Thursday, March 21, 2024

 

Impacts of major volcanic eruptions over the past two millennia on both global and Chinese climates



SCIENCE CHINA PRESS
Time series of global surface air temperature over the past millennium 

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(A) RECONSTRUCTION OF GLOBAL VOLCANIC FORCING. (B) RECONSTRUCTED SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES (°C) RELATIVE TO 1961–1990. (C) ENSEMBLE MEAN OF ANNUAL MEAN SAT ANOMALIES (°C) FROM MULTI-MODEL SIMULATIONS.

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CREDIT: ©SCIENCE CHINA PRESS





Recently, a research finding of Dr. Sun Weiyi and Prof. Liu Jian from the School of Geography at Nanjing Normal University was published in SCIENCE CHINA Earth Sciences. The research team, based on multiple data from observations, reconstructions, simulations, and assimilations over the past 2000 years, systematically summarized the historical facts of major volcanic eruptions, the characteristics and mechanisms of their climatic impact, and directions for future research.

The reconstructions of volcanic activity over the past two millennia reveal that cold epochs (530–700 AD, 1200–1460 AD, and 1600–1840 AD) coincided with frequent major volcanic eruptions, while warm epochs (0–200 AD and 900–1100 AD) occurred during volcanic quiescence. The eruption of Changbai Mountain in 946 AD was identified as the strongest volcanic eruption in China over the past 2000 years.

The research indicates that significant cooling occurred throughout the globe and China several years after eruptions. The reconstructed cooling magnitude does not entirely align with volcanic intensity (Figure 1), but there is a significant linear relationship between the cooling simulated by climate models and volcanic intensity. Continuous volcanic eruptions lead to decadal-scale cold events in the Northern Hemisphere and China on the decadal time scale. In the first year after eruptions, monsoon precipitation globally significantly decreases, while precipitation in the Yangtze River Basin in China abnormally increases. There are inconsistent responses among different datasets in North China, Northeast China, and the southern part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.

The research team also reviewed previous reconstructions of El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) based on tree-ring data over the past millennium. They found that after tropical major volcanic eruptions, El Niño events occurred, followed by a rapid decline into La Niña. This caused anomalous Northwest Pacific anticyclones, transporting moisture to the Yangtze River Basin. However, coral δ18O records from the central tropical Pacific show no significant El Niño event after major volcanic eruptions, indicating discrepancies between reconstruction data. Frequent major volcanic eruptions can influence the phase changes of the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) by triggering processes such as Arctic sea ice expansion, air-sea interactions, and changes in oceanic dynamic processes. The responses of ENSO and AMO to volcanoes will further impact regional climate response differences, potentially causing disparities between reconstructed and simulated data.

Future research should focus on enhancing the in-depth understanding of the impact processes of internal variability in the climate system under volcanic influence, such as hydroclimate, weather and seasonal-scale variability changes, and climate anomalies. This relies on improvements in volcanic-forcing reconstruction, the development of stratospheric chemistry-aerosol-climate models, and a more comprehensive revelation of the climatic effects of major volcanic eruptions.

See the article:

Sun W, Chen D, Lü G, Ning L, Gao C, Zhang R, Wang B, Liu J. 2024. Impacts of major volcanic eruptions over the past two millennia on both global and Chinese climates: A review. Science China Earth Sciences, 67(1): 61‒78, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-022-1218-0

 

Scientists weigh up current status of blue whale populations around the world


Largest global genomic dataset to date will assist conservation and management


FLINDERS UNIVERSITY

Pygmy blue whale 

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PYGMY BLUE WHALE 

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CREDIT: FLINDERS UNIVERSITY




The largest living animal, the blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus) which averages about 27 metres in lengthhas slowly recovered from whaling only to face the rising challenges of global warming, pollution, disrupted food sources, shipping, and other human threats.

