Monday, February 10, 2025

 

California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state



A system-wide evaluation of California’s marine reserve network finds conservation benefits across multiple ecosystems


University of California - Santa Barbara

Honeyman and Garibaldis 

image: 

California's network of marine reserves enables conservation and management without closing large areas of the ocean.

view more 

Credit: Jennifer Caselle




(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — It’s 1999, the 21st century is on the horizon, and California has big plans for marine conservation. New legislation has presented a mandate to establish an ambitious network of marine protected areas (MPAs) unlike anywhere else in the world. The goal is to craft strategic protections to safeguard the state’s marine life for preservation and economic benefits alike.

Now 25 years later, an international team of researchers, led by scientists at UC Santa Barbara, have evaluated the network’s effects across different species and habitats. “What everyone wants to know is do MPAs work?” said Joshua Smith, lead author of a new study on the matter published in Conservation Biology.

The study confirmed many benefits an MPA can confer to sea life, especially those targeted by fisheries. The authors found that older MPAs, and those with a greater diversity of habitats, showed the highest amount of fish biomass, especially in targeted species, like rockfishes. Stronger protections also correlated with more pronounced results. With international targets aiming to protect more of the world’s oceans, the findings can inform approaches to MPA design and networks that span multiple ecosystems.

An ambitious proposal

Marine protected areas have emerged as a leading tool for protecting ocean ecosystems. But there’s a lot of diversity in the character, size and regulations of MPAs around the world, from a total ban on all extractive or destructive activities to various regulations on infrastructure, water quality, shipping, recreation and so forth.

In 1999, the California Legislature passed the Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA), which required the state to overhaul its marine reserves. The legislation prompted the creation of the first statewide MPA network in the United States, and perhaps the most extensive in the world. “This huge, state-wide network, and its comprehensive design process, was sort of revolutionary at the time,” said co-author Cori Lopazanski, a doctoral student at UCSB’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management.

“The state invested a ton of time and energy into designing this network of 124 marine protected areas [using the best science of the time],” said Smith, a former postdoc at UCSB and now an ocean conservation research scientist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Rather than close a giant area of the ocean, the state decided to set aside a constellation of smaller protected areas distributed across the coast. They specifically engineered the network to enable the interchange of animals, plankton and nutrients between different reserves.

“And now, only years later, are we finally able to evaluate the network in its totality,” said senior author Jennifer Caselle, a research biologist at UCSB.

Synthesizing disparate data

In 2021, scientists converged in Santa Barbara for a working group to inform management recommendations and decisions. The effort was hosted by the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS), a National Science Foundation research center at UC Santa Barbara.

Twenty-four scientists collaborated on the resulting paper, which sought to determine the conservation performance of 59 MPAs in California’s MPA network. To this end, the authors considered the number of species present in an area, the relative abundance of different species and the overall biomass. Biomass is simply a scientific way to say “pounds of living stuff.” In this case, the researchers looked at pounds of fish.

The researchers compiled long-term data on 170 taxa from the MPA monitoring efforts of four groups, each focused on a different habitat: the surf zone, kelp forest, shallow reef and deep reef. The four monitoring groups had very similar data, but they collected and notated in different ways. So authors had to clean and synthesize the disparate data sources.

Fortunately, the team found a workaround. “For each sampling method, we compared what’s inside the MPA to what’s outside,” Lopazanski said. “Once you have that difference, then you’re just dealing with ratios.”

“Now we could take all of that information and put it in a single analysis that tells us something about how the MPA is performing across all of those ecosystems,” Smith added.

Gains made across the board

Overall, the authors found that MPAs increased fish biomass across the whole network. This primarily came from species targeted by fisheries, which suggests that the protection from fishing really does help boost their population health. Biomass can change in two ways: more fish and larger fish. Although their analysis didn’t distinguish between the two, the authors suspect the gains were a combination of both.

A few characteristics seemed to correlate strongly with conservation benefits. MPAs with more stringent protections saw greater gains, as did areas that had previously experienced heavy fishing. Older MPAs also produced more significant results. “Many fish in California are slow growing and take a long time to mature,” Smith said. “So it makes sense that the benefits of MPAs are going to take time to actually manifest.”

Habitat diversity emerged as a major predictor of success, as well. Although scientists and fishermen often classify species by their preferred habitat, a single fish may move between habitats from day to day. “If you have different habitats in proximity to each other, then there’s more variability in the types of resources, foods, shelters — the types of things fish need to survive — in the space where they’re living” Lopazanski said. Including diverse habitats within an MPA ensures that fish don’t have to leave an MPA to seek these things out.

