Sunday, 30 June 2024
Chuck's picture corner June 30, 2024 🍒🍓🐸⛆☔🌞
Sharing false political information on social media may be associated with positive schizotypy, research suggests
Sharing false political information on social media by users may be associated with aspects of personality such as positive schizotypy, a set of traits including paranoia, suspicion and disrupted thinking patterns. It may also be linked to a motivation to increase awareness according to a study published June 26, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Tom Buchanan, University of Westminster, UK, and colleagues.
The spread of false political information on social media can tarnish trust in authentic news and even contribute to social unrest. Knowingly or not, a small portion of social media users actively share false material.
Buchanan and colleagues asked what differentiates those who share false material on social media from those who do not and why they do it. To do this, they tested two categories of factors: individual user differences (like personality) as well as user motivation.
The researchers conducted four individual studies on a total of 1,916 US residents. Participants did not overlap between studies.Study 1 used a cross-sectional online survey to explore the relationship between individual differences (e.g., positive schizotypy, conscientiousness and decision-making style) and users' self-reported tendency to share false information.
Study 2 expanded on Study 1 by surveying respondents' motivations for sharing false information (e.g., activism, manipulation, and entertainment).
In Study 3, participants (whose individual differences and motivations were surveyed) viewed a series of true and false political headlines, and were asked to indicate whether they would consider sharing each and whether each was truthful.
In Study 4, the researchers assessed real Tweets posted by participants to determine if the factors identified in Study 1, 2 and 3 are associated with actual sharing of false material on Twitter.
Across all studies, the researchers found evidence that positive schizotypy is related to sharing false information, both accidentally and deliberately, though they note that the effect sizes are small. This might be because positive schizotypy is associated with decision-making based more on intuition—and sometimes biases—rather than reflective/deliberate thought, though the researchers suspect the mechanism may be complex. As for motivations, participants most commonly reported sharing political information for reasons of "raising awareness."
The researchers noted limitations of their studies: small sample sizes in some cases limited the exploratory analysis that could be performed, and participants may not always have known whether or not the information they shared was false.
A better understanding of who shares false information and why may help in identifying and developing targeted strategies to combat the spread of misinformation, the researchers say. They also suggest further research is needed to understand the links between positive schizotypy and spread of misinformation.
The authors add, "We've all seen false political information on social media, but only a few of us choose to share it. This study showed that our specific motivations for sharing, as well as our individual psychological characteristics, are associated with sharing false material both accidentally and on purpose."
Intermittent Fasting vs. USDA Diet: Johns Hopkins Scientists Uncover Surprising Brain Health Benefits
Recent research reveals that intermittent fasting and a standard healthy diet both enhance brain function in obese adults with insulin resistance, with intermittent fasting yielding better cognitive gains.
Researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine and the National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health report findings from their study involving 40 older adults with obesity and insulin resistance. Participants were randomly assigned to follow either an intermittent fasting regimen or a standard healthy diet endorsed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The study provides significant insights into the potential brain health benefits of both dietary approaches.
Insulin resistance is a hallmark of type 2 diabetes and is common in people with obesity. Studies suggest that people with insulin resistance are at higher risk than usual for Alzheimer’s disease and other cognitive impairments. As a result, various weight loss regimens figure widely as ways to reduce the risk of these metabolic and brain disorders.
Study Findings and Methodology
Previous Johns Hopkins research on animal models of diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease showed that intermittent fasting can improve cognition and insulin sensitivity. The new study, published June 19 in Cell Metabolism, tested the effects of intermittent fasting on women and men at risk for cognitive impairment, and it offers a “blueprint,” the authors write, for using a wide panel of biomarkers to assess dietary impact, including analysis of extracellular vesicles — tiny packets of materials shed from neurons, which are types of brain cells that send messages. Such neuron-derived extracellular vesicles are shed into circulating blood and were collected from the new study’s participants during an eight-week period while each person followed one of the two diets.