In a major new study, Flinders University has taken a stocktake of the number, distribution and genetic characteristics of blue whale populations around the world and found the greatest differences among the eastern Pacific, Antarctic subspecies and pygmy subspecies of the eastern Indian and western Pacific.

“Each of these groups need to be conserved to maintain biodiversity in the species, and there are indications that natural selection in different environments contributed to driving genetic differences between the high-level groups,” says study first author Dr Catherine Attard in a newly published article in Animal Conservation.

“Within these regions, there were differences between the eastern North and eastern South Pacific, and among the eastern Indian Ocean, the western South Pacific and the northern Indian Ocean but no differences in the Antarctic group,” she says.

The study found no evidence of inbreeding, which is good news for the potential recovery of subspecies and populations. However, challenges remain for this endangered species.

The recovery of baleen whales including endangered blue whales is now threatened by multiple human sources, including underwater noise, changing availability of food driven by human-induced effects on ocean productivity, environmental contaminants, ship collision and entanglement in fishing gear.

“Our findings build on decades of work to improve the management of endangered blue whales under the International Whaling Commission,” says Dr Attard.

The estimated migration rates were 1%-4% among each of the high-level groups, with both migrant individuals (i.e. movement without necessarily interbreeding) and hybrids (i.e. interbreeding) among the high-level groups.

Piecing together the whale population structures, the researchers found an unexpected similarity between the eastern South Pacific and eastern North Pacific blue whales, which suggests they are part of the same subspecies, rather than their current classification as separate subspecies.

“This finding was unexpected given that blue whale populations are thought to have opposite breeding seasons when their populations exist on either side of the equator,” adds senior author Associate Professor Luciana Möller, from the Molecular Ecology Lab and Cetacean Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution Lab at Flinders University.

“While eastern Indian and western Pacific blue whales have the lowest genetic diversity of the high-level hierarchical groups, which is likely due to climate-induced diversification rather than anthropogenic impacts, our study identified the eastern Indian Ocean, western South Pacific Ocean and potentially western Indian Ocean as different populations within the Indo-western Pacific,” says Associate Professor Möller.

As well as generating the largest global genomic dataset to date for blue whales, the study incorporated information from recent satellite tagging, acoustics and stable isotopes research to link the genetic results to blue whale population calls and typical migratory and breeding patterns.

Another coauthor, Matthew Flinders Professor Luciano Beheregaray, who founded the Molecular Ecology Lab at Flinders University in 2009, adds: “Genomics is a vital tool that has unparalleled power to determine population differentiation, connectivity, and other characteristics to inform the conservation management of biodiversity.

“Whole-genome population studies and comparisons with environmental conditions are needed to better understand adaptations in blue whales and other baleen whales. Localised depletion of blue whales could occur if these threats are concentrated in areas containing populations with limited connectivity to animals in surrounding regions.

“Thus, describing the spatio-temporal patterns of population differences within a species and their geographic boundaries can inform management decisions on the timing and location of human activities to minimise impacts on these wide-ranging whale species.”

While blue whales became protected from commercial whaling in 1966, the International Whaling Commission (IWC) implemented a global moratorium 20 years later.  

The Flinders University-based research group calls on the IWC to use the findings to refine the stock delineations of blue whales for conservation and management purposes. 

“We recommend that national management bodies minimise human activities that can impact these management groups when the blue whales are within their jurisdiction,” researchers conclude.

The article, Global conservation genomics of blue whales calls into question subspecies taxonomy and refines knowledge of population structure (2024), by CRM Attard, J Sandoval-Castillo, AR Lang, BG Vernazzani, LG Torres, R Baldwin, KCS Jenner, PC Gill, CLK Burton, A Barceló, M Sironi, M-NM Jenner, MG Morrice, LB Beheregaray, LM  Möller has been published in Animal Conservation (Zoological Society of London).

