Friday, January 31, 2025

 

Chameleon shrimp can camouflage themselves even in invasive species of algae, study shows



Researchers have observed that a small crustacean that changes color according to the marine vegetation is able to disguise itself in exotic algae that did not evolve together with the species. The long-term effects of this interaction are unknown



Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Chameleon shrimp can camouflage themselves even in invasive species of algae, study shows 

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Experiment in which shrimp could choose between native and exotic algae 

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Credit: Rafael Duarte





Small shrimps of the genus Hippolyte have the ability to change color to camouflage themselves in the algae where they live and escape predators. Depending on the algae they are in, they can turn red, green, brown or transparent.

A study published in the Journal of Animal Ecology shows for the first time how these crustaceans interact with invasive algae. The results also show that they can camouflage themselves in algae from other oceans with which they did not evolve together.

The authors, from the Federal University of ABC (state of São Paulo, Brazil) and the University of Exeter (United Kingdom), tested how the species found at European beaches, the chameleon shrimp (Hippolyte varians), interacts with two exotic algae, one from Asia and the other from Australia.

The European species, which is about 3 centimeters long, is evolutionarily related to the carnival shrimp (Hippolyte obliquimanus), which is common along the north coast of São Paulo (read more at: agencia.fapesp.br/25091).

“When the chameleon shrimp encounters two different algae, it doesn’t matter which is native and which is exotic, it chooses the one that offers the best color match so it can hide,” reports Rafael Duarte, first author of the study, which was conducted during his postdoctoral studies at the Center for Natural and Human Sciences (CCNH) at UFABC with a scholarship from FAPESP.
  
The collections and experiments were conducted during Duarte’s internship at the University of Exeter under the supervision of Martin Stevens, co-author of the article.

The researchers collected the shrimp and the algae they lived on from tide pools formed on rocks at two beaches in Falmouth, southwest Britain.

In the laboratory, the animals were placed in a box with two algae to hide in, one native and one exotic. Combinations of two of the four species studied were tested, always one native (green or red) and one exotic (brown or pink).

“The brown one is an Asian sargassum species that has increased its presence in the last decade and is causing problems in several places in Europe. It’s taking over the habitat of native species, which are being restricted to deeper areas. However, it has proven to be an excellent shelter for shrimp,” says Duarte, currently a researcher at the University of Aveiro in Portugal.

Complexity rather than color

In the Y-shaped boxes, the shrimp were observed for ten minutes. In most cases, they chose one of the two algae offered and remained there until the end of the experiment.

In general, there was no preference for choosing the native algae, but rather the algae where they could best hide. The green shrimp showed no preference between the green native algae and the brown exotic sargassum.

But when they encountered the native red algae and the exotic brown algae, the shrimp preferred the sargassum. The researchers believe that when there is no color match with the native plant, the structure of the invasive plant serves as better protection, favoring its choice.

“While the native green algae are quite leafy and flat, the sargassum has a more complex three-dimensional structure, like a fern. In nature, this probably makes it easier for them to protect themselves better from predators, even if the colors don’t quite match,” Duarte points out.

Moreover, he adds, the native green algae are quite seasonal. In the periods when they’re not as available, the shrimp can use sargassum, which is more stable throughout the year.

It takes up to 30 days for the chameleon shrimp to turn the same color as the algae. The researchers observed that the color change from red to green is faster than the other way around. The most likely hypothesis lies in the pigments inside the cells that give the animals their color, called chromatophores.

Work on pigmentation carried out by other groups shows that red animals have all the necessary pigments in their chromatophores and only need to get rid of the other colors to change their color.

In the case of green animals, however, the red pigment must be acquired in order to change color, which requires more time and energy from the organism. In the case of chameleon shrimp, the researchers believe that it is necessary to eat red or pink algae in order to acquire the pigments of these colors.

However, a number of questions remain about this complex interaction. One of them is how the shrimp recognize the algae. Previous studies have shown that the shape of the algae is important, but it is not certain that the choice is visual. The group is now investigating whether algae have chemical signals that can be detected by crustaceans, and whether the presence of pollutants in the water can alter this perception.

