Tuesday, 28 April 2026

 Michael Button History,  26 Apr 2026

For most of human history, survival demanded something from us. Memory. Awareness. Social intelligence. The ability to think under pressure. If you lost those skills… you didn’t make it. 

But today, we don’t need them anymore. We’ve outsourced memory to devices. Navigation to GPS. Even thinking is starting to be handed over to algorithms and AI. So what happens when the very skills that built civilisation… are no longer required? 

In this video, we compare two humans separated by thousands of years - and the result is uncomfortable. Because this isn’t just about the past. It’s about what we’re becoming.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_Q-o0z8zfw


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


Common Food Preservative Linked to Rising Suicide Deaths Among Young People

By BMJ Group, April 28, 2026


A widely used food preservative is increasingly linked to suicide deaths in the UK, particularly among younger individuals and men, according to a multi-year forensic analysis. 
Credit: Shutterstock



Sodium nitrite-related suicides are increasing in the UK, especially among young people, prompting calls for regulation and better safeguards.

A widely available food preservative is emerging as a disturbing factor in a growing number of suicide deaths in the UK — particularly among young people. Researchers analyzing cases from the past five years have identified a sharp rise in incidents involving sodium nitrite, a common curing agent, raising urgent questions about how easily it can be accessed and misused.

The trend is especially pronounced among boys and young men, who account for the majority of cases. The findings, published in BMJ Public Health, suggest that what was once considered a routine household or industrial chemical is now playing a troubling role in preventable deaths.

Researchers say there is an urgent need for public health officials to reassess the unrestricted availability of this substance to prevent further avoidable deaths.

Although suicide rates in the UK have generally declined since the early 1990s, recent data suggest a reversal of this trend. This increase appears to coincide with growing reports worldwide of suicides involving sodium nitrite poisoning.

Investigating Sodium Nitrite Poisoning Cases

To examine whether sodium nitrite is contributing to suicide deaths in the UK, researchers reviewed case records submitted by coroners, forensic pathologists, and police between March 2019 and August 2024. These cases were analyzed by the main UK laboratory responsible for measuring nitrite and its oxidized form, nitrate, in postmortem samples.

During this period, the lab processed 274 samples linked to 201 suspected cases of intentional or accidental poisoning across the UK, Ireland, and Gibraltar.

Most cases were reported in Greater London, South East England, Ireland, and the Midlands. However, the researchers caution that this distribution may reflect differences in reporting awareness rather than actual regional rates.


Sodium nitrite is a chemical compound commonly used as a food preservative, particularly in processed meats, where it helps prevent bacterial growth and maintains color and flavor.
 Credit: Shutterstock



Increase in Cases and Data Scope

Case numbers rose sharply after 2019, which was the first year testing for nitrite and nitrate became available.

The final dataset included only cases approved by coroners, representing 82% (164) of all cases received during the study period.

The average age of individuals was 28. Ages ranged from 14 to 74 among males and 17 to 82 among females. Nearly three-quarters (71%) of cases involved younger groups, including Gen Z (33%; born 1981-96) and Millennials (38%; born 1997-2012, though counted only up to 2005 to separate minors, who made up 4% of cases).
Demographics and Gender Patterns

Men accounted for the majority of cases, with 109 compared to 52 women. In nearly every age group, more than half of the cases involved men. The only exception was the oldest group (Silent generation, born 1928-45), which included a single case involving a woman.

In 87% of cases, blood levels of nitrite and nitrate were about 100 times higher than normal physiological levels, strongly suggesting intentional ingestion.

The researchers also note important limitations. Testing for nitrite and nitrate is not routinely required in all suspected suicide cases, making it difficult to determine the true number of deaths linked to this substance.

Limitations and Underreporting Concerns

“It is therefore likely that the cases included here represent a substantial underestimate of the actual incidence. Secondly, the interval between death and sample receipt varied considerably, introducing the possibility that delays may have affected the accuracy of the biochemical measurements,” they say.

Despite these limitations, the increase in cases among younger individuals, who are often highly familiar with digital tools, is troubling.

“Intentional poisoning has contributed to these recent increases, and at least in the USA, this rise has been partly attributed to the use (and availability) of sodium nitrite,” they point out.

