Thursday, September 08, 2022

Researchers study historical developments of the periodic system of chemical elements


Space determines the arrangement

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITÄT LEIPZIG

In a recently published article in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" (PNAS), the scientists look back to the beginnings of the periodic system, whose structure is characterized by similarity and order relationships among the elements. Periodic tables arose from the knowledge of the existing or potentially possible chemical elements and compounds known at that time. The total combination of these two components forms the so-called chemical space. Order relationships were initially set up based on atomic weights and similarities in terms of commonality in chemical composition. As knowledge of chemical substances grew throughout the history of science, so did potentially possible periodic systems, influenced by the state of the chemical space of the time. "We were attracted by the question of how the expansion of chemical space contributed to the formation of the first periodic systems. Little was known about that. So, we investigated in particular the chemical space between 1800 and 1869 to discover how well the periodic table corresponds to the chemical data at the time of its formulation", Guillermo Restrepo, Project leader at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences describes the research team’s objective.

Expansion of the chemical space between 1800 and 1869

Their analysis of the knowledge of chemical space revealed, that the periodic table of chemical elements converged to a clearly visible basic structure as early as the 1840s, and was thus already encoded in space about two and a half decades before its formulation.

The first quarter of the 19th century was characterized by a rapid discovery of chemical elements and their compounds, leading to an unstable period with a wide variety of periodic tables, only few of which stood the test of time. In 1826, the discovery of elements slowed down, allowing chemists to further explore the properties of known substances and discover compounds that had new valences and thus new similarities among known chemical elements. These discoveries persisted for years and provided consolidation of the chemical space and thus fairly stable periodic systems. Between 1835 and 1845, the system continued to approach its basic structure, which was finally revealed in the 1860s.

Impact of organic chemistry

Wilmer Leal, doctoral student at the Max Planck Institute and the University of Leipzig, describes the essential role of organic chemistry in the formulation of the periodic system: "The rise of organic chemistry in the 1830s played a key role in facilitating the recognition of similarities between elements that are massively represented in chemical space, such as oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur, and between metals often associated to organic compounds, such as sodium, potassium, palladium, platinum, barium, and calcium. At the same time, the plethora of organic compounds obscured the identification of similarities between metals which are poorly represented in organic space.”

Regarding the periodic systems of Lothar Meyer and Dmitri Mendeleev, both chemists could already rely on a mature chemical space and a quite stable set of atomic weights at that time. The systems they formulated were thus largely consistent with other periodic systems that would have been possible at the time, according to the computational analysis.

Computational reconstruction of chemical space from atomic weights

To replicate the chemical space before 1869 and account for the role of atomic weights known in the 19th century, the researchers used the Reaxys chemistry database and, based on its extensive information, introduced an algorithm to adjust the chemical space to different sets of weights. This enables current chemical formulas to be converted to fit any system of atomic weights. It allows approximations to the chemical space known to chemists of the past and estimates the resulting periodic systems of the time.

Analyzing the various periodic systems formulated over time, the scientists revealed that their structure was determined mainly by the similarities between the chemical elements and less by their order based on atomic weights. "Gauging these similarities was the hardest part for us, and the results were quite surprising. It was previously assumed that periodic systems could only be formulated if a stable system of atomic weights was given. However, we were able to demonstrate that even the unstable weights reported before 1860 produced quite stable periodic systems" says Peter Stadler, Professor at the Interdisciplinary Center for Bioinformatics at the University of Leipzig.

Review with vision

The method presented in the paper to formulate a periodic system for a given chemical space is not limited to the past but can also be applied to all possible environments, such as the study of chemical spaces generated under extreme pressure and temperature conditions. The implementation of this method could provide a comprehensive picture of chemistry in real-time, which would also have implications for teaching and the future of the field. Although their approach is more computational than historical, the scientists hope it can complement other tools in the history of chemistry and contribute to the advancement of chemical knowledge.

Interactive and freely available information

The algorithm presented in this paper for the formulation of a periodic system based on a given chemical space is freely available at:

https://keeper.mpdl.mpg.de/d/2284ca87fd124ea9823f/

The scientists also created an interactive platform for exploring the chemical space between 1800 and 1869, on which the historical development and derivation of various periodic systems can be traced in great detail.