Interestingly, none of these features appeared to influence the number or relative abundance of different species present. Smith suspects the former may stem from California’s past stewardship. The state has boasted strong fishery management for decades, so few species were completely gone from any area, he explained. As for the other marker of diversity, protection can increase the number and size of fishes without necessarily changing the relative abundance of different species.

New analysis validates past decisions

The authors are encouraged by their findings. “It was exciting to see that all of the planning and design that went into putting this huge network into place was producing many of its intended benefits,” Lopazanski remarked.

One of the strengths of a marine reserve is that it can protect large areas with many species. “MPAs are always designed to protect multiple habitats, but they are rarely evaluated with all of the different habitats in a single study,” Caselle said. And that’s in part because scientists specialize. But California supports broad monitoring efforts across its marine reserves, and this paper analyzes all these habitats at once.

 

Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon




Cambridge University Press





Public posts on social media platforms shed light on the extent and nature of prolific illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon, research in Oryx—The International Journal of Conservation, published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fauna & Flora, has found. 

The study is the first to use social media as a tool for assessing illegal hunting activities in Lebanon. The country, along with the Mediterranean region more broadly, is a global poaching blackspot, particularly for the illegal killing of protected birds.  

The researchers analysed photographs posted on social media platforms to assess the bird species targeted in Lebanon. During 2011–2023, they reviewed 1,844 photographs publicly posted by poachers on Facebook and Instagram. In these images showing dead birds and other wildlife, the team identified 212 bird species, of which 94% are legally protected. Many are species of conservation concern, with 19 listed as threatened or Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List and 33% experiencing population declines in Europe. 

Lead author of the research paper, André F. Raine of Archipelago Research and Conservation, Hanapēpē, Kauaʻi, USA, said:  

“Illegal hunting of migratory birds across the Mediterranean region is a serious international conservation issue. For some species, such as the lesser spotted eagle and Levant sparrowhawk, almost the entire world population passes over Lebanon during migration. The relentless killing of large numbers of these birds, as well as other species already on the IUCN Red List, will clearly have severe impacts on their long-term population trajectories.  

“The scale of illegal hunting in Lebanon is at a level rarely seen across the entire migratory flyway.  Furthermore, the fact that hunters are happy to pose with large numbers of illegally shot species on social media pages open to the public highlights their current sense of impunity, and may in itself be further driving the rampant poaching across the country.” 

Social media’s attraction for illegal wildlife hunters  

The researchers observed that Lebanese poachers appeared unconcerned about posting images and videos of their illegal hunting on public social media platforms and groups, posing enthusiastically with their trophies and often making no attempt to hide their identities. 

Co-author Lloyd Scott of the Committee Against Bird Slaughter, Bonn, Germany, said: 

“Allowing social media users to continually post images of protected species that have been killed creates a cycle of rewarding illegal behaviour, often tempting hunters to compete for photographs with the rarest species or the most carcasses, thereby perpetuating the issue.  

“Facebook, Instagram and TikTok must be more proactive in screening and regulating posts relating to wildlife crime.” 

The researchers noted that although they have reported multiple posts viewed during their analysis via the appropriate reporting channels, they have not yet seen any specific action taken – despite these posts violating Meta’s sanctions against graphic violence and animal abuse. 

How social media can help fix the problem 

The researchers argue that although social media may be encouraging certain aspects of poachers’ criminal behaviour, they also have the potential to improve the situation. 

Previous studies have highlighted how social media can benefit wildlife conservation, including by increasing pro-conservation behaviour amongst the public, increasing conservation funding and inciting policy changes. In the case of illegal hunting, photographs published by hunters on social media can motivate international discourse, environmental campaigns and diplomacy addressing the issue of bird poaching. For example, images of numerous hunted white storks galvanised a Polish campaign to reduce illegal bird killing in Lebanon

Lebanese groups such as the Middle Eastern Sustainable Hunting Centre have also been using social media to promote legal hunting and to applaud hunters who are adhering to the hunting laws in Lebanon, using their platform to educate and to encourage hunters to attend workshops, and to suggest alternatives to hunting, such as photography. Similarly, multiple bird conservation groups such as the Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon and the Association for Bird Conservation in Lebanon regularly use social media posts to encourage the general population to bird watch and visit nature reserves, and provide education on bird conservation issues. 