Online Access and Emerging Risks

“This trend has emerged alongside freely accessible online information detailing how sodium nitrite can be obtained and used, disseminated both under the guise of providing mental health support and for more explicitly harmful purposes,” they explain.

The findings point to the need for immediate action. “Collectively, these findings establish unequivocally that use of sodium nitrite in the UK as a method of suicide is both substantial and concerning,” they write.

“Our data provide strong support for the suggestion that the improved digital literacy of younger people enables access to illicit online material promoting suicide practices and lends further support for calls for tighter legislation to prevent availability of such information in online forums,” they add.

Prevention Measures and Policy Recommendations

Meanwhile, the researchers suggest practical steps to reduce harm. Providing an antidote (methylthioninium chloride kits) in ambulances could offer “a simple and cost-effective timely method to prevent the devastating consequences of ingestion,” they point out.

Lead researcher Professor Amrita Ahluwalia adds, “This is an extremely difficult subject to talk about, and we appreciate the impact that this might have on all those affected by suicide.

“What our research shows is deeply upsetting. But it makes clear why urgent steps are needed to regulate access to this chemical and to reduce the spread of harmful information about it online.”


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

Your Pleasant Memories Can Vanish For a Surprisingly Simple Reason

28 April 2026, ByM. Spear, The Conversation

(Agung Pandit Wiguna/Pexels)

My husband was recently describing something that happened on a past holiday. It wasn't a significant event, but it sounded pleasant. I, however, had no recollection of what he was telling me.

He couldn't quite believe it.

We know that "recollections may differ", but how can they be so different? And why do I not have this memory? I'm busy at work – have I simply run out of space?

It's a tempting explanation. We talk about "full heads", "information overload", and "too much to take in" as though the brain were a container that eventually reaches capacity. But the brain does not fill up. Instead, it filters.

At any given moment, far more information is available to us than we could ever realistically store. The sights, sounds, and conversations of even a single day would overwhelm any system that attempted to record them in full.

Instead, the brain relies on selection. Attention determines what is noticed. Emotion helps determine what matters. Then, structures such as the hippocampus decide what is worth committing to longer-term memory.

If your attention is elsewhere, the process falters at the first step.

On that holiday, my husband may have paused long enough to register the moment. I may have been thinking about where we were going next, checking timings, or simply moving through the day without stopping to take it in.

The difference is subtle, but it matters.

Without focused attention, experiences are only weakly encoded, if at all. In that sense, the memory was not lost. It was never fully formed.


The sights, sounds, and conversations of even a single day would overwhelm any system that attempted to record them in full.
 (Asia-Pacific Images Studio/Getty Images)



Even when memories are successfully encoded, they are not stored as fixed records. Each time we recall an event, we reconstruct it, drawing on fragments of sensory detail, prior knowledge, and expectation.

With repetition – through conversation, reflection, or retelling – those reconstructions become stronger and more coherent.

Over time, they can feel increasingly vivid and certain.

This helps explain why shared experiences can diverge so dramatically. We assume that living through the same moment should produce the same memory, but the brain does not work that way. It does not passively record experience. It actively selects, prioritizes, and, just as importantly, discards.

The feeling that our brains are "full" arises not because we have run out of storage, but because we have reached the limits of what we can process at once. Attention is finite. Working memory – the small amount of information we can actively hold in mind – is even more limited.

When these systems are saturated, new information struggles to gain a foothold. This is the mental equivalent of too many tabs open: nothing has been permanently lost, but everything becomes harder to manage.

Computing analogies are useful up to a point. If working memory resembles RAM – fast, temporary, limited – then long-term memory is often compared to a hard drive.


Working memory is a bit like RAM. 
(ภาพของWodthikorn Phutthasatchathum/Canva)



But this is where the parallel breaks down. A hard drive stores files in fixed locations, retrievable in exactly the same form in which they were saved.


The brain does not work this way.

Memories are not stored as discrete files. They are distributed across networks of neurons, overlapping, reshaped, and reassembled each time they are recalled.

New experiences do not simply add to what is already there – they interact with it, altering both the new and the old.

Attempts have been made to estimate how much the brain could theoretically hold.

