Thursday, January 25, 2024

 

Marine heat waves trigger shift in hatch dates and early growth of Pacific cod

Peer-Reviewed Publication

OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

Pacific cod otolith 

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AN OTILITH, OR EAR STONE, FROM A PACIFIC COD. IMAGE COURTESY JESSICA MILLER, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY. 

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CREDIT: JESSICA MILLER, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

Marine heat waves appear to trigger earlier reproduction, high mortality in early life stages and fewer surviving juvenile Pacific cod in the Gulf of Alaska, a new study shows. These changes in the hatch cycle and early growth patterns persisted in years following the marine heat waves, which could have implications for the future of Gulf of Alaska Pacific cod, an economically and culturally significant species,

 

 

 

Innovative tech shows promise to boost rubber production in US


Developments crucial as world’s natural supply is at risk


Peer-Reviewed Publication

OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY




COLUMBUS, Ohio – With disease and high demand posing threats to the world’s primary natural rubber supply in Southeast Asia, scientists are working to ramp up the U.S. rubber market by advancing methods to extract latex from two sustainable North American plant sources: a dandelion species and a desert shrub.

Researchers reported their methods to improve efficiency and increase latex yield in two recent publications, building upon decades of research led by Katrina Cornish, professor of horticulture and crop science and food, agricultural and biological engineering at The Ohio State University. 

Cornish and colleagues have added specialized agents during processing of the Taraxacum kok-saghyz (TK) dandelion and the guayule shrub to coax a higher amount of latex from both plants. Neither source can simply be tapped – the method used on tropical trees that produce the only commercially available natural rubber in the world.

“We need to have efficient extraction methods for any and all alternative natural rubber-producing species, especially at a large scale,” Cornish said. “And they have to be low-cost if you’re going to be able to compete in the tire market in the long term.”

The TK dandelion work was published recently in Industrial Crops and Products, and the guayule research in Environmental Technology & Innovation.

Beyond tires, rubber has applications in an estimated 50,000 products. The need is urgent for a domestic natural rubber industry: While the United States produces synthetic rubber, it is entirely dependent on imports for natural rubber. In 2019, 10% of the natural rubber supply was lost to disease – and the risk for transmission of South American leaf blight to Southeast Asia has increased with the expansion of direct airline travel between Brazil and China.

It is not an overstatement, Cornish said, to suggest that if leaf blight were to make it from South America to Asia, the disease could wipe out most of the world’s natural rubber supply in short order.

“And then we could see the collapse of the world’s supply chains and, subsequently, entire economies,” she said. “We’ve concentrated an entire global industry around a tropical plant. But TK dandelion and guayule are sustainable and can grow in temperate conditions.”

Guayule latex comes from generalized cells in the shrub’s bark. Extracting the latex involves grinding up the bark to break open its cells and release latex particles into what Cornish calls a “milkshake.” A series of washing and spinning cycles follows to separate the latex from other solid material – and with each centrifugation step, some latex is lost.

The research team found that adding chemical substances called flocculants to the milkshake helped bind other solid materials together and separate them from the latex, effectively cutting the washing cycles in half and improving the overall latex yield. The addition of one substance doubled the available latex and that yield was increased by 12-fold when a creaming agent was added for purification.

“By adding flocculants, latex extraction is more efficient and clean,” said first study author Beenish Saba, a postdoctoral researcher in food, agricultural and biological engineering at Ohio State. “We found specific flocculants that work best at improving the quality of latex extraction and reducing the time it takes.”

The study also showed that feeding the remaining solids back through the processing system enabled extraction of even more latex and also reduced the environmental footprint of the entire operation, Saba said.

Guayule contains a particularly attractive high-performance latex that is stronger and softer than any other known polymer, Cornish said, meaning more filler can be added in production without any loss of its valuable properties. She used guayule latex to develop the first hypoallergenic medical glove to block both radiation and pathogens.

Though TK dandelion latex is produced in the plant’s roots, the extraction process is similar – the roots are trimmed, blended into a slurry and filtered to remove solid chunks of plant material and dirt. Latex floating on the top of the remaining liquid is slurped up with a pipette and rinsed up to three times for purification, and then dried.

