Saturday, 21 February 2026

The Southern Indian Ocean Is Losing Salt at an “Astonishing” Rate

BY U. OF COLORADO AT BOULDER, FEB. 19, 2026

The waters off Western Australia are becoming dramatically less salty and the cause traces back to climate-driven shifts in global winds. Scientists warn that this quiet transformation could ripple through ocean circulation and marine life worldwide. 
Credit: SciTechDaily.com

A vast region of the Southern Indian Ocean is freshening at an unprecedented pace.

Ocean water is not just “wet.” Its saltiness helps determine how seawater stacks up in layers, how currents move heat around the planet, and how easily nutrients can reach the sunlit surface where much of marine life begins. That is why scientists are paying close attention to a startling shift now unfolding off Western Australia: the Southern Indian Ocean there is freshening fast.

According to a study published in Nature Climate Change, researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder report that rising global temperatures over the past 60 years have altered major wind patterns and ocean currents. These shifts are funneling increasing amounts of freshwater into the Southern Indian Ocean. The researchers warn that this trend could reshape how the ocean and atmosphere interact, interfere with large circulation systems that regulate climate worldwide, and place added stress on marine ecosystems.

“We’re seeing a large-scale shift of how freshwater moves through the ocean,” said Weiqing Han, professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences. “It’s happening in a region that plays a key role in global ocean circulation.”
The Indo-Pacific Freshwater Pool

Much of the incoming freshwater can be traced back to a huge tropical region where surface waters are naturally diluted by frequent rain. This zone, stretching from the eastern Indian Ocean across to the western Pacific in the Northern Hemisphere tropics, stays relatively fresh because rainfall is high while evaporation is comparatively low. Scientists often call it the Indo Pacific freshwater pool.

That pool is not isolated. It connects to the thermohaline circulation, a global current system sometimes described as a conveyor belt because it moves heat, salt, and freshwater between ocean basins. Warm surface waters from the Indo Pacific feed into pathways that ultimately influence conditions in the Atlantic. In the North Atlantic, that transported water cools, becomes denser, sinks, and then returns southward at depth before eventually flowing back toward the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Small shifts in salinity can matter here because salt helps set seawater density, and density helps power the sinking and spreading that keep the system moving.

The waters off Australia’s southwest have typically been dry at the surface, with evaporation outpacing rainfall. That pattern has historically favored higher salinity. But long-term observations show that the balance is changing.

Han’s team estimates that the area covered by salty seawater in this Southern Indian Ocean region has shrunk by about 30% over the past 60 years. They describe it as the fastest freshening seen anywhere in the Southern Hemisphere.

“This freshening is equivalent to adding about 60% of Lake Tahoe’s worth of freshwater to the region every year,” said first author Gengxin Chen, visiting scholar in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and senior scientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ South China Sea Institute of Oceanology. “To put that into perspective, the amount of freshwater flowing into this ocean area is enough to supply the entire U.S. population with drinking water for more than 380 years,” he said.
Climate-Driven Wind Shifts

The researchers found that the growing influx of freshwater cannot be explained by local rainfall. By analyzing observational records alongside computer simulations, they concluded that global warming is reshaping surface wind patterns across the Indian and tropical Pacific Oceans. These altered winds are steering ocean currents in ways that transport more freshwater from the Indo-Pacific freshwater pool into the Southern Indian Ocean.

As salt levels drop, seawater becomes less dense. Fresher water tends to remain above saltier, heavier water, increasing the separation between surface and deep layers. This enhanced layering limits vertical mixing, the process that normally allows surface water to sink and deeper water to rise, distributing heat and nutrients throughout the ocean.

Previous studies have suggested that climate change could slow part of the thermohaline circulation, as melting from the Greenland Ice Sheet and Arctic sea ice adds freshwater to the North Atlantic, disrupting the salinity balance needed for the conveyor belt to keep moving. The expansion of the freshwater pool could further influence this system by transporting fresher water into the Atlantic.

Weaker vertical mixing could also harm marine life. When nutrient-rich water from the depths does not reach the sunlit surface, organisms in upper layers have fewer resources to survive. At the same time, reduced mixing traps excess heat near the surface, raising temperatures further for species already coping with warming oceans.

“Salinity changes could affect plankton and sea grass. These are the foundation of the marine food web. Changes in them could have far-reaching impact on the biodiversity in our oceans,” Chen said.


The Life of Earth
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'Freak of Nature': Scientists Think Greenland's Ice Is Churning Like Molten Rock

21 Feb. 2026, By M. STARR

(Arctic-Images/Stone/Getty Images)

Deep inside the Greenland ice sheet, radar images have revealed strange, plume-like structures distorting the layering deposited over eons.

Now, more than a decade after their discovery, scientists think they have figured out what causes these structures, and it's a real hum-dinger. According to modeling, the plumes are a striking match for convection: the roiling upward transport of heat more commonly linked to the fiery, molten rock churning beneath Earth's crust.

"Finding that thermal convection can happen within an ice sheet goes slightly against our intuition and expectations. Ice is at least a million times softer than the Earth's mantle, though, so the physics just work out," says glaciologist Robert Law of the University of Bergen in Norway.

"It's like an exciting freak of nature."

Example plume structures from northern Greenland, mapped from radar surveys.
 (Law et al., The Cryosphere, 2026)

The Greenland ice sheet, which covers 80 percent of the island, is one of our planet's biggest reservoirs of frozen water, and is forecast to play a major role in rising sea levels as it melts into the ocean. Understanding the physics inside it is vital for predicting how the ice sheet will change over time.

This is why scientists use ice-penetrating radar. Radio waves pass through the ice and reflect back differently as they encounter internal layers – snow that fell long ago and was compacted into ice as more snow piled on top. Each of these layers has its own characteristics – slightly different acidity levels, for example, and variations in dust, ash, and chemical content.

In a 2014 paper, scientists described strange structures these radar images had revealed deep inside the ice in northern Greenland. These large, upward-buckling features were unrelated to the topography of the bedrock below, presenting a puzzle researchers have been trying to solve ever since.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JdzA6fC91s&t=1s

Previous efforts suggested that mechanisms such as glacial meltwater freezing onto the underside of the ice sheet, or migrating slippery spots, may be responsible for the structures. One idea that had not been tested, however, was that thermal convection may take place within ice sheets.