One widely cited figure from the Salk Institute puts it at around a petabyte – roughly equivalent to hundreds of years of continuous video. It is an impressive number, but also a somewhat misleading one.

It implies a storage system that fills up over time, when in reality, the brain is constantly reorganizing itself. Capacity is not fixed, and information is not stored in isolation. It is integrated, modified, and, when no longer useful, allowed to fade.

Which raises a slightly uncomfortable question: what happens to the memories we would like to keep?

Some of them will fade – not because the brain has run out of space, but because they are not continually reinforced. Memory is not preserved simply because it matters to us. It is preserved when it is revisited, retold, or reconnected to other experiences.

Without that reinforcement, even meaningful moments can become harder to access over time.

What is lost, in most cases, is not the memory itself but our ability to retrieve it. A familiar smell, a piece of music, or an unexpected detail can bring something back that seemed entirely gone.

The trace remains, but it has slipped out of reach.

And the absence of a memory is rarely evidence of a system at capacity – more often, it is the trace of a moment that was never fully stored, or one that has simply not been called upon.


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

Monday, 27 April 2026

Common Pregnancy Medications Linked to Higher Autism Risk in Massive U.S. Study

By U. of Nebraska Medical Center, April 27, 2026
https://scitechdaily.com/common-pregnancy-medications-linked-to-higher-autism-risk-in-massive-u-s-study/

A large-scale national study analyzing millions of U.S. births has uncovered a potential link between prenatal exposure to certain widely prescribed medications and increased rates of autism spectrum disorder. 
Credit: Shutterstock



Prenatal use of certain common medications may raise autism risk, especially when multiple drugs are combined. Findings highlight the need for caution and further research.

A major study led by researchers at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) and published in Molecular Psychiatry reports a strong link between medications commonly prescribed during pregnancy and an increased risk of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in children.

The researchers reviewed 6.14 million maternal-child health records from the Epic Cosmos database, which covers nearly one-third of all U.S. births between 2014 and 2023. They found that drugs known to disrupt the body’s cholesterol production pathway were consistently tied to higher rates of ASD in children.

Cholesterol Pathway–Inhibiting Drugs Identified

Instead of grouping medications by their intended use, as earlier research has done, the UNMC team classified drugs based on their shared impact on sterol biosynthesis, including both direct effects and side effects.

This group of sterol biosynthesis-inhibiting medications (SBIMs) includes certain antidepressants, antipsychotics, anxiolytics, beta-blockers, and statins. 

The 15 drugs examined were aripiprazole, atorvastatin, bupropion, buspirone, fluoxetine, haloperidol, metoprolol, nebivolol, pravastatin, propranolol, rosuvastatin, sertraline, simvastatin, cariprazine, and trazodone. Many of these are widely prescribed in the United States, with more than 400 million prescriptions filled each year.

Key FindingsPregnant individuals who were prescribed at least one SBIM had a 1.47 times higher likelihood of having a child diagnosed with ASD. The risk rose with greater exposure. Each additional SBIM increased the risk by 1.33 times, reaching a 2.33 times higher risk when four or more were used at the same time.

Of the 234,971 children in the study diagnosed with ASD, 15% had been exposed to SBIMs before birth.
Use of these medications during pregnancy has also increased significantly, from 4.6% of pregnancies in 2014 to 16.8% in 2023.

Importance of Cholesterol in Fetal Development

Cholesterol plays a critical role in fetal development, particularly for the brain, which contains more cholesterol than any other organ. The fetal brain begins producing its own sterols at about 19–20 weeks of gestation. Disruptions in this pathway can lead to serious developmental conditions such as Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS), in which up to 75% of affected children meet criteria for ASD.

Many commonly used medications can interfere with this biological process. This study is the first nationwide effort to examine how prenatal exposure to this class of drugs may influence neurodevelopmental outcomes.

Expert Caution and Medical Guidance

“Our findings do not suggest that these medications are unsafe for adults,” said corresponding author Karoly Mirnics, MD, PhD, dean and director of the UNMC Munroe-Meyer Institute. “But they raise important questions about their use during pregnancy, a period when even small biochemical disruptions may have outsized effects on fetal brain development.”