“Although the interaction with exotic algae doesn’t seem to affect the species’ ability to camouflage itself, we don’t know the long-term effects of the presence of these invaders. Throughout the world, invasive species are wreaking havoc on ecosystems. We need to monitor to better understand these relationships,” he concludes.

About FAPESP

The São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) is a public institution with the mission of supporting scientific research in all fields of knowledge by awarding scholarships, fellowships and grants to investigators linked with higher education and research institutions in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. FAPESP is aware that the very best research can only be done by working with the best researchers internationally. Therefore, it has established partnerships with funding agencies, higher education, private companies, and research organizations in other countries known for the quality of their research and has been encouraging scientists funded by its grants to further develop their international collaboration.

 

 

Urgent action needed to keep Europe polio-free, warn heads of ECDC and WHO Europe



An unusually high amount of poliovirus detections in several European countries in recent months has underscored the importance of keeping Europe polio-free



Reports and Proceedings

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC)





An unusually high amount of poliovirus detections in several European countries in recent months has underscored the importance of keeping Europe polio-free, according to an editorial by European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) Director Pamela Rendi Wagner and World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge, which was published on Eurosurveillance. ‘A future without polio remains our goal, but it is by no means a certainty’, warn Rendi-Wagner and Kluge.

Every country must remain vigilant to detect the presence of polioviruses through sensitive surveillance systems, prepared to act quickly if any circulation is detected, and committed to sustain high vaccination coverage in every community every year until global polio eradication has been achieved,’ said Kluge and Rendi-Wagner. This reiterates the path laid out in the European Immunization Agenda 2030, the GPEI Polio eradication strategy, and the Global Polio Surveillance Action Plan.

Ongoing risk highlighted by recent detections

While polio has been a threat to the health and wellbeing of children for centuries, it is a mostly forgotten disease for the vast majority of people in Europe. Thanks to successful vaccination programmes, extensive surveillance and outbreak response, Europe has been polio-free since 2002.

However, the virus will continue to be imported into Europe as long as it circulates globally. Pathogenic poliovirus has been detected in at least one country in Europe every year from 2015 through 2022. More worryingly, vaccine-derived poliovirus type 2 was detected in 2024 in the wastewater systems of 14 cities in 5 countries, namely in Spain, Poland, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Finland.

These viruses are linked to a lineage that was first detected in Nigeria in 2020, and which has travelled to other 21 countries in Africa, causing outbreaks in 15 of them. Genetic sequencing analysis indicates that before it had been detected in Europe, the virus had been circulating for a year elsewhere.

There is no evidence that there has been widespread circulation of the virus in Europe due to these importations. However, these may and do lead to outbreaks if people who are unvaccinated are exposed to the virus, as recently seen in Tajikistan, Ukraine, Israel and the United Kingdom.

Public health action urgently needed

Therefore, Rendi-Wagner and Kluge emphasise the need to maintain high national vaccination coverage across all populations. While the five countries that detected polio virus in 2024 have maintained high immunization levels, they have also reported disparities in some communities, which remain vulnerable to infection as a result. ECDC estimates that 2.4 million children in the EU/EEA may not have received the course of vaccinations required for protection between 2012-2021, with an additional 600 000 children who may have missed their vaccinations in 2022-2023.

ECDC has published a Rapid Risk Assessment on these detections recommending priority actions to be urgently taken to prevent and curb possible transmission of polioviruses. WHO Europe has also published guidance to help countries identify, address and track disparities in vaccination levels.

Kluge and Rendi-Wagner have also underlined their commitment to cooperate closely to support national and local public health authorities in their efforts to curb the virus. This support includes technical guidance and resources for surveillance and outbreak response, facilitating data exchange and genetic sequencing of virus strains, and assisting in targeted risk communication and community engagement strategies to improve vaccination coverage. ‘Europe remains committed to do its part in the context of all relentless global efforts in this direction and has full capacity to do so successfully,’ said Kluge and Rendi-Wagner.