How explainable artificial intelligence can propel the growth of industry 4.0

Explainable artificial intelligence can help bridge the gap between human understanding and the way artificial intelligence models function


Peer-Reviewed Publication

INCHEON NATIONAL UNIVERSITY

Scientists from Incheon National University survey the existing AI applications in Industry 4.0 

IMAGE: THE SURVEY HIGHLIGHTS THE EXISTING AI AND XAI METHODS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS BEING USED IN INDUSTRY 4.0. XAI-BASED METHODS ARE EXTREMELY IMPORTANT TO SPEED UP THE DEVELOPMENTS IN INDUSTRY 4.0 AND TO BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN HUMAN INTELLIGENCE AND MACHINE FUNCTION. view more 

CREDIT: "AT BOEING'S EVERETT FACTORY NEAR SEATTLE" BY JETSTAR AIRWAYS

The very first industrial revolution historically kicked off with the introduction of steam- and water-powered technology. We have come a long way since then, with the current fourth industrial revolution, or Industry 4.0, being focused on utilizing new technology to boost industrial efficiency. Some of these technologies include the internet of things (IoT), cloud computing, cyber-physical systems, and artificial intelligence (AI). AI is the key driver of Industry 4.0, automating intelligent machines to self-monitor, interpret, diagnose, and analyze all by themselves. AI methods, such as machine learning (ML), deep learning (DL), natural language processing (NLP), and computer vision (CV), help industries forecast their maintenance needs and cut down on downtime.

However, to ensure the smooth, stable deployment and integration of AI-based systems, the actions and results of these systems must be made comprehensible, or, in other words, “explainable” to experts. In this regard, explainable AI (XAI) focuses on developing algorithms that produce human-understandable results made by AI-based systems. Thus, XAI deployment is useful in Industry 4.0.

Recently, a group of researchers, including Assistant Professor Gwanggil Jeon from Incheon National University, South Korea, surveyed existing AI and XAI technologies and their applications in Industry 4.0. Their review, published in IEEE Transactions on Industrial Informatics, was made available online on January 27, 2022, and subsequently published in Volume 18, Issue 8 of the journal on August 8, 2022.

“Though AI technologies like DL can solve many social problems due to their excellent performance and resolution, it is difficult to explain how and why such good performance is obtained. Therefore, there is a necessity to develop XAI, so that DL, like the current black box, can be modeled more efficiently. It will also be easier to make applications,” said Prof. Jeon explaining his motivation behind the study.

XAI-based methods are classified according to specific AI tasks, like the feature explanations, decision-making, or visualization of the model. The authors note that the combination of cutting-edge AI and XAI-based methods with Industry 4.0 technologies results in various successful, accurate, and high-quality applications. One such application is an XAI model made using visualization and ML which explains a customer’s decision to purchase or not purchase non-life insurance. With the help of XAI, humans can recognize, comprehend, interpret, and communicate how an AI model draws conclusions and takes action.

There are clearly many notable advantages of using AI in Industry 4.0; however, it also has many obstacles. Most significant is the power-hungry nature of AI-based systems, the exponentially increasing requirement for a large number of cores and GPUs, as well as the need for fine-tuning and hyperparameter optimization. At the heart of this is data collected and generated from millions of sources, devices, and users, thereby introducing bias that affects AI performance. This can be managed using XAI methods to explain the bias introduced.

“AI is the principal component of industrial transformation that empowers smart machines to execute tasks autonomously, while XAI develops a set of mechanisms that can produce human-understandable explanations,” concludes Prof. Jeon.

Adapting XAI-based methods can get us one step closer to efficiently realizing smart cities, factories, healthcare, and cyber-security!

 

***

 

Reference

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/TII.2022.3146552

Authors: Imran Ahmed1, Gwanggil Jeon2, and Francesco Piccialli3

Affiliations:     

1Institute of Management Sciences, Pakistan

2Incheon National University, South Korea

3University of Naples Federico II, Italy

 

About Incheon National University

Incheon National University (INU) is a comprehensive, student-focused university. It was founded in 1979 and given university status in 1988. One of the largest universities in South Korea, it houses nearly 14,000 students and 500 faculty members. In 2010, INU merged with Incheon City College to expand capacity and open more curricula. With its commitment to academic excellence and an unrelenting devotion to innovative research, INU offers its students real-world internship experiences. INU not only focuses on studying and learning but also strives to provide a supportive environment for students to follow their passion, grow, and, as their slogan says, be INspired.