First published: 15 March 2024 https://doi.org/10.1111/acv.12935

Photos:  more Pygmy blue whale Photos available here 

Acknowledgements: The IWC Southern Ocean Research Partnership, Sea World Research and Rescue Foundation Inc, Winifred Violet Scott Charitable Trust and Flinders University provided funding as well as the Australian Marine Mammal Centre within the Federal Government’s Australian Antarctic Division Southwest Fisheries Science Center in California provided samples from the eastern North Pacific, tropical Pacific and the Maldives.

 

 

New model clarifies why water freezes at a range of temperatures



AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
New model clarifies why water freezes at a range of temperatures 

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CREDIT: AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY



NEW ORLEANS, March 20, 2024 — From abstract-looking cloud formations to roars of snow machines on ski slopes, the transformation of liquid water into solid ice touches many facets of life. Water’s freezing point is generally accepted to be 32 degrees Fahrenheit. But that is due to ice nucleation — impurities in everyday water raise its freezing point to this temperature. Now, researchers unveil a theoretical model that shows how specific structural details on surfaces can influence water’s freezing point.

The researchers will present their results at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS). ACS Spring 2024 is a hybrid meeting being held virtually and in person March 17-21; it features nearly 12,000 presentations on a range of science topics.

“Ice nucleation is one of the most common phenomena in the atmosphere,” says Valeria Molinero, a professor of physical and materials chemistry. “In the 1950s and 1960s, there was a surge of interest in ice nucleation to control weather through cloud seeding and for other military goals. Some studies addressed how small shapes promote ice nucleation, but the theory was undeveloped, and no one has done anything quantitative."

When temperatures drop, the molecules in liquid water, which normally speed around and zip past one another, lose energy and slow down. Once they lose enough energy, they grind to a halt, orient themselves to avoid repulsions and maximize attractions, and vibrate in place, forming the crystalline network of water molecules we call ice. When liquid water is completely pure, ice may not form until the temperature gets down to a frigid –51 degrees Fahrenheit; this is called supercooling. But when even the tiniest impurities — soot, bacteria or even particular proteins — are present in water, ice crystals can form more easily on the surfaces, resulting in ice formation at temperatures warmer than –51 degrees Fahrenheit.

Decades of research have revealed trends in how the shapes and structures of different surfaces affect water’s freezing point. In an earlier study on ice-nucleating proteins within bacteria, Molinero and her team found that the distances between the groups of proteins could impact the temperature at which ice formed. “There were distances that were very favorable for ice formation, and distances that were completely opposite,” says Molinero.

Similar trends had been observed for other surfaces, but no mathematical explanation had been found. “People before already had a sense of ‘oh maybe a surface will inhibit or promote ice nucleation,’ but no way to explain or predict what they observed experimentally,” says Yuqing Qiu, a postdoc, who is presenting the work at the meeting. Both Qiu and Molinero carried out this research at the University of Utah, though Qiu now works at the University of Chicago.

To address this gap, Molinero, Qiu and team gathered hundreds of previously reported measurements on how the angles between microscopic bumps on a surface affected water’s freezing temperature. They then tested theoretical models against the data. They used the models to consider factors that would encourage ice crystal formation, such as how strongly water binds to the surfaces and angles between structural features.

In the end, they identified a mathematical expression that shows that certain angles between surface features makes it easier for water molecules to gather and crystallize at relatively warmer temperatures. They say their model can help design materials with surfaces that would make ice form more efficiently with minimal energy input. Examples include snow or ice makers, or surfaces that are suitable for cloud seeding, which is used by several Western states to increase rainfall. It could also help better explain how tiny mineral particles in the atmosphere help make clouds through ice nucleation, potentially making weather models more effective.

The researchers plan to use this model to return to their studies of ice-nucleating proteins in bacteria. More than 200 proteins are believed to be ice-nucleating proteins, but their structures are not all known. The researchers hope to study proteins with structures that have been solved with AI tools, and then they will model how aggregates of those proteins affect ice formation.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Yen Fellowship from the Institute for Biophysics Dynamics at the University of Chicago.

Visit the ACS Spring 2024 program to learn more about this presentation, “The most potent snow makers,” and more scientific presentations.

