, because it embodied the part of the enemy that could come back to haunt us?”
 Credit: Éditions Odile Jacob, 2026



When two closely related groups interbreed, the sex chromosomes do not behave like the others. They are often more sensitive to incompatibilities and to natural selection. Take the case of a Neanderthal father and a Sapiens mother. Their child does indeed receive Neanderthal DNA in many of its chromosomes. But the father’s X chromosome is not passed on to sons, only to daughters. It therefore circulates less easily from one generation to the next.

In addition, in hybridizations between closely related groups, males are often biologically more fragile, with greater problems of survival or fertility. This is why the sex chromosomes, and the X chromosome in particular, can eliminate DNA from the other group more quickly. A depletion of Neanderthal DNA on the X chromosome may, therefore, reflect a classic biological phenomenon, not the lingering trace of an erotic choice.

The signal observed today may, therefore, have several causes. The authors themselves do not present “partner preference” as direct proof, but as the most parsimonious explanation within their statistical model. They make it clear that it excludes neither sex-biased demographic processes nor more complex scenarios in which natural selection, differential migrations, and sex asymmetries may all have acted together.

Genetics detects transmissions. It does not reconstruct a society. It tells us neither whether these unions involved alliances, captures, asymmetrical exchanges, violence, or choice, nor who decided, nor under what constraints women and men circulated among groups. Between a chromosomal pattern and a scene of life, an entire world is still missing: the world of social constructions, rules on residence, hierarchies, conflicts, and asymmetries between collectives.

For all their power, genes do not speak of past loves. They speak only of what survived.

What El Sidrón changes in the discussion

This is where archaeology and cultural anthropology become decisive again, because genes are not enough to reconstruct the social scene based on encounters between Neanderthals and Sapiens. We must, therefore, leave the Science article behind and rely on other kinds of evidence to get to grips with the structure of Neanderthal groups indirectly. In this respect, the site of El Sidrón, in northern Spain, provides a particularly strong basis which we can lean on.


Néandertal nu, published by Éditions Odile Jacob, 2026. 
Credit: Frédéric Bihel and Ludovic Slimak



Researchers identified bones there belonging to at least twelve Neanderthals. The most striking point concerns the adults. Three males shared the same mitochondrial lineage, whereas three females each had a different one. Yet mitochondrial DNA is transmitted only through mothers.

From this, the researchers drew a simple interpretation with far-reaching implications: the males would have remained within their group, while the women would have circulated more between groups. In other words, El Sidrón is compatible with a patrilocal system.

The idea is decisive. Any human population needs exchanges with the outside world in order to reproduce itself over time. In a great many human societies, this circulation passes first through women, who leave their group of origin more often than men do. More generally, female dispersal and the tendency for males to remain in their natal group also constitute a predominant pattern among the great apes.

To see in Neanderthals a signal compatible with greater female mobility therefore points to a deep behavioral tendency, one that runs from primates to human societies. Here, female mobility between groups is thus the most plausible explanation for the pattern observed. This therefore provides us, for once with a concrete foothold on Neanderthal social organization.

And this deep tendency towards female dispersal changes a great deal. From that point on, an entire society becomes thinkable: exchanges of women between groups, asymmetrical integrations, reciprocal or non-reciprocal circulation, alliances, captures, or more brutal forms of intergroup relations. From then on, the question is no longer simply which chromosome survived, but in what kind of society these transmissions took place. This possibility alone is enough to skew the interpretation of the Science paper, because the genetic asymmetry observed may then reflect a social environment, yet to be explored, structured by rules on residence, circulation, and exchange.
‘Neanderthal, Sapiens: I love you… me neither’

Bringing the constraints of cultural anthropology back into biomolecular analysis allows other reversals to emerge. In Belgium, the site of Goyet yielded the remains of four Neanderthal females and two immature individuals. Clear-cut marks are present on five of them. The demographic profile of this assemblage is too singular to be explained by ordinary mortality.

Isotopic signatures suggest a non-local geographic origin. The authors advance the hypothesis of conflict-related cannibalism, a form of predation targeting females from neighboring groups. If this interpretation is correct, it tells us something brutal. Here, relations between Neanderthal groups belonged not to a sentimental world, but to one of capture, killing, and the consumption of the other.

