Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Wild Animals Are Adapting to City Life in Surprising Ways, Scientists Reveal

14 April 2026, By D. T. Blumstein et al., The Conversation

(Christina Radcliffe/iStock/Getty Images)

The urban monkeys in New Delhi are so bold they'll steal the lunch right off your plate.

If you've spent time in New York, you've probably seen squirrels try to do the same. Sydney's white ibises got the nickname "bin chickens" for stealing trash and sandwiches.

This brazen behavior isn't normal for most species in the countryside, yet it shows up in urban wildlife, and not just in these cities.

Studies show that animals living in urban environments around the world exhibit common sets of behaviors. At the same time, these urban animals are losing traits they would need in the wild.

This process of urban animals' behavior becoming more similar is known as "behavioral homogenization," and it accompanies the loss of species diversity with urbanization.

We study animals in urban settings to understand how humans can help wildlife thrive in an urbanizing world.

In a new study, we explore the causes and the long-term consequences of these behavior changes for urban wildlife.

What makes animals in cities similar?

Cities, despite their local differences, share many of the same features worldwide: They are warmer than the surrounding countryside, noisy, polluted by light and, most importantly, dominated by people.

New York's squirrels, New Delhi's monkeys, gulls in coastal cities of the U.K. and other urban wildlife have learned that people are a source of food. And because people typically don't harm the animals, city-dwelling animals learn not to fear people.

Cities drive evolution as well. Humans and the changes we've brought to cities have led to the survival of bolder animals, and those bolder animals pass on their traits to future generations. In genetics, scientists refer to this as the environment "selecting" for those traits.


It's not just sandwich-stealing that is more common among city wildlife; urban birds also sound more alike.

Why? Cities are loud and filled with traffic noise, so those who can effectively communicate in that environment are more likely to survive and pass on those traits.


For example, urban birds may sing louder, start singing earlier in the morning or at higher frequencies to avoid getting drowned out by low-frequency traffic noise.

Cities select for smart individuals and species because that's what it takes to survive.

Animals may behave similarly in cities because they learn from each other how to exploit novel human food sources. For instance, the cockatoos in Sydney have learned to open trash bins. In Toronto, the raccoons are in a race to outwit humans as urban wildlife managers try to design animal-proof trash bins.


The buildings and bridges in cities become home to bats, birds, and other urban dwellers, at the cost of learning to use more natural nesting sites. Roads and culverts modify how and where animals move.

While rural animals may forage at a variety of places and eat a variety of foods, urban animals may concentrate on garbage bins or rubbish dumps where they know they can find food, but they end up eating a potentially unhealthy diet.

Consequences of similar behaviors

The loss of behavioral diversity is happening everywhere that humans increase their footprint on nature. This is worrisome on several levels.

At the population level, behavioral variation may reflect genetic variation. Genetic variation gives species the ability to respond to future environmental change. For example, for animals that have evolved to breed at a specific time of the year, urban heat islands can select for earlier breeding.

Reducing genetic variation leaves populations less able to respond to future changes. In that sense, having genetic variation resembles a diversified investment portfolio: Spreading risk across a variety of stocks and bonds lowers the risk that a single shock will wipe out everything.

Moreover, as animals become tamer, new conflicts between animals and humans may emerge. For instance, there may be more car crashes, animal bites, property damage and zoonotic disease transmission. Such conflicts cost money and may harm both the animals and humans.

Losing behavioral diversity is also troubling for conservation.

When a species loses behavioral diversity, it loses resilience against future environmental change in the wild, making reintroducing urban animals to the wild harder.

Losing behavioral diversity also risks erasing socially learned, population-specific behaviors, such as local migration routes, foraging techniques, tool-use traditions or vocal dialects.


For example, Australia's regent honeyeater populations have been shrinking and are critically endangered. The isolation of having fewer of their own species around has disrupted normal song-learning behavior, making it harder for male birds to sing attractive songs that help them find mates and breed successfully.


Ultimately, behavioral homogenization is making wildlife in cities such as Los Angeles, Lima, Lagos and Lahore behave in similar ways despite living in different environments and having different evolutionary histories.

Many of these behaviors influence survival and reproduction, so understanding this form of diversity loss is important for successful wildlife conservation, as well as future urban planning.

Daniel T. Blumstein, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles; 
Peter Mikula, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Faculty of Environmental Sciences, and
  Piotr Tryjanowski, Professor of Zoology



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

Saunas May Do More Than Raise Body Temperature – They Activate Your Immune System

By U. of Eastern Finland, April 13, 2026

A single sauna session appears to briefly increase circulating white blood cells, hinting at a short-term shift in how the immune system monitors the body. 
Credit: Stock

A brief sauna session may quietly mobilize the immune system.

A sauna session may do more than raise your heart rate and body temperature. A new study from Finland found that it also briefly increases the number of white blood cells moving through the bloodstream, a shift tied to the body’s frontline immune defenses. The study involved 51 adults with an average age of 50.

After a 30-minute sauna session that included a short cold shower break halfway through, researchers saw an increase in all circulating white blood cells. Two of the most important groups, neutrophils and lymphocytes, returned to baseline within about 30 minutes.
Temporary Mobilization of Immune Cells

Rather than creating new immune cells, the sauna appears to temporarily move existing ones into circulation. That matters because white blood cells are most useful when they are actively traveling through the body, where they can detect signs of infection or other threats.