A bit of serendipity led to the improvement to this extraction method. First author Nathaniel King-Smith, a graduate student in Cornish’s lab, found that processed samples sitting in the lab for three months had significantly more latex floating on their surfaces. An analysis showed that heavy divalent cations, like magnesium, bound to the latex particle membranes weighed down the particles – until the connection eventually collapsed.

The team found that adding EDTA, a chelator that binds to divalent cations, to processing the dandelion roots allowed for extraction of more than twice as much latex than was extracted without the addition of EDTA.

“Our question was, how can we free up the heavy fraction without waiting three months for rubber particles to suddenly become lighter and float?” King-Smith said. “We found that the extra latex yield after months of storage could be achieved immediately in a standard extraction just by adding EDTA before spinning.”

The use of EDTA also increased the gel content of the extracted latex once it was dried – useful information for potential production by industries that are looking for higher-gel rubber, he said.

EDTA may turn out to be applicable to latex extraction from guayule, though Cornish said her lab hopes to partner with flocculant chemists who could help further refine that process. She has been planting, harvesting and extracting latex from TK dandelion for over a decade in Ohio and has a greenhouse full of guayule on Ohio State’s Wooster campus, where she hopes to one day build a full-scale latex processing plant.

“We are working on a small scale and focusing on premium latex markets where you can make something of great value with minimal materials so that we can fund expansion,” she said. “And in the meantime, we’re making extraction more efficient so we can make the material clean and pure.”

This work was supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

Co-authors of the guayule paper included Cindy Barrera and David Barker of Ohio State. Co-authors of the TK dandelion paper included Kristof Molnar, Joshua Blakeslee, Aswathy Pillai and Judit Puskas of Ohio State, Colleen McMahan of the USDA-Agricultural Research Service and Meirambek Mutalkhanov of Al-Farabi Kazakh National University.

 

Study offers rare long-term analysis of techniques for creating standing dead trees for wildlife habitat


Peer-Reviewed Publication

OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY




CORVALLIS, Ore. – Ecologists have long known that standing dead trees, commonly referred to as snags, are an important habitat element for forest dwellers and act as a driver of biodiversity.

They’re so important that in some managed forests, snag creation is part of the conservation tool kit – i.e., crews sometimes convert a percentage of live trees into dead ones through techniques ranging from sawing off their tops to wounding their trunks to injecting them with disease-causing fungi.

Until now, however, key questions had remained unanswered: How well do any of those techniques actually work over the long term? And which ones are cost-effective for land managers seeking to enhance habitat?

Jim Rivers of the Oregon State University College of Forestry looked at nearly 800 large-diameter Douglas-fir trees that had been subjected to snag creation treatment in southwestern Oregon in the early 2000s. He learned that chain-saw topping was the best way to have a rotting, standing dead tree after a couple of decades, especially if the topped tree had minimal live branches left in in place.

“The key finding from this study was a strong divergence among snag creation treatments in the extent of tree decay 18 to 20 years after treatment,” Rivers said. “Mechanical wounding and fungal inoculation showed limited ability to create snags and promote structural diversity in the forest. And adding fungal inoculation to trees that have been topped with chain saws does not appear to be worth the additional expense and time. It resulted in only small increases in the extent of decay relative to what topping alone could do.”

In wilderness areas, snags occur on their own as trees die from natural causes. Some remain standing for more than a century, serving as homes and feeding grounds for a host of vertebrate species.

Snag-reliant woodpeckers are of particular importance among those species, acting as ecosystem engineers through their foraging and nesting activities. Woodpeckers help regulate insect pests, serve as indicators of forest health and create nesting cavities that are used by a host of other species.

Despite snags’ ecological importance, standing dead trees in managed forests are often removed for their commercial value or to avoid interfering with forestry operations, especially as it pertains to worker safety during timber harvesting. In Oregon, there are no snag requirements on state or private lands.

“Snags support multiple functions within forest ecosystems,” Rivers said. “They provide vertical structure and contribute to nutrient flows and carbon cycling in addition to providing habitat for a diversity of organisms. But many have been lost from managed forests, especially large-diameter snags.”