To test the idea, Law and his colleagues turned to computer modeling. They built a simplified digital slice of the Greenland ice sheet and asked a simple question: If the base of the ice is warmed from below, could convection form structures that match what radar sees?

They used a geodynamics modeling package normally used to simulate convection in Earth's mantle to model a slab of ice 2.5 kilometers (1.6 miles) thick. They tweaked variables such as snowfall rate, ice thickness, how soft the ice is, and how fast the ice moves on the surface.

Under the right conditions, the model began producing plume-like upwellings – rising columns of ice that folded the overlying layers into shapes strikingly similar to those seen in radar images.

In the model, plumes only formed when the ice near the base was warmer and significantly softer than standard assumptions allow, suggesting that if convection is responsible, the real ice at the base of northern Greenland's ice sheet may also be softer than previously thought.

Meanwhile, the heat required to produce these convection upwellings in the model was consistent with the heat continuously flowing from Earth, generated by the radioactive decay of elements within the crust and by residual heat from Earth's formation as it gradually cools over billions of years.

This effect is tiny, but over time, and under a giant slab of insulating material, it could build up enough to warm and soften the ice above it.

"We typically think of ice as a solid material, so the discovery that parts of the Greenland ice sheet actually undergo thermal convection, resembling a boiling pot of pasta, is as wild as it is fascinating," says climatologist Andreas Born of the University of Bergen.

Now, that doesn't mean the ice is slushy. It's still solid ice, flowing only on timescales of thousands of years. It also doesn't necessarily mean that it will melt faster. Further investigation into the physics of ice, and the effects of convection on the evolution of the ice sheet, is required to determine what this means for the future.

"Greenland and its nature is truly special. The ice sheet there is over one thousand years old, and it's the only ice sheet on Earth to have a culture and permanent population at its margins," Law says.

"The more we learn about the hidden processes inside the ice, the better prepared we'll be for the changes coming to coastlines around the world."



The Life of Earth
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Something Strange Altered Earth's Magnetic Field 40 Million Years Ago

21 Feb. 2026,By D. NIELD

(Mark Garlick/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

Researchers have identified a period of sluggish magnetic field flipping for planet Earth, some 40 million years ago – raising big questions about how long these reversals actually take, and how we might be affected by the next one.

Magnetic field flips are thought to happen fairly regularly, as far as geological timescales go. There have been some 540 reversals across the last 170 million years, and it seems they've been happening for billions of years.

But something was different 40 million years ago. One transition around this time took 18,000 years, and another took at least 70,000 years, the international team of researchers found, which is far longer than the typical timespan of 10,000 years or so that scientists think is the norm.

"This finding unveiled an extraordinarily prolonged reversal process, challenging conventional understanding and leaving us genuinely astonished," writes lead author and paleomagnetist Yuhji Yamamoto from Kochi University in Japan.

"The variability in reversal duration revealed by this study reflects the intrinsic dynamical properties of the Earth's geodynamo, and it provides empirical evidence that geomagnetic reversals can last significantly longer than the widely assumed 10,000-year duration."

The team analyzed a sediment core extracted from a location off the coast of Newfoundland in the North Atlantic. The magnetic signals inside these cores, locked to tiny crystals, reveal the direction of Earth's magnetic field over vast time periods.


Yuhji Yamamoto studying a drilling core. 
(Peter Lippert)



In this case, the researchers looked closely at a specific layer measuring 8 meters (a little over 26 feet) top to bottom, representing part of the Eocene era. There was a clear shift in polarity, but across an unexpectedly large section of the sediment core.


Two magnetic field flips were discovered, one lasting around 18,000 years, and another lasting 70,000 years. Computer modeling suggested events like these could potentially stretch across 130,000 years in some cases – though that's never been seen in the geological record.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgouMVdqLDI&t=5s

These magnetic field flips are driven by shifts in Earth's liquid iron and nickel outer core, around 2,200 kilometers (1,367 miles) thick. While this outer core is always in flux, it occasionally becomes unstable enough that the magnetic poles change position.

The planet doesn't tip over, but magnetic north becomes magnetic south, and vice versa – your compass would eventually point in the opposite direction, after tens of thousands of years of being incredibly confused.

Not only did these newly identified flips take a long time, but they were messier and more variable than the researchers expected. There were multiple 'rebounds' where the magnetic field seemed unsure about which direction to travel in, matching findings from our planet's most recent flip – the Brunhes-Matuyama reversal.

"The occurrence of multiple rebounds is not unprecedented: this behaviour is also reported for the Brunhes-Matuyama reversal," write the researchers in their published paper.

"We suggest that it may be more common and that polarity reversals are inherently complex, if not somewhat chaotic, events."

The Brunhes-Matuyama reversal, which happened around 775,000 years ago, backs up the new findings. A study from 2019 found that the flip took 22,000 years to complete – so drawn-out reversals may be the rule, rather than the exception.

When the next one happens, we need to be ready. One of the consequences of a magnetic field reversal is that our planet gets far less protection from the radiation and geomagnetic activity beaming down from space.

If that exposure is going to last tens of thousands of years longer than previously thought, we need to know about it. It has the potential to disrupt everything from animal species to climate systems – though more research will be needed to know the precise effects.

"It's basically saying we are exposing higher latitudes in particular, but also the entire planet, to greater rates and greater durations of this cosmic radiation," says paleomagnetist Peter Lippert from the University of Utah.

"Therefore, it's logical to expect that there would be higher rates of genetic mutation. There could be atmospheric erosion."



The Life of Earth
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Friday, 20 February 2026

Astonishing Spinosaur Unearthed in The Sahara Is Unlike Any Seen Before

20 Feb. 2026, By J. COCKERILL

Paleontologist Paul Sereno with the reconstructed Spinosaurus mirabilis skull. (Keith Ladzinski/University of Chicago)


A new Spinosaurus species has been unearthed from the Saharan desert, and its skull bears a magnificent crest never seen before on this kind of dinosaur.