The results revealed that both types of diet plans had benefits regarding decreasing insulin resistance and improving cognition, with improvements in memory and executive function with both diets, but more strongly with the intermittent fasting diet, according to Mark Mattson, Ph.D., adjunct professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and former chief of the laboratory of neurosciences at the National Institute on Aging in Baltimore. “Other scientists may want to incorporate the (brain) markers (we used) into additional, larger studies of diet and brain health,” Mattson says.
Research Techniques and Participant Demographics
Because people with obesity and insulin resistance may be more at risk of cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease than people with normal metabolism and body mass index (BMI), Dimitrios Kapogiannis, M.D., chief of the human neuroscience section at the National Institute on Aging and adjunct associate professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, developed a method to isolate neuron-derived extracellular vesicles from blood. His laboratory found molecular evidence of insulin resistance in extracellular vesicles shed from neurons of people with diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease, and because blood samples are relatively easy to collect, they were considered good candidates for widespread use.
To test the effects of the two diets on brain function biomarkers, participants in the new study were recruited between June 2015 and December 2022, and four in-person assessments were completed at facilities run by the National Institute on Aging at MedStar Harbor Hospital in Baltimore. Among the participants, 40 completed their eight-week study. Also, 20 were assigned to an intermittent fasting diet that restricted calories to one-quarter of the recommended daily intake for two consecutive days per week, and they followed the USDA’s healthy living diet — which consists of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, low-fat dairy products and limited added sugars, saturated fats, and sodium — for the remaining five days. The USDA’s healthy living diet was assigned to 20 other study participants each day of the week.
The average age of participants in both groups was 63, and 25 were white, 14 were Black, and one was Hispanic. There were 24 men and 16 women. All were obese and had insulin resistance.
The researchers found that both diets had equally positive effects on reducing insulin resistance markers in extracellular vesicles, improving BrainAGE (a measurement of the brain’s biological age using structural MRI data), and lowering glucose concentration in the brain. Reduced glucose concentration is a corollary of higher glucose use.
Both diets also improved customary measurements of metabolic health, including weight, BMI, measurement of waist circumference, blood lipids such as cholesterol, and insulin resistance. Executive function and memory (which are a set of mental skills that helps with planning and achieving goals) improved approximately 20% more in the intermittent fasting group than in the healthy living diet group.
Observations and Health Cautions
A few study participants reported modest side effects including constipation loose stools, and occasional headaches.
The researchers also saw increased levels of a neurofilament protein (a structural protein in neurons) in both diet groups, but mainly in the intermittent fasting group. What that means regarding brain health is unclear.
“This is a marker to continue to evaluate in further studies,” says Mattson. “Neurons release a lot of proteins, and one idea is that intermittent fasting may be causing some kind of neuroplasticity (a change in structure) in neurons, causing the release of neurofilament proteins.”
The Johns Hopkins researchers and others caution that people interested in intermittent fasting should plan carefully with a healthcare practitioner because it could be harmful to some people, including those with type 1 diabetes and eating disorders.
Saturday, 29 June 2024
Phytochemical diversity and herbivory are higher in tropical forests, says study
It is widely accepted that biological interactions are stronger or more important in generating and maintaining biodiversity in the tropics than in temperate regions. However, this hypothesis has not been fully tested in ecology and evolutionary biology.
In a study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, researchers from the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences have provided strong support for this central prediction by examining phytochemical diversity and herbivory in 60 tree communities ranging from species-rich tropical rainforests to species-poor subalpine forests.
The researchers investigated tree communities in Yunnan, one of the world's floristic hotspots, which contains an elevation gradient from tropical rainforest to subtropical forest to subalpine forest within a relatively short distance. In 2011 and 2012, they established 60 long-term forest inventory plots ranging from species-rich tropical rainforest to species-poor subalpine forest along the gradient.
Using community metabolomic approaches, they tested the predictions that phytochemical diversity is higher within and among communities in tropical forests as compared to less species-rich subtropical and subalpine forests. They also measured herbivore damage and leaf specialization.