 

Wildfire smoke can carry toxins hundreds of kilometers, depositing grime on urban structures, surfaces: research



McMaster University
Wildfire researchers 

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Researchers Sarah Styler (left) and Iris Chan say wildfire events may become an increasingly dominant and troubling source of pollution in urban areas. 

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Credit: McMaster University




Hamilton, ON, Jan. 30, 2025 – Researchers have shown that plumes of wildfire smoke can carry contaminants hundreds of kilometres, leaving a toxic and lingering footprint which has the potential to be re-released into the environment.

 

The frequency and severity of wildfires is expected to continue increasing due to climate change. In recent weeks, catastrophic wildfires have devasted Los Angeles, scorching tens of thousands of acres. 

 

Canada’s 2023 wildfire season was the most destructive ever recorded, with an estimated 18.5 million hectares burned. The 2024 season was the second worst on record, with more than 5 million hectares burned according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, which tracks national statistics.  

 

Wildfire events may become an increasingly dominant and troubling source of pollution in urban areas, say researchers. 

 

Wildfire smoke features a complex mixture of pollutants, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), a class of carcinogenic compounds that can also cause mutations in nature. PAHs are produced whenever incomplete combustion occurs, including when wood burns.

 

In the new study, published today in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, researchers at McMaster University report the potential impact of PAHs extends far downwind of wildfires, even hundreds of kilometres.

 

“This study was motivated by the large increase in wildfire frequency and severity in Western Canada,” explains Iris Chan, a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry & Chemical Biology and lead author of the study. “There is a great deal of public awareness and research on air quality related to North American wildfires, but the long-term impact of smoke drifting into cities is virtually unknown.” 

 

Urban landscapes are dominated by impermeable structures and surfaces such as buildings and roads, she explains. Over time, these surfaces accumulate what is known as “urban grime,” a buildup of deposited particles and other chemical compounds that can hold and re-release pollutants such as PAHs.

 

For this study, researchers enlisted volunteers in Kamloops and Calgary to collect samples in their backyards from August to November 2021. 

 

They set out specially designed kits containing glass beads, which mimic impervious urban surfaces like windows. The samples were regularly collected and analyzed at McMaster.   

 

The team looked for correlations between surface-grime PAHs and evidence of fire activity in measurements of local air quality such as carbon monoxide and fine particulate matter.

 

In the Calgary samples, researchers found toxin levels nearly doubled when smoke from fires in neighbouring Saskatchewan arrived from about 500 kilometres away. There were no other large-scale pollution events in Calgary at that time, suggesting the increase was linked.

 

In Kamloops, they pinpointed a sharp increase in toxins even when there were no significant wildfire events in the region. Based on the specific composition of samples, researchers concluded the uptick was due to a hyper-local burn, likely a neighborhood campfire. 

 

“We should be mindful that the minor things people do every day, like using their barbeque or having a campfire in the backyard, can have a significant and long-lasting impact on their local environment,” says Sarah Styler, who supervised the study and holds the Canada Research Chair in Atmospheric Chemistry at McMaster.

 

The accumulation problem grows worse when there isn’t sufficient rainfall to wash away the grimy buildup. A reservoir of toxins can, in principle, grow for long periods.  

 

“We would then expect precipitation to release pollutants into stormwater runoff, with the potential for adverse consequences for downstream water bodies, sediments and aquatic life,” says Styler.

 

The team is currently following up by analyzing samples from multiple cities in Canada and the United States collected during the 2022 wildfire season.  Additionally, they have recently begun a pilot project with Environment Hamilton to collect and analyze dust and grime samples in city neighbourhoods to determine how much is falling in different areas and what it might contain. 