“This may indicate that sauna bathing mobilizes additional white blood cells into the bloodstream from tissues, where they are then redeposited after the session. This kind of periodic release of white blood cells into the bloodstream is beneficial, as once they leave their storage sites, they are better able to patrol the body and respond to pathogens,” says Ilkka Heinonen, an Academy Research Fellow at the University of Turku.

This short-term increase in circulating immune cells is similar to what happens during physical activity. It reflects the body’s ability to improve immune surveillance by sending more white blood cells through the bloodstream, where they can detect and respond to potential threats.

Cytokines and Temperature Effects

The researchers also examined cytokines, which are signaling molecules involved in immune responses. Overall, sauna use did not significantly change cytokine levels in the blood.

“Interestingly, however, the levels of several cytokines changed in relation to how much body temperature rose during sauna bathing. No similar association was observed between white blood cell counts and changes in body temperature,” says Professor Jari Laukkanen, who led the study at the University of Eastern Finland.

Regular sauna use has been linked to various health benefits, and these findings may offer insight into the biological processes behind those effects. However, the researchers note that this study focused only on the immediate impact of a single sauna session. Because of this limitation, the results do not establish any long-term health outcomes.



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

New Study Reveals Earth Is Getting Brighter at Night – About 2% Each Year

By Ruhr-U. Bochum, April 13, 2026

Earth’s nighttime glow is changing in unexpected ways, as seen from space. New data hints at complex global patterns that scientists are only beginning to fully understand.
 Credit: Shutterstock

Satellite observations reveal that global nighttime lighting is steadily rising, though the trend varies widely by region, with some areas brightening rapidly while others dim.

An analysis of data from the VIIRS Day/Night Band satellite instrument, covering 2014 through 2022, shows that artificial lighting at night is increasing worldwide by about 2 percent each year.

“Although there has been a total increase of 16 percent worldwide, that does not mean that lighting is increasing everywhere,” explained Christopher Kyba. “In areas where lighting increased, we found global emissions rose by 34 percent. This was offset by an 18 percent decrease in emissions from other areas.”

The study reveals that changes in nighttime lighting vary widely by location and are more dynamic than previously thought. China and India grew significantly brighter during this period due to urban expansion, while many industrialized countries saw declines in measured emissions, often linked to a shift toward LED lighting and policies aimed at reducing light pollution.

Ukraine experienced a sharp drop in lighting following the Russian invasion. France also saw a notable decrease (down 33 percent), as many cities turn off streetlights after midnight to conserve energy and limit light pollution.

“In Germany, light emissions remained almost constant overall despite local variations,” Kyba reports. “While light emissions rose by 8.9 percent in brightening German regions, they fell by 9.2 percent in dimming areas.”

Across Europe, satellite measurements show an overall 4 percent decline in nighttime light. However, this modest drop may not match what people perceive, since the satellite’s sensitivity differs from human vision.

The final accumulated nighttime light change area: A night-time view of Earth, capturing human activity across the eastern hemisphere of the planet through the emissions of artificial light. Derived from satellite images taken daily over the past decade, the image maps the dynamics of the human night-time activity, with golden areas experiencing brightening, purple areas featuring dimming, and white areas experiencing both. 
Credit: Michala Garrison/NASA Earth Observatory

First global analysis at full resolution

These results were made possible by examining data collected each night. Earlier studies relied on monthly or yearly averages, which made it harder to capture subtle changes due to limitations in the instruments.

“Until now, no global analysis had been conducted using the full-resolution nighttime data,” Kyba emphasizes.

The researchers also applied an algorithm that accounts for the satellite’s viewing angle. Residential areas tend to appear brighter when seen from an angle rather than from directly overhead, while the opposite is often true in dense urban centers. This new method corrects for those differences for the first time.

The Satellite

The study used data from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) Day/Night Band (DNB) instrument on the Suomi NPP, NOAA-20, and NOAA-21 satellites, operated by NOAA and NASA.

These satellites collect data after midnight, usually between 1:00 a.m. and 4:00 a.m. local time, and scan nearly the entire Earth each night, from 70° North to 60° South. Each pixel represents an area of about 0.5 square kilometers (about 0.19 square miles). The analysis focused only on artificial lighting, excluding natural sources such as wildfires and auroras.

A new satellite for Europe

“Artificial light is a major consumer of electricity at night, and light pollution harms ecosystems,” says Christopher Kyba. “It is therefore important to understand how both of these are changing.”

Kyba is leading a proposal for a next-generation satellite to monitor nighttime lighting as part of the European Space Agency’s “Earth Explorer 13” mission. This instrument would detect much fainter light than current systems and provide higher resolution data, helping reduce uncertainty about what is changing and where.

“While the U.S. and China each have multiple satellites that observe nighttime light, there is currently no European satellite designed for this purpose,” says Kyba.


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

Monday, 13 April 2026

Anatomy Isn’t Finished: The Human Body Still Holds Secrets

By M. Spear, U. of Bristol, April 10, 2026

Despite centuries of study, the human body remains only partially mapped, with new discoveries and variations continually reshaping what we thought we knew. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Human anatomy is far from complete, with ongoing discoveries reshaping understanding of variation, structure, and disease.