Website: http://www.inu.ac.kr/mbshome/mbs/inuengl/index.html

 

About Assistant Professor Gwanggil Jeon, Incheon National University

Dr. Jeon received a Ph.D. from the Department of Electronics and Computer Engineering, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea, in 2008. Currently, he is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Embedded Systems Engineering, Incheon National University in Korea. His research interests lie in the fields of image processing and computational intelligence, particularly in image compression, motion estimation, image enhancements, and fuzzy and rough sets theories. He is an IEEE Senior Member and has received numerous awards, including the IEEE Chester Sall Award in 2007, the ETRI Journal Paper Award in 2008, and the Industry-Academic Merit Award by the Ministry of SMEs and Startups of Korea in 2020.

Mastering the dynamics of photosynthesis regulation for a more sustainable indoor agriculture

Grant and Award Announcement

INSRL

Indoor Farming 

IMAGE: EXAMPLE OF INDOOR FARMING AS AN APPLICATION FOR THE DREAM PROJECT. view more 

CREDIT: @DREAM - INSOCIETY

Today, the agricultural sector is facing increasing pressures: feed a growing world population while reducing environmental impact and preserving natural resources. Innovative technologies can improve resource management, e.g., by ensuring that photosynthetic organisms receive what they need for optimum health and productivity, avoiding unnecessary consumption. 

The EU-funded project DREAM (dream-eic.eu) proposes science-based technologies that study plant needs and provide cultivation protocols to optimize indoor production. 

Starting in 2022, the DREAM researchers will study and exploit the complex network of processes that regulate photosynthesis. Photosynthetic organisms respond to and cope with various environmental factors, including temperature, drought, CO2 concentration, and light quality and quantity. Thanks to recent scientific advances, the static and simplified view of photosynthesis regulation has given way to a more complex and dynamic one, in which plants and algae respond in non-trivial ways to external stresses. According to DREAM coordinator, Ludovic Jullien, Professor of Chemistry at Sorbonne Université and Ecole Normale Supérieure “Knowing and mastering the dynamics of photosynthesis regulation will help assess and optimise the demand of resources and energy in agriculture.” 

DREAM, awarded € 3M, is one of the 39 projects selected for funding from 403 submitted in the first ever EIC Pathfinder Open, designed to support high-risk/high-gain interdisciplinary projects in any field of science and technology. 

The Consortium, composed of two research organizations (The French National Centre for Scientific Research and Forschungszentrum Jülich), two academic institutions (Palacký University Olomouc, Eindhoven University of Technology) and two SMEs (INsociety and Sony CSL Paris), brings together expertise at the interface of biology, physics and chemistry and combines innovative research on plant and algae with technical skills in machine learning, optics, selective sensing, and electrical engineering. 

Within five years, DREAM researchers will develop new sensors to interrogate plants and algae under natural-like light and retrieve detailed data on their photosynthetic performance. With this new knowledge, it will be possible to design modulated lighting tools that adapt the energy supply to the plant needs and customised protocols that reduce the use of water, nutrients, and pesticides. 

DREAM scientists will validate the new tools in the laboratory and greenhouse on three organisms: the green alga C. reinhardtii, the model plant A. thaliana, and the tomato. Later data acquisition will be extended to other users working on a wide variety of algae and plants; the collection will help refine data interpretation and provide increasingly reliable plant management protocols for growers. 

In the long term, the DREAM project aims to improve indoor cultivation so that, in addition to protecting from outdoor harsh elements, it recreates an ideal environment for growing plants and microalgae without wasting resources. DREAM smart sensing can boost controlled environment agriculture, reducing its demand for energy and labour and making it a sustainable practise to overcome climate change’s effects. 

Disclaimer: AAAS and

 

A 'PROGRESSIVE' ASSESSMENT OF UCP LEADERSHIP CANDIDATES

FROM THE DESK OF 

Duncan Kinney

http://www.theprogressreport.ca

In a move that is sure to degrade my mental health I’m going to write a weekly (maybe biweekly!) power ranking of the UCP leadership race. The rules will be made up and the points won’t matter but I will do my best to catalogue who’s up, who’s down and to track the big narratives of the race to crown the next leader of the UCP and Alberta’s next premier, at least until the next election. 

These rankings are how I believe the UCP leadership race would finish if it was held right now. I have no polling, no data, just my gut and a willingness to wade through the awfulness that is this UCP leadership race. 

