Friday, April 21, 2023

360-million-year-old Irish fossil provides oldest evidence of plant self-defense in wood

Peer-Reviewed Publication

TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN

Microscopic observation of a section of Devonian fossil wood containing tyloses 

IMAGE: MICROSCOPIC OBSERVATION OF A SECTION OF DEVONIAN FOSSIL WOOD CONTAINING TYLOSES AND DETAIL OF AN AREA SHOWING SEVERAL TYLOSES (ARROWS) PRODUCED BY PARENCHYMA CELLS (P) INSIDE A CONDUCTOR CELL (C); SCALE: 0.05 MM (50 ΜM). PHOTOS: A-L DECOMBEIX. view more 

CREDIT: A-L DECOMBEIX.

An international team of scientists, co-led by Dr Carla J. Harper, Assistant Professor in Botany in the School of Natural Sciences at Trinity, has discovered the oldest evidence of plant self-defence in wood in a 360-million-year-old fossil from south-eastern Ireland.

Plants can protect their wood from infection and water loss by forming special structures called “tyloses”. These prevent bacterial and fungal pathogens from getting into the heartwood of living trees and damaging it. However, it was not previously known how early in the evolution of plants woody species became capable of forming such defences. 

Published today in Nature Plants is the oldest evidence of tylosis formation from Late Devonian (360-million-year-old) fossil wood from the Hook Head Peninsula area, Co. Wexford, Ireland.

These plants lived well before the time of the dinosaurs or even flying insects. They formed the first primeval forests, when plants ruled the continents, accompanied by microorganisms, fungi, and early relatives of spiders, millipedes and centipedes.

Dr Harper and her team, including Dr Anne-Laure Decombeix (CNRS, France), Dr Cyrille Prestianni (Uni. Liège, Belgium), Trinity Botany PhD student Thibault Durieux (co-advised by Harper and Decombeix), Merlin Ramel (INRAe, France), and Prof Michael Krings (BSGP, Munich, Germany and Trinity SNS Visiting Research Associate), discovered tyloses in the fossilised wood of an extinct group of plants known as the Archaeopteridalean progymnosperms. These plants are particularly important as they were the first trees to resemble those we see today, with a large woody trunk, branches, and complex root systems.  

The team has now discovered that these primitive trees were also able to form tyloses to protect their wood. What is particularly exciting is that Ireland is one of the few places in the world where such details can be observed in plants from this remote time period. This means that the fossils from Co. Wexford give unique insights into this important period in plant evolution. 

Dr Harper said: “Fossil wood is an example of an anatomically preserved fossil: plant remains that have been infiltrated by a water rich in minerals, preserving their tissues in three dimensions. These fossils allow us to study very fine details of extinct plant anatomy, down to the cellular level. This type of preservation, in general, is rare but occurs in certain fossil deposits in Ireland.

“Continuing fieldwork in Irish Devonian localities will yield new fossils that will increase our understanding of the diversity and biology of extinct plants. Overall, Ireland’s rich plant fossil history – an untapped resource – plays a key role in answering exciting research questions and raises many more.” 

Ireland has long been known as the Emerald Isle due its famous rolling green hills—but such discoveries help us to understand how and when this “greening” began. 

Dr Harper said: “By studying these fossil plants and their past environments, we can get powerful insights into the history of plant physiological processes that still occur today, and into both current and future ecosystems of Ireland and the world.” 

The journal article can be read on the publisher's website.

To learn more about this research see a new blog post on the Nature website

This research was funded by the Irish Research Council Ulysses 2021 Grant 17056, Irish Research Council and French Ministry of Foreign Affairs and a Trinity College Dublin Ph.D. Provost Award.

New paper advances understanding of geographic health disparities

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON

By looking at where people were born instead of where they ultimately move to and die, geographic disparities in mortality look different than previously assumed, according to a new study published on April 1, 2023, in the journal Demography.

interstate migration may mitigate regional inequalities in mortality according to “Understanding Geographic Disparities in Mortality,” a paper led by Jason Fletcher, professor in the La Follette School of Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and director of the Center for Demography of Health and Aging with an appointment in Population Health Sciences.

“At a time when nearly a third of Americans die in a state they were not born in, it is important to consider how calculating geographic disparities in life expectancy does not only reflect the overall health of a region,” says Fletcher. “It also reflects migration patterns.”

Fletcher and his team of researchers were able to reconceptualize this important demographic measure by analyzing a sample of nearly 1.5 million individuals from the newly available Mortality Disparities in American Communities data set, which links respondents in the 2008 American Community Survey to official death records from the National Death Index. The currently available mortality follow-up period extends until Dec. 31, 2015.