Spend a few minutes with a biology textbook, scroll through fitness content, or overhear a conversation at the gym, and it can seem like the human body has already been fully mapped. Muscles are labeled, nerves are charted, and everything appears neatly explained and accessible.

Many people are familiar with at least some anatomical terms such as “traps,” “glutes,” and “biceps.” Given centuries of work involving dissection, microscopy, and modern imaging, it is easy to assume there is little left to uncover. Surely anatomy, as a field, must be complete?

It isn’t. Not even close.

Since the publication of De Humani Corporis Fabrica by Andreas Vesalius in 1543 – the first comprehensive anatomy book based on direct observation of human dissection—the field has carried a strong sense of authority. Vesalius corrected long-standing misconceptions passed down from earlier thinkers, including the ancient physician Galen, by relying on direct study of the human body. His work marked a turning point, helping to establish anatomy as a discipline grounded in observation and evidence.

Three hundred years later, Gray’s Anatomy by Henry Gray reinforced the impression that the body had finally been catalogued, indexed, and neatly organized—a system mapped and fully explained.

But textbooks create a misleading sense of certainty. They present the body as stable, universal, and fully agreed upon. Real anatomy is messier than that.
The illusion of completeness

Much of early topographical anatomy – the careful mapping of structures in relation to one another – depended on cadavers obtained through grave robbery.

“Resurrectionists” – body snatchers – exhumed the recently buried, disproportionately targeting the poor, the institutionalized, and those without family protection or the financial means to guard graves. These bodies were then sold to anatomists, who relied on them for dissection and teaching.

Working conditions for early anatomists were difficult, and the limitations considerable.

Lighting was poor. Bodies were often malnourished or diseased. Post-mortem change had already altered tissue planes. Sample sizes were small and opportunistic. Demographic information was largely absent, beyond what could be inferred from appearance. The bodies of women were sometimes dissected but rarely reported.

Yet it was under precisely these conditions that anatomists produced the observations that became the foundation of classical anatomical topography.

The anatomical “norm” that emerged from these studies was therefore constructed from a narrow and socially stratified sample.

None of this diminishes the extraordinary technical skill of early anatomists. Their observational ability was remarkable. But the conditions under which they worked inevitably shaped what they saw – and what they missed.

So when we ask whether anatomy is finished, we might also ask a more uncomfortable question: was it ever truly complete in the first place? This question matters scientifically as well as ethically.

For much of the 20th century, anatomical investigation slowed dramatically. By the 1960s, relatively few cadaveric studies were being published worldwide. The assumption was simple: the human body had already been mapped.

Medical education continued, of course, but much of it focused on teaching established knowledge rather than generating new anatomical observations. That apparent stability masked a deeper problem: much of the knowledge had been inherited rather than tested.

Improved imaging techniques, renewed cadaveric research, and a growing awareness of anatomical variation have triggered something of a renaissance in anatomical study. Structures once overlooked or poorly described are being re-examined.

Far from being finished, anatomy is rediscovering just how incomplete its map of the human body may be.

Beyond the ‘standard’ human body

One of the most important shifts in modern anatomy has been recognizing that variation is the rule rather than the exception. Textbooks present a “typical” body for teaching, but real human anatomy sits along a spectrum.

Human anatomy varies across several dimensions at once. Differences exist between males and females, across the lifespan as the body develops and ages, and between populations shaped by genetics and environment.

Beyond these broad patterns lies enormous individual variation: blood vessels may follow different routes, muscles may be absent or duplicated, and even the folding patterns of the brain differ from person to person. The “standard” anatomy shown in textbooks is therefore best understood not as a universal blueprint, but as a simplified reference point within a wide biological range.

This variation matters far beyond the operating theater. Differences in nerves, vessels, and joints can alter how diseases reveal themselves, influence how scans are interpreted, and shape patterns of movement and injury.

Subtle differences in joint alignment may affect the risk of conditions, such as osteoarthritis, while variations in vascular anatomy can influence susceptibility to stroke or aneurysm. Understanding anatomical diversity is therefore central not only to surgery, but also to diagnosis, medical imaging, biomechanics, and the study of disease itself.

Even after centuries of study, the human body continues to yield new anatomical insights. Structures once overlooked – from previously unrecognized lymphatic vessels around the brain to overlooked ligaments in the knee – are being re-examined. Familiar tissues are being understood in new ways, and the map of the body is still being revised.

People should know more about their bodies. Greater understanding helps people advocate for their own health and engage more confidently with care. But it is worth remembering that the canonical anatomy presented in textbooks is best understood as a teaching model, not a perfect representation of biological reality. The more closely we study the human body, the more we realize there is still much to learn.



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

This Tiny Wildflower Could Be a Secret Weapon Against Superbugs

13 April 2026, ByR. McCarthy et al., The Conversation

Tormentil (Potentilla erecta). 
(Krzysztof Ziarnek, Kenraiz/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY 4.0)


Long before we had modern antibiotics to rely on, people often turned to traditional medicines from plants to treat infections.

The root of tormentil (Potentilla erecta), a small yellow wildflower that grows across Ireland, the UK and Europe, was used for centuries in Irish and European traditional medicine.