7. Todd Loewen

The absolute last place in a preferential voting contest is intriguing to me. Last place in this kind of system means you didn’t just not win—people explicitly put you at the bottom of their list, or even ignored you entirely.

The race for last in the UCP leadership race is going to be a tight one between Todd Loewen and Leela Aheer. About the only thing Todd is known for is getting kicked out of caucus by Kenney. Beyond that he’s a lightweight obsessed with WEF conspiracy theories who has zero stage presence.  

Todd may very well pull first place votes from a handful of Western Standard subscribers but when they spell your name wrong at the Rebel News/Alberta Prosperity Project debate that is not a good sign. I’d feel sorry for him if he wasn’t such a bad person.  

6. Leela Aheer

Any bump that Leela Aheer may have received from acting as a volunteer bull distractor has now subsided. Aheer has set herself up as the standard-bearer of the ‘progressive’ wing of the UCP—the leftovers of the old Progressive Conservative party that ran Alberta for decades. (Never mind that she actually hails from the old PCs’ arch-enemies, the very not-progressive Wildrose.)

It’s going about as well as you might expect for her in a leadership race in a party whose voters think Jason Kenney wasn’t extreme enough. 

Aheer and her team have attempted to coax centrists and moderates who otherwise wouldn’t touch the UCP with a ten-foot pole to buy a membership and vote for her, but that’s a hopeless strategy. Stephen Carter may have been able to cast a reality distortion field that convinced thousands of non-PC members to join the PCs and vote for Allison Redford back in 2011 but lightning is not going to strike twice. This time around the Alberta NDP exists as a political party that has won a general election in Alberta. That hadn’t happened in 2011. 

Why invest time and money in a political project that’s doomed to fail in a party that wants nothing to do with what she’s selling? Aheer’s best hope is a Toews victory that involves some deal-making to get her voters. There doesn’t seem to be any deal to make with Smith. 

5. Rajan Sawnhey

Sawnhey’s campaign has a few prominent backers including Christy Clark’s former chief of staff, Ken Boessenkoel, but doesn’t seem to be going anywhere.

There is one thing to talk about regarding Sawnhey: AISH. Sawnhey’s campaign has been promising to re-index Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped, or AISH, back to inflation. This is the entirely not-enough subsidy that goes to people who are unable to work. The NDP had indexed it to inflation when they were in charge. You might have read a little bit about how runaway inflation is making the lives of everyone worse, well you can double that for disabled folks on a fixed income. 

It’s a bit of a cute play for Sawnhey because she was the minister who de-indexed AISH in the first place. I think the rhetoric around flips and hypocrisy is not very useful a lot of the time, but this is just too rich. What’s Sawnhey going to run on in 2027, re-de-indexing it?

4. Rebecca Schulz

We saw a push back in the summer to try and solidify Schulz as Jason Kenney’s successor, but it looks like that failed and Toews has consolidated that support. (Nobody told Ric McIver, though, who endorsed Schulz online this week.) I expect that most Kenney loyalists who are backing Toews have Schulz as their second choice, which isn’t a great place for Schulz to be: she can’t cut a deal to send her supporters to Toews if Toews was already their first choice.

Personally I despise Schulz for deliberately delaying the implementation of the federal child care plan until after the federal election. That deal was ready to go, but got pushed back for purely political reasons—which left parents like me paying full price for childcare for no good reason.

3. Brian Jean

Steps one, two, three, four and five of Brian Jean’s campaign to replace Jason Kenney involved getting rid of Jason Kenney. But then Danielle Smith jumped into the race and ate Jean’s lunch by vigorously appealing to the pro-COVID sentiments of the far-right flank of the UCP base that Jean was counting on. So, step six of Jean’s plan to become Premier is now to out-bigot Danielle Smith, and apparently Jean thinks the way to do it is leaning hard into transphobia. 

In an email that went out to his supporter list on Friday Jean took time out of his busy campaign to specifically single out trans people and deny that they exist in an email that used sports as a pretext to spread hate.

Jean is clearly desperate and trying to differentiate himself from Danielle Smith by picking on trans folks, a group of people who already deal with far too much violence and stigma. This is the scummiest thing I’ve seen from any leadership candidate in a race filled with scumbags. The mainstream narrative for the past few years has been of ‘nice guy Brian,’ a good-natured fella who got outsmarted by the cunning Jason Kenney. But good-natured people don’t punch down like this. 