Paleontologists have named it Spinosaurus mirabilis, meaning 'wonderful spine lizard'. We heartily agree.


Paleoartist rendering of Spinosaurus mirabilis eating a coelacanth. 
(Dani Navarro)



The discovery reveals more than just the dinosaur's beauty, however. Spinosaurus have mostly been found in coastal deposits, while this new specimen hails from deep inland in Niger, hundreds of kilometers from any ocean.

Even the paleontology team, led by Paul Sereno of the University of Chicago, was caught off guard.

"This find was so sudden and amazing, it was really emotional for our team," Sereno says.


"I'll forever cherish the moment in camp when we crowded around a laptop to look at the new species for the first time… One member of our team generated 3D digital models of the bones we found to assemble the skull – on solar power in the middle of the Sahara. That's when the significance of the discovery really registered."

With its spiky, interlocking teeth reminiscent of modern crocodiles, and its proximity to long-necked dinosaurs buried in nearby river sediments, Sereno and team think this Spinosaurus might have led a semi-aquatic lifestyle amidst a forested habitat.

"I envision this dinosaur as a kind of 'hell heron' that had no problem wading on its sturdy legs into two meters of water but probably spent most of its time stalking shallower traps for the many large fish of the day," Sereno says.

The scimitar-shaped crest sure is handsome, but exactly what purpose it served remains a mystery. The team suspect it was once sheathed in keratin – perhaps brightly colored, like a toucan's bill – to create a kind of visual display.


The Life of Earth
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This Comet Mysteriously Reversed Its Spin After Passing The Sun, But Why?

20 Feb. 2026, By M. STARR

Comet 41P photographed in March 2017. 
(Kees Scherer/Flickr, CC0)

A comet whizzing through the Solar System has astonished scientists by doing something they had never seen before.

In early 2017, comet 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresák made its 5.4-year close approach to the Sun, or perihelion.

As it did so, its spin appeared to slow down to a complete halt, before likely starting up again in the opposite direction, according to astronomer David Jewitt of the University of California, Los Angeles.

The reversal itself isn't the crazy part; changes in cometary spin are known to happen sometimes as these icy objects draw near to the Sun. Rather, it's how quickly and dramatically the reversal occurred.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe-d9RxLLaM&t=3s

"The previous record for a comet spindown went to 103P/Hartley 2, which slowed its rotation from 17 to 19 hours over 90 days," said astronomer Dennis Bodewits of the University of Maryland, describing the slowdown phase in 2018.

"By contrast, 41P spun down by more than 10 times as much in just 60 days, so both the extent and the rate of this change is something we've never seen before."

The sequence of events is as follows. Observations taken in March 2017 showed that 41P's rotation period was about 20 hours. By May, the rotation had slowed to more than double that length, with one rotation every 53 hours or so.

By December, however, something really weird had happened. The rotation period of the comet had shortened to 14.4 hours – a change, Jewitt believes, that can best be explained if its rotation had slowed to a complete stop sometime around June 2017 and then changed direction.

This is actually fairly easy to explain, in theory. Comets are clumpy agglomerations of rock and ice that spend most of their orbital periods just trucking along. However, as they get closer to the Sun, the ice in their bodies starts to transition directly into gas, a process called sublimation.

Jets and geysers burst forth, spraying vapor out into space. Each of these jets imparts a torque on the cometary nucleus. This is why so many comets change their spin as they go around the Sun, some spinning up to such high speeds that they fall apart completely.

In addition, the spin of a smaller comet changes more readily than the spin of a larger one. At roughly a kilometer wide – about the length of 10 football fields laid end to end – 41P is small enough for those gas jets to have an outsized effect.

If the Sun heated it unevenly, or if the distribution of its ice content was lopsided, its rapid reversal is relatively easy to explain mathematically.

Now, there's still a little bit of a question mark. The light-curve measurements taken of 41P can give its spin rate, but not its spin direction.

Jewitt arrived at his conclusions by plotting the lightcurves along with new estimates of the comet's size, calculated from archival Hubble Space Telescope data. He could only make them line up smoothly if the comet's spin had slowed to zero and then flipped.

"The observed, rapid changes are natural consequences of torques from outgassed volatiles acting on the very small nucleus," Jewitt writes in his preprint, which has not yet been peer-reviewed.

If 41P's spin continues evolving at the rate seen in 2017, it could spin itself apart within a few short decades, Jewitt found. We don't know yet if that's the case. There are no published spin rates from its September 2022 perihelion. The next opportunity to measure its spin rate will be its 2028 perihelion.

Comets are among the more fascinating relics of the early Solar System. They're fragile and change rapidly, but somehow they're still here, 4.5 billion years after the Solar System formed.

The changes displayed by 41P over the course of 2017, and the decades prior, suggest that it may be the remnant of a much larger comet that has been gradually whittled away by its long, slow dance with the Sun.


The Life of Earth
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The Sleep Mistake Putting Millions of Runners at Risk

BY U. OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA, FEB. 19, 2026

Poor sleep significantly raises the risk of running injuries. Getting consistent, high-quality rest may be one of the most effective tools for staying healthy and performing at your best.
 Credit: Shutterstock

A new study suggests that skimping on sleep could nearly double your chances of getting injured while running.

More than 620 million people worldwide run regularly, and many of them head out early in the morning. But starting your run without enough rest the night before could significantly raise your chances of getting injured.

That is the conclusion of new research led by Professor Jan de Jonge, a work and sports psychologist at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands (and Adjunct Professor at the University of South Australia).

In a survey involving 425 recreational runners, Prof de Jonge and his colleagues found that participants who reported shorter sleep, poorer sleep quality, or frequent sleep disturbances were nearly twice as likely to suffer an injury.

The study, published in Applied Sciences, offers what Prof de Jonge describes as “compelling evidence that sleep is a critical yet often overlooked component of injury prevention.”

“While runners specifically focus on mileage, nutrition, and recovery strategies, sleep tends to fall to the bottom of the list,” he says.

“Our research shows that poor sleepers were 1.78 times more likely to report injuries than those with stable, good quality sleep, with a 68% likelihood of sustaining an injury over a 12-month period. That’s a strong reminder that how well you rest is just as important as how hard you train.”