It was used to treat wounds, sore throats, diarrhoea and gum disease. These traditional uses suggested that tormentil could contain compounds powerful enough to kill microbes.

Our latest research has now shown that not only does tormentil have antimicrobial activity, it may also be powerful enough to fight microbes that are resistant to modern antibiotics.

Antimicrobial resistance is a growing global threat. This occurs when bacteria evolve to survive the drugs used to treat common infections.

This makes some infections very difficult and sometimes impossible to treat. Antimicrobial resistance could be pushing us back to a time when once treatable infections could again become deadly.


Tormentil (Potentilla erecta). 
(Amirh. absnd/Wikimedia Commons/CC0 1.0)



Researchers are therefore searching for new antimicrobial compounds. Plants are a promising source, having evolved over millennia to produce a wide range of bioactive chemicals to defend themselves against microbes.

In our recent study, we investigated whether various Irish bogland plants contain compounds that could help fight multi-drug-resistant bacteria.

To do this, we prepared extracts from over 70 different plant species collected from bogs across Ireland. We then tested them against clinically relevant bacterial pathogens in the laboratory – including bacteria which cause severe pneumonia and urinary tract infections.

We used antimicrobial susceptibility testing to see whether the extracts inhibited bacterial growth. This involved exposing the bacteria to the various plant extracts to see which extract inhibited the growth of the bacteria.

We then tested these extracts on biofilms to determine whether the plant compounds could prevent bacteria from forming biofilms. Biofilms are bacterial communities surrounded by a slimy carbohydrate shield that protects them from antibiotics, disinfectants and the immune system.

Excitingly, our initial screening showed that tormentil extracts were antimicrobial and limited the formation of biofilms. This suggested these extracts contained compounds with antimicrobial activity, which may explain their historical use to treat infection.

We also explored whether these plant extracts could work in combination with existing antibiotics, as some plant compounds don't kill bacteria directly but instead can make antibiotics work better.

So we combined low levels of the antibiotic colistin – an antibiotic that is only used as a last resort against severe infections due to its potential toxicity to patients – with the tormentil extract.

The low-level antibiotic dosage wasn't enough to kill the bacteria when used on its own. But when combined with the tormentil extract, the plant compound enhanced the antibiotic's efficacy.

Part of our team then performed an analysis to identify the compounds present in the tormentil extracts. Potentilla plants are known to contain naturally occurring compounds, such as ellagic acid and agrimoniin, which have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

We tested ellagic acid and agrimoniin compounds which were present in our bogland tormentil. We showed that these specific compounds could inhibit bacterial growth. This indicates they may be responsible for tormentil's antimicrobial activity.

We subsequently found these compounds were doing this by scavenging iron – a nutrient that's essential for bacterial growth. This effectively starved the bacterial cells, preventing them from growing.

We are now focused on optimising this antimicrobial activity and developing formulations to test its potential as a treatment in experimental models.

Nature has always been a rich source of medicine. Many antibiotics that we use today originally came from natural sources. For instance, the potent, last-resort antibiotics vancomycin – which is used to treat MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) and C. difficile infections – came from soil microbes.

With antimicrobial resistance continuing to rise globally, we urgently need new approaches and treatments. Plants may be an underexplored source of both new antimicrobial compounds and of compounds that make existing drugs more effective.

The story of tormentil shows how nature and traditional medicine can work hand in hand with modern science to address today's challenges. It also highlights that solutions can be found in unexplored places – even in a small yellow wildflower growing in a bogland.

Ronan McCarthy, Professor in Microbial Biofilms, University of Southampton; 
John J. Walsh, Associate Professor, Pharmacy, Trinity College Dublin, and
  Kavita Gadar, Research Fellow, Department of Microbes, Infection and Microbiomes, University of Birmingham



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

What If Consciousness Exists Beyond Your Brain

By BIAL Foundation, April 12, 2026

What if consciousness isn’t something your brain creates, but something far more fundamental? 
Credit: Shutterstock

Scientists still don’t know how consciousness emerges from the brain. New ideas suggest it may not emerge at all, but instead be a basic feature of reality.

Is consciousness produced by the brain, or is it a deeper feature of reality? This question is a key focus of Christof Koch, one of today’s leading neuroscientists, in his presentation at the 15th “Behind and Beyond the Brain” Symposium, organized by the Bial Foundation and held April 8 to 11 in Porto.

The Limits of Materialism and the “Hard Problem”

Materialism continues to shape most scientific thinking, but Koch highlights where it falls short. Even with major progress in neuroscience, scientists still cannot explain how subjective experience arises from physical brain activity. This unresolved mystery is known as the “hard problem” of consciousness.

Key Challenges in Explaining Conscious Experience

Koch outlines three major areas where current understanding struggles. 

First is the challenge of fully reducing conscious experience to physical processes in the brain. 

Second is the difficulty modern physics faces when trying to define what is truly “real.” 

Third is the persistence of unusual experiences – including near-death experiences, mystical states, and episodes of terminal lucidity – that do not fit neatly within existing scientific explanations.

Rethinking Consciousness as a Fundamental Part of Reality

Based on these issues, Koch suggests it may be time to revisit older philosophical perspectives such as idealism and panpsychism. These approaches treat consciousness as a basic component of reality rather than something generated by the brain alone. He supports Integrated Information Theory, which proposes that any system with a high level of integrated information has some form of subjective experience – a scientific version of panpsychism.

