Monday, November 10, 2025

 

Scientists discover chameleon’s telephone-cord-like optic nerves once overlooked by Aristotle and Newton



Florida Museum of Natural History
Image 1 

image: 

Scientists have discovered coiled optic nerves in chameleons, a trait not known to exist in any other lizard and one that is rare among all animals. 

view more 

Credit: Collins et al., 2025





Chameleons’ wandering eyes have fascinated and puzzled scientists since the days of ancient Greece. Now, after millennia of study, modern imaging has revealed the secret of their nearly 360-degree view and uncanny ability to look in two different directions at once. Behind their bulging eyes lie two long, coiled optic nerves — a structure not seen in any other lizard.

“Chameleon eyes are like security cameras, moving in all directions,” explained Juan Daza, associate professor at Sam Houston State University and author of a new study describing the trait. “They move their eyes independently while scanning their environment to find prey. And the moment they find their prey, their eyes coordinate and go in one direction so they can calculate where to shoot their tongues.”

The chameleon’s darting eyes are easy to observe, but scientists have never fully understood the optic nerve that makes such movement possible. Edward Stanley, director of the Florida Museum of Natural History’s digital imaging laboratory, was visiting Daza’s lab in 2017 when he first spotted the unique shape in a CT scan of the minute leaf chameleon (Brookesia minima). The coiled optic nerves were unlike anything he’d seen before.

Still, both scientists were initially cautious. Chameleons have been studied for millennia; surely, they were not the first to make this discovery.

“I was surprised by the structure itself, but I was more surprised that nobody else had noticed it,” Daza said. “Chameleons are well studied, and people have been doing anatomical studies of them for a long time.”

Chameleons are native to Africa, Europe and Asia. Beyond their color-shifting skin, the lizards have an impressive repertoire of tree-dwelling traits. They use their grasping tail to steady themselves and their oven-mitt-shaped feet to creep along branches with a slow, deliberate gait. Chameleons have no need to rush because they have a ballistic tongue, which can go from zero to 60 miles per hour in just a hundredth of a second. This long, sticky tongue can shoot distances over twice the length of the chameleon’s own body to snatch up unsuspecting prey.

Charismatic and unique, it’s no wonder that chameleons have long captured human attention. Their distinct form and curled tail are even distinguishable among ancient Egyptian petroglyphs. Convinced there must be a published description of these coiled optic nerves out there, the team went deep into the stacks of research in search of evidence, even bringing in language experts to decipher old texts published in French, Italian and Latin — and sometimes a confounding mix of multiple languages.

Over two thousand years ago, the Greek philosopher Aristotle erroneously theorized that chameleons lacked optic nerves altogether, instead declaring the eyes were directly connected to the brain, which allowed their independent movements. In the mid-1600s, Roman physician Domenico Panaroli challenged Aristotle’s views, arguing that chameleons do have optic nerves, but — unlike in most other animals — they do not cross. This cross causes the image viewed in the right eye to be processed on the left side of the brain, and vice versa. Panaroli rationalized that without this crossing structure, chameleon eyes could move freely.

Isaac Newton, also intrigued by the strange structure of chameleon eyes, propagated Panaroli’s theory and mentioned the animal multiple times in his 1704 book Optiks, which covers three decades of this work and theories on light and colorIn contrast, French anatomist Claude Perrault sketched the animal’s two optic nerves crossing before continuing in straight line in his 1669 book on chameleon anatomy. While overlooked by Newton and many others, this was one of the earliest and most accurate renditions at the time.

As years passed, scientists’ observations came close but ultimately fell short of capturing the true shape of the optic nerves in their published research. In his 1852 treatise on the brains and nerves of lizards, Johann Fischer illustrated a section of the chameleon’s optic nerve that included part of the coil, but the rest was cut from the figure and the coil itself was never described. Over a century and a half later, in 2015, Lev-Ari Thidar, a master's student at the University of Haifa, described a section of the chameleon’s optic nerve as C-shaped in their thesis. Only after an exhaustive search could the scientists confirm that no published description of the coil yet existed.

So how, after centuries of interest and study, could the true structure of a chameleon’s optic nerves remain hidden? The answer lies in the power of CT scanning and open data. In past publications, scientists relied on dissections to get a look at the inner workings of the chameleon’s anatomy, but the practice often displaced or destroyed the optic nerves and obscured their true structure. 