The evidence can indeed be read in this way. But this case also calls for caution. The sample is small. The excavations are old. Spatial data are lacking. The identity of the local predatory group is not directly observed. Here again, the traces do not speak with a common voice.

At that point, another reversal becomes possible. If we step away for a moment from biomolecular reading alone and return to social analysis, a patrilocal society changes the entire meaning of the body and what it represents in a society. Women come from other groups, but in worlds where female mobility is a common pattern, from the great apes to human societies, interpreting this signal immediately becomes more subtle.

Evidence of cannibalism affecting women originating from neighboring regions may, therefore, be read as simple predation upon outsiders. But another interpretation cannot be ruled out: that of an internal, perhaps ritualized, treatment of women who came from elsewhere but by then had been fully integrated into the group. Biology and genetics cannot tell us whether an individual born elsewhere remains a stranger to us or whether they become a full member of our own social environment.

Let us return, then, to the Science study. This is where we must be very precise about what it actually demonstrates. The sign of Sapiens’ ancestry as suggested by the authors, refers to a very ancient episode, around 250,000 years ago. Their claim, therefore, is not based on direct observation of an admixture event that left any traces on present-day humans. It assumes that the same genetic mechanism would still have been at work nearly 200,000 years later, at the time of the final contacts between 

Sapiens and Neanderthals.

If we take into account the very strong tendency towards female mobility, a paradox appears, one that places the extrapolation proposed by the Science article under deep tension. If Sapiens women had, in fact, regularly entered Neanderthal groups, we would expect to see a recent genetic signal of Sapiens ancestry persisting among the last Neanderthals. But this is not what the available evidence shows. Among the earliest ancient Sapiens in Eurasia, Neanderthal ancestry is constant.

By contrast, the Neanderthal genomes available so far document no recent Sapiens contribution within the last Neanderthal populations. The genetic flow documented at the time they last came into contact, therefore, operates in only one direction, from Neanderthal to Sapiens.

Another anthropological hypothesis then becomes thinkable. In a patrilocal world, the circulation of women does not just organize reproduction; it also sets up alliances between groups. If exchange ceases to be reciprocal, the entire relationship changes. The following offer may seem harsh, but it captures the paradox well:

“I take your sister, but I won’t give you mine.”

This should not be read as a mechanical description of every individual encounter. But the offer enables us to formulate a possible structure: that of an unequal relationship between two human worlds, perhaps even a durable social asymmetry between the Neanderthal and Sapiens groups. It was this link between one-way genetic flow, patrilocality, and the non-reciprocity of exchange that led me, in Néandertal nu in 2022, to formulate the singular paradox: “Neanderthal, Sapiens: I love you… me neither.”

Placed back within this framework, the meaning of the molecular signatures shifts. The asymmetry no longer reads as a “fossil trace” indicating a preference, but as one possible effect of a structurally unequal relationship between human populations. Add to this the fact that sex chromosomes eliminate certain genetic contributions faster, and the picture changes again. What we thought we were reading as a “romance” may in fact be more deeply rooted in asymmetrical social structures.

What genes do not know about humans

Projecting our own narratives of desire, taste, and preference onto the very long history of humanity allows us to remain within our zone of comfort. But the reality of confrontation with alterity is always a harsher affair. Our values possess no spontaneous universality.

They cannot serve as the foundation for imagining worlds vanished from existence. Nor can encounters between Neanderthals and Sapiens be reduced to past loves or wars merely transposed from our modern imagination. Researchers are trying to get closer to social structures, forms of exchange, boundaries between groups, the quality of alliances, ways of building a society.

But to do this, aligning chromosomes or isotopes is not enough. Paleoanthropology must regain its glory as a science that’s not only about bones, but that’s an ethological, cultural, and social study of bygone human societies.

The difficulty, then, is not to choose between supposedly solid disciplines and supposedly fragile ones. It is to learn how to make different fields of knowledge speak to one another, each working in its own way to analyze traces of humanity that are incomplete.

Perhaps that is the real lesson. Chromosomes tell us far more than a mere love story between populations: they lead us to far larger questions. Who enters the group? Under what conditions? According to what rules of circulation? Under what reciprocity, or non-reciprocity? Often, within what violence? And above all, what changes in people’s status?