A Leading Researcher in Consciousness Studies

Koch, a researcher at the Allen Institute for Brain Science and a former professor at MIT and Caltech, has played a major role in advancing the study of consciousness. His work includes developing new methods to identify signs of awareness in patients who appear unresponsive, helping to expand how scientists detect and understand conscious states.



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

Sunday, 12 April 2026

Chuck's picture corner to April 12, 2026

It's been another week of below average temperatures in Cardinal, we even had a little snow. My week has been focused on gardening, outside when it's warm enough, and inside planting up my seed flats into cell flats. I had to order more cell flats after years of reusing the old ones. The household windows are quite close to full, soon flats that are ready will head out to the unheated barn windows. I'm hoping for at least average temps if not I'll have to set up a few more lights. The barn keeps night time temps 5 deg. c warmer than outside, a thin margin.

Wsw facing window in the back room. Where the seed flats wait for planting up into cell packs.

The dining room wsw facing window with still a little space left, the seed flats are cauliflower and cabbage.

tomatoes and peppers cell flats, in the south dining room window

the start to another day.

opening their first true leaves

morning in the ene bedroom window

lots of birds about, the song birds are back, gotta love their songs.

re vacuuming my spice jar after making meat sauce.

spaghetti sauce essentials, and mushrooms of course, lol

herbs from the garden to spice up the sauce, each one has a health benefit, directly or through feeding (or killing) the gut microbiome.  Oregano is a super anti bacterial. Rosemary I pick fresh from the plant growing in a window.
https://goodsciencing.com/treatment/using-oregano-as-a-antibiotic/


Enjoy
https://chuckincardinal.blogspot.com/


Human Echolocators Can 'See' With Sound, And Brain Scans Reveal How

11 April 2026, By C. Cassella

(Anna Reshetnikova/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

Echolocation is not just a skill that dolphins or bats possess. Believe it or not, humans can also 'see with sound', and it's surprisingly easy for people to learn.

Becoming an expert is another matter.

The best echolocators among us can use the clicks of their mouths or the taps of their canes to create an astonishingly accurate mental map of their surroundings, even in the absence of vision.

The information they gather from sound alone can reveal not just the location of surrounding objects, but their position, size, distance, shape, and material as well.

A new experiment has now provided the first "fine-grained account" for how the human brain pulls this off.

The findings suggest that with each returning echo, the central nervous system gradually builds and refines its picture of the surrounding space, homing in on the details.

In other words, the brain doesn't just rely on one single echo to perceive and navigate an environment, but a symphony of returning sounds. What's more, other research has shown that the brain calls upon visual pathways, as well as auditory ones, to decipher these cues.

The research was conducted by neuroscientists at the Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, a nonprofit research institute in San Francisco, California. It compared 4 expert echolocators to 21 sighted participants with no experience in echolocation.

In each session, participants were fitted with EEG caps to measure their brain activity. They then listened in a dark room as sequences of up to 11 synthetic clicking sounds were made. These sounds were followed by fake echoes, mimicking the noise bouncing off a virtual object in the room.

Participants had to determine where this virtual object was located, somewhere to their left or right, based on the echoes.


How humans 'see' using sounds and how they bounce off surfaces.
 (Thaler & Goodale, Wires Cog. Sci., 2016)



Just as researchers suspected, participants who were experts in echolocation were significantly better at figuring out where the virtual object was in front of them, scoring above chance every time.

Sighted participants, meanwhile, guessed at rates no better than 50 percent.

Still, it was the three expert echolocators who had become blind earlier in life who scored the best by far. These three individuals were correct about where the virtual object was located more than 70 percent of the time, even after hearing only a few clicks.

The findings suggest that early blindness may foster an enhanced sensitivity to sound. Interestingly, when the virtual object was further to a participant's right or left, it took fewer clicks for them to locate it. The best angle for the human brain was about 45 degrees from the midline.

The study authors also found that each returning sound stimulated the brain's spatial networks faster than the last. This may possibly reflect how sensory information is rapidly extracted, integrated, and refined into a coherent picture.

The study is small, but it aligns with broader evidence suggesting that when vision is lacking, the brain may become more attuned to spatial acoustic cues.

In two expert echolocators, with early-onset blindness, there was a "steep improvement" between the seventh and eighth clicks.

This suggests their "perceptual system effectively integrates echoacoustic features over time, then plateaus or saturates as ceiling performance is reached."

The study is among the first to use EEG recordings to explore how the human brain processes echolocation information from click to click. While more research is needed to understand the skill, this experiment "showcases the remarkable flexibility of the brain's perceptual systems in the absence of vision."



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

Researchers Have Found a Dietary Compound That Increases Longevity

By U. of Seville, April 11, 2026

New findings suggest a hidden dietary compound may help the body resist oxidative stress and protein damage tied to aging.
 Credit: Shutterstock

A largely overlooked plant compound found in common fruits and vegetables is drawing new scientific attention for its potential effects on aging and brain health.

A little-known nutrient found in everyday fruits and vegetables may be doing far more in the body than scientists once believed.