 

Biotech in Germany has significant potential, but lack of collaboration hampers growth





ESMT Berlin





The report “Assessing Deep-Tech Innovation Hubs in Germany: The Case of Biotechnology” evaluates Germany’s performance in deep-tech innovation within biotech using a comprehensive index and examines five key hubs: Berlin, Heidelberg, Munich, Nuremberg-Erlangen, and Stuttgart. These hubs were analyzed in terms of fundamental research, research and development in biotech, startup activity, public infrastructure, and business environment. 

Berlin, Munich, and Heidelberg are the leading biotech hubs

Berlin leads the index due to its strong public infrastructure and extensive clinical research. Munich follows in second place, excelling in startup support and late-stage financing. Heidelberg ranks third, distinguished by its strength in fundamental research. Nuremberg-Erlangen benefits from a specialized ecosystem in medical technology, while Stuttgart boasts a highly diversified economic structure with strong potential for interdisciplinary innovation. 

“Biotech is essential for addressing challenges in healthcare and climate protection and has the potential to drive groundbreaking breakthroughs,” explains Francis de Véricourt, professor of management sciences, Joachim Faber Chair in Business and Technology, and academic director of the DEEP Institute at ESMT. “For the first time, our index provides a structured evaluation of Germany’s biotech hubs across the entire value chain.” The study covers an eight-year period. 

“Despite their unique strengths, most leading biotech hubs have seen a decline in their ability to transform research into market-ready solutions over the past decade. Apart from Munich, all top hubs have lost efficiency, despite a temporary boost during the COVID-19 pandemic,” explains Daniel Posch, innovation expert at Bertelsmann Stiftung. 

Germany’s biotech sector falls short of its potential 

Germany has strong conditions for biotech innovation, including world-class fundamental research in several future-oriented fields, a robust industrial base in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries, and a steady influx of international science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) students. However, the country is not fully capitalizing on its research strengths, leaving significant economic potential untapped. This is mainly due to a weaker knowledge transfer into market-ready applications compared to international peers.  

“Germany’s innovation potential is essentially lost in translation,” says Posch. Technology transfer in deep tech is inherently challenging due to high technological and economic risks. Moreover, the comparatively high fragmentation of Germany’s biotech landscape creates additional hurdles. 

To enhance innovation dynamics in the domestic biotech sector, de Véricourt sees potential in targeted collaboration among Germany’s leading hubs: “Our research shows that German biotech hubs have different but often complementary strengths. Expanding and better connecting these key domestic hubs could transform them into an integrated ecosystem.”  

In addition to fostering collaboration and networking—also on a European level—resources should be strategically allocated to support a select few, particularly promising German hubs. This approach could help achieve a critical mass of research and entrepreneurship in the medium term. Posch adds, “Future policy initiatives in this sector should prioritize excellence over broad-based funding.” 

 

Scientists find that a playful approach to life activates ‘lemonading’, which helps people cope with adversity


Highly playful people are realistic about their circumstances, scientists say, but they are more resilient in the present and more optimistic about the future



Frontiers




Scientists have found that taking a playful approach to life doesn’t mean you don’t take your situation seriously, but it can mean you cope with it better. By surveying people about their experiences during a Covid-19 lockdown, they learned that more playful people were more positive about the future and coped more actively and creatively. Life gave them lemons, and they made lemonade. 

“Our study revealed that playfulness and resilience are intimately connected through what we call ‘lemonading’ — the ability to imagine and generate positive experiences even in difficult circumstances,” explained Dr Xiangyou ‘Sharon’ Shen of Oregon State University, corresponding author of the article in Frontiers in Psychology. “While more and less playful individuals reported feeling equally vulnerable and isolated during the pandemic, highly playful people actively altered challenging situations, found creative substitutes for what was lost, viewed obstacles as opportunities for growth, and maintained a sense of control over their responses.” 

Lemonading 

Shen and her colleagues had long been interested in how playfulness influences people’s approach to life, particularly challenging experiences. The pandemic gave them an opportunity to investigate how it shapes resilience on a large scale. They recruited 503 adults living in the US and surveyed them in February 2021, during the second pandemic wave and early vaccine rollouts.  

The survey targeted participants’ experience of life during the pandemic, like their perceptions of infection risk, whether they thought things would get better, their social support, and their emotional and behavioral responses. Participants were also asked to rate their own playfulness on a scale measuring their spontaneity, how inhibited they felt in general, and how motivated they were to seek out fun.  

The scientists then used this data to divide their participants into quartiles, depending on how highly participants rated for playfulness. To learn how playfulness affects the way people see and respond to their environment, they compared the most playful quartile to the least playful quartile: two groups of 126 participants.  