Maybe the Jean campaign is veering into these desperate tactics because their comms people just can’t manage anything else. There’s been a steady drip of banal factoids from the Jean campaign and in every single one his team finds a way to put their collective feet in their mouths. The two that have been made fun of the most feature Jean walking out of a tipi talking about how many Indigenous nieces and nephews he has (a post he deleted without explanation) and another where he brags about almost completing a masters in environmental law. 

And look, pulling together social media content for a foundering leadership campaign is hard. Especially with someone as fundamentally boring and devoid of charisma as Jean. No one cares that Brian Jean was a lawyer or boarded at Prairie Bible High School in Three Hills or was the president of the Downtown Business Association of Fort McMurray. 

But there’s more to Brian Jean than just a pathetic loser desperately trucking in bigotry for attention while he wastes his fortune on a doomed political campaign. Consider:

 

2. Travis Toews

Kenney loyalists have congealed behind former finance minister Travis Toews after Rebecca Schulz’ attempt to consolidate that support failed over the summer. 

Toews is promising to be a boring, staid, respectable conservative leader who will unify a fractured party and that’s just not what the UCP faithful are looking for. They want the hard shit. Constitutional crises and fighting with the Lieutenant Governor and the political and media establishment calling you crazy and your plans unworkable. 

Toews does not tire of pointing out that he has the support of the majority of his UCP caucus colleagues. The thing is, nobody likes them either. 

His whole campaign message can be boiled down to one word: unity. He will do so much uniting, man, he will unite the UCP so hard that people will be shocked at all the unity going on. The trouble is both the caucus and the party no longer even want unity. UCP members have had their brains broken by the double barreled shotgun of the pandemic and a self-reinforcing media and social media bubble. 

Will Travis Toews put in a respectable showing? Sure. Will Travis Toews win? It seems unlikely at this point.  

1. Danielle Smith 

Number one with a bullet is everyone’s least favourite Fraser Institute ghoul, turned radio host, turned Premier-in-waiting: it’s Danielle Smith. A month out from the results being announced and Smith appears to be in the catbird’s seat. 

Her defining campaign plank and one that is increasingly dominating media coverage of the UCP leadership race is her proposed Alberta Sovereignty Act. 

Jason Kenney called it “catastrophically stupid.” The Lieutenant Governor has said she would get legal advice before signing it into law. Legal scholars are alternating between calling it ridiculous and warning us that this could be the first step towards totalitarianism. So it’s no big surprise that the UCP base absolutely loves it.

Just the other day Danielle Smith put forward some extremely unhelpful clarifications around her proposed new law. She put a whole section about it on her website and sent out a media release going into more detail about it. The vast majority of the scenarios she’s describing where she would be invoking the Alberta Sovereignty Act are all drawn from conspiracy theories or right wing meme talking points. 

Smith would invoke the Alberta Sovereignty Act if there were mandatory vaccinations or if the federal government tried to take away your guns or if there was some federal mark of the beast digital identification program. The ASA would be invoked to somehow invalidate federal laws around pipelines or if there are mandatory cuts to electricity or oil and gas production. 

It’s all theatre, which annoyingly makes it the sort of thing you can’t defeat just by refuting it with the facts. 

The more people talk about how the Alberta Soveriegnty Act is unconstitutional or unworkable or catastrophically stupid the more Smith dominates the air war around the UCP leadership race. And it's not even original theatre: it’s the exact same show as Kenney’s referendum on equalization or his legal fights against the carbon tax or his promise to thoroughly investigate and lock up all of the evil environmentalists who were saying mean things about the oilsands. 

So while Kenney denounces Smith and her proposed legislation, it is Smith who is continuing his project. Smith is Kenney’s true successor, it’s just that Kenney wants his boy, Travis Toews to win.

The vast majority of regular folks, and this includes UCP members voting in a leadership race, don’t care about philosophical legal arguments or the “rule of law,” they care about two things–does this politician actually improve my material conditions and/or does this politician make me feel good? 

Since Smith isn’t actually proposing anything that would improve the lives of UCP members she’s giving them the next best thing–starting beef with the federal government. 

And right now it’s working. 

Duncan Kinney

http://www.theprogressreport.ca

 

Is She Dead?
Written by Davide Mastracci - September 8, 2022

Good morning, Passengers.

As you probably know, it looks like the queen will die soon or is already dead. As a result, I’ll be sharing a couple pieces from the Passage archives today critiquing the so-called Royal Family and the way they’re covered in Canadian media. We also have the latest article from Passage columnist Nora Loreto. 