Researchers from the University of Seville and the University of Kent report that phytoene, a colorless carotenoid present in foods like tomatoes, carrots, oranges, and peppers, can extend lifespan and protect against key processes linked to Alzheimer’s disease, at least in a widely used laboratory model.

Their experiments in the tiny worm Caenorhabditis elegans showed lifespan increases of 10 to 18.6 percent, along with a 30 to 40 percent reduction in the toxic effects caused by amyloid-β42, the protein associated with brain plaque formation in Alzheimer’s.

Rethinking an Overlooked Compound


Phytoene is a colorless carotenoid naturally found in a variety of fruits and vegetables, including tomatoes, carrots, oranges, and red peppers, as well as in certain microalgae species. 
Credit: Stock



Phytoene has long been overlooked. Unlike better-known carotenoids such as beta-carotene or lycopene, it does not give foods their bright colors and has often been treated as an inactive precursor rather than a functional compound.

The research, part of Ángeles Morón Ortiz’s doctoral work, tested both purified phytoene and extracts derived from microalgae, specifically Chlorella sorokiniana and Dunaliella bardawil. These extracts, which contained high levels of phytoene, performed just as well as the pure compound. Importantly, the treatments did not interfere with the worms’ growth or food supply, suggesting the benefits were not due to reduced calorie intake or stress.

Further experiments revealed how phytoene may be working. The compound improved resistance to oxidative stress, a process driven by unstable molecules that damage cells and contribute to aging and diseases such as cancer and neurodegeneration. At certain doses, survival under oxidative stress increased by as much as 53 percent. This aligns with what scientists already know about carotenoids, which can neutralize harmful molecules or activate the body’s own defense systems.

The Alzheimer’s-related findings are also significant. In the worm model, amyloid-β42 buildup leads to progressive paralysis. Animals given phytoene showed a clear delay in this effect, indicating protection against protein aggregation, one of the hallmarks of the disease.


Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) is a microscopic, transparent roundworm widely used as a model organism in biological research due to its simple structure and well-understood genetics. In this study, it served as a key system for investigating the effects of phytoene, allowing researchers to observe changes in lifespan, oxidative stress resistance, and Alzheimer’s-related protein toxicity. 
Credit: Stock


“These are very exciting preliminary results, so we are looking for funding to continue this line of research and to find out by what mechanisms these effects are produced,” said Dr. Paula Mapelli Brahm.

Nutritional and Environmental Implications

Phytoene may also be important from a nutritional perspective. Some studies suggest that people consume more phytoene daily than many other carotenoids, and it accumulates in tissues throughout the body, including the skin. There is also evidence that it may help protect against ultraviolet radiation, adding to its potential health value.

The study highlights microalgae as a promising and sustainable source of this compound. Unlike traditional crops, microalgae grow rapidly, require little land, and can produce high concentrations of beneficial molecules. They are already used in supplements and food ingredients, and their role in future nutrition is expanding as demand rises for both healthier and more environmentally friendly food systems.

From Worms to Human Health

While the results come from a simple organism, C. elegans has been central to major scientific breakthroughs, including discoveries related to aging, gene regulation, and cell death. Findings in this model often guide early-stage research in humans.

The researchers emphasize that more work is needed to confirm whether the same effects occur in people.

Building on these findings, the team has already begun exploring its effects beyond lifespan and neurodegeneration. In a more recent study, they again used C. elegans to examine how phytoene and related carotenoids influence the organism’s skin-like outer layer.

They found that phytoene-rich microalgae extracts improved epidermal integrity and significantly strengthened the worm’s protective barrier, suggesting potential applications in skin health and aging.

The team has also begun exploring phytoene’s potential in other disease areas. In early-stage experiments using human cell models, phytoene-rich extracts showed protective effects against oxidative damage and signs of modest anti-tumor activity in colorectal cancer cells.



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

Saturday, 11 April 2026

Scientists Found a Common Brain 'Fingerprint' Across 5 Psychedelics

11 April 2026, By D. Nield

(TrueCreatives/Canva)

A growing amount of research is investigating how psychedelics might be used to treat depression and other disorders, and now a new study highlights a "neural fingerprint" that's common across five well-known mind-altering drugs.

The effects of these drugs are typically only analyzed in small numbers of people, and in isolation from each other, so the international team of researchers behind this latest study wanted to try and get a bigger picture of their effects as a group.

Five different psychedelics were looked at: psilocybin, LSD (Lysergic Acid Diethylamide), mescaline, DMT (dimethyltryptamine), and ayahuasca.

The researchers looked at the interconnectedness of brain regions across all the participants. 
(Girn et al., Nat. Med., 2026)

By pooling fMRI brain scans of people who had taken these substances, the team identified two shared patterns: stronger communication between distinct brain networks, and selective reductions in connections within some networks.

"This is a breakthrough in how we think about psychedelic drugs," says Danilo Bzdok from McGill University in Canada.

"For the first time, we show there's a common denominator among drugs that we currently consider completely separate."

These are the key numbers for the study: 11 separate datasets, covering 267 people across five countries, and 519 brain scans in total.

The boosted interconnectivity observed by the researchers covered the cortical brain networks that handle higher-level thinking, plus the brain regions associated with sight and touch – perhaps not surprising given the trips people experience on these drugs.