A spotlight on positive possibilities 

The data revealed that more playful participants were more optimistic about the future, with a greater expectation of a successful vaccine rollout, and life returning to normal. However, this didn’t mean they weren’t realistic about their current circumstances.  

“While rose-tinted glasses would color everything positively, potentially distorting reality, the ‘color spotlight’ effect we observed is more selective,” said Shen. “Playful individuals didn't minimize Covid-19 risks or overestimate the effectiveness of protective measures. They directed their ‘spotlight’ toward possibilities for positive change and growth, illuminating potential paths forward even in dark times.” 

Highly playful people were more motivated to seek fun and less inhibited, which may have helped them imagine a broader range of positive possibilities in an uncertain situation. This is complemented by more flexible behavior and greater engagement with their activities, which could explain inter-group differences in resilient coping. Both groups reported feeling equally vulnerable and isolated, but more playful participants took more creative, active steps to cope. Their leisure activities were not significantly different or more frequent compared to less playful participants, but they were more likely to adapt their engagement with those activities by adjusting schedules, exploring new places, or finding creative ways to stay active. They also felt more active, more joyful, and more immersed in their daily lives. 

“While our study focused on measuring rather than developing playfulness, research suggests several approaches to cultivate this quality,” said Shen. “For instance, engage in activities that spark joy, be open to new experiences, and hang out with people who make you laugh. You don’t have to play to be playful. It’s about bringing a spirit of fun, openness, and flexibility to everyday moments.” 

Play for the future 

“Playfulness is a vital but underappreciated resource for maintaining wellbeing, particularly during challenging times,” said Shen. “Understanding how playful individuals navigate adversity can inform strategies to help people cope with stress and uncertainty. This is particularly relevant as we face increasing global challenges that require both realistic assessment and creative adaptation.” 

However, Shen and her colleagues cautioned that these findings shouldn’t be over-generalized. Playfulness could affect people differently in different situations. It’s also likely not all the differences between more and less playful people are driven by playfulness alone.  

“Though we discovered important differences between more and less playful individuals, there are likely other areas where playfulness influences how people perceive and respond to their environment and life events,” Shen noted. “Future research should examine these potential differences across life domains to build a more complete picture of the playful reframing effect.” 

 

During pandemic, playful people were remarkably resilient, OSU research shows



Oregon State University
Playfulness 

image: 

Adults with high levels of playfulness are more resilient than those with lower levels of playfulness, research by Oregon State University shows.

view more 

Credit: Oregon State University





CORVALLIS, Ore. – Adults with high levels of playfulness showed strong resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to less playful individuals, new research shows.

The study led by Xiangyou “Sharon” Shen of Oregon State University is important because playfulness is a vital but underappreciated resource for building resilience and maintaining well-being during difficult periods such as the pandemic, Shen said. And it’s a resource that individuals can cultivate.

“Understanding how playful people navigate adversity can inform interventions and strategies to help people cope with stress and uncertainty,” said Shen, an assistant professor in the OSU College of Forestry and the director of the Health, Environment and Leisure Research Lab, or HEAL. “This is particularly relevant as we face increasing global challenges that require both realistic assessment and creative adaptation.”

Chronic stress is a significant public health concern in the United States, according to the American Psychological Association. It’s linked to health problems ranging from heart disease and diabetes to depression and anxiety, and the long-term effects of chronic stress have the potential to strain the U.S. health care system.

Factors like the pandemic, economic uncertainty and social issues can heighten stress and increase mental health diagnoses, the association says.

Shen and HEAL researcher Zoe Crawley broke a study group of more than 500 adults from the U.S. into two subgroups: those with higher levels of playfulness as measured by the Adult Playfulness Trait Scale, and those with lower levels of playfulness.

“They shared similar perceptions of risk and protective factors as their less playful peers but demonstrated greater optimism when envisioning future possibilities, engaged in more creative problem solving and managed to infuse quality and enjoyment into everyday activities,” said Shen, whose team developed the trait measurement scale in 2014. “They actively altered challenging situations, found creative substitutes for what was lost, viewed obstacles as opportunities for growth and maintained a strong sense of control over their responses.”

Perhaps most revealing, Shen added, was that while the highly playful didn’t necessarily do different activities or do them more often than less playful people, they experienced the activities with higher quality – greater immersion, activeness and positive affect.

“This is essentially making lemonade from lemons, and it’s connected intimately with resilience,” she said. “Their unique combination of realistic assessment and flexible problem solving emerged as a powerful formula, offering a vivid demonstration of how personality traits like playfulness shape our responses under stress.”

