• If earthworms were a country, they’d be the world’s fourth largest producer of grain | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/if-earthworms-were-country-they-d-be-world-s-fourth-largest-producer-grain

    Earthworms do many things to make soil more fertile. By feeding on dead plant matter, they release nutrients much faster than soil microbes would by themselves. They also improve the physical structure of soil. As worms digest plant matter, they excrete tiny, stable clumps of particles. Together with the earthworm burrows, these aggregates make soil more porous. This allows rainwater to soak in and enables roots to grow more easily.

    #sols #vers_de_terre #grains

  • Germany’s radioactive boars are a bristly reminder of nuclear fallout | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/germany-s-radioactive-boars-are-bristly-reminder-nuclear-fallout

    What has tusks, bristly hair, and is contaminated with dangerous levels of radiation? Visit Germany’s Bavarian mountain towns and you just may find out. The wild boars (Sus scrofa) that snuffle through the region’s forests are so radioactive that the country has ruled them unsafe to eat—but why these animals are so contaminated has proved a puzzle. In a new study out today in Environmental Science & Technology, scientists report that at least some of the radioactive elements in their bodies are the result of fallout from atomic bombs that detonated in our atmosphere more than 60 years ago.

    […]

    Consumption of wild boar meat, which was long considered a delicacy in the region, has noticeably decreased in recent decades, Steinhauser says. There are ecological impacts, too, he adds. If no one wants to eat boar meat, hunters could be deterred from thinning their numbers, raising the possibility that populations could grow unmanageably large. This would threaten Bavarian forests, Steinhauser says, as too many boars can cause a lot of damage to forest vegetation and nearby farms.

  • The final puff ?
    https://www.science.org/content/article/final-puff-can-new-zealand-quit-smoking-good
    https://www.science.org/do/10.1126/science.adg2115/files/_20221209_nf_nzsmoking3_1600px.jpg

    As New Zealand’s associate minister for health, [Ayesha Verrall] has led the development of the Smokefree Aotearoa 2025 Action Plan, which could make New Zealand the first country in the world to achieve smoke-free status—typically defined as an adult smoking rate of no more than 5%.

    [...] Unveiled in December 2021, the plan features three radical interventions. One, called the smoke-free generation strategy, will make it illegal to ever sell combustible tobacco products to those born in 2009 or later. The goal is to create an ever-growing cohort that never picks up the smoking habit. A second provision calls for reducing the number of tobacco retailers by as much as 95%, to make cigarettes harder to get. The boldest proposal in the eyes of experts is reducing cigarettes’ nicotine content to below addictive levels. This “cuts right at the heart of why people smoke in the first place,” says Geoffrey Fong, head of the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project at the University of Waterloo. It’s potentially a “true game changer in the battle against smoking.”

    #Nouvelle-Zélande #santé #tabac #cigarette #Maori

  • ‘The door is open’ : Iranian astronomers seek collaborations for their new, world-class telescope | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/door-open-iranian-astronomers-seek-collaborations-their-new-world-class-tel
    https://www.science.org/do/10.1126/science.adf4145/abs/_10221018_on_iran_telescope.jpg

    In a major milestone for Iran’s scientific community, astronomers announced today in Tehran that the Iranian National Observatory (INO) has seen “first light”: The world-class, 3.4-meter optical telescope, whose future appeared cloudy just last year, is operational and has acquired its debut images.

    “We’ve been waiting for this moment for so long,” says INO Project Director Habib Khosroshahi, an astronomer at the Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences (IPM) in Tehran.

    First light for the $25 million observatory “comes at a turbulent time,” Khosroshahi acknowledges. Iran has been roiled by protests since last month’s death in police custody of a young woman who’d been arrested for not wearing her hijab properly. “We’re anxious about how our announcement will be interpreted,” Khosroshahi says. “But we want to emphasize that INO is for all the people of Iran. We couldn’t keep this news to ourselves anymore.”

    INO’s scientific odyssey began 2 decades ago—and faced long odds. “When they started this project, it was just a dream. No one in Iran had attempted anything on this scale before,” says Gerry Gilmore, an astronomer at the University of Cambridge and chair of INO’s international advisory board.

    (Admirez au passage comment la revue Science se fait pardonner de publier cette information favorable à l’Iran en évoquant, sans guère de pertinence pour le sujet, les troubles dans le pays.)

    #iran #science

  • Mopping can create air pollution that rivals city streets | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/mopping-can-create-air-pollution-rivals-city-streets

    Cleanliness may be next to godliness, but a new study suggests it could have an unexpected downside: A few minutes of mopping indoors with a fresh-scented cleaning product can generate as many airborne particles as vehicles on a busy city street. The finding suggests custodians and professional cleaners may be at risk of health effects from frequent exposure to these suspended tiny particles, known as #aerosols.

    #chimie #pollution #santé

  • Transgenic glowing fish invades Brazilian streams | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/transgenic-glowing-fish-invades-brazilian-streams

    Fish genetically engineered to glow blue, green, or red under blacklight have been a big hit among aquarium lovers for years. But the fluorescent pet is not restricted to glass displays anymore. The red- and green-glowing versions of the modified zebrafish have escaped fish farms in southeastern Brazil and are multiplying in creeks in the Atlantic Forest, a new study shows. It is a rare example of a transgenic animal accidentally becoming established in nature, and a concern for biologists, who worry the exotic fish could threaten the local fauna in one of the most biodiverse spots on the planet.