The researchers emphasize that pregnant patients should not stop or change medications without guidance from a healthcare provider, since many SBIMs are necessary and can be life-saving. Instead, the findings highlight the need to reassess prescribing practices and develop safer options for use during pregnancy.

Recommendations for Safer Prescribing Practices

The team recommends several steps to improve medication safety for pregnant patients:

Develop a comprehensive list of drugs that affect sterol pathways.

Screen all new medications for unintended interference with cholesterol synthesis.

Improve provider awareness of how medications may disrupt sterol processes during pregnancy.

Consider safer alternatives when stopping treatment is not an option.

Limit the use of multiple SBIMs during pregnancy when possible.

Identify patients with genetic risks affecting sterol metabolism, who may be more vulnerable.

Support further research to better understand these mechanisms and reduce risk.



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

Scientists Discover a Surprising Reason Intermittent Fasting Extends Life

By UT Southwestern Medical Center, April 26, 2026

Intermittent fasting has long been linked to longer life, but new research points to an unexpected driver behind its benefits. 
Credit: Stock

How the body efficiently shifts metabolism after fasting may be key to improving health, UTSW-led research suggests.

Cutting calorie intake has long been linked to longer life, and intermittent fasting often appears to work better than maintaining a constant diet. Even so, scientists have struggled to explain exactly why this happens.

New research from UT Southwestern Medical Center, published in Nature Communications, suggests that the key factor is not the fasting period itself, but how the body adjusts its metabolism when food is reintroduced. The experiments were carried out in Caenorhabditis elegans, a type of roundworm commonly used in laboratory studies, and the findings could eventually inform approaches to improving human health.

“Our discoveries shift the focus toward a neglected side of the metabolic coin – the refeeding phase. Our data suggest that the health-promoting effects of intermittent fasting are not merely a product of the fast itself, but are dependent on how the metabolic machinery recalibrates during the subsequent transition back to a fed state,” said study leader Peter Douglas, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Molecular Biology and a member of the Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine at UT Southwestern. Dr. Douglas co-led the study with Lexus Tatge, Ph.D., a former member of the Douglas Lab.


Peter Douglas, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Molecular Biology and a member of the Hamon Center for Regenerative Science and Medicine at UT Southwestern. 
Credit: UT Southwestern Medical Center



Metabolic switch drives fasting benefits

During fasting, cells quickly use up limited glucose supplies and then switch to breaking down stored lipids for energy. This shift, known as catabolism, is controlled by a protein called NHR-49. When glucose levels drop, NHR-49 activates and triggers lipid breakdown. Once food is available again, NHR-49 turns off, allowing cells to stop breaking down fats and begin restoring their energy reserves. Earlier work published in 2022 by Dr. Douglas and colleagues showed that NHR-49 also monitors lipid levels inside cells and helps prevent starvation when those reserves run low.

To explore whether NHR-49 is responsible for the lifespan benefits of fasting, Dr. Douglas and colleagues removed the gene for this protein in C. elegans and then subjected the worms to a 24-hour fast. The outcome was unexpected. The absence of NHR-49 did not reduce the lifespan benefit. The fasted worms still lived about 41 percent longer on average and showed more youthful behavior, including increased movement, similar to worms with normal NHR-49 function.

These images show how three Caenorhabditis elegans roundworms use and restore fat (green) during feeding, fasting, and refeeding: full when fed (left), reduced during fasting (middle), and rebuilt after refeeding (right). UT Southwestern researchers found that short fasting cycles can extend lifespan by over 60%, supporting longer, healthier life. Credit: UT Southwestern Medical Center

Refeeding response determines longevity

The researchers then turned their attention to what happens after fasting ends, when NHR-49 is normally switched off.

Vincent Tagliabracci, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Molecular Biology at UT Southwestern and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. 
Credit: UT Southwestern Medical Center



To understand this process, they examined how NHR-49 is naturally inactivated. Experiments led by Vincent Tagliabracci, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Molecular Biology at UTSW and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, along with Victor Lopez, Ph.D., a postdoctoral researcher in the Tagliabracci Lab, showed that an enzyme called protein kinase CK1 alpha 1 (KIN-19) modifies NHR-49 through phosphorylation. When Dr. Douglas and colleagues altered this system so that NHR-49 remained active even after feeding resumed, lipid breakdown continued, and the lifespan-extending effects of fasting disappeared.