By looking at state of birth instead of state of residence, all states except Minnesota in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest regions of the U.S. have higher life expectancy measures. The opposite is true for almost all states in the southeastern region of the country, which already had the lowest life expectancies by state of residence.

For five states in the Southeast, male life expectancy of transplants to the state is more than two years higher than that of people born in the state who still lived there at the time of the 2008 survey used in the study.

The patterns for women are similar, but differences are slightly smaller in magnitude. This gender difference could be because the overall migration rate is higher for men than for women.

This new method of assessing regional life expectancy also demonstrates that interstate migration is not as simple as people selecting destinations based on health environments. Instead, states lose healthy residents to other states while they also gain healthy transplants.

The net effect differs widely across states but is clustered by region. For example, in many southern states, the mortality risk of transplants is much lower than the mortality risk of people who have remained in their home state. In many states in the Northeast and Midwest, the mortality risk of these two subgroups is similar.

However, migration patterns reduce these regional disparities, making them less visible in nearly all previous research on this topic that used state of residence in their measurements.

The Population Association of America featured this paper in the lead-up to their 2023 Annual Meeting in New Orleans from April 12-15, 2023.

Fletcher is a leader in the emerging field of social genomics, and this new paper is part of a larger research agenda that connects early life conditions and mortality. He was recently awarded the prestigious 2023 Guggenheim Fellowship to further this research.

World’s largest grammar database reveals accelerating loss of language diversity

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER

There’s a crisis unfolding in the field of linguistics: Global language experts estimate that, without intervention, about one language will be lost every month for the next 40 years.

A study published in Science Advances debuts a grammatical database that documents the enormous diversity of current languages on the planet, highlighting just how much humanity stands to lose and why it's worth saving. 

Known as Grambank, it is now the world’s largest publicly available comparative grammatical database. Initiated by scholars in the Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, more than 100 authors from 68 institutions, including the University of Colorado Boulder, contributed to the years-long, global data project.

The analysis of more than 400,000 data points and 2,400 separate languages and dialects reveals that language loss is occurring unevenly across major linguistic regions of the world, with indigenous languages in northeast South America, Alaska to Oregon, and in northern Australia at highest risk.

“Grambank is showing us the importance of working on language documentation and revitalization in order to preserve this legacy of human communication, culture and cognition,” said Hannah Haynie, co-first author of the study and assistant professor in the Department of Linguistics at CU Boulder.

Grammar 101

Grammar is simply the rules of a language: the words and sounds used, and how they are combined and interpreted. Grammatical elements of a language include word order (if the subject goes before or after the verb), tense (present, the past or future), comparatives (words that express ‘bigger’ or ‘smaller’) and whether a language has gendered pronouns.

Over the past century, many researchers have studied languages, worked with their speakers, and published books or other types of grammatical descriptions of languages. Grambank is built both on these research analyses and prior language databases, but compared with previous databases, it is larger in scale and more thorough. It encodes 195 possible grammatical features for about 215 language families.

“Our understanding of grammar and what that tells us about humans is limited by what we can observe,” said Haynie. “We're putting those observations into this data set, and that allows for comparison.”

As there are currently about 4,300 languages with published grammatical descriptions—out of about 7,000 known languages in the modern world—Grambank is over halfway to encoding all possible grammar information that can be extracted from existing data sources, said Haynie.

“Unusual” languages

Using Grambank, the team found that they could identify “unusual” languages: those which stray further from the averages in variation typically found in language, which often have no known sister languages. But they also found that there’s nothing particularly unusual about endangered languages compared with those that are not endangered.

“A lot of fairly ordinary languages, in terms of their basic grammar, happen to be endangered for a variety of reasons,” said Haynie.

English, spoken around the world by 1.5 billion people, is actually “a pretty weird language” by Grambank’s standards.

“Some of the places with more ‘unusual’ languages are places like Europe and Northern Africa—languages that we, as English speakers, tend to be more familiar with,” said Haynie.

The bigger takeaway for Haynie is that none of the languages in the dataset are identical. Of all 2,400 languages and dialects in the dataset, only five match up the same using the grammatical code used to document and analyze them within Grambank. Though vocabulary may play a big role in the mutual unintelligibility that linguists rely on to determine what counts as separate languages, Grambank shows that the grammatical ‘fingerprints’ of languages are also typically unique, she said.

“It means that every language is pretty darn special,” said Haynie.

Language loss

Language extinction has occurred throughout human history, but its speed has been accelerating due to social, political and economic pressures, said Haynie.

It’s as if, while mapping the human genome, scientists saw the genes themselves rapidly disappearing before their eyes.

“Right now we're at a critical state, in terms of language endangerment,” said Haynie, noting that the United Nations has declared this the International Decade of Indigenous Languages to try to promote language preservation, documentation and revitalization.