Enjoy!





Karen Geier | Passage | February 2020

Passage launched on Feb. 4, 2020. Here’s an article we published that day, arguing that “the Monarchy is a representation of what makes Canada’s history shameful and rotten,” and that “it’s time we parted ways.” The article offers some history about the monarchy and the family currently leading it that you may not know about, and makes a convincing case for Canada separating from it, something I hope you won’t need much convincing to believe. 

Karen Geier writes, “The fact that an unelected, appointed representative of the Queen makes our bills become laws should concern anyone who cares about democracy. Having a regent or an appointed regent in situ means the will of the people can be taken away for a monarch’s caprice. Famously, Royal Assent was withheld in Saskatchewan in 1961 by the province’s lieutenant governor over a bill redefining mineral contracts. It has happened before, and there’s no legal impediment to it happening again. Why isn’t Canada’s prime minister signing our laws into effect, and being held directly responsible for them? Canadians deserve to have an elected head of state who ensures lawmaking reflects Canadians’ decisions.” (7 minute read)

Davide Mastracci | Passage | April 2021

Last year’s media coverage of the death of Philip Mountbatten, husband and cousin to Elizabeth Windsor, was awful. I wrote about it at the time, arguing that “like any good former colonial subject, our state media and its private counterparts have been pumping out praise of Philip since his death.” I think this article serves as a good critique of this coverage and a reminder of how the media is likely to behave in coming weeks. Of course, I think things will be much worse this time around, though.

I wrote, “Canadian media coverage following Philip’s death has effectively worked to help cement a positive legacy, and in doing so ignored the majority of people, throughout Canada and internationally, who have far less positive things to say about the man and the institution he represents. This coverage has, in fact, effectively portrayed these people as not ‘real’ Canadians, which isn’t exactly a surprise given that praise for the monarchy is literally required to become one.” (6 minute read)


J B S HALDANE ; FOSSIL RABBIT


 



 
 
Beetles Have A Clever Way to Keep Symbiotes Safe During Their Metamorphic Contortions

NATURE
05 September 2022
By TESSA KOUMOUNDOUROS
An adult darkling beetle. (RS Ranke)

Insects have their own suite of friendly microbes that help keep them healthy, just as we do.

But instead of simply growing larger like us sensible vertebrates, insects undergo extreme body warping to metamorphosize into their older stages of life.

As you might expect, these life-changing contortions complicate the microbes' living arrangements.

This convoluted process can completely distort and drastically shift organs and other tissues around, so any microbes along for the journey would possibly not be in for a survivable, let alone fun, ride.

Evolutionary ecologist Rebekka Janke from Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz and colleagues took a close look at this transformative process in the darkling beetle Lagria villosa to find out what happens to their little helpers during this upheaval.

While darkling beetles have many symbiotic species within their microbiome, they particularly rely on Burkholderia bacteria for successful reproduction.

The beetle's eggs and larvae are vulnerable to infections, but Burkholderia, which female beetles ooze out from glands near their ovaries onto their eggs, keeps their offspring safe by producing polyketide chemicals that have antimicrobial properties.

As a consequence, one particular Burkholderia strain, B. gladioli, or Lv-StB, has become so accustomed to living a cushy life within the beetle that it has lost all ability to move of its own accord: Its genes and cellular structures for motility are almost completely gone, so it is reliant on the beetles for its own survival too.



Janke and the team tracked what happened to the microbes using fluorescent markers and microCT scans, and a sampling of the bacteria's DNA.

After the mother beetles coat their eggs with their bacteria-containing gland goo, the microbes spend around six days exposed on the eggs' surface, fighting off parasitic bacteria and hungry fungi.

Once the baby beetle grubs hatch, the bacteria gather into three deep lower back folds in the larva's outer cuticle, like back pockets. These folds don't just provide the symbiotes with protection; they also contain glandular cells that likely help nourish the bacteria with secretions.

But even these pockets get wrinkled during the extreme metamorphosis. They do, however, allow some of the bacteria to escape onto the surface, this time onto the pupae, ready to make their move towards the adult beetle's reproductive organs.

The researchers did not detect any B. gladioli in the pupae guts, so traveling to their hosts' glands is clearly not happening through internal paths.