In this research, Rivers examined snags near Coos Bay in a pair of study sites that total 7.5 square kilometers in area. The two sites are about 4 kilometers apart.

All of the treatments resulted in some type of decay but the markers of decay, such as whether a tree was broken, was cracked along the bole or had peeling bark, were strongest on trees that had experienced chain-saw topping.

Rivers said the study makes it clear that when managers interested in snag creation are deciding which treatment or treatments to use, they should think in terms of time span – i.e., how quickly do they want decay to occur in newly created snags.

For example, if the goal is rapid decay – such as within five years, to rapidly create snags in an area with few or none – chain-saw topping seems to be the best method.

“But if the goal is to promote slower decay over longer time frames such as decades, mechanical wounding may be more appropriate,” he said. “Wounding involves removing a section of the tree base and leads to a slow decline.”

Rivers added that concurrently implementing different treatments can extend the total period during which human-created snags are available to deadwood-dependent wildlife – and also cut costs by eliminating the need to get crews back into stands to do snag creation at multiple points in time.

The Bureau of Land Management funded this research, which was published in Forest Ecology and Management.

 

These male marsupials give up sleep for sex


Peer-Reviewed Publication

CELL PRESS

Male dusky antechinus 

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THIS PHOTOGRAPH SHOWS A MALE DUSKY ANTECHINUS IN A NATURALISTIC ENCLOSURE LOCATED IN CAPE OTWAY, AUSTRALIA.

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CREDIT: ERIKA ZAID



All animals need sleep. When humans or animals don’t get enough, it can lead to trouble paying attention, irritability, and other ill effects. And yet, researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on January 25 have made the surprising discovery that a small Australian marsupial called an antechinus will sacrifice hours of sleep per night to make more time for sex during the mating season.

The researchers say the multi-year study is the first to show direct evidence for this type of sleep restriction in any land-dwelling mammal. It’s a trade-off between sleep and reproduction that they say is likely driven by strong sexual selection.

“Using a combination of techniques, we showed that males lose sleep during the breeding season, with one male halving his sleep during this mating period,” says Erika Zaid (@zaid_erika) of La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia. “In humans and other animals, restricting the normal amount of sleep leads to worse performance while awake, an effect that compounds night after night. And yet, the antechinus did just that: they slept 3 hours less per night, every night, for 3 weeks.”

Antechinus are bizarre in other ways, too. Males only reproduce once in their lifetime and live for only 1 year. Females can live for 2 years. Male antechinus typically die at the same time right after their sole short and intense mating season. During the breeding season, males compete physically and through sperm competition for access to as many females as possible to maximize their reproductive success. Their unusual life history is what drew the researchers led by John Lesku, also of La Trobe University, to study them.

“The males have one shot at fathering offspring during a single 3-week mating period,” Lesku says. “We found that male, but not female, dusky antechinuses, become restless during their only breeding season.”

The researchers used accelerometry to track the marsupials’ movements. They also used electrophysiology and metabolic measures to quantify how much the animals were sleeping. Those data showed that the males were sleeping 3 hours less every night for weeks.

The findings suggest that antechinus may have some way to thrive on less sleep during this time. The other possibility is that they accept the downsides of staying awake to improve their chances at paternity.

“It is actually a little surprising that these animals do not sacrifice even more sleep during the breeding season, since they will soon die anyways,” Zaid says. “In this way, keeping much of their sleep intact reveals the essential functions that sleep serves.”

It’s not clear what causes males to die after the breeding season. The researchers don’t suspect that sleep loss alone is the reason. In part that’s because the males they saw sleeping the least were not the ones in the worst condition.

The researchers want to learn more about how antechinus manage the sleep loss, which is at a level that would make people act as though they were legally intoxicated. “Are antechinus equally compromised, but just get on with it?” they ask. “Or are they resilient to the negative effects of sleep restriction?” These are exciting questions for future study.

This photograph shows researcher E.Zaid holding a dusky antechinus before releasing it at the trapping site at the end of the breeding season.  

CREDIT

Francesca Leonard

Australian rainforest (IMAGE)

CELL PRESS

This research was funded by the Australian Research Council, the Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, and the La Trobe University Department of Environment, Ecology and Evolution.