The body, its skin, its bones, its genes, its isotopes will never tell us anything about the reality of the individual within the wider society. The human being is a creature that cannot be reduced to its matter.

Among humans, who we consider a “stranger” firmly remains in the “eye of the beholder”.

So yes, it is indeed a matter of taste. But not necessarily in the sense understood by major media outlets. What newspapers have turned into an affair of sentimental preference may, in reality, belong to something far deeper and, occasionally, regarding certain forms of cannibalism; far more literal.



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

Men vs. Women: Scientists Uncover Dramatic Differences in How the Immune System Ages

By Barcelona Supercomputing Center, April 23, 2026

Men and women show striking differences in how their immune systems function and age, influencing susceptibility to infections, cancer, and autoimmune disease. A large-scale, cell-by-cell analysis now reveals that immune aging follows distinct biological paths in each sex, uncovering specific cells and genes behind these shifts. Credit: Shutterstock

Men and women experience immune aging differently, affecting disease risks. New data-driven research identifies key biological differences, supporting more personalized healthcare.

Men and women do not age the same way at the level of the immune system, and those differences may shape who gets sick, when, and why.

Scientists have long known that men are generally more prone to infections and many cancers, while women tend to have stronger immune defenses and respond better to vaccines. But that advantage comes with a tradeoff. A more active immune system is also more likely to misfire, which helps explain why roughly 80% of autoimmune diseases occur in women.

What has remained unclear is how these differences evolve over time. A new study from the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS), published in Nature Aging, now offers one of the most detailed answers yet. By tracking changes in the immune system across adulthood, researchers found that aging follows distinct biological paths in men and women, down to the level of individual cells and genes.

Women’s Immune Aging vs. Men’s Cancer Risk

The findings show that women experience more pronounced immune changes with age, including a rise in inflammatory immune cells. This may help explain why autoimmune diseases are more common in women, especially later in life, and why some inflammatory conditions worsen after menopause.


BSC researchers Aida Ripoll-Cladelles (left), Marta Melé (center), and Maria Sopena-Rios (right) in front of the MareNostrum 5 supercomputer. 
Credit: Mario Ejarque / BSC-CNS



In contrast, men show fewer overall changes in immune aging. However, researchers observed an increase in certain blood cells with pre-leukemic alterations, which may help explain why some blood cancers are more common in older men.

These insights came from analyzing blood samples from nearly 1,000 people across the full span of adulthood. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, a method that examines each cell individually, researchers measured the activity of about 20,000 genes in more than one million blood cells. This approach revealed how the immune system evolves and highlighted clear differences between sexes.

Single-Cell Technology and Data Analysis Advances

“Until now, most studies analyzed the immune system based on the average of many cells at once, which makes it difficult to capture the progressive effects of aging. With cell-by-cell analysis and a much larger sample, we were able to detect these patterns and compare them robustly between biological sexes,” explained Maria Sopena-Rios, researcher at BSC and first co-author of the study.

Handling such a massive dataset required advanced computational tools. The team relied on the MareNostrum 5 supercomputer to process and analyze the data, enabling a level of detail that would not have been possible with standard computing resources.

Although earlier research suggested that immune aging differs by sex, women have often been underrepresented in studies. This project is the first to analyze a large number of samples with balanced representation of men and women, which proved essential for uncovering these patterns.

Addressing Bias and Advancing Inclusive Research

“Many studies still do not take sex into account in their analyses, or directly only use data from men, so they leave key questions unanswered. Our research was born precisely from this need and combines a scientific outlook with a sex perspective, inclusive data, and great computational power,” highlighted Marta Melé, leader of the Transcriptomics and Functional Genomics group at BSC and director of the study.

These findings lay the groundwork for treating biological sex as a key factor in precision medicine for aging. By identifying sex-specific immune cells and biomarkers, researchers can begin developing prevention, diagnosis, and treatment strategies tailored to both women and men, helping create more personalized and equitable healthcare as populations age.

“The immune system plays a fundamental role throughout the organism; therefore, the differences we observed have a very important generalized impact on the entire body. Better understanding the aging of the immune system can help us understand processes that go beyond the blood and affect multiple tissues,” noted Aida Ripoll-Cladellas, researcher at BSC and first co-author of the study.