Combining these data, they tested the prediction that these variables are higher in the tropics. They then quantified the phylogenetic signal in the phytochemical similarity between species to test whether closely related species diverged more in their phytochemicals than expected.
They found that phytochemical diversity was higher within tropical tree communities compared to subtropical and subalpine communities. Along with increased alpha and beta phytochemical diversity in leaves in tropical tree communities, they found an increase in leaf herbivory and the degree of specialized herbivory in the tropics. Furthermore, herbivory pressure and specialization were highest in the tropics.
The researchers then constructed a phylogeny including all species in their system and quantified phylogenetic signal in phytochemical similarity. They found little phylogenetic signal in tree phytochemical similarity, suggesting rapid divergence among closely related species.
The results also highlight multiple dimensions of tropical biodiversity that are often unquantified and of value to human society, but which are threatened by ongoing global change. Tropical forests not only contain more species than temperate forests, but also spectacular levels of phytochemical diversity. There are likely numerous abiotic covariates (e.g., temperature and precipitation) and biotic covariates (e.g., herbivores, pathogens, neighborhood composition and diversity) that may be associated with phytochemical diversity and cannot be clearly separated to elucidate specific mechanisms.
"Our study provides multiple lines of evidence from entire tree communities from the tropics to the subalpine that biotic interactions are likely to play an increasingly important role in generating and maintaining tree diversity at lower and lower latitudes," said Yang Jie of XTBG.
Genetic Giants: Unveiling the Massive Genomes of Arctic’s Glow-in-the-Dark Mushrooms
Research on various Mycena mushroom species revealed unexpectedly large genomes, suggesting a genetic capacity for diverse lifestyles, notably in Arctic strains where genomes are significantly larger.
The study, involving an international team and part of the 1000 Fungal Genomes project, uncovered genome expansions across all gene families, likely aiding adaptability in extreme environments.
Mycena Mushroom Genomes
Mycena mushrooms, also known as “bonnets,” have unexpectedly large genomes, according to a new scientific study of multiple species. The research was published today (June 27) in the journal Cell Genomics.
While the mushrooms had been thought to live by degrading dead organic material alone, the discovery suggests that they may instead have a collection of genes to enable them to adapt to different lifestyles as circumstances change, according to the researchers. Interestingly, they show that certain Mycena strains living in the Arctic have some of the largest mushroom genomes ever described.
Genome Expansion in Mycena Mushrooms
“As a group, Mycena has simply used every possible known trick from the playbook to expand their genomes and apparently for multiple different purposes that are not obviously connected to their known, supposedly preferred lifestyle,” says Christoffer Bugge Harder. With an original base for the work at the University of Oslo, Norway, he served as the lead author of a 28-person author team from universities in seven countries.
“Evolution tells us that non-advantageous traits tend to disappear over time, so an obvious implication is that adaptability and generalism in those large genome structures must be an advantage for these fungi,” says Francis Martin of the INRAE and the University of Lorraine in Champenoux, France. “This is despite the costs of having a large genome with lots of possibly unnecessary features that must be replicated in each cell division. This may be particularly true in an extreme environment like the Arctic, as also seen in plants.”
The Role of Mycena in Ecosystems and Their Genome Sequencing
The researchers set out to study Mycena based on their role as a main mushroom decomposer of litter and leaves in forest ecosystems. Despite their tiny fruiting bodies, Mycena have an important role in the global carbon cycle. This group of mushrooms had long been thought to live purely on dead organic material, but more recently it was found some species also make a living through cooperative or parasitic interactions with living plants. Mycenas are also bioluminescent—i.e., they glow in the dark—and earlier work describing the genomes of five Mycena species had investigated this phenomenon. To learn more about their direct lifestyle habits, the researchers now wanted to study a broad palette of Mycena species with different preferences for substrates.