“Throughout history people have looked at chameleon eyes because they're interesting,” Stanley said. “But if you physically dissect the animal, you lose information that can tell the full story.”

Today, CT scanning technology is ubiquitous in medicine and becoming increasingly common in research collections.  X-ray CT allows scientists to visualize structures hidden within specimens, including the space beneath a chameleon’s skull.

Seeing the coiled nerve optic nerve in a single species of chameleon was informative, but the scientists had plenty more data at their fingertips thanks to oVert (short for openVertebrate). This initiative, launched by a coalition of 18 U.S. institutions and led by the Florida Museum of Natural History, provides free, digital 3-D vertebrate anatomy models and data to researchers, educators, students and the public.

“These digital methods are revolutionizing the field,” Daza said. “Before, you couldn’t discover details like this. But with these methods, you can see things without affecting the anatomy or damaging the specimen.”

The research team downloaded and analyzed the CT scans of over thirty lizards and snakes, including three species of chameleons representing the family’s diverse clades. They created 3D brain models for 18 of these lizards and measured their optic nerves. All three chameleon species studied had significantly longer and more coiled optic nerves than their fellow lizards. The results confirmed what Stanley had seen in Daza’s lab was no fluke.

The team dove further into their research to observe how these unique optic nerves form during the chameleon’s development. They measured the optic nerves across three embryonic stages of the veiled chameleon (Chamaeleo calyptratus). At the earliest stage, the embryo’s optic nerves were straight, but before hatching, they lengthened and began forming the loops seen in adults. By the time a chameleon hatchling emerges, it already has two fully mobile eyes.

On an evolutionary timescale, however, pinpointing when chameleons first developed this trait is more challenging. The oldest known chameleon fossils date back to the early Miocene, roughly 16 to 23 million years ago, after many of their tree-dwelling adaptations had already evolved. These fossils do not offer many clues about the order or timing in which these specialized traits evolved, but this new observation can help scientists start to infer why they developed the unique structure in the first place.

Across vertebrates, animals with large eyes tend to employ one of two strategies to broaden their field of view: move their necks or move their eyes. Owls and lemurs are famous for the first approach, swiveling their heads to scan their surroundings while their eyes remain fixed. Others, like humans, have developed stretchy optic nerves that let the eyes move like telescopes. Rodents, similarly, have wavy nerve fibers that allow for greater flexibility.

Because chameleons have limited neck mobility, they likely needed another way to reduce the physical strain of moving their eyes. The solution appears to be the coiled optic nerve, which is an adaptation seen in only a few other invertebrates, such as the stalk-eyed fly. Chameleons may have evolved this feature to give their eyes extra slack, easing the tension created by their remarkable range of motion.

“You can compare optic nerves with old phones,” Daza said. “The first phones just had a simple, straight cord attached to the headset, but then someone had the idea to coil the cord and give it more slack so people could walk farther while holding it. That's what these animals are doing: They're maximizing the range of motion of the eye by creating this coiled structure.”

Even after thousands of years of observation, the natural world still has more to reveal. Scientists are now curious whether other tree-dwelling lizards have developed similar adaptations, and Stanley and Daza plan to investigate further.

“These giants we’ve cited—Newton, Aristotle and others—have inspired natural historians for centuries,” Stanley said. “It’s exciting to be the ones taking the next step along the long road to understanding what on earth is going on in chameleons.”

The authors published their study in the journal Scientific Reports.

 

3D worlds from just a few phone photos​




The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST)
3D Worlds from Just a Few Phone Photos​ 

image: 

<(From Left) Ph.D candidate Jumin Lee, Ph.D candidate Woo Jae Kim, Ph.D candidate Youngju Na, Ph.D candidate Kyu Beom Han, Professor Sung-eui Yoon>

view more 

Credit: KASIT





Existing 3D scene reconstructions require a cumbersome process of precisely measuring physical spaces with LiDAR or 3D scanners, or correcting thousands of photos along with camera pose information. The research team at KAIST has overcome these limitations and introduced a technology enabling the reconstruction of 3D —from tabletop objects to outdoor scenes—with just two to three ordinary photographs. The breakthrough suggests a new paradigm in which spaces captured by camera can be immediately transformed into virtual environments.

KAIST announced on November 6 that the research team led by Professor Sung-Eui Yoon from the School of Computing has developed a new technology called SHARE (Shape-Ray Estimation), which can reconstruct high-quality 3D scenes using only ordinary images, without precise camera pose information.