The researchers conclude that treating aging as a uniform process across the population overlooks important biological differences. Recognizing how immune aging varies between men and women will be key to improving immune health and supporting healthier aging for everyone.



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Eating Chili Peppers Linked to Longer Life

BY SCITECHDAILY.COM, APRIL 23, 2026

Large population studies across multiple countries have found that people who regularly eat chili peppers tend to have lower rates of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer. Scientists are investigating compounds like capsaicin for their potential roles in supporting metabolic and vascular health. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Research suggests a potential link between spicy food consumption and reduced mortality.

Spicy food may do more than wake up your taste buds. Research suggests it could also be linked to a longer life.

A 2017 study from the Larner College of Medicine at the University of Vermont found that Americans who ate hot red chili peppers had a 13 percent lower adjusted risk of death overall than those who did not. The research, published in PLOS ONE, analyzed data from 16,179 adults in the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (NHANES) III, a nationally representative U.S. dataset. Participants, who were surveyed between 1988 and 1994, were followed for a median of 18.9 years.

During 273,877 person-years of follow-up, researchers recorded 4,946 deaths. Overall mortality was 21.6 percent among people who ate hot red chili peppers, compared with 33.6 percent among those who did not. After adjusting for differences in age, lifestyle, and health factors, chili pepper consumption remained associated with a modest but statistically significant reduction in the risk of death.

Expanding Global Research

Since then, more research has pointed in a similar direction. In 2020, a large pooled analysis presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions reviewed four major studies involving more than 570,000 people in the United States, Italy, China, and Iran.

Compared with people who rarely or never ate chili peppers, regular consumers had a 26 percent lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease, a 23 percent lower risk of death from cancer, and a 25 percent lower risk of death from any cause.

“We were surprised to find that in these previously published studies, regular consumption of chili pepper was associated with an overall risk-reduction of all cause, CVD, and cancer mortality,” said senior author Bo Xu, M.D., a cardiologist at Cleveland Clinic. At the same time, Xu stressed that the findings do not prove chili peppers directly help people live longer, and that more rigorous studies are still needed.

More Recent Findings and Nuanced Effects

Another study, published in 2024 in the Chinese Medical Journal, reported more modest but still notable results. Researchers followed about 486,000 Chinese adults for roughly 12 years and found that those who ate spicy food at least once a week had a slightly lower risk of vascular disease overall, particularly ischemic heart disease and major coronary events.

The reduction was small, about 3 percent to 5 percent, and the main analysis did not show a clear significant link for stroke. The association appeared stronger in younger individuals, people living in rural areas, and those with generally healthier lifestyles.

Research suggests spicy foods may have some health benefits, particularly for heart health, but the effects are modest and not definitive. Because these studies are observational, they can show associations but cannot prove cause and effect, and people who eat more chili peppers may also have healthier lifestyles overall.

Possible Mechanisms and Limitations

One possible explanation involves capsaicin, the compound that gives chili peppers their heat, which has been linked to anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anticancer, and blood sugar-regulating effects.

Researchers have also suggested that capsaicin may support cholesterol metabolism, improve blood vessel function, reduce oxidative stress, and influence the gut microbiome. The 2017 study pointed to Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) channels as a possible mechanism, since these receptors respond to capsaicin and may affect processes related to metabolism and circulation.

However, key uncertainties remain, as studies differ widely in how they define spicy food, how much is consumed, and the types of peppers or dishes involved, making it unclear how much or how often chili peppers might be most beneficial.


The Life of Earth
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Thursday, 23 April 2026

Mysterious Golden Orb at The Bottom of The Ocean Finally Identified

23 April 2026, By M. Starr

The mystery orb found at the bottom of the Gulf of Alaska. 
(NOAA Ocean Exploration, Seascape Alaska)

In 2023, in water so deep that sunlight never reaches it, scientists operating a remote vehicle found a mystery at the bottom of the ocean.

Tightly adhered to a rock was an orb-shaped mass of golden material that shimmered in the bright lights of the ROV Deep Discoverer, appearing to be something no one had ever seen before.