###

The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. ACS’ mission is to advance the broader chemistry enterprise and its practitioners for the benefit of Earth and all its people. The Society is a global leader in promoting excellence in science education and providing access to chemistry-related information and research through its multiple research solutions, peer-reviewed journals, scientific conferences, eBooks and weekly news periodical Chemical & Engineering News. ACS journals are among the most cited, most trusted and most read within the scientific literature; however, ACS itself does not conduct chemical research. As a leader in scientific information solutions, its CAS division partners with global innovators to accelerate breakthroughs by curating, connecting and analyzing the world’s scientific knowledge. ACS’ main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Note to journalists: Please report that this research was presented at a meeting of the American Chemical Society. ACS does not conduct research, but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

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Title
The most potent snow makers

Abstract
Several organisms have evolved proteins that control the formation of ice. Ice nucleating bacteria are the most potent ice-nucleating agents in the biosphere and the atmosphere, contributing to cloud glaciation and precipitation, and routinely used for the synthetic production of snow. These bacteria have proteins in their outer membrane that are able to nucleate ice at temperatures as high as –1 °C. This presentation will discuss our quest to elucidate the mechanisms by which bacterial proteins and other potent ice nucleants promote water crystallization, what makes them so outstanding, and whether we can design materials that outperform them.

 

A new discovery in extraction technology of HEMP fiber


Exploring hemp seed hull biomass for an integrated C-5 biorefinery: Xylose and activated carbon


JOURNAL OF BIORESOURCES AND BIOPRODUCTS

A New Discovery in Extraction Technology of HEMP Fiber 

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EXPLORING HEMP SEED HULL BIOMASS FOR AN INTEGRATED C-5 BIOREFINERYXYLOSE AND ACTIVATED CARBON

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CREDIT: AGANNADH SATYAVOLU, CONN CENTER FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY RESEARCH, UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 40292, UNITED STATES; BIOPRODUCTS LLC, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY 40206, UNITED STATES.




Hemp containing 𝛿-tetrahydrocannabinol below legal limits (< 0.3%) commonly referred as industrial hemp is an annual cash crop gaining attention in the United States and European countries. Earlier studies in this lab on seed hulls has showed its potential as substrate for C-5 biorefinery due to its low lignin and high hemicellulose content. It can effectively reduce costs. A typical C5 biorefinery focuses on extraction of xylose by hydrolyzing biomass using dilute acids and converting xylose to xylitol and other chemical precursors. The remaining xylose stripped biomass can be converted to other value-added products such as activated carbon (AC). Successful portable energy storage systems such as Li-ion batteries require renewable, sustainable and low-cost electrode material and high surface area AC’s can meet this demand.

For a C-5 biomass biorefinery process, the choice of acid and the hydrolysis conditions is an important factor. Commonly preferred acid for dilute acid hydrolysis is sulphuric acid (SA). However, SA pre-treatment/hydrolysis requires downstream processing in the form of acid neutralization which is expensive and leads to generation of sulphate wastes. Jagannadh Satyavolu’s Team find that it can effectively solve such problems by using methane sulphonic acid (MSA) to replace SA. Moreover, they discuss the production of xylose and AC from hemp seed hull with methane sulphonic acid (MSA) hydrolysis. And dilute acid hydrolysis of hemp seed hull with MSA is 31% higher yields when compared to traditional dilute acid hydrolysis with sulphuric acid (SA) at the same acid loading rate. In addition, the result shows that AC produced from MSA hydrolyzed and KOH activated hemp seed hull delivered an order of magnitude higher surface area when compared to SA hydrolyzed and KOH activated AC. The MSA is found to have delignification properties and therefore removal of hemicellulose along with lignin leads to formation of pure cellulose structures and this property has a great positive impact on high surface area AC formation.