Exploring Genome Diversity in Mycena Species
In the new study, they generated new genome sequences for 24 additional Mycena species and a related species now known as Atheniella floridula. The genomes were sequenced and annotated through the DOE Joint Genome Institute’s Community Science Program. The work is part of the 1000 Fungal Genomes project, which aims to explore genome diversity both across and within different groups of fungi, in this case the genus of Mycena.
The species included represent six decayer categories: wood generalists, broadleaf wood decayers, grass litter generalists, broadleaf litter decayers, coniferous litter decayers, and overall litter generalists. It also included three Arctic species. They added their new genomes to 33 additional genomes from non-Mycena species. They wanted to understand how the genomes had evolved and expanded over evolutionary time and how species might differ in plant cell-wall-degrading enzymes based on their lifestyle habits.
Surprising Genome Expansions and Their Evolutionary Implications
They were surprised to find that Mycena showed massive genome expansions overall, affecting all gene families regardless of their expected habits. The expansion appeared to be driven by the emergence of novel genes as well as gene duplications, enlarged collections of genes that produce enzymes for degrading polysaccharides, the proliferation of transposable elements, and horizontal gene transfers from other fungal species. They also found that two species collected in the Arctic had the largest genomes by far, at a size that is two to eight times bigger than Mycena living in temperate zones.
Observations of Adaptations in Arctic Mycena Species
“It was a particular surprise that both that the Arctic genomes were so especially expanded on top of the general Mycena expansion—and that Mycena had horizontally transferred genes from Ascomycetes,” Harder says. “Those species are also found in temperate areas, and we cannot see conclusively from our results whether these species are large because of a specific species effect or because of an Arctic effect.”
However, some Arctic plants have been shown to inflate their genomes with transposable elements or simply duplicate their entire genomes altogether compared to their close relatives in temperate areas, and it is of course tempting to suggest that a similar parallel evolution could be happening in Arctic mushrooms.
“The evolutionary transition from decomposer to symbiotic fungi is generally believed to have happened in parallel in several fungal groups throughout the course of evolution millions of years ago,” says Håvard Kauserud of the University of Oslo, Norway. “However, with Mycena, we appear to be seeing this gradual process in action happening right in front of our eyes.”
Reflections on Genome Sequencing and Ecological Deductions
“We know from other lines of research that Mycena, contrary to many other fungi, can adopt more than one possible lifestyle. The findings suggests that these multiple possible lifestyles are reflected in their genome structures, too,” Harder says.
The findings also have important implications for efforts to understand an organism’s habits from their genome sequences alone.
“This serves as a reminder that one cannot always easily deduce the main ecology or lifestyle of a fungus just from sequencing their genomes,” Martin said. “This is quite important to remember in an age where DNA sequencing is becoming cheaper and cheaper and more and more ubiquitous while traditional hands-on organism knowledge is less widespread in younger generations of biologists and harder to obtain funding for.”
'Time Cells' in The Brain Could Be More Crucial Than We Ever Realized
When it comes to how we experience, interact with, and navigate our world, timing is everything. And new research in mice suggests a specific set of cells is fundamental to the way we learn complex behaviors that rely on timing.
The discovery by a team at the University of Utah in the US could eventually help detect onset of neurodegenerative diseases that affect time perception, like Alzheimer's.
To create a memory for your own personal archives, your brain must encode the timing and sequence of events as you're experiencing them. It creates this timeline using circuits in the medial temporal lobe (MTL), one of which is the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC).
This MEC circuit has 'time cells' that fire at specific moments during tasks, on a scale of seconds and minutes, a kind of organic internal metronome that helps us keep track of time in the moment.
Scientists suspect this 'timer' may leave its mark on episodic memories, so the 'frames' of our experience are replayed in sequence, with a built-in rhythm. But to do so, these time cells would need learning dynamics that allow them to encode different temporal contexts.
We know 'spatial cells' within the MTL can reorganize their 'firing fields' according to spatial contexts, as an animal moves through different and changing environments.