    “This is serious,” says ecologist Jean Vitule at the Federal University of Paraná, Curitiba. Vitule, who was not part of the research, says the ecological impacts are unpredictable. He worries, for example, that the fluorescence-endowing genes from the escapees could end up being introduced in native fish with detrimental effects, perhaps making them more visible to predators. “It’s like a shot in the dark,” he says.

    The unwelcome visitors are well known to scientists who have used zebrafish (Danio rerio) for developmental and genetic studies for decades. Native to Southeast Asia, the match-size freshwater fish are brightly colored naturally. But the animals were engineered to glow for research purposes in the late 1990s by endowing them with genes from fluorescent jellyfish (for blue and green colors) and coral (for red). In the 2000s, companies saw the potential of the neon fish as pets. Trademarked as Glofish, they became the world’s first genetically engineered species to be commercially available.

    Now, they are one of the first to escape and thrive in nature. Early on, environmentalists worried about the possibility, and Glofish sales were banned in some U.S. states such as California and several countries—including Brazil.

    In 2014, a single Glofish was spotted in canals near ornamental fish farms in the Tampa Bay region of Florida. But it had not multiplied, probably because native predators such as the eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) and the largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) ate the interloper, says the biologist who spotted the transgenic animal, Quenton Tuckett of the University of Florida.

    Brazil is proving more hospitable. André Magalhães, a biologist at the Federal University of São João del-Rei’s main campus, first spotted groups of glowing zebrafish swimming in the Paraíba do Sul River Basin in 2015, in slow-moving creeks. The waters border the largest ornamental aquaculture center of Latin America, in Muriaé, and Magalhães says the fish probably escaped some of the center’s 4500 ponds, which release water into the streams.

    Unlike Florida, the Brazilian creeks don’t have any local predators for zebrafish, and Magalhães believes they are now thriving. In 2017 he and colleagues began to survey five creeks in three municipalities, finding transgenic zebrafish in all of them. Every 2 months over 1 year, they collected and measured the animals and their eggs and analyzed their stomach content to see what they were eating.

    The fish are reproducing all year round, with a peak during the rainy season—just as native zebrafish do in Asia. But the transgenic fish seem to achieve sexual maturity earlier than their forebears, which allows them to reproduce more and spread faster. The invaders are also eating well: a diversified diet of native insects, algae, and zooplankton, the researchers reported this week in Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment.

    “They are in the first stages of invasion with potential to keep going,” Magalhães says. Before long, he says, the fish could become plentiful enough to directly affect local species by competing for food or preying on them.

    Despite Brazil’s ban on sales of the fish, local farms keep breeding them, and stores all over the country sell them as pets. They may soon colonize other parts of the country: Isolated Glofish individuals were spotted in ponds and streams in south and northeast Brazil in 2020.

    Tuckett, whose lab in Florida is close to U.S. farms that grow hundreds of thousands of glowing fish, says the Brazilian detection “should be a wake-up call” for fish producers and natural resource managers in Brazil. But he is not terribly worried about impacts. He suspects the transgenic fish will encounter predators as they move to larger bodies of water. And the animals’ bright colors will make them vulnerable.

    For now, the glowing fish “could be considered little weeds growing up out of the concrete,” Tuckett says. Magalhães likes the metaphor, but points out that even little weeds can grow to cause a lot of damage.

    • Tracking cryptic SARS-CoV-2 lineages detected in NYC wastewater
      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-28246-3

      Tracking SARS-CoV-2 genetic diversity is strongly indicated because diversifying selection may lead to the emergence of novel variants resistant to naturally acquired or vaccine-induced immunity. To monitor New York City (NYC) for the presence of novel variants, we deep sequence most of the receptor binding domain coding sequence of the S protein of SARS-CoV-2 isolated from the New York City wastewater. Here we report detecting increasing frequencies of novel cryptic SARS-CoV-2 lineages not recognized in GISAID’s EpiCoV database. These lineages contain mutations that had been rarely observed in clinical samples, including Q493K, Q498Y, E484A, and T572N and share many mutations with the Omicron variant of concern. Some of these mutations expand the tropism of SARS-CoV-2 pseudoviruses by allowing infection of cells expressing the human, mouse, or rat ACE2 receptor. Finally, pseudoviruses containing the spike amino acid sequence of these lineages were resistant to different classes of receptor binding domain neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. We offer several hypotheses for the anomalous presence of these lineages, including the possibility that these lineages are derived from unsampled human COVID-19 infections or that they indicate the presence of a non-human animal reservoir.

  • An unpublished COVID-19 paper alarmed this scientist—but he had to keep silent | Science | AAAS
    https://www.science.org/content/article/unpublished-covid-19-paper-alarmed-scientist-he-had-keep-silent

    On the train home from work on 16 January 2020, Thijs Kuiken made a troubling discovery. A veterinary pathologist at Erasmus University Medical Center in the Netherlands, Kuiken was reading a manuscript The Lancet had asked him that morning to review within 48 hours.

    The paper, by researchers at the University of Hong Kong, described a family from Shenzhen, China, just across the border from Hong Kong, that had been struck by the new coronavirus, then provisionally named 2019-nCoV, after a trip to Wuhan, some 1000 kilometers to the north. Of six travelers, five had become infected. None had visited the infamous Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market there, which many known early cases had links to. After their return, a seventh family member who had not visited Wuhan became infected as well.

    The researchers’ conclusion was clear: The new virus, now known as SARS-CoV-2, was transmissible between humans. And they reported two more disturbing findings: Two infected family members had no symptoms, suggesting the new disease could spread surreptitiously, and one did not have respiratory symptoms, the most common feature of the new disease, but diarrhea, which meant doctors might be overlooking cases. “It really scared me,” Kuiken says.