Existing 3D reconstruction technology has been limited by the requirement of precise camera position and orientation information at the time of shooting to reproduce 3D scenes from a small number of images. This has necessitated specialized equipment or complex calibration processes, making real-world applications difficult and slowing widespread adoption.

To solve these problems, the research team developed a technology that constructs accurate 3D models by simultaneously estimating the 3D scene and the camera orientation using just two to three standard photographs. The technology has been recognized for its high efficiency and versatility, enabling rapid and precise reconstruction in real-world environments without additional training or complex calibration processes.

While existing methods calculate 3D structures from known camera poses, SHARE autonomously extracts spatial information from images themselves and infers both camera pose and scene structure. This enables stable 3D reconstruction without shape distortion by aligning multiple images taken from different positions into a single unified space.

"The SHARE technology is a breakthrough that dramatically lowers the barrier to entry for 3D reconstruction,” said Professor Sung-Eui Yoon. “It will enable the creation of high-quality content in various industries such as construction, media, and gaming using only a smartphone camera. It also has diverse application possibilities, such as building low-cost simulation environments in the fields of robotics and autonomous driving."

Ph.D. Candidate Youngju Na and M.S candidate Taeyeon Kim participated as co-first authors on the research. The results were presented on September 17th at the IEEE International Conference on Image Processing (ICIP 2025), where the paper received the Best Student Paper Award.

The award, given to only one paper among 643 accepted papers this year—a selection rate of 0.16 percent—once again underscores the excellent research capabilities of the KAIST research team.

This achievement was carried out with support from the Ministry of Science and ICT's SW Star Lab Project under the task 'Development of Perception, Action, and Interaction Algorithms for Unspecified Environments for Open World Robot Services.'

 

New study reveals devastating impact of cane toads approaching the Pilbara



New Curtin University research has found invasive cane toads are on track to reach Western Australia’s Pilbara region within the next 10 to 20 years, threatening to cause widespread losses among native species and significant cultural and economic harm.





Curtin University

Cane toad 

image: 

Cane toad in Western Australia

view more 

Credit: Dr Judy Dunlop




New Curtin University research has found invasive cane toads are on track to reach Western Australia’s Pilbara region within the next 10 to 20 years, threatening to cause widespread losses among native species and significant cultural and economic harm.
The study, published in Scientific Reports, predicts that without containment efforts, the toxic amphibians will colonise up to 75 per cent of the Pilbara within three decades, putting 25 native species at risk of serious population declines. These include several species of native marsupial predators like northern quolls, ghost bat and kaluta, as well as frog-eating snakes, blue-tongue skinks and goannas.
Of these, nine native mammals and reptiles are expected to become newly listed as threatened species and push the already vulnerable ghost bat to a higher threat category if the toads are not properly managed.
Lead author Dr Judy Dunlop, from Curtin’s School of Molecular and Life Sciences, said there were simple steps that could prevent the invasive pest from using dams as stepping stones into the Pilbara.
“The Pilbara region’s permanent water sources make it an ideal habitat for the invasive species, which have already devastated native wildlife like quolls, goannas, and snakes across Australia's iconic Kimberley region,” Dr Dunlop said.
“Toads are approaching a naturally dry part of the country south of Broome where the Great Sandy Desert meets the ocean. Here, the only water accessible to them is cattle watering points.
“If these points are dams, toads will access and use them as stepping stones to make their way through the desert zone but simple upgrades to concrete tanks and troughs will make them inaccessible to toads.”
Co-author Professor Ben Phillips, also from Curtin’s School of Molecular and Life Sciences, said the findings highlighted the urgent need to establish a “toad containment zone” to stop their southward march.
“By establishing a 150km long ‘toad containment zone’ which limits toad access to artificial waterpoints, we may be able to prevent the invasion and push the species back to the top of the barrier – much like how firebreaks are used to halt the spread of bushfires by removing fuel and creating controlled boundaries,” Professor Phillips said.
“There is no doubt that the arrival of toads will cause catastrophic declines in culturally important species, which will be felt by the Traditional Custodians of the Pilbara. The animals most at risk - such as the goanna and bluetongue skink - are culturally important to traditional owners for food, storytelling and bushtucker practices.”
Media Release
CRICOS Provider Code 00301J
Professor Phillips said the findings may also have implications for WA’s mining sector, which may face increased financial costs and new conservation requirements due to the changing status of local fauna if the toads invade.
“Our study shows that implementing a model to control the invasion of cane toads could deliver significant environmental, cultural and economic benefits for Western Australia’s Pilbara region and beyond,” Professor Phillips said.
The work was supported by BHP Social Investments.
The full paper is titled, ‘Quantifying the potential impact of the cane toad (Rhinella marina) on biodiversity in Australia’s Pilbara region’ and can be found online here – once published.