Targeting metabolism could extend life

Taken together, the findings indicate that the ability to properly shut down NHR-49 after fasting is critical for extending lifespan through calorie restriction. Adjusting this process may offer a way to gain the benefits of fasting without needing to follow strict dietary regimens.

“Our findings bridge a gap between lipid metabolism and aging research,” Dr. Douglas said. “By targeting aging, the single greatest risk factor for human disease, we move beyond treating isolated conditions toward a preventive model of medicine that enhances quality of life for all individuals.”



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

Pomegranate Compound Could Help Protect Against Heart Disease

By Cardiff U., April 27, 2026

Urolithin A appears to protect the arteries by targeting the underlying biology of plaque formation rather than simply lowering cholesterol. It reduces oxidative stress and inflammation, limits the movement of immune cells into vessel walls, and decreases the buildup of cholesterol inside macrophages, which are key drivers of plaque growth. 
Credit: Shutterstock

A compound produced by gut bacteria from pomegranate-derived molecules may play a critical role in protecting the cardiovascular system.

A compound created by gut bacteria from pomegranate-derived nutrients may help protect the arteries by reducing plaque buildup, easing inflammation, and making plaques less likely to rupture, according to researchers at Cardiff University.

In a study published in Antioxidants, scientists identified urolithin A as a key factor behind these effects. This molecule forms when gut microbes break down pomegranate polyphenols and shows strong cardiovascular benefits in preclinical models of atherosclerosis, the condition responsible for most heart attacks and strokes.

Pomegranates contain high levels of punicalagin, a polyphenol often associated with heart health. However, the body absorbs very little of this compound directly. Instead, gut bacteria convert it into smaller molecules called urolithins, which can circulate in the bloodstream and interact with tissues.

“Our findings show that the real biological effects come from what gut bacteria make from pomegranate compounds, rather than from the compounds in the fruit itself,” said Professor Dipak Ramji, senior author of the study and Professor of Cardiovascular Science at Cardiff University.

Cellular Evidence of Protective Effects

Researchers tested punicalagin, its intermediate form ellagic acid, and several urolithins in human immune and blood vessel cells grown in the lab. Urolithin A stood out, consistently reducing oxidative stress, lowering inflammatory gene activity, limiting immune cell movement, and decreasing cholesterol uptake by macrophages. These processes are central to the formation and growth of arterial plaques.

The team then evaluated urolithin A in LDL receptor-deficient mice fed a high-fat diet, a widely used model that resembles human atherosclerosis. After twelve weeks, treated mice developed smaller plaques with fewer inflammatory cells.

Plaques in these mice also showed higher levels of smooth muscle cells and collagen, both linked to stronger, more stable plaques that are less likely to rupture. Plaque rupture is the leading cause of heart attacks and strokes.

“What was striking is that these benefits occurred without lowering blood cholesterol levels,” Professor Ramji said. “This suggests urolithin A works by suppressing inflammation and stabilizing plaques, rather than by changing lipid levels.”

Broader Effects on Immunity and the Microbiome

The effects extended beyond the arteries. Mice given urolithin A had lower levels of circulating inflammatory monocytes and granulocytes, which are known to worsen atherosclerosis. At the same time, levels of beneficial short-chain fatty acids rose in blood and feces, suggesting positive shifts in gut microbial activity.

Further analysis using RNA-sequencing showed that urolithin A influenced hundreds of genes involved in inflammation, oxidative stress, and metabolism. Harmful pathways linked to atherosclerosis were reduced, while protective antioxidant and metabolic pathways became more active.

“These results help explain why diets rich in fruits like pomegranates are associated with cardiovascular benefits, but also why responses can vary between individuals,” Professor Ramji said. “Not everyone’s gut microbiome produces urolithin A efficiently.”

The researchers note that studies in humans are still needed to confirm these findings. If similar effects are seen, urolithin A could support existing heart disease treatments by targeting inflammation and improving plaque stability.

“This study opens the door to the use of urolithin A and microbiome‑driven strategies for cardiovascular disease prevention,” Professor Ramji said.



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

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/