Current Biology, Zaid et al.: “Semelparous marsupials reduce sleep for sex.” https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(23)01764-5 

Current Biology (@CurrentBiology), published by Cell Press, is a bimonthly journal that features papers across all areas of biology. Current Biology strives to foster communication across fields of biology, both by publishing important findings of general interest and through highly accessible front matter for non-specialists. Visit http://www.cell.com/current-biology. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.

 

 

Three-year population study supports fight to save Cameroon’s Kordofan giraffe


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL

Cameroon giraffes 

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CAMERA TRAP IMAGE OF KORDOFAN GIRAFFES IN CAMEROON

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CREDIT: BRISTOL ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY




Crucial new data about the numbers of Critically Endangered Kordofan giraffe living within Cameroon’s Bénoué National Park has been released, supporting conservation efforts to save the subspecies from extinction.

Researchers from the University of Bristol and Bristol Zoological Society have carried out a three-year study using imagery of giraffe from a variety of sources, including camera traps, to establish how many of the highly threatened mammals remain within the park.

Their findings, which have been published in the African Journal of Ecology, present the first reliable estimate of giraffe population size for the region and will help conservationists monitor the threats they are facing.

The paper concluded that as few as 27 individuals remain within the park, highlighting the vital importance of ongoing efforts by Bristol Zoological Society and others to minimise threats from poaching and mounting human pressures.

Giraffe in the park are a target for illegal hunting, which poses a serious threat to the population. An alarming recent study, also led by Bristol Zoological Society and University of Bristol, found that without intervention, poaching of just two Kordofan giraffe per year could result in extinction of the population in just 15 years.

The Society has been working to conserve giraffe in Cameroon since 2017. It is thought there are fewer than 2,000 Kordofan giraffe remaining in the wild – a decline of 85% since the 1980s.

The paper’s lead author, Connor Parks, undertook the study as part of his Master’s degree in Global Wildlife Health and Conservation at Bristol Vet School, in conjunction with teaching partner Bristol Zoological Society. Connor is among more than 400 students who annually undertake one of the six degrees the Society offers, in partnership with UWE, the University of Bristol and SGS College.

Connor Parks explained: “Our study has shown a significant population of Kordofan giraffe still occur within the park, with many more living in the surrounding landscape. It also emphasises that continued conservation efforts are vital if we are to further support the subspecies in Cameroon. This should include strengthening existing anti-poaching regulations and protecting wildlife movement corridors.”

Dr Caspian Johnson, a conservation scientist and lecturer at Bristol Zoological Society said: “Habitat degradation and illegal hunting has already seen the loss of cheetah, black rhino, and all resident elephants from Bénoué National Park. It is paramount we do not lose another precious species from this area.

“These studies provide us with the crucial baseline data needed to determine how giraffe population size and structure may change in the future. This will help us inform the conservation action and management practices needed to protect giraffe in Bénoué National Park.”

Aerial image of Kordofan giraffe in Bénoué National Park, Cameroon

CREDIT

University of Bristol

 

Sika deer overpopulation endangers beech forests in Southern Kyushu, Japan


A new study reveals how soil erosion caused by sika deer foraging reduces the growth of the beech trees


Peer-Reviewed Publication

KYUSHU UNIVERSITY

Increase in sika deer population damages the environment 

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RESEARCHERS FOUND THAT THE INCREASE IN SIKA DEER POPULATION LED TO SOIL EROSION AND SUBSEQUENT REDUCTION IN BEECH TREE GROWTH.

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CREDIT: KYUSHU UNIVERSITY/SAMANTHA SASTRAWIDJAJA




Fukuoka, Japan—Kyushu University researchers have found that Japanese beech (Fagus crenata) in the forests of southern Kyushu have seen reduced growth, due to soil erosion caused by the overpopulation of sika deer (Cervus nippon). Their findings, which were published in the journal Catena, could help in the development of new strategies for forest conservation.

Conservation is more than just preserving forests; it's about protecting the diverse web of life. One area where conservation has become critical is a beech forest in Shiiba Village, in the remote mountains of Southern Kyushu. The Japanese beech is a prominent and iconic species in Japan's cool-temperate forests, spanning all across Japan from Honshu to Southern Kyushu.