Recreational running is one of the world’s most popular sports, but it also carries a high injury risk, particularly for those who are poor sleepers. 
Credit: University of South Australia



Why Sleep Matters for Injury Prevention

Recreational running is among the most popular sports globally, yet injuries are extremely common. Up to 90% of runners experience an injury at some point, leading to substantial medical costs and lost work time each year.

This study stands out because it looked at sleep from multiple angles. Instead of focusing only on how long people slept, the researchers also examined sleep quality and the presence of sleep disorders to better understand their combined effect on injury risk.

“Sleep is a vital biological process that allows the body and mind to recover and adapt to the physical and mental demands of training,” Prof de Jonge explains. “When sleep is disrupted or insufficient, the body’s ability to repair tissues, regulate hormones, and maintain focus diminishes, all of which can increase injury risk.”

The findings showed that runners who regularly struggled to fall asleep, woke up frequently during the night, or did not feel refreshed in the morning faced the greatest risk. In contrast, runners who maintained steady sleep schedules and good sleep quality reported fewer injuries overall.

Rethinking Training and Recovery Priorities

According to Prof de Jonge, these results carry important implications for recreational and competitive runners alike, as well as for coaches and health professionals.

“We often assume that more training equals better performance, but that’s not necessarily the case.”

“Runners – especially those balancing training with work, family, and social commitments – may actually need more sleep than average adults to recover properly. Sleep should be treated as a performance priority, not an afterthought.”

Experts generally recommend seven to nine hours of sleep per night. Athletes may require additional rest, including daytime naps, to fully support physical and mental recovery.

Practical steps such as maintaining a regular bedtime, limiting screen exposure before sleep, reducing caffeine and alcohol intake, and keeping the bedroom quiet and cool can all help improve sleep quality.

“Sleep quality and sleep duration are both important, but quantity often provides the bedrock. Sleep should be recognized not only as a recovery tool, but also as a potential predictor of injury vulnerability in recreational sports.”


The Life of Earth
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Thursday, 19 February 2026

Giant Gravity Anomaly Under Antarctica Is Getting Stronger, Scientists Reveal

19 Feb. 2026, By M. STARR

The Antarctic Geoid Low. 
(GReD)

Although Earth is approximately spherical, its gravity field doesn't adhere to the same geometry. In visualizations, it more closely resembles a potato, with bumps and divots.

One of the strongest of these depressions – where the gravity field is weaker – lies under Antarctica. Now, new models of how the so-called Antarctic Geoid Low evolved over time have shown that it's only getting stronger, driven by the long, slow movement of rock deep below Earth's surface, like a giant shifting in its sleep.

"If we can better understand how Earth's interior shapes gravity and sea levels, we gain insight into factors that may matter for the growth and stability of large ice sheets," says geophysicist Alessandro Forte of the University of Florida.

Earth's geoid – the bumpy potato shape of the gravitational field – is uneven because gravity is linked to mass, and the mass distribution inside the planet is uneven, due to different rock compositions having different densities.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCptIGM1cg8&t=1s

It's not a huge difference that you'd notice at the surface. Maps tend to exaggerate it so we can see what's going on; if you weighed yourself at a geoid low and a geoid high, the difference would be just a few grams.

Nevertheless, the geoid represents a window into processes deep inside Earth that we can't observe directly.

Forte and his colleague, geophysicist Petar Glišović of the Paris Institute of Earth Physics in France, generated a detailed map of the Antarctic Geoid Low using another window into Earth's interior: earthquakes. Seismic waves from earthquakes travel through the planet, changing speed and direction as they encounter materials with different compositions and densities.

"Imagine doing a CT scan of the whole Earth, but we don't have X-rays like we do in a medical office," Forte explains. "We have earthquakes. Earthquake waves provide the 'light' that illuminates the interior of the planet."

Using the earthquake data, the researchers constructed a 3D density model of Earth's mantle and extrapolated it into a new map of the entire planetary geoid. They compared this map with the gold-standard gravity data collected by satellites and found it to be a close match.

That was the easy part. The next step was to try to turn back the clock to assess how the geoid has evolved since the early Cenozoic, 70 million years ago.

Forte and Glišović fed their map into a physics-based model of Earth's mantle convection, rewinding Earth's interior geological activity to see how the geoid evolved over that timeframe.

Then, from their starting point, they let the model run forward to see if it could reproduce the geoid we see today.

They also checked whether their model reproduced real changes in Earth's rotational axis known as True Polar Wander. It arrived at the current geoid and matched the polar wander, suggesting it also provides an accurate representation of the geoid's evolution.

The results showed that the Antarctic Geoid Low is not a new development; a gravitational depression has been sitting near Antarctica for at least 70 million years. But it hasn't remained static. About 50 million years ago, its position and strength started to change dramatically – timing that matches a sharp bend in the polar wander.

According to the model, the anomaly formed as tectonic slabs subducted beneath Antarctica and sank deep into the mantle, altering the planet's gravity field at the surface. Meanwhile, a broad region of hot, buoyant material rose upward, becoming more influential over the past 40 million years and strengthening the geoid low.

Interestingly, this may be linked to the glaciation of Antarctica, which began in earnest around 34 million years ago. It's only a speculative link, but here's the interesting thing about the geoid: it shapes sea level. So, as the geoid shifted downward around Antarctica, the local sea surface would have lowered with it – potentially influencing the growth of the ice sheet.

That's obviously a hypothesis that requires further testing. However, the work does show that different geodynamic processes, from mantle convection to the geoid to the motion of the poles, can all be connected and influence each other.

The gravity hole under Antarctica may be subtle, but it is a reminder that even the slowest processes deep inside Earth can leave a lasting impression on the world above.


The Life of Earth
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Thousands of Alien Species Could Invade the Arctic, Scientists Warn

BY S. BRANDSLET, NORWEGIAN U. OF SCI. AND TECH., FEB. 18, 2026

Alien species are considered one of the greatest threats to global biodiversity, and new research suggests the Arctic may be far more vulnerable than previously thought.
 Credit: Shutterstock

More than 2,500 alien plant species could find suitable conditions in the Arctic, especially in northern Norway and Svalbard. Researchers used massive biodiversity datasets to map risk areas and improve early detection efforts.