The researchers wanted to investigate whether time cells have a similar ability to 're-map' to different temporal contexts. They combined a complex time-based learning task with brain imaging to watch patterns of time cell activity.
The first trial involved the mice completing a task in which the timing of events was crucial, distinguishing between an odor stimulus with variable timing, to get a reward.
The patterns in time cell activity were consistent regardless of odor stimulus pattern, but became more complex as the mice learned, developing unique 'time scales' corresponding to each stimulus.
And when the mice got the trial wrong, the researchers noticed, their time cells also fired in the wrong order.
"Time cells are supposed to be active at specific moments during the trial," says neurobiologist Hyunwoo Lee. "But when the mice made mistakes, that selective activity became messy."
When the researchers chemically blocked the MEC, disabling the mice's time cells, the animals were still able to perceive and predict event timing, but it became impossible for them to learn the time-based task from scratch.
"Surprisingly, time cells play a more complicated role than merely tracking time," says the study's first author, neurobiologist Erin Bigus.
"The MEC isn't acting like a really simple stopwatch that's necessary to track time in any simple circumstance. Its role seems to be in actually learning these more complex temporal relationships."
This research could lead to a better understanding of psychological conditions where people experience time very differently, like Alzheimer's, which we already know affects the MEC early in its progression.
"We are interested in exploring whether complex timing behavior tasks could be a useful way to detect the early onset of Alzheimer's disease," says senior author of the study, neurobiologist James Heys.
There's also growing interest in how 'time blindness' – a symptom of ADHD and autism – arises. Understanding how time is mapped and recorded in the brain could help progress investigations there, too.
The researchers note that while they found the MEC has a clear role in timing, there are other regions in the MTL, like the hippocampus and lateral entorhinal cortex, that also encode time.
"A clear future direction will involve testing the necessity of other MTL regions," the team writes.
Friday, 28 June 2024
Frog ‘Saunas’ – Pandemic Protection for Endangered Frogs Facing a Deadly Global Fungus
A study by Macquarie University and the University of Melbourne has found that heating shelters can help frogs combat chytridiomycosis effectively. This method, which allows frogs to ‘bake off’ infections, could significantly lower mortality rates and increase resistance to future infections, providing a viable conservation strategy for endangered amphibians.
Researchers have developed a groundbreaking method using heat to combat chytridiomycosis in frogs.
This simple strategy involves creating ‘hotspot’ shelters where frogs can elevate their body temperatures to kill off fungal infections. The study shows promise for not only reducing mortality but also enhancing immunity against future infections, offering a scalable and cost-effective solution for amphibian conservation.
Researchers at Macquarie University have discovered a straightforward and efficient heat-based method to aid endangered frogs in withstanding the devastating impacts of a pandemic affecting multiple species.
Working alongside the University of Melbourne, the team focused on combating chytridiomycosis, a fungal disease that has led to the extinction of at least six amphibian species in Australia and poses a threat to dozens more worldwide.
Significant Breakthrough in Amphibian Conservation
The findings, published today (June 26) in the journal Nature, offer a potential lifeline for fast-declining populations like the green and golden bell frog (Litoria aurea), which has disappeared from more than 90 percent of its former native range in Australia.
Dr. Anthony Waddle, a Schmidt Science Fellow at Macquarie University’s Applied BioSciences and lead author of the study, says very few interventions address the impacts of the international spread of the disease-causing chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis or Bd).
“In the 25 years since chytrid was identified as a major cause of the global collapse of amphibian populations, our results are the first to provide a simple, inexpensive, and widely applicable strategy to buffer frogs against this disease,” Dr. Waddle says.
Developing Practical Solutions for Chytridiomycosis
Chytridiomycosis (chytrid) typically establishes itself permanently once it spreads to a new environment and has caused greater damage to global biodiversity than any other recorded disease or invasive species.
Of chytrid-stricken species worldwide, 90 have gone extinct or are presumed extinct in the wild. Another 124 species have declined in number by more than 90 percent.