Metal Contamination ‘Critical’ In Peruvian Highlands



Transporting concrete blocks to install a floating buoy-type station on Lake Junín to monitor water quality. Dangerous levels of arsenic, lead and cadmium have been found around the lake. Copyright: AsiriMH/Wikimedia Commons, (CC BY-SA 4.0)

November 10, 2025 
By Martin De Ambrosio


One of the most iconic ecosystems of the Peruvian plateau, the Junín Lake basin, suffers from “critical” levels of arsenic, lead and cadmium contamination, leading to health risks including cancer, according to new analysis.



The study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment found that 99 per cent of the area has “very high to ultra-high” ecological risk and contamination levels. It revealed a “100 per cent carcinogenic risk” for adults, with children also highly exposed to arsenic, a highly toxic metalloid.

“The levels of arsenic are extremely high, as are those of lead and cadmium, far exceeding acceptable thresholds,” Samuel Pizarro, one of the authors, told SciDev.Net.

“The combined carcinogenic risk is unacceptable. The amount of chromium found is also significant and poses a serious threat to human health.”

The study was conducted by researchers from the National Institute of Agricultural Innovation of Peru and the National University Toribio Rodríguez de Mendoza.

They tested the spatial distribution, ecological risk and human health implications of 14 heavy metals, metalloids and trace elements in more than 200 samples taken from surface soils surrounding Lake Junín — also known as Chinchaycocha.



“This assessment reveals critical contamination by potentially toxic elements in the Junín Lake watershed, with arsenic, lead, cadmium, and zinc concentrations substantially exceeding ecological and human health thresholds,” the researchers wrote.

Levels of the toxins exceeded ecological thresholds by more than 100 times in agricultural areas, they added.

Part of the Junín National Reserve, the area is home to about 50,000 people, including urban and rural populations.

“But the impact reaches 1.3 million people because some of the water is then used in the valleys and in dams downstream,” said Pizarro.

He added that further work is needed to calculate the size of that impact, and the effect on children and pregnant women.
‘Sink for metals’

The Junín Lake area is one of the most emblematic ecosystems of the Peruvian highlands, says Dennis Ccopi, one of the study’s co-authors.

“At 4,100 meters above sea level, it is the second largest body of water in the country and the source of the Mantaro River, which feeds agricultural areas in the valley,” he said.

He said the ecosystem had become a “sink” for metals and metalloids, which accumulate in water, sediments, and grazing soils.

“This affects food and exposes local communities that use the land and water,” he added.

The contamination is linked to mines abandoned for a century or more, Ccopi explained, as well as agriculture and urbanisation. Nestled in the central Peruvian Andes, the highland area has a mining tradition dating back more than 300 years.

“There is a bioaccumulation process because the animals around the lake consume contaminated fodder,” Pizarro added.

Another co-author, Alberto Arias-Arredondo, is originally from the area and recalls that pollution was a problem when he was growing up. Now, he says, the study provides robust evidence of the scale of the issue.

Researchers systematically tested the area using grid sampling points around the lake and machine learning to analyse the data along with other environmental variables such as flooding.

Anna Heikkinen, a researcher at the University of Helsinki, Finland, who was not involved in the study, said the results were consistent with her own research findings from the Mantaro River basin, and the Huaraz region.

“Mining-related contamination in the high Andes of Peru is a serious ecological, socio-economic and health risk for local people,” Heikkinen told SciDev.Net:

She said the study offered a detailed analysis of the different levels of heavy metals and metalloids in the Lake Junín area and the risks they posed to local populations and ecosystems.

“I hope the Peruvian authorities will take such study in serious consideration to protect the well-being of local people, animals and environment,” she added.

The regional environmental authority for the Junín area did not respond to SciDev.Net’s requests for comment on the study’s findings.

This article was produced by SciDev.Net’s Latin America and Caribbean desk.



Martin De Ambrosio

Martín de Ambrosio is a freelance journalist for SciDev.Net