See the article:

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jobab.2024.01.002

Original Source URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2369969824000136

Journal

Journal of Bioresources and Bioproducts

 

Cleaning up environmental contaminants with quantum dot technology




AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

Cleaning up environmental contaminants with quantum dot technology 

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Watch a short Q&A video about this research on YouTube.

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CREDIT: AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY




NEW ORLEANS, March 20, 2024 — The 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was focused on quantum dots — objects so tiny, they’re controlled by the strange and complex rules of quantum physics. Many quantum dots used in electronics are made from toxic substances, but their nontoxic counterparts are now being developed and explored for uses in medicine and in the environment. One team of researchers is focusing on carbon- and sulfur-based quantum dots, using them to create safer invisible inks and to help decontaminate water supplies.

The researchers will present their results today at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS). ACS Spring 2024 is a hybrid meeting being held virtually and in person March 17-21; it features nearly 12,000 presentations on a range of science topics.

Quantum dots are synthetic nanometer-scale semiconductor crystals that emit light. They are used in applications such as electronics displays and solar cells. “Many conventional quantum dots are toxic, because they’re derived from heavy metals,” explains Md Palashuddin Sk, an assistant professor of chemistry at Aligarh Muslim University in India. “So, we’re working on nonmetallic quantum dots because they’re environmentally friendly and can be used in biological applications.”

Quantum dots are tiny — usually only tens of atoms in diameter. Because they’re so small, their properties are controlled by quantum effects, which makes them act a little strangely compared to larger objects. Namely, they emit light differently than one might expect; for example, gold materials appear blue on this scale. Nonmetallic quantum dots exhibit the same effect and have been explored by other researchers as a tool for bioimaging. Palashuddin has focused on designing carbon- and sulfur-based quantum dots (Cdots and Sdots, respectively) for a variety of other applications.

“Carbon and sulfur are very abundant, cost-effective materials, and they can easily be synthesized into quantum dots,” he says. “You can make carbon dots from waste materials, then use them for removing pollutants — they’re a way to make the process come full circle.”

Palashuddin has already put Cdots and Sdots to work in a variety of ways, though both are relatively recent discoveries. Though small, the dots have a large surface area, which can easily be functionalized to adapt the dots for different applications. Previously, the team designed dots that shined different colors, depending on which contaminants they encountered. That meant they could help identify contaminants — such as lead, cobalt and chromium — in a water sample without leaching any new metals from the dots themselves.

In addition to identifying contaminants, Cdots can help break down pollutants such as pesticides and dyes in water. In one project, Palashuddin and collaborator Amaresh Kumar Sahoo, an assistant professor who studies nanobiotechnology at the Indian Institute of Information Technology, formed Cdots from potato peels and then mounted them on microscopic robots designed to target and degrade toxic dyes in samples simulating polluted water.

The team has also developed methods to remove contaminants from water entirely, rather than just identifying or degrading them. They’ve specially designed Cdots to sop up automotive oil and are currently exploring a Cdot-based filter system to help treat oil spills.

Next, the researchers plan to put their laboratory findings to work in the field, possibly in a project focused on the Yamuna River. This river runs directly through New Delhi and is famously contaminated, especially in more populated areas. Palashuddin hopes to use his team’s nonmetallic dots to identify and separate the various pollutants in the river, including pesticides, surfactants, metal ions, antibiotics and dyes. Ideally, the dots will be functionalized to grab as many of these different contaminants on their surfaces as possible, so they can then be easily removed.

The potential uses for nonmetallic dots don’t just end with water treatment, though. Palashuddin and colleagues are currently investigating uses that could align more closely with traditional, metal-based dots, but without the toxicity concerns. As an example, some light-emitting quantum dots developed by the team could be included in invisible inks to help prevent counterfeiting, or incorporated into light-emitting devices, including television screens.

The team hopes that their work can help broaden the uses for nonmetallic quantum dots and put their unique properties to work in the environment.

The research was funded by the Science and Engineering Research Board and the University Grants Commission of the Government of India.