Altered connections were also seen in deeper brain regions, including the caudate, putamen, and cerebellum. These subcortical areas are linked to how we coordinate perception and action.

This increased cross-talk is a sign of the brain's normal hierarchy being flattened out, say the researchers, and knowing that this is common across several psychedelics can help in developing them as treatments, as well as understanding the biology of hallucinations.

Of the drugs tested, psilocybin and LSD looked the most similar in terms of neural patterns, which matches up with their similar chemical makeup and the subjective experiences they trigger in people.

"This approach gives us an X-ray view of the entire research community," says Bzdok.

The broader look means some big dots can be joined by researchers. This hasn't always been possible in the past, when drug studies were restricted over concerns about the drugs and their associations with criminalization and counterculture.

Nowadays, safe and controlled research projects are increasingly common. Some early research has linked psychedelics to immune system modulation and lasting improvements in mood.

Previous research also suggests psychedelics may be able to slow down the biological process of aging and even reduce crime rates.

We know that these substances are mind-altering. The question is whether or not they can be engineered and applied in a way that ensures those alterations are beneficial, such as treating depression or substance use disorders.

Being able to compare these drugs in a collected and collated way changes the perspective. The findings here challenge previous studies suggesting that these substances caused breakdowns in brain connectivity, instead pointing to selective within-network changes alongside stronger cross-network communication.

Next, the researchers want to see tests that are more standardized, carried out across larger groups of people, to look into these brain patterns more closely.

It's worth bearing in mind that the existing datasets analyzed by the researchers all used different methods, doses, and timings as well as different drugs – those are variations that can be minimized in future research.

Nor did this study look specifically at how these drugs might be used as treatments – but that can come next.

"Many drug therapies for depression, for example, have changed little over the past decades," says Bzdok.

"Psychedelics may represent the most promising shift in mental health treatment since the 1980s."



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

Naturally Occurring Bacteria Completely Eradicate Tumors in Mice With a Single Dose

By Japan Advanced Inst. of Sci. and Tech., April 10, 2026 

Scientists have discovered that a naturally occurring bacterium isolated from amphibian intestines may possess extraordinary anticancer properties.
 Credit: Shutterstock

A bacterium from frog gut microbiota eliminated tumors in mice by selectively colonizing tumors and triggering both direct cell killing and immune-driven anticancer responses.

Researchers led by Prof. Eijiro Miyako at the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST) have identified a bacterium with striking anticancer potential. The microorganism, Ewingella americana, was isolated from the intestines of Japanese tree frogs (Dryophytes japonicus). Laboratory tests revealed that it can strongly suppress tumor growth, a discovery described in the international journal Gut Microbes.

Interest in the connection between gut microbes and cancer has grown rapidly over the past decade. Most studies have explored indirect strategies, such as altering the microbiome through diet, probiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation. The new research takes a very different path. Instead of adjusting the overall microbial community, the scientists isolated individual bacterial strains, grew them in the lab, and delivered them directly into the bloodstream with the goal of targeting tumors.

To search for promising candidates, the team collected microbes from several amphibians and reptiles. They isolated 45 bacterial strains from the intestines of Japanese tree frogs, Japanese fire belly newts (Cynops pyrrhogaster), and Japanese grass lizards (Takydromus tachydromoides). Each strain was then carefully tested for anticancer properties. Nine of them showed measurable tumor-suppressing activity, but one stood out. E. americana produced the strongest therapeutic effect among all the candidates examined.


Anticancer efficacy: Ewingella americana versus conventional therapies. Tumor response: single i.v. dose of E. americana (200 µL, 5 × 10⁹ CFU/mL); four doses of doxorubicin or anti–PD-L1 (200 µL, 2.5 mg/kg per dose); PBS as control. Data: mean ± SEM (n = 5). ****, p < 0.0001 (Student’s two-sided t-test). 
Credit: Eijiro Miyako from JAIST



Remarkable Therapeutic Efficacy

In experiments using a mouse model of colorectal cancer, researchers observed an extraordinary outcome after administering E. americana through a single intravenous injection. The treatment completely eliminated tumors in every case, resulting in a 100% complete response (CR) rate. This level of effectiveness was far greater than what is typically seen with established cancer therapies such as immune checkpoint inhibitors (anti-PD-L1 antibody) and the chemotherapy drug liposomal doxorubicin (chemotherapy agent).

A single bacterial dose eliminates tumors in mice

Further analysis revealed that E. americana targets cancer through two coordinated biological actions that work together to suppress tumor growth.Direct Cytotoxic Effect: As a facultative anaerobic bacterium, E. americana preferentially accumulates in the low oxygen tumor microenvironment, where it directly damages cancer cells. Within 24 hours after administration, bacterial levels inside tumors rise by about 3,000 times, enabling the bacteria to efficiently attack tumor tissue.
Immune Activation Effect: The bacteria also trigger a strong immune response. Their presence attracts T cells, B cells, and neutrophils to the tumor. These immune cells release pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IFN-γ), which strengthen immune activity and promote apoptosis in cancer cells.

Tumor-Specific Accumulation Mechanism

E. americana shows a strong preference for tumor tissue, building up in cancerous areas while remaining absent from healthy organs. This highly selective targeting of tumors appears to result from several biological factors that work together to guide the bacteria toward cancer sites.