When species are introduced outside their natural range, they can outcompete and displace native plants. The Intergovernmental Panel on Nature (IPBES) ranks invasive species among the most serious threats to global biodiversity.

To better understand the danger facing Arctic ecosystems, scientists compiled a comprehensive list of alien plant species that could establish themselves in the region. Their findings raise concern, especially at a time when expanding travel and human presence make it easier than ever for species to move across continents.

“We found a total of 2554 species that would find a suitable climatic niche in today’s Arctic,” says Kristine Bakke Westergaard, an associate professor at the Department of Natural History at the NTNU University Museum (at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology).


In recent years, a surprisingly large number of alien species have managed to flourish in Svalbard. In 2024, common meadow rue, Thalictrum flavum ,was identified for the first time in Svalbard, in full bloom on a nutrient-rich slope in Barentsburg. 
Credit: Kristine Bakke Westergaard, NTNU University Museum



In practical terms, this means these species could survive if they reach the Arctic. One of the most likely ways they could arrive is by traveling unintentionally with people, for example, attached to clothing, equipment, or transported goods.


Kristine Bakke Westergaard. 
Credit: Nina Tveter NTNU


Human Activity Accelerates Arctic Species Spread

“Our results show that alien species from virtually all over the world can find a niche in the Arctic. And with all the human activity in the Arctic now, there are lots of opportunities to get there,” Westergaard said.

Westergaard and her collaborators from the Department of Natural History and the University of Liverpool carried out what is known as a “horizon scan” to anticipate future biological invasions.

“We looked at roughly 14,000 known alien plant species that can spread to places where they do not originally belong,” Westergaard said.

Massive Biodiversity Dataset Reveals Arctic Hotspots

The team drew on more than 51 million documented observations of these species. The records were sourced from the GBIF—the Global Biodiversity Information Facility—as well as other large databases and scientific publications.

The slope below the old barn and farm buildings in Longyearbyen is very nutrient-rich after manure and food scraps were dumped there for years. It’s a great place where new alien species can get established. 
Credit: Kristine Bakke Westergaard, NTNU University Museum

First author Tor Henrik Ulsted completed the research while he was a master’s student at the NTNU University Museum until 2024. He received the Faculty of Natural Science’s award for the best master’s thesis that contributes to sustainable development and has since worked to publish the findings.

Using the combined dataset, the researchers produced a map highlighting the Arctic regions most exposed to potential plant invasions.

Norway and Svalbard Among Highest-Risk Arctic Regions

“Our map shows hotspot areas in the Arctic where many alien species can tolerate the climate. The highest number of species are found in the north of Norway,” Ulsted said.

Although Norway stands out as a high-risk area, almost no part of the Arctic can be considered fully protected, including Svalbard.


This map shows hotspots for possible new alien vascular plants in the Arctic. The lighter the color, the higher the number of potential species per 1 x 1 km. 
Credit: NTNU University Museum



“Even in Svalbard, 86 alien species can find a climatic niche,” says Westergaard, who has found and studied alien species there herself.

Rapid environmental change is compounding the threat. Rising temperatures across the Arctic lately have created conditions that allow an increasing number of foreign plant species to survive and potentially spread.

Early Detection Tools to Prevent Arctic Invasions

In Norway and Svalbard, the Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre‘s expert committees evaluate the risks posed by alien species in different regions.

“These committees have long found it to be very laborious, almost impossible, to make a list of relevant species that should be assessed as possible new alien species,” says Westergaard.


Human activity brings with it alien species and creates excellent conditions that allow them to become established in an otherwise barren Arctic landscape. The slope below the old barn and farm buildings in Barentsburg is very nutrient-rich after manure and food scraps were dumped there for years. New alien species appear here at regular intervals, even though farming ceased many years ago. 
Credit: Kristine Bakke Westergaard, NTNU University Museum



The newly developed approach provides experts with clearer species lists and a more systematic way to evaluate ecological risk in specific areas.

Supporting Global Biodiversity Goals by 2030

“Our long-term goal is to help identify alien species before they become invasive and problematic,” Ulsted said.

Detecting and managing invasive species early is far more effective than trying to control them once they are firmly established.

According to Westergaard, this strategy also advances the objectives of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, which calls for reducing the threat from alien species, including cutting their introduction and establishment by half by 2030.

The work also supports several measures outlined in the Norwegian authorities’ action plan against alien organisms.


The Life of Earth
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Deer Create Mysterious Ultraviolet Signals That Glow in Forests

19 Feb. 2026, By J. COCKERILL

(NaNami Cn/500px/Getty Images)

Deer have the ability to see ultraviolet light, and a recent study shows they can also leave a glowing trail visible in those wavelengths, too.

The discovery casts a whole new light on the way deer are communicating with each other, and how they perceive their environment.

Male white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) are known for making their mark on the forest during their autumn mating season. They rub their antlers against trees and the forest floor, shedding antler velvet – the soft, blood-rich velveteen 'skin' that covers their calcified antlers as they're growing – and leaving scent marks in the form of glandular secretions, urine and poop.

These marks, known as 'deer rubs' (on trees and shrubs) and scent-marking scrapes (on the ground), act as signposts to other animals of a deer's presence: a warning to rivals, a catcall to potential mates.

But scent, it seems, is not the only language with which the deer communicate.

Scientists at the University of Georgia (UGA) in the US have discovered that these marks 'glow' in ultraviolet wavelengths, which previous studies have shown deer eyes are capable of seeing.

"The resulting photoluminescence would be visible to deer based on previously described deer visual capabilities," the team writes in their published paper describing the phenomenon.

This is the first time scientists have documented evidence of any mammal actually using photoluminescence in their environment, although UV-induced photoluminescence in mammals has been studied for more than a century.

What's more, the study checks most of the boxes needed to say whether photoluminescence is actually serving a biological function.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4ouBJ5Zrj4&t=1s

Daniel DeRose-Broeckert, a graduate research assistant at UGA, and colleagues carried out their study in a 337-hectare (about 840-acre) research forest called Whitehall, where deer roam freely.