So researchers put tiny symbiont-sized fluorescent beads of polystyrene onto the developing pupae. Most beads ended up around the tip of the beetles' abdomens once they emerged as adults, after their cases just happened to split open exactly where their back pockets were.

"By modifying unique 'pockets' on their backs, Lagria beetles manage to keep their protective symbionts and facilitate their relocation during pupation to newly developed adult organs," says evolutionary ecologist Laura Flórez of the University of Copenhagen.

The final stage of the bacteria's journey into the adult glands still remains a mystery, and most of this process only occurs in female beetles. The males start losing bacteria from the pupal stage – their back pockets are much smaller and shallower, and male adults lack symbiotes.

Cuticle pocket shapes in female (left) and male (right) darkling beetle larvae and pupae. 
(Janke et al., Frontiers in Physiology, 2022)

"In the adult stage, the main purpose of the symbiotic organs seems to be to enable successful transmission onto the egg stage and to the next generation," explains Flórez. "Since only females lay eggs, male adults do not need to carry these potentially costly symbionts and are a dead-end for the bacteria."

In social insects like ants, if individuals lose some of their microbial companions, they can be seeded back again from others in the group; the study's new results provide an example of how solitary insects avoid this potential loss during their most vulnerable life stages.

"These findings indicate that the ecological importance of the symbionts likely drove the evolution of specialized structures in the host to house and maintain the bacteria during metamorphosis," Janke and her colleagues conclude in their paper.

This research was published in Frontiers in Physiology.







The Story Of A Tribe That Tried To Escape The Rising Sea

An island that once covered 35 square miles has less than 1 square mile remaining. The island’s population, mostly French-speaking American Indians and their descendants, has fallen from 325 to just a dozen in 20 years.



"Net Loss" by Paul Goyette is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.


CLIMATE CHANGE
By Carolyn Fortuna
Published 2 days ago

As a writer for CleanTechnica, I get a lot of stories that come across my desk. More often than not, I delete them without further thought. A feature article from the Times-Picayune/ New Orleans Advocate, though, definitely caught my attention by personalizing the climate crisis, moving an abstraction like the rising sea level to a whole new level of meaning-making.

To walk alongside a native islander and see the ever-softening, ever-shrinking land around their home is a story that deserves a close read. In doing so, we recognize that broad proclamations about climate change-spurred relocation and funding are sometimes little more than a pleasant mist of meaning without substance.


A widow. A grocery worker. A member of the Jean Charles Choctaw Nation. Her name is Theresa “Betty” Billiot. Born in 1957, Betty remembers the area around her home as filled with a vista of cattle grazing in pastures, cotton fields, and wild prairie dotted with duck ponds.

Now she opens the same door and sees nothing but the rising sea.

The Legacy of Big Oil & the Rising Sea

Native Americans settled the 35-mile Isle de Jean Charles in the early 1800s after President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act. Some Choctaw fled to the wilderness of swamps in south Terrebonne, 45 miles southwest of New Orleans. The island then was a ridge surrounded by marsh and coastal prairie.

In 1952, the first oil derrick rose above Isle de Jean Charles, a sign some residents hoped would signal prosperity. But tribal members recall companies used intimidation and coercion to get land access and oil rights from residents who couldn’t speak or read enough English to understand what they were signing away. That was when residents noticed the island starting to unravel.

“They put in these canals, and they cut the island in two or three, and that brought in the salt water,” said Edison Dardar, a tribal council member and retired oyster harvester.
 “That messed up the whole thing.”

Oil and gas companies have been cutting through the coastal marshes around Isle de Jean Charles for decades. Canals dug for oil and gas infrastructure, including wells and pipelines, have allowed saltwater and storm surges to penetrate deep into the wetlands, hastening the rates of erosion and subsidence that have robbed the island of 98% of its landmass since 1955.

The canals have allowed the rising sea to penetrate inland wetlands, killing trees and grasses that held the soil in place. Storm surges blasted through this network of watery highways, causing rapid erosion and flooding miles from the coast.

Such canals are now considered a primary cause of Louisiana’s land-loss crisis, along with rising seas, storms, and the levees that straitjacket the Mississippi’s land restoring sediment. Louisiana loses a football field’s worth of land every 100 minutes.

The island again drew outside interest when oil companies began slicing canals through the surrounding marsh. Oil extraction also accelerated subsidence, the speed at which Louisiana’s land compacts, by a factor of two or three. While the rising sea builds, the land around oil wells is sinking faster.