This global language loss is also not evenly distributed. Several regions are at higher risk of losing indigenous languages, such as Aleut in Alaska and Salish languages of the Pacific Northwest, Yagua and Tariana spoken in South America, and the languages of Kuuk-Thayorre and Wardaman native to Northern Australian communities.

“Indigenous languages here in North America, languages around us and on our continent, are some of the most endangered languages in the world,” she said.

Genealogy versus geography

One element that has been “hotly debated” within linguistics for years is the relationship between genealogy and geography in the development of language. That is: Which features in language are inherited from family and culture (genealogy) and which are more likely to be shared through contact among neighbors (geography)?

The Grambank analysis found that genealogy seems to be consistently more important than geography—meaning that the faithful inheritance of ancestral language plays a stronger role in shaping grammar in languages still spoken today than who someone’s geographical neighbors were and how they talked, said Haynie.

While language crossover and bilingualism are well documented throughout history, this finding showcases how there is much we can still learn about human history and the ways we communicate in present day from the words of our ancestors.

“Language always finds a way,” said Haynie.

The Grambank database is an open-access comprehensive resource maintained by the Max Planck Society.

Long distance voyaging among the Pacific Islands

Geochemical analyses of stone artefacts reveal long-distance voyaging among Pacific Islands during the last millennium

Peer-Reviewed Publication

MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR EVOLUTIONARY ANTHROPOLOGY

Emae Island 

IMAGE: EMAE ISLAND IN CENTRAL VANUATU. view more 

CREDIT: © AYMERIC HERMANN

Polynesian peoples are renowned for their advanced sailing technology and for reaching the most remote islands on the planet centuries before the Europeans reached the Americas. Through swift eastward migrations that are now well covered by archaeological research, Polynesian societies settled virtually every island from Samoa and Tonga to Rapa Nui/Easter Island in the east, Hawai’i in the north, and Aotearoa/New Zealand in the south. But little is known about Polynesian migrations west of the 180th meridian.

In order to better understand the relationship between these Polynesian societies of the western Pacific, Melanesia and Micronesia – often referred to as “Polynesian Outliers” – a multidisciplinary team of researchers analysed the geochemical signature of stone artefacts collected in Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and the Caroline Islands between 1978 and 2019. An international research team, led by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, was able to identify the geological origin of these artefacts after comparing their geochemical and isotopic compositions with reference datasets of natural rocks and archaeological quarries in the region.

The connection to the Polynesian homeland

Adzes are versatile cutting tools comparable to axes. Among the eight adzes or adze fragments the researchers analysed, six were sourced to the same large fortified quarry complex of Tatagamatau on Tutuila Island (American Sāmoa), which is located more than 2,500 kilometres away in the Polynesian homeland. “Tatagamatau adzes were among the most disseminated items across West and East Polynesia, and the sourcing of Taumako and Emae adzes suggest bursts of long-distance mobility towards the Outliers similar to those that led to the settlement of East Polynesia”, says lead author Aymeric Hermann, researcher at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and associate researcher at the Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Hermann points out that the transportation of such socially valued items – often passed down for generations among Polynesian chiefly families – suggests carefully planned voyages, rather than accidental landfalls.

The geochemical investigation of stone artefacts from the Polynesian Outliers also provides critical information on inter-island transfers between the Polynesians and their neighbours in the western Pacific, specifically between the Banks Islands and Central Vanuatu, and between the Bismarck and the Caroline Islands. The team highlights that such inter-island contacts are signals that Polynesian sailors might have played an important role in the reappraisal of long-distance mobility and in the distribution of specific material culture items and technologies such as shell adzes, back-strap loom, and obsidian points among the mosaic of Pacific Island societies in the western Pacific during the last millennium A.D. “A recent study describes an obsidian stemmed point as a chiefly heirloom found on Kapingamarangi Island with a geochemical signature matching an obsidian source on Lou Island in the Admiralties: this is an exciting find that echoes our identification of a basalt flake from mainland New Britain on that same atoll”, adds Hermann.

Long-distance mobility in the past

In the Pacific region, geochemical sourcing has been particularly successful at locating sources of stone artefacts and tracing the transport of specific items across distant islands and archipelagos. Such material evidence of long-distance inter-island voyaging shows that Pacific Island societies were never completely isolated from one another. These patterns of interaction are central to our understanding of the deeply intertwined history of cultural systems in the Pacific.

In this study, atomic emission spectroscopy and mass spectrometry were used to measure concentration of oxides, trace elements and ratios of radiogenic isotopes in order to identify geological provenances with a high level of accuracy. Thanks to the collaboration of experts in archaeology, geochemistry and data science, a cutting-edge approach to geochemical sourcing was developed, which involves the use of computer-assisted comparisons with open-access databases.