WOMEN'S HEALTH

Caregiving hours increase menopause burden, researchers find



Study in Mayo Clinic Proceedings highlights a critical need for greater advocacy for more inclusive healthcare policies and support systems for midlife women in caregiving roles



Elsevier





Researchers have identified a link between the number of caregiving hours per week a woman performs and menopause symptom burden. A novel study in Mayo Clinic Proceedings, published by Elsevier, found that women caregiving for more than 15 hours a week have significantly increased odds of experiencing moderate or severe menopause symptoms. It sheds light on the adverse health outcomes associated with an increased burden of caregiving.

The majority of caregivers in the United States are women with an average age of 50 years. The duration of caregiving in the United States is about five years, further raising the likelihood that women who are caregivers are likely to experience the menopause transition in the course of caregiving. They are generally having children later in life such that they may have, in midlife, the dual and concurrent commitment to care for their own children as well as an aged adult, known as the “sandwich generation.”

Caregiving can undermine a caregiver’s lifestyle, compromise their ability to focus on their own health, and contribute to higher levels of anxiety, depression, and burnout, with these effects being more pronounced in women than in men. The overlap of caregiving and menopause may impose a disproportionate physical and emotional burden on midlife women. The current study was conducted to assess the association between caregiving status, hours spent caregiving, and menopause symptom severity.

Lead Investigator Stephanie S. Faubion, MD, MBA, Division of General Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic Women’s Health, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, says, "This study demonstrates an association between time spent caregiving and menopause symptom burden in midlife women. Women have many different roles, and during midlife, they may be navigating challenging careers, dealing with menopause, and at the same time may have significant caregiving responsibilities for an aging parent, a partner, or even a child with special needs. It is critical to better understand these links so that we can better support women during this universal life transition."

In a cross-sectional analysis conducted among 4,295 women aged 45-60 years who received primary care at one of four Mayo Clinic locations between March 1 and June 30, 2021, 19.7% self-identified as caregivers and 37.6% reported moderate to very severe menopause symptoms as assessed by the Menopause Rating Scale. The burden of menopause symptoms across all symptom domains increased as the weekly number of caregiving hours increased, and this association persisted when relevant indices of daily stress levels and mental health were taken into consideration: 34.1% in the less than 5 hours/week group, 42.6% in the 5-14 hours/week group, and 50.4% in the 15 hours or more/week group. Further analysis showed that caregiving for 15 hours or more/week significantly increased the odds of having moderate or worse menopause symptoms in at least one symptom domain compared to no caregiving.

Co-investigator Ekta Kapoor, MBBS, Mayo Clinic Women’s Health and Women’s Health Research Center, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, notes, "Menopause and caregiving are two life experiences that commonly intersect, yet their reciprocal influences had not been explored prior to this study. We have major gaps in understanding the menopause experience and how it differs in diverse populations or under different circumstances. This is the first study to examine an association between menopause symptoms and caregiving in midlife women, helping to provide more clarity on the full lived experiences of women in midlife."

Co-investigator Chrisandra L. Shufelt, MD, MS, Division of General Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic Women’s Health, and Women’s Health Research Center, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, adds, "This study is crucial because women in midlife or approaching menopause often juggle caregiving responsibilities for both children and aging parents, finding themselves in the ‘sandwich generation.’ Given the aging US population and likely resultant increases in caregiving burden that can exacerbate menopausal symptoms, women should be aware of effective treatment options available through a menopause provider. Our study highlights the need for greater advocacy for more inclusive healthcare policies and support systems for midlife women in caregiving roles."

The investigators offer the compelling suggestion that caregiver status should be included under the rubric social determinants of health (SDOH); be assessed and documented in the medical record; and be considered for its potential exacerbatory effects on menopause symptoms and its other risks.

Karl A. Nath, MBChB, Mayo Clinic Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, and Editor-in-Chief of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, comments, “Caregiving is essentially altruistic in origin, but it should not be a zero sum game, wherein the beneficent and unfettered provision of care and support then impose a stressful and inordinate burden on the caregiver. In this regard, this study provides needed advocacy for health care policies and support systems that can aid and ease the burdens of the caregiver including those that worsen menopause symptoms.”

Information on menopause-certified clinicians can be found on the Menopause Society website at menopause.org.