Senior author Professor Rick Shine, from Macquarie University’s School of Natural Sciences says this study has demonstrated a simple intervention that can easily scale up, potentially helping reduce the impact of the deadly chytrid pandemic.
“Chytrid isn’t going away, but our behavioral ecology intervention can help endangered amphibians co-exist with chytridiomycosis in their ecosystems,” Professor Shine says.
Practical Implementation and Future Prospects
The research team found artificial ‘hotspot’ shelters built from readily available materials, such as bricks and PVC greenhouses, can allow frogs to quickly ‘bake off’ infections with the chytrid fungus.
When frogs shifted to hotspot shelters, chytrid infections were reduced significantly.
“The whole thing is like a mini med spa for frogs,” says Dr. Waddle.
“In these simple little hotspots, frogs can go and heat up their bodies to a temperature that destroys the infections.
The study also showed that frogs who survive a chytrid infection can develop a form of acquired immunity, making them more resistant to future infections.
“Lowering mortality rates and boosting their immunity to chytrid is the key to protecting amphibians from this disease, which is now endemic around the world,” says Dr. Waddle.
Dr. Waddle says these simple ‘hotspot’ shelters are easy to reproduce, and the strategy can easily be scaled up with community involvement.
Professor Lee Skerratt, Professorial Fellow in Wildlife Bioscience at the University of Melbourne, says: “This research has great potential to be extrapolated to other endangered frog species threatened by chytridiomycosis, and demonstrates the value of cross-disciplinary and cross-institutional collaboration in tackling this global problem.”
Iceland's Volcanic Eruptions Could Continue For Decades, Study Finds
Eight eruptions have occurred since 2021 and new research suggests the upsurge in volcanic activity stems from a shallow pool of magma just 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) wide and only 9-12 kilometers below the surface.
Alerting authorities to this magma source is critical for the ongoing safety of residents in the region, with researchers claiming the magma pool could feed similarly-sized volcanic eruptions in the area for years or maybe decades more.
"A comparison of [current] eruptions with historical events provides strong evidence that Iceland will have to prepare and be ready for this volcanic episode to continue for some time, possibly even years to decades," says geologist Valentin Troll of Uppsala University in Sweden, who led the study.
Troll and his colleagues used seismic wave data from volcanic eruptions and earthquake 'swarms' to map the subsurface of the Reykjanes Peninsula in southwest Iceland, which is home to most of the country's population.
They found the 2021 eruptions of the Fagradalsfjall volcanic system were fed by a pocket of magma that then oozed along geological lines to Sundhnúkur, where volcanoes have been spewing lava since late 2023.
With both eruption zones expelling lavas with similar geochemical 'fingerprints', the findings suggest a "connected magma plumbing system" joins the two volcanic systems.
Historical data indicates this shared magma pool likely formed sometime between 2002 and 2020, was recharged again in 2023, and continues to supply magma from shallow depths to surface fissures and vents via slightly sloped pathways. Melting rock deeper in the mantle replenishes the magma pool, so it may fuel eruptions for decades to come.
"There is a need for an improved understanding of the magma supply system that feeds the ongoing eruptive events," Troll and colleagues write in their published paper.
"Increased eruption frequencies should be expected for the foreseeable future."
Now that the magma pool has been identified, it can be mapped and monitored to prepare communities for what might eventuate.
Repeated evacuations would be an obvious but very necessary disruption to ensure people's safety. Frequent eruptions may also damage key infrastructure such as geothermal power plants that supply Iceland with electricity and heat, and experimental carbon sequestration facilities, injecting carbon dioxide (CO2) and other gaseous pollutants into porous rocks.
Sitting atop the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the tectonic plate boundary pushing North America and Eurasia apart, Iceland is no stranger to volcanic eruptions.
But the past three years of eruptions have been particularly disruptive and could, potentially, mark the beginning of a lengthy period of persistent volcanic eruptions for the country. Nature is rarely predictable, however, so the researchers are calling for continued monitoring of the area.