Visit the ACS Spring 2024 program to learn more about this presentation, “Non-metallic luminescent quantum dots for potential environmental remediation applications,” and more scientific presentations. 

###

The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. ACS’ mission is to advance the broader chemistry enterprise and its practitioners for the benefit of Earth and all its people. The Society is a global leader in promoting excellence in science education and providing access to chemistry-related information and research through its multiple research solutions, peer-reviewed journals, scientific conferences, eBooks and weekly news periodical Chemical & Engineering News. ACS journals are among the most cited, most trusted and most read within the scientific literature; however, ACS itself does not conduct chemical research. As a leader in scientific information solutions, its CAS division partners with global innovators to accelerate breakthroughs by curating, connecting and analyzing the world’s scientific knowledge. ACS’ main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Note to journalists: Please report that this research was presented at a meeting of the American Chemical Society. ACS does not conduct research, but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

Follow us: X, formerly Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram

Title
Non-metallic luminescent quantum dots for potential environmental remediation applications

Abstract
Non-metallic quantum dots have emerged as a promising paradigm in addressing pressing environmental challenges, outperforming their metallic counterparts. Research endeavors span a comprehensive array of applications, manifesting the multifaceted potential inherent in non-metallic quantum dots. We are developing non-metallic quantum dots like carbon dots (Cdots) and sulfur dots (Sdots) based smart materials for environmental remediation applications. Luminescent Sdots is an emerging metal-free quantum dots. We have reported that Sdots can potentially discriminate colorimetrically and fluorometrically multiple toxic metal ions and separate these metal ions from water. Sdots are found to be low-toxic and suitable candidate for bioimaging. Further, Sdots exhibit antibacterial activity under sunlight. The visible-light-driven photocatalytic properties of Sdots can be used to disinfect the diverse locations of interest.

Concurrently, we explored the superhydrophobic properties of biomass-derived Cdots and unveiled their exceptional capability to selectively separate oil from water in diverse environments, offering a sustainable approach to addressing oil spill contamination. Biomass-derived Cdots are reported as an excellent antibacterial agent, focusing on combating drug-resistant bacterial strains. The findings have underscored their superior antibacterial activity, offering a novel avenue for addressing drug-resistant bacterial infections. Recently, we have developed potato peel-derived autonomous magnetic microbots for the degradation of toxic dyes as well as neurotoxic pesticides. These studies underscore the diverse and promising applications of non-metallic quantum dots in environmental remediation, contributing significantly to the ongoing efforts to address environmental challenges.

 

First International Forum on Challenges of and Responses to Zoonoses



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Conference Logo 

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CONFERENCE LOGO

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CREDIT: ZOONOSES





Call for Abstracts and Posters: Submission Now Open







Important Deadlines

Abstract submission: July 1st 2024

https://conference.zoonoses-journal.org/submit-abstracts/

Poster submission: September 1st 2024

Early bird registration: April 30th, 2024          https://conference.zoonoses-journal.org/

The 1st International Forum on Challenges of and Responses to Zoonoses will be held at Shanxi Agricultural University, Taigu District, Jinzhong, China on October 29 – 31, 2024.

Shanxi Agricultural University and Zoonoses journal will jointly host this Forum, with a goal to address increasing cross-border threats of zoonotic diseases, to promote awareness and effective control of the harmfulness of zoonotic diseases, and to facilitate the translation/development of novel tools for zoonotic disease management.

The Forum will host global leading scientists in the field of zoonotic diseases and discuss the challenges of and effective responses to zoonotic diseases. The Forum will serve as a crucial platform for researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders to exchange knowledge and foster collaboration to address the global challenge of zoonoses.

Topics

The Forum will focus on two main areas at the forefront of zoonotic disease research:

  • Infection and immunity of zoonotic pathogens
  • The spread, diagnosis, and prevention of zoonotic diseases

Forum Chairs

Professor Lynn Soong, Departments of Microbiology & Immunology and Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, TX, USA

Professor Xiaoping