Initial speculation seemed to favor that the mystery object was the abandoned egg case of some deep-dwelling creature. Now, after three years, we finally have answers – and it's not what scientists initially suspected.

But it's still deeply weird: The shining blob of tissue was a chunk of 'skin' left by a glorious sea anemone, possibly discarded when the animal either picked up and moved or tried to reproduce.

Painstaking work even revealed the species: Relicanthus daphneae, a deep-sea cnidarian with tentacles that can grow more than 2 meters (6.6 feet) long.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUXrvirtdB8

The initial discovery of the blob, measuring around 10 centimeters (4 inches) across with a hole in one side, had scientists simultaneously baffled and delighted. It was found stuck to a rock at the bottom of the Gulf of Alaska, around 3,250 meters (about 2 miles) below the ocean's surface.

At those depths, the ocean is very cold, very dark, and the ambient pressure is crushing – significant barriers to human exploration.

Scientists aboard the NOAA ship Okeanos Explorer came across the mass while observing a live feed as they controlled the remotely operated vehicle Deep Discoverer.


A close-up view of the blob in the Smithsonian Institution laboratory. (NOAA Fisheries)



"I don't know what to make of that," said one of the researchers on a livestream of the expedition back in 2023.

"It's definitely got a big old hole in it, so something either tried to get in or tried to get out," another speculated.

"I just hope when we poke it, something doesn't decide to come out," one researcher said. "It's like the beginning of a horror movie."

They carefully collected the specimen using the ROV's robotic arm and took it to a laboratory for testing, expecting it would either turn out to be an egg case or a dead sponge or coral. Here, the mystery deepened.

"We work on hundreds of different samples and I suspected that our routine processes would clarify the mystery," explains zoologist Allen Collins of NOAA Fisheries' National Systematics Laboratory.

"But this turned into a special case that required focused efforts and expertise of several different individuals. This was a complex mystery that required morphological, genetic, deep-sea, and bioinformatics expertise to solve."


A specimen of R. daphneae clinging to a rock, observed during a 2016 NOAA expedition to the Mariana Islands.
 (NOAA Ocean Exploration, Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas)



The researchers found that the specimen did not have the typical anatomy expected in an animal.

Instead, it was fibrous and packed with stinging cells called cnidocytes that are typically seen in corals and anemones. The specific cnidocytes found in the blob were spirocysts, which are found only in the Hexacorallia class of cnidarians.

However, at this point, the investigation ran into a snag.

Superficial DNA testing was inconclusive because the blob was riddled with other microscopic organisms. It was only by sequencing the whole, deep genome that the researchers landed on a close match – R. daphneae, first described in 2006.

An R. daphneae attached to the stalk of a dead sea sponge, observed on a 2016 expedition.
 (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

The blob, the researchers explained, is a cuticle left behind by one of these anemones. The cuticle is a thin, multilayered coating secreted by the outer tissues of some anemones, forming flexible, sheet-like structures that can detach and remain on the seafloor.

Its main ingredient appears to be chitin, the tough, fibrous material that makes up hard parts of other organisms, such as beetle cases and fungal cell walls.

"Observations of animals in situ suggest that cuticle is left behind as the animal moves, suggesting that the animal can detach from it," the researchers write.

Collected specimens of R. daphneae rarely have a cuticle; this ability to move on and leave it behind might explain why. The abandoned cuticle might also be a clue to how the animal reproduces – a process that is difficult to understand in creatures living in such an inaccessible habitat.

"Although genetic and morphological data confirm the identification of the taxon in question, explanation of the golden orb morphology remains a vexing issue," the researchers write.

"One possible interpretation is that the orb is a remnant of incomplete asexual reproduction. Some sea anemones are capable of pedal laceration, whereby the base of the polyp is abandoned, and the upper portion of the animal moves away, leaving a stump of the body that then regrows a new polyp."

Whether this is the case for R. daphneae is still unknown, but even if it is an incomplete reproduction, it's still conducive to life in the inhospitable depths.


A closeup of the 'orb' attached to the rock on which it was found.
 (NOAA Ocean Exploration, Seascape Alaska)



The sheer volume of microorganisms found on the cuticle suggests it may act as a microscale hotspot of microbial activity, where microbes feed on and break down the decaying tissue, one key part of the nitrogen cycle.