The team tracked down deer 'signposts' – 109 rubs and 37 scrapes – during two roughly month-long surveys in the fall of 2024, and returned to each one at night with ultraviolet flashlights peaking at 365 nm and 395 nm.

Both of these wavelengths abound in the skies at twilight and dawn, when deer are most active. And since earlier research has shown deer can see reflections or emissions of these wavelengths, anything that glows bright enough under these torches would be easily visible to a deer's eye.

As a proxy, the scientists used a tool that measures irradiance values: how much light is reflected or emitted at each wavelength, from a given spot.

"Rubs and urine found on scrapes exposed to 395 and 365 nm had greater average irradiance values (i.e., brighter) than the surrounding environment, and exhibited photoluminescence," the team reports.

It's unclear how much of this glow comes from the trees and shrubs, and how much is coming from remnant deer fluids. Deer urine, for instance, contains porphyrins and amino acids that become excited under longer UV wavelengths. Phenols and terpenes released from the forehead glands of male deers are thought to have a similar quality.

When the deer damage plants, they expose woody lignin and plant terpenes, types of compounds also known to exhibit photoluminescence.

"Whether the photoluminescence is the result of deer forehead glandular secretions or wood properties, the fact remains that rubs visually contrast the surrounding environment in a way that is uniquely suited for deer vision," the team notes.

Under both kinds of UV flashlight, the photoluminescence emitted by the deer signposts was the right kind to be registered by the cones within a deer's eye that are sensitive to short- and middle-wave visible light. This, the scientists say, reaffirms that deer eyesight is adapted to the low-light conditions of dawn and dusk.

More impressively, it suggests deer are communicating with light-up 'noticeboards' throughout the forest that the rest of us can't even see.

As to what the deer are saying? Until further research is conducted, we won't know for sure.

"Though we did not directly test for a behavioral change in deer as a result of the presence of photoluminescence, the irradiance of rubs increased at the same time as deer hormone levels increased, and behavioral changes are known to change with the progression of the breeding season," the team writes.


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

Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Glaciers Can Suddenly And Dangerously Surge Up to 60 Meters a Day

By H. LOVELL & C. STOKES, THE CONVERSATION

(DavidGreitzer/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

It's difficult to forget standing in front of a glacier that is advancing towards you, towering ice pillars constantly cracking as they inch forward. The motion is too slow to see in real time, but obvious from one day to the next.

One of us (Harold) experienced this during fieldwork in 2012 at Nathorstbreen on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, which was moving forwards more than 10 metres per day.

Encounters like this are rare. Most of the world's glaciers are retreating rapidly as the climate warms, and thousands are likely to disappear altogether within the next few decades.

However, a small fraction of glaciers do the opposite, and repeatedly speed up and advance for months or years after a long period of stagnation and retreat. This is known as glacier surging, and it has long puzzled scientists.


Surging glaciers in the Panmah region of the Karakoram, High Mountain Asia. 
(Frank Paul)



It might be tempting to view advancing ice as an antidote to the gloomy picture of disappearing glaciers, but the polar opposite is true. Surges can accelerate ice loss, make glaciers more vulnerable to climate change, and create serious hazards for people living downstream of them.

We have just published a global study of over 3,000 surging glaciers to find out what's causing them to move like this. Our work also summarises, for the first time, the hazards caused by these glaciers, and how surging is being affected by climate change.

Why some glaciers surge

During surges, glaciers accelerate from a slow crawl to tens of metres per day – sometimes within weeks. The fastest phase, when ice can flow at over 60 metres a day, typically lasts a year or more – although some glaciers have surged for up to 20 years. The return to low speeds and even stagnation can happen abruptly over days, or over several years.

Nathorstbreen dramatically advanced more than 15 kilometres in roughly a decade during its surge, which began in 2008 – transforming the entire landscape in a matter of years.


Field investigations at the surging front of Nathorstbreen, Svalbard in July 2012.
 (Harold Lovell)



The onset of surging is thought to be controlled by changes beneath the glacier. In surge-type glaciers, water generated by melting ice does not immediately drain away, but gathers at the bottom of the glacier. This reduces friction between ice and the ground, making it easier for ice to slide faster.

When that water eventually drains, the glacier slows again. Some glaciers experience repeated surges separated by years or decades of low ice flow – but the exact timing of surges is hard to predict.

Global hotspots of surging ice

Our study shows that at least 3,000 glaciers have surged at some point. That's only about 1% of all glaciers in the world, but they tend to be large, so represent about 16% of the global glacier area.

Notably, they are found in dense geographical groupings across the Arctic, the Himalayas and other high mountains in Asia, and the Andes – but are largely absent elsewhere. This is primarily controlled by the climate: surges do not generally happen where conditions are currently too warm, such as in the European Alps or mainland Scandinavia, or too cold and dry, such as Antarctica.

Other factors such as size and underlying geology are also important for determining which glaciers surge in a region and which do not.

Some of the hotspots are found in populated regions, where surging glaciers can become hazards. The advancing ice can overrun infrastructure and farmland, and block rivers to form dangerous lakes that can release devastating floods when the ice breaks.

An unstable lake formed by a surge of Shisper Glacier in the Karakoram mountain range drained multiple times from 2019 to 2022, causing extensive damage to the Karakoram Highway, a key connection between Pakistan and China.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xTe23gDWMY4&t=1s

Fast-moving ice can cause deep cracks (crevasses) to form, affecting travel in regions such as Svalbard where glaciers provide highways between isolated human settlements. It also disrupts tourism and recreation activities, such as where climbers use glaciers to approach peaks. When glaciers surge into the sea, they release numerous icebergs in a short space of time that could present a risk to shipping and tourism.

Surging is changing as the climate warms

Climate warming is already reshaping how and when glaciers surge. In some regions, surges are becoming more frequent; in others, they are declining as glaciers thin and lose the mass needed to build towards a surge.

Heavy rainfall, intense melt periods or other extreme weather have also been shown to trigger earlier-than-expected surges, and these factors may become more important in a warming climate.