However, in recent years, the beech forest in Shiiba Village has been in decline, believed to be driven by the rapid growth of the sika deer population between the 1980s to the early 2000s.

"Due to their overpopulation and subsequent foraging, dwarf bamboo (Sasamorpha borealis)—the dominant understory vegetation in this area—was lost. This destabilized the soil and led to soil erosion, exposing the roots of the beech trees," explains Hayato Abe, a Ph.D. student in Kyushu University Forest, Graduate School of Agriculture and first author of the study. "We wanted to see if soil erosion was playing a role in the decline of the beech forest."

Abe and his team conducted an ecological survey on 12 beech trees at a research site in Shiiba Research Forest, established by Kyushu University in 1939. They investigated tree growth by measuring the production of leaves, stems, and roots. Tree ring samples were also obtained and used to compare the growth of the trees throughout the years. Their analysis revealed a concerning decline in tree growth since 1997 – around the same time that the understory vegetation was lost due to deer foraging.

Suspecting soil erosion as the primary driver for reduced tree growth, the team looked for a link by measuring the length of the exposed beech tree roots. They found that trees with more exposed roots showed lower growth rates and produced fewer new leaves.

To understand this link, the researchers also investigated how the trees use water. They found that trees that struggled to take up water were growing at a slower pace. A likely explanation, Abe says, is that the parts of the roots that remain in the soil retain water better, as they are exposed to less extreme temperatures. In contrast, the exposed roots are vulnerable to water loss due to freezing or drought and are unable to transport water efficiently.

"Our results suggest that soil erosion possibly leads to water stress in the trees, affecting their growth and health. These trees are also more vulnerable to damage from strong winds, climate change, and pests, which means they are also more likely to wither or die," says Abe.

The scientists also fear that due to fewer leaves growing, the leaf litter on the forest floor will also decrease, further exacerbating soil erosion and leading to a negative spiral. Ultimately, the study highlights the delicate relationship between forests and the wildlife that inhabit them, and the cascading impacts that occur when the ecosystem is out of balance.

"The Japanese government has been taking steps to reduce the local deer population.  Up until the 1980s, the hunting tradition in Shiiba Village played a key role in controlling the sika deer population. But as time went on, the number of hunters decreased. Compounded by the lack of natural predators in the area, the deer population exploded, leading to the situation today," continues Abe. "The government is supporting local hunters but it's a short-term solution. They have also considered installing deer exclusion fences to restrict deer to a limited region. Unfortunately, due to the remoteness of Shiiba Village, setting up such facilities can be costly and time-consuming."

Solving problems in conservation is never an easy task and requires multifaceted and multidisciplinary approaches.

"As scientists, we can work to find the root causes of the problems and even develop solutions. But implementation will require working with other researchers and with the larger community," concludes Abe.

(By Negar Khalili)

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For more information about this research, see "Soil erosion under forest hampers beech growth: Impacts of understory vegetation degradation by sika deer," Hayato Abe, Tomonori Kume, Fujio Hyodo, Mimori Oyamada, Ayumi Katayama, Catena https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2023.107559

About Kyushu University 
Kyushu University is one of Japan's leading research-oriented institutes of higher education since its founding in 1911. Home to around 19,000 students and 8,000 faculty and staff, Kyushu U's world-class research centers cover a wide range of study areas and research fields, from the humanities and arts to engineering and medical sciences. Its multiple campuses—including one of the largest in Japan—are located around Fukuoka City, a coastal metropolis on the southwestern Japanese island of Kyushu that is frequently ranked among the world's most livable cities and historically known as Japan's gateway to Asia. Through its Vision 2030, Kyushu U will 'Drive Social Change with Integrative Knowledge.' Its synergistic application of knowledge will encompass all of academia and solve issues in society while innovating new systems for a better future.


Outline on how Sika Deer overpopulation leads to reduced tree growth. Sika Deer overpopulation leads to the degradation of understory vegetation, which in turn leads to soil erosion. This causes the tree roots to be exposed leading to water stress in trees and eventual reduction of tree growth.

CREDIT

Kyushu University/Samantha Sastrawidjaja