The local levee district built a 6-foot-tall ring levee around the island. It was high enough to keep out tides but not to protect against minor hurricanes. The levee also sealed off the island’s bayou. Once crowded with fishing boats and teeming with crabs and fish, it stagnated into a weedy ditch.

Now the island has less than 1 square mile of land, and that’s not really arable anymore. The island’s population, mostly French-speaking American Indians and their descendants, has fallen from 325 to just a dozen in 20 years.

Hurricanes, coastal erosion, and the rising sea made the island almost unrecognizable to Billiott when she returned to her family home in 2013 to care for her elderly mother, described as “a stoic woman” whose health problems were exacerbated by struggling with murky floodwaters.

The Choctaw’s Attempt to Gain Ground & Legal Recognition

After a 14-year effort by the Chocktaw tribe to resettle members on higher, safer ground, a $48 million grant seemed to offer the first federally funded relocation of a community threatened by climate change. The grant would allow Billiot and her mother to move to a brand new house 40 miles inland in a few years.

Initially, the effort seemed as if it would be an example for displacements across the globe, as the UN expects up to 200 million people over the next 30 years by a rapidly warming planet.

“This is not just an issue in distant, poor countries,” Elizabeth Ferris, a climate migration researcher at Georgetown University, explained. “It’s happening in the US right now.” She noted relocation efforts in Alaska, New Hampshire, Washington, and New Jersey.

 “They’re all struggling to get this right.”

The relocation grant process, however, wasn’t close to expectations. The tribe lacks federal recognition and couldn’t apply for the grant on its own. “We were supposed to be a model for others, but the state took it over and screwed it all up. This isn’t our dream come true,” Chief Albert Naquin related.

Once the state Office of Community Development had the money, their relationship with the tribe changed, according to The Advocate. The agency abandoned the tribe’s vision and restarted an already lengthy development process, hiring its own planners and architects, and cutting the tribe’s chief and council out of decision making.

The state both narrowed resettlement eligibility, instituting financial and residency requirements, and broadened it, with plans to eventually open the resettlement site to people from other parts of the coast. The process relied mostly on written documents, which was a challenge for the Jean Charles tribe, partly because the tribe settled in a remote area to avoid detection by White authorities.

In 2009, the tribe teamed up with the Lowlander Center, a Terrebonne nonprofit that helps coastal communities adapt to environmental changes, and began crafting a more detailed proposal. Nearly 190 professionals “from pavement experts to hydrologists” helped, often working pro bono, said Kristina Peterson, a Lowlander founder and former University of New Orleans environmental hazards researcher.

“We took all the values of the tribe and put them into a place,” she said. “It was exceedingly cutting-edge.”

The 120-home plan emphasized a tribal center with space for a children’s day care, meals for the elderly and tribal gatherings. Its initial purpose, though, would be as a storm shelter.

Then the unthinkable happened.


In an email to tribal members, Mathew Sanders, the project’s manager, wrote that he could not “use these federal grant dollars with the explicit purpose of benefiting your tribe.” Doing so, Sanders said, would be discriminatory. Tribal members were no longer invited to join agency staff as they presented the project at conferences, including some of the world’s largest gatherings of scientists and civic planners.

By mid-2017, agency staff began quietly saying what was becoming obvious: They no longer saw the project as a tribal resettlement.

With the tribe marginalized, the state felt free to expand the use of the new site.

And although the state came to deem the island unsafe and forbid participants from living on or improving their properties, it did spend millions fortifying the access road and adding parking, docks, and recreational fishing amenities. That spurred interest from developers, who envisioned new cabins for hunters and anglers alongside the wrecked homes of longtime residents.

There were no houses on The New Isle when Billiot visited in April, 2021, but the state had managed to clear the land, install some utilities and the beginnings of a road, and dug pits for ponds.

Today, 6 years after the grant award, the resettlement site called The New Isle has only 12 homes at the 515-acre site. The state offered a range of reasons for the slow progress: permitting issues and environmental reviews, the COVID-19 pandemic, materials shortages, and hurricanes.

Back on Isle de Jean Charles, mostly old men who’d fished in their primes now spend their days puttering around their properties, sometimes casting a net for a shrimp dinner. One fisher still plans to move to New Isle.

The rest aren’t budging.

If you would like to read the fascinating expose in its entirety and view the striking photographs by Ted Jackson, I recommend you click through to the Times-Picayune/ New Orleans Advocate original story.