Together, this paints a picture of the increasing unpredictability of glacier surges. Some regions might experience less surging as the world warms, while others might see an increase. It is feasible that glaciers that have never surged before may begin to, including in areas where there are no records of past surges, such as the fast-warming Antarctic peninsula.

Surging glaciers remind us that ice does not always respond to warming in simple and predictable ways. Understanding these exceptions, and managing the hazards they create, is critical in a rapidly changing world.


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

Your Gut Bacteria Are Actively Searching for Food

BY MAX-PLANCK-GESELLSCHAFT, FEB. 17, 2026

Scientists found that beneficial gut bacteria can detect a broad range of nutrients and chemical signals, helping them move toward valuable food sources. 
Credit: Shutterstock

Your gut bacteria are constantly sensing, moving, and sharing nutrients to keep the microbiome thriving.

The gut microbiome, also called the gut flora, is essential to human health. This vast and constantly changing community of microorganisms depends on a web of chemical exchanges. Microbes communicate not only with one another but also with the human body that hosts them. To function properly, gut bacteria must detect nutrients and signaling molecules in their surroundings. However, scientists still do not fully understand the wide range of chemical signals that bacterial receptors are able to recognize.

A key question remains: which of these signals are most important for beneficial gut bacteria?

Moving Beyond Pathogens in Bacterial Research

Most research on bacterial sensing has focused on model organisms, particularly disease-causing microbes. Far less attention has been given to commensals, the non-pathogenic and often beneficial bacteria that naturally live in humans. This has left an important gap in understanding what kinds of chemical signals these helpful microbes actually detect in the gut.

An international team led by Victor Sourjik sought to answer that question. The researchers, from the Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, the University of Ohio, and Philipps-University Marburg, investigated Clostridia. These motile bacteria are abundant in the intestinal flora and play a major role in maintaining gut health.

Gut Bacteria Recognize a Wide Range of Nutrients

The team found that receptors from bacteria in the human gut microbiome respond to a surprisingly broad range of metabolic compounds. These include breakdown products of carbohydrates, fats, proteins, DNA, and amines. Through systematic screening, the scientists observed that different types of bacterial sensors show clear preferences for specific classes of chemicals.

This indicates that gut bacteria are selectively tuned to certain metabolic signals rather than reacting randomly to everything in their environment.

Lactate and Formate Emerge as Key Signals

Using a mix of laboratory experiments and bioinformatic analysis, the researchers identified multiple chemical ligands that bind to sensory receptors controlling bacterial movement. These receptors allow motile bacteria to detect valuable nutrients. The findings suggest that movement in these microbes is primarily driven by the search for food.

Among all the substances tested, lactic acid (lactate) and formic acid (formate) appeared most often as stimuli. This suggests they may be especially important nutrients that support bacterial growth in the gut.

Cross-Feeding Strengthens the Gut Ecosystem

Interestingly, some gut bacteria can produce lactate and formate themselves. This supports the concept of ‘cross-feeding’, a process in which one bacterial species releases metabolites that serve as nutrients for other species. Such interactions help sustain a balanced and cooperative microbial community.

“These domains appear to be important for interactions between bacteria in the gut and could play a key role in the healthy human microbiome,” explains Wenhao Xu, a postdoctoral researcher in Victor Sourjik’s research group and the study’s first author.

Discovery of New Sensory Domains

By systematically analyzing multiple sensor types, the researchers identified several previously unknown groups of sensory domains. These newly described sensors are specific for lactate, dicarboxylic acids, uracil (a RNA building block) and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs).

The team also determined the crystal structure of a newly identified dual sensor that binds both uracil and acetate. This structural insight allowed them to understand how these molecules attach to the receptor. The sensor belongs to a large family of sensory domains with diverse specificities.

Further evolutionary analysis revealed that ligand specificity within this family can change relatively easily over time. This flexibility highlights how bacterial sensory receptors adapt to shifts in their surrounding environment.

“Our research project has significantly expanded the understanding of sensory abilities of beneficial gut bacteria,” says Victor Sourjik. “To our knowledge, this is the first systematic analysis of the sensory preferences of non-model bacteria that colonise a specific ecological niche. Looking ahead, our approach can be similarly applied to systematically investigate sensory preferences in other microbial ecosystems.”



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

Scientists Say Your Fingers Hold a Secret of Brain Evolution

BY SWANSEA U., FEB. 17, 2026

Finger length may reveal more than you think about human evolution. Boys with higher prenatal estrogen exposure showed larger head sizes at birth, pointing to a possible hormonal boost behind the growth of the human brain.
 Credit: Shutterstock

The secret to how our brains grew may be hidden in our fingers before we are even born.

One of the defining features of human evolution is the steady expansion of our brains. New findings suggest this growth may be partly linked to higher levels of estrogen before birth. Surprisingly, a visible clue may lie in the relative length of a person’s fingers.

What the 2D:4D Digit Ratio Reveals

Professor John Manning of Swansea’s Applied Sports, Technology, Exercise and Medicine (A-STEM) research team specializes in the study of digit ratio. This measurement compares the length of the index finger to the ring finger and is known as the 2D:4D ratio. Research shows that this ratio reflects the balance of estrogen and testosterone to which a fetus is exposed during the first trimester of pregnancy.

People who experienced higher estrogen-to-testosterone ratios before birth tend to have longer index fingers (2D) than ring fingers (4D), resulting in a higher 2D:4D ratio.

Professor Manning recently collaborated with researchers from Istanbul University’s Department of Anthropology. Their study was published in the journal Early Human Development.

Newborn Head Size and Brain Development

Because head circumference in newborns is closely associated with brain size and later measures of IQ, the researchers examined both finger ratios and head measurements in 225 infants, including 100 boys and 125 girls.

The analysis found a clear association in boys. Higher 2D:4D values (indicating high prenatal estrogen) were linked to larger head circumference. The same pattern was not observed in girls.

Evolutionary Tradeoffs and the Estrogenized Ape Hypothesis

Professor Manning explained the broader implications of the findings. “This finding is relevant to human evolution because increases in brain size are found alongside feminization of the skeleton, what is known as the estrogenized ape hypothesis. High values of 2D:4D in males have been found to be related to elevated rates of heart problems, poor sperm counts, and predisposition to schizophrenia.