Shen emphasizes that playful people don’t view the world through “rose-colored glasses” but rather with the ability to see upside while maintaining “clear-eyed realism.”

“Highly playful people were just as realistic about COVID-19 risks and challenges as others, but they excelled at ‘lemonading’ – creatively imagining and pursuing the positive, discovering ways to create moments of joy even in difficult circumstances,” she said.

Shen notes that while researchers have long claimed that playful people “reframe” situations to make them more enjoyable, the widely accepted idea had been “surprisingly vague and untested.” It was unclear exactly what the reframing is or how it works.

Shen and Crawley saw COVID-19 as an opportunity to look for answers. With most of the population experiencing similar large-scale disruption, Shen said, the researchers were able to move beyond assumptions and determine the specific ways playfulness helps people navigate tough times.

“Playfulness doesn’t distort reality – it enhances it,” Shen said. “And while our study focused on measuring rather than developing playfulness, research suggests several approaches to cultivate this quality.”

Those approaches include:

  • Engaging in activities that spark joy and curiosity. 
  • Being open to new experiences, including experimenting with new ways of doing routine activities.
  • Creating opportunities for spontaneous, unstructured exploration.
  • Hanging out with people who make you laugh and inspire you to play.
  • Embracing moments of silliness and humor when appropriate.

“Of course, interpretation of appropriateness may vary, and knowing boundaries makes playing with them more fun,” Shen said. “A key to all of this is focusing on the quality of engagement rather than simply doing what might be called play activities. True playfulness doesn’t require a playground, games or toys. It’s about bringing a spirit of openness, flexibility and fun to everyday moments.”

Shen adds, though, that regularly setting aside time for play can be instrumental as it provides a safe space to express and practice playfulness.

“Even during hectic times, dedicating five to 10 minutes daily for a small dose of play – whether solo or shared – can make a meaningful difference,” Shen said.

Findings were published in Frontiers in Psychology.

Uncovering two rare infectious diseases which might be responsible for COVID-19


NO MENTION OF WUHAN LAB 


KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
VISUALIZATION OF SITE-SITE RELATIONSHIP AND SITE-RISK PROBABILITIES 

image: 

Visualization of site-site relationship and site-risk probabilities

view more 

Credit: Zhang, Z.




Despite extensive research, the origins of COVID-19 remain elusive. In a new study published in the KeAi journal Advances in Biomarker Sciences and Technology (ABST), an AI-driven approach was adopted to examine DNA methylation patterns at 865,859 CpG sites in blood samples from early COVID-19 patients.

The study was conducted by Zhengjun Zhang from the Department of Statistics at University of Wisconsin. Using max-logistic intelligence, he uncovered strong genetic link evidence suggesting that COVID-19 likely emerged from the natural fusion of two rare infectious diseases, glanders and Sennetsu fever, with some common human diseases.

The findings suggest that COVID-19 likely originated in humans rather than bats or pangolins, meaning previous studies may have been misled by an overemphasis on wildlife origins.

“Establishing such connections across 865,859 CpG sites is quite a challenge, with random correlations occurring at a probability of less than one in ten million,” says Zhang. “However, when factoring in the rarity of these diseases, the odds of discovering a meaningful link drop to just one in one hundred million, further strengthening the validity of these results.”

Max-logistic intelligence has been previously demonstrated in cancer biomarker studies. Unlike traditional AI algorithms or modern machine learning techniques such as random forests, deep learning, and support vector machines, max-logistic intelligence offers greater interpretability, consistency and robustness, making it especially useful for establishing causal relationships.

Zhang emphasized that while identifying reliable biomarkers are critical for scientific progress, many gene markers identified in isolated studies fail in other cohorts, resulting in low or no cross-group commonality.

“DNA methylation, the process by which methyl groups are added to DNA, plays a central role in gene expression and disease development,” explains Zhang. “Errors in methylation can trigger diseases, prompting studies into COVID-19's DNA methylation patterns.”

###

Contact the author: University of Chinese Academy of Sciences and AMSS Center for Forecasting Science, CAS, Beijing, China; Department of Statistics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA. zjz@stat.wisc.edu

The publisher KeAi was established by Elsevier and China Science Publishing & Media Ltd to unfold quality research globally. In 2013, our focus shifted to open access publishing. We now proudly publish more than 200 world-class, open access, English language journals, spanning all scientific disciplines. Many of these are titles we publish in partnership with prestigious societies and academic institutions, such as the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).