"We don't know how long and how frequently it will continue for the next ten or even hundred years," says study author Ilya Bindeman, a volcanologist at the University of Oregon.
"A pattern will emerge, but nature always has exceptions and irregularities."
Three new extinct walnut species discovered in high Arctic mummified forest
In a new study, scientists describe three new, but long-extinct, walnut species on an island above the Arctic Circle. The fossils were discovered further north than any known walnut species, living or extinct, and represent some of the oldest-known records of this group. The work is published in the International Journal of Plant Sciences.
Today, the Canadian island of Axel Heiberg is a frozen desert devoid of nearly all life. But 45 million years ago, it supported a lush rainforest on the shores of the Arctic Ocean. Since then, the forest has been buried first beneath layers of sediment, then accumulated ice, leaving it frozen in time.
"When you walk into the site, the first thing you notice are these big stumps, a meter or more in diameter, and they're still rooted in the soil that they grew in. It's completely out of place. The closest living trees are 3,000 kilometers away," said study co-author James Basinger, professor emeritus of geological sciences at the University of Saskatchewan.
The stumps are so conspicuous, they can be spotted from the air. In 1985, staff from the Geological Survey of Canada discovered the Axel Heiberg fossil forest while conducting a survey of the area from a helicopter. A year later, paleobotanists returned to the site and found fossils unlike anything they'd seen before.
"There aren't really that many places around where you can go to see fossils that are preserved that well," said Steven Manchester, lead author of the study and curator of paleobotany at the Florida Museum of Natural History.
In most cases, fossilization is characterized by organic matter being replaced with minerals over time. In other cases, organic matter is heated and compressed into coal or burned in forest fires and preserved as charcoal. But this isn't the case with the Axel Heiberg fossils. The wood, leaves, cones, nuts and fruit are seemingly unchanged. This unique form of preservation is referred to as mummification, and it only takes place under a very specific and rare set of circumstances.
"Things can be broken down by bacteria and fungi, they can be rumbled along in a riverbed and destroyed; there are lots of ways of losing the material before it becomes fossilized," Basinger said. But the ancient forests on Axel Heiberg were buried rapidly under swamp and lake sediments. As the global climate cooled, these processes were slowed.
Basinger was among the first researchers to study the forest. The Arctic's barren surfaces and strong winds made it remarkably easy to collect specimens. "You can see a few fossils on the surface and pick what you can. But you go back next year, when there's been a little erosion, and there's a few more on the surface. Over a number of years, you can actually get a large collection," he said.
The walnuts had been eroded from the soil and were sitting on the surface. "In one case, the walnuts are concentrated at one spot, possibly cached there by animals," Basinger said. Some of the fossil nuts also have gnawed holes, indicating they were a food source for local animals.
Over a period of fifteen years, Basinger and his colleagues retrieved over a thousand nut and seed fossils and returned with them to Saskatchewan to be studied.
Visualizing a globally warm planet
If you looked back 45 million years ago to the middle Eocene, the Earth's poles would be unrecognizable. At the time, Antarctica and the Arctic Circle were warm and blanketed with forests, in stark contrast to the freezing deserts that we associate with the region today.
Due to their high latitude, polar regions had relatively short growing seasons, but they made up for it with exceptionally long summer days, receiving up to twenty hours of sunlight. Inversely, the winters were characterized by near-total darkness, yet temperatures seldom reached freezing.
Paleontology and geology records indicate there was more CO2 in Earth's atmosphere at the time, which resulted in temperatures that were much higher than they are now. This global greenhouse, in turn, created warm ocean circulations that kept the Arctic Ocean free of ice.
"The far north supported redwood-style forests," Basinger said. There were cypress swamps and upland forests, where statuesque trees grew up to 40 meters in height. The canopy included dozens of trees, such as redwoods, cedars, hickories, pines, spruces, hemlocks, larches, birches, ginkgos and, of course, walnuts.