Low oxygen tumor environment: Tumor tissues commonly contain areas with very little oxygen. These hypoxic conditions create an ideal setting for anaerobic bacteria to grow, allowing E. americana to multiply more easily inside tumors than in healthy tissues.

Local immune suppression: Many cancer cells produce the protein CD47, which helps them avoid detection by the immune system. This creates an immunosuppressive environment around the tumor that also allows bacteria to survive and persist in the same area.

Leaky tumor blood vessels: Blood vessels that feed tumors are often poorly structured and unusually permeable. Because of this leakage, circulating bacteria can more easily exit the bloodstream and enter tumor tissue.

Distinct tumor metabolism: Cancer cells produce unique metabolic byproducts that differ from those found in normal tissues. These tumor-associated metabolites can support the selective growth of bacteria such as E. americana within the tumor environment.

Excellent Safety Profile

Comprehensive safety testing showed that E. americana has several favorable safety characteristics:

Rapid removal from the bloodstream (half-life ~1.2 hours, completely undetectable at 24 hours)

No bacterial presence detected in normal organs, including liver, spleen, lung, kidney, and heart

Only short-lived mild inflammatory responses, which return to normal within 72 hours

No signs of long-term toxicity during a 60-day extended observation period

Future Directions

This research provides proof of concept for a new cancer treatment strategy that uses naturally occurring bacteria. Future studies and development will focus on several key directions:

Expansion to other cancer types: Testing effectiveness in breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, melanoma, and other malignancies

Improving delivery methods: Developing safer and more effective administration strategies, including dose fractionation and intratumoral injection

Combination therapy development: Studying how the approach may work together with existing immunotherapy and chemotherapy treatments

The findings also highlight the untapped potential of biodiversity as a source of new medical technologies. Discoveries like this may eventually lead to additional treatment options for patients with cancers that do not respond well to current therapies.


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

Researchers Discover Long-Lost Words of Ancient Greek Philosopher After 2,000 Years

By U. of Liège, April 10, 2026

Fragment The Empedocles of Cairo (P. Fouad inv. 218). 
Credit: Université de Liège / N.Carlig

Newly discovered verses of Empedocles provide original insight into his philosophy and influence on later thinkers, reshaping understanding of early Greek thought.

A two-thousand-year-old papyrus fragment uncovered in the archives of the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo contains thirty previously unknown verses by Empedocles, a pre-Socratic philosopher from the 5th century BCE.

Empedocles, a pre-Socratic philosopher from 5th century BCE Sicily, was one of the most influential thinkers of early Greek philosophy. Known for his theory of the four root elements, earth, air, fire, and water, and the cosmic forces of Love and Strife that govern their interaction, he sought to explain both the physical world and human perception through a unified natural philosophy.

His ideas helped shape later thinkers from Plato and Aristotle to Roman authors like Lucretius.

For the first time, scholars can examine his ideas directly rather than relying only on later quotations. The first edition, translation, and analysis of these verses appear in the book L’Empédocle du Caire, edited by Nathan Carlig, Alain Martin, and Olivier Primavesi.

Nathan Carlig, a papyrologist at the University of Liège, identified papyrus P.Fouad inv. 218 at the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo (IFAO) as a previously unrecognized fragment of Physica, Empedocles’ major poetic work.

Direct Access to Empedocles’ Original Texts

“Until now, our knowledge of Empedocles’ work relied exclusively on indirect sources such as fragmentary quotations, summaries, or allusions scattered throughout the works of authors such as Plato, Aristotle, or Plutarch. Papyrus P.Fouad inv. 218 allows us to read the philosopher in his original text, without the intermediary of often partial or biased sources. It is also the only known copy of the Physica, fragments of other parts of which from the same scroll are preserved in Strasbourg.”

The newly revealed text focuses on theories of particle emissions and sensory perception, especially vision. Researchers have identified surprising links within the material, including what appears to be a direct source for a passage by Plutarch (2nd century CE), as well as connections to a dialogue by Plato and a work by Theophrastus, a student of Aristotle, both from the 4th century BCE.

Additional traces of Empedocles’ ideas appear in the writings of the comic playwright Aristophanes and the Roman philosopher Lucretius. The findings also suggest that Empedocles may have anticipated atomist thinkers, particularly Democritus of Abdera.

Philosophical Connections and Influence Across Antiquity

To illustrate the importance of this discovery, the researchers offer a comparison. Imagine that centuries from now, Victor Hugo survives only through brief excerpts of Les Misérables in schoolbooks, a stage adaptation of Notre-Dame de Paris, and a theater program for Hernani.

If the original pages of Hugo’s work were suddenly found, it would be a major literary event. That is the situation scholars of Empedocles now face. Since the late 19th century, papyrologists have searched ancient papyrus texts in much the same way Renaissance scholars once combed libraries for lost manuscripts.

“It is, in a way, to borrow Peter Parsons’ words, a ‘second Renaissance’ of ancient literature,” says Nathan Carlig. The publication of this research opens up new perspectives on understanding Empedocles’ doctrine and, more broadly, his work, in order to better situate the philosopher within the history of Greek philosophy and to better define his relationship with his predecessors and successors.”



The birth of modern Man
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