“However, increases in brain size may offset these problems. Thus, the evolutionary drive for larger brains in humans may inevitably be linked to reductions in male viability, including cardiovascular problems, infertility, and rates of schizophrenia.”

The research team says these results add to growing evidence that prenatal estrogen may have played a beneficial role in the evolutionary expansion of the human brain, even if that shift carried biological costs.

Broader Research on Digit Ratio

Professor Manning’s earlier studies have also explored how digit ratio connects to other traits and outcomes. His work has examined links to alcohol consumption, recovery after COVID-19 infection, and oxygen use in football players. Together, this body of research suggests that finger length may offer insight into the powerful hormonal influences that shape development before birth.



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

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

The Oldest Minerals on Earth Are Rewriting the Planet’s Origin Story

BY U. OF WISCONSIN-MADISON, FEB. 16, 2026

New chemical evidence preserved in some of Earth’s oldest minerals is challenging long-held ideas about the planet’s earliest geological state. Analyses of ancient zircons suggest that parts of the Hadean Earth may have hosted early forms of subduction and continental crust, rather than being dominated by a single, rigid tectonic regime. 
Credit: Stock

Tiny zircon crystals are revealing that Earth’s earliest history may have included surprisingly complex tectonic activity.

Earth today is built around recycling. Old crust sinks, melts, and returns as new rock. A new zircon study suggests that kind of cycling may have started shockingly early, in some places, when the planet was still in its first half billion years.

Scientists led by the University of Wisconsin–Madison found distinctive chemical patterns inside zircons, Earth’s oldest minerals, that match what geologists expect from subduction and from large amounts of continental crust during the Hadean Eon, more than 4 billion years ago.

If that interpretation holds, the early Earth was not simply wrapped in a rigid, motionless outer shell, the classic “stagnant lid” idea that also assumes little or no continental crust. Instead, at least some regions may have been dynamic enough to reshape the surface, which matters because crust recycling and continent building influence where stable, potentially life-friendly environments can exist.

The work was published in Nature and focuses on ancient zircons from the Jack Hills of Western Australia. These grains, often found as tiny crystals weathered out of older rocks and preserved in younger sediments, are prized because they carry the only direct record from Earth’s first 500 million years. That makes them rare witnesses to how the surface and interior interacted as the earliest continents began to take form.

High-Precision Chemical Fingerprinting

The research team reached its conclusions by measuring trace elements inside individual zircon grains using WiscSIMS, a highly sensitive instrument located at UW–Madison. This technology allows scientists to analyze objects roughly one-tenth the width of a human hair. The team also developed new analytical techniques that made it possible to measure elements that could not be reliably studied before.

The trace elements serve as chemical markers that reveal the conditions under which each zircon formed. By examining these signatures, researchers can tell whether a zircon crystallized from magma rising directly from the mantle beneath Earth’s crust or from magma linked to subduction and continental crust. Zircons retain their original chemical makeup when they form and are extremely resistant to later changes, making them some of the most dependable record-keepers of early Earth processes even billions of years later.

“They’re tiny time capsules and they carry an enormous amount of information,” says John Valley, a professor emeritus of geoscience at UW–Madison who led the research.

Evidence for Early Continental Crust

According to Valley, the chemical composition of zircons from the Jack Hills indicates that they formed from a very different source than other Hadean zircons discovered in South Africa. The South African samples show chemical traits typical of simpler rocks that originated deep within Earth’s mantle.

“What we found in the Jack Hills is that most of our zircons don’t look like they came from the mantle,” says Valley. “They look like continental crust. They look like they formed above a subduction zone.”

Together, the two zircon populations suggest that Earth’s earliest geology was more varied than previously assumed, with different tectonic processes operating at the same time rather than a single, uniform system, Valley says.

“I think the South Africa data are correct, and our data are correct,” Valley says. “That means the Hadean Earth wasn’t covered by a uniform stagnant lid.”

Importantly, the type of subduction that could have produced the Jack Hills zircons is not necessarily the same as in modern plate tectonics. Valley described a process in which mantle plumes of ultra-hot rock rose, partly melted, and pooled at the base of the crust, creating circulation that could draw surface materials downward.

“That is subduction,” he says. “It’s not plate tectonics, but you have surface rocks sinking down into the mantle.”

This matters because subduction carries water-rich surface rocks down to hotter depths, where they can cause melting and form magmas that produce granitic rocks.

“If you have material on the surface, the surface had liquid water in the Hadean,” Valley says. “And when you take that material down, it’s wet and dehydrates. The water causes melting and that forms granites.”

Building the First Continents

Granites and related rocks are fundamental building blocks of continents. They’re less dense than other common rocks found under Earth’s oceans. This creates buoyant continents that rise higher above the ocean basins, providing stable environments on the Earth’s surface.

“This is evidence for the first continents and mountain ranges,” Valley says.

The results suggest that early Earth was geologically diverse, with different tectonic styles operating simultaneously in different regions.

“We can have both a stagnant-lid-like environment and a subduction-like environment operating at the same time, just in different places,” Valley says.

That complexity could reshape how scientists think about the planet’s first billion years, and the implications extend beyond tectonics. Subduction and continent formation influence when dry land first appeared and how surface environments evolved.

“What everybody really wants to know is, when did life emerge?” Valley says. “This doesn’t answer that question, but it says that we had dry land as a viable environment very early on.”

The oldest accepted microfossils are about 3.5 billion years old, but the Jack Hills zircons push evidence for potentially habitable surface conditions much earlier.

“We propose that there was about 800 million years of Earth history where the surface was habitable, but we don’t have fossil evidence and don’t know when life first emerged on Earth,” Valley says.

Looking Deeper Into the Hadean

As scientists continue to hunt for evidence of what the earliest Earth was like, Valley says the latest results are an example of the power of improving and refining laboratory techniques.

“Our new analytical capabilities opened a window into these amazing samples,” he says. “The Hadean zircons are literally so small you can’t see them without a lens, and yet they tell us about the otherwise unknown story of the earliest Earth.”


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