What we can learn from the Axel Heiberg walnuts
As an expert in the evolutionary history of the walnut family, Manchester helped bring the decades-long project to completion. He performed CT scans on walnuts from the island and described three previously unknown species.
"The CT scans allow us to show details of the internal structure of these nuts that were once really hard to get," Manchester said. Before CT scanners, traditional methods for studying fossils involved tediously dissecting and slicing the specimens in various orientations, destroying them in the process.
After scanning several of the most completely preserved fossils, Manchester compared them to walnuts from both modern and extinct walnut species. National repositories, like iDigBio, allow researchers to easily locate museum specimens stored anywhere in the United States. The fossils didn't match anything that had yet been discovered and were thus found to represent three new species in the genus Juglans.
Based solely on genetic data from living species, researchers once thought the walnut family originated somewhere in Asia. More recently, however, fossil data indicates they instead first appeared in the warm, moist environments of North America or Europe. As the family diversified, some species adapted to cooler conditions, which allowed them to extend their range into higher latitudes.
The fossils from this study add a clearer picture of how walnuts evolved during periods of intensely shifting climates and where our modern species came from.
Thursday, 27 June 2024
Health and Wellness News: Parkinson's disease: 'It's as though I never had it', patient says, as 'miracle' treatment ends tremors
Parkinson's disease: 'It's as though I never had it', patient says, as 'miracle' treatment ends tremors
The non-invasive procedure uses high-intensity focused ultrasound to create a lesion in a part of the brain which controls a person's movements and gives Parkinson's patients hope of regaining independence.
By Sky News, Thursday 27 June 2024
Tremors File pic: iStockA man suffering from Parkinson's disease has said a procedure which has ended his tremors "feels like a miracle".
An ultrasound thalamotomy, which gives Parkinson's patients hope of regaining independence, was carried out on a sufferer for the first time in Scotland earlier this month.
Ian Keir, 63, was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 2018 after suffering two years of tremors in his right hand and couldn't manage everyday tasks.
But since the retired firefighter underwent the non-invasive procedure at the University of Dundee's School of Medicine as part of an international clinical trial, he can write and cut his own food again, making him less reliant on his wife.
Mr Keir, from Carnoustie in eastern Scotland, said: "It feels like a miracle. My tremor has completely gone - it's as though I never had it. I'm now able to do exactly what I could before.
"I can pour a jug of water, my handwriting is back, and I'm now able to do things without thinking about them beforehand.
"I was obviously nervous but the improvement was almost immediate."
Focused Ultrasound for Parkinson’s Disease and Essential Tremor | Penn Medicine
Uncontrollable tremors, stemming from reduced levels of dopamine in the brain, are a symptom of the incurable illness.
The ultrasound thalamotomy is an incision-free procedure that uses high-intensity focused ultrasound to create a lesion in a part of the brain known as the thalamus, which controls a person's movements.
Relying on technology that is not widely available, the procedure has been carried out on a small number of Parkinson's patients elsewhere and on 60 people in Scotland living with essential tremor disorder, a condition similar to, and often confused with Parkinson's, in recent years.
Dr Tom Gilbertson, consultant neurologist and honorary senior lecturer at the University of Dundee, one of the world's leading centres for Parkinson's research, called it "a milestone moment" for Scottish medicine.
"We have already witnessed the transformative impact similar procedures have for patients living with essential tremor, so to replicate that for those with Parkinson's - who may never have dreamed of having such control of their movements again - is a huge privilege," he said.
He said it has a "life-changing impact" on patients.
Focused Ultrasound for Parkinson’s Disease and Essential Tremor | Penn Medicine (youtube.com)
He added: "It was incredibly frustrating - I had to learn to eat with just a fork. Thankfully my wife is very understanding and was a great support to me.
"My handwriting was pretty much illegible - tremors affected my right hand, but I never really mastered writing with my left hand.
"While I'm aware this isn't a cure for Parkinson's, it is a cure for some of my symptoms. I'm so grateful and just want to make the most of every day."
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