So there you have it. An anemone shucked its 'skin', giving a free lunch to the microbes.

"This is why we keep exploring – to unlock the secrets of the deep and better understand how the ocean and its resources can drive economic growth, strengthen our national security, and sustain our planet," acting director of NOAA Ocean Exploration Captain William Mowitt says.



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

Why Are Giant Ants Letting Tiny Ants Crawl All Over Them?

By Smithsonian, April 22, 2026

In the deserts of southeastern Arizona, several cleaner ants tend to a harvester ant by licking tiny particles off the larger ant’s body. 
Credit: © Mark Moffett, Minden Pictures

Tiny cone ants in Arizona have been seen cleaning much larger harvester ants, even inside their open jaws. The unusual behavior may benefit both species and has never been recorded before.

In the deserts of southeastern Arizona, researchers have observed an unusual interaction between two very different ants. Large harvester ants gather outside the nests of much smaller cone ants, holding their serrated jaws open. Instead of showing aggression, the smaller ants climb onto the larger ones and begin licking and nibbling their bodies, including sensitive areas. Scientists say this is the first recorded case of one ant species cleaning a much larger ant.

The behavior was detailed this week in the journal Ecology and Evolution and was documented by entomologist Mark Moffett, a research associate at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. He likens the discovery to marine “cleaner fish” that remove parasites and debris from larger fish, even from species that could easily eat them.

“This new ant species is the insect equivalent of cleaner fish in the ocean,” Moffett said. “The potentially dangerous harvester ants even permit the visitors to groom between their open jaws.”
How the Behavior Was Discovered

Moffett, who studies the social behavior of ants and other animals, first noticed the interaction while visiting a research station in Arizona’s Chiricahua Mountains. One morning, while watching harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) leave their nests to collect seeds, he saw something unusual. A few ants stood completely still, which is not typical for these constantly moving insects.

Looking closer with his camera, he realized those ants were covered with tiny cone ants.

“Given the usual tendencies of ants, I first assumed that I was observing aggression,” Moffett said. “But the larger ants seemed to seek the attention of the smaller ants by first visiting their nests and then allowing the small ants to lick and nibble all over them.”

Step-by-Step Ant Cleaning Behavior

Over several days, Moffett recorded at least 90 harvester ants interacting with the smaller cone ants. These cone ants belong to an undescribed species in the genus Dorymyrmex. He photographed many of the encounters to document how the process unfolds.

A harvester ant typically approaches a cone ant nest and stands upright with her mandibles open (all worker ants are female). Within about a minute, a cone ant emerges and climbs onto the larger ant. In some cases, up to five cone ants gather and begin grooming.

The interactions can last less than 15 seconds or continue for more than five minutes. During this time, the cone ants use their tongue-like mouthparts to clean the harvester ant’s body, even reaching inside the open jaws. The larger ant remains still and does not attack. When the session ends, the harvester ant shakes off the smaller ants, sometimes flipping onto her back before quickly moving away.
A Rare Example of Ant Cooperation

Moffett had never encountered anything like this in ants or other insects. The closest comparison comes from the ocean, where larger fish visit specific locations to be cleaned by smaller fish and shrimp. Similar to the cone ants, some of these marine cleaners even work inside the mouths of their hosts.
What Do the Ants Gain?

Scientists are still working to understand why this behavior occurs. Moffett suggests the cone ants may be feeding on tiny particles they remove from the harvester ants’ bodies. These could include small, energy-rich fragments, possibly from the seeds the larger ants collect. Notably, the cone ants only interacted with living harvester ants and ignored dead ones placed near their nests.

There may also be benefits for the harvester ants. While they already groom each other to remove debris, spores, and parasites, the smaller cone ants might be able to clean areas that are otherwise hard to reach. Future research could determine whether this behavior reduces infections or affects the microbiome of either species.

A Reminder to Look Closely at Nature

Moffett believes this discovery shows how much remains to be learned from observing animals in their natural environments.

“All kinds of amazing discoveries are still there to be made outside of the lab,” Moffett said. “Finding new species and behaviors in nature often requires us to pay close attention to the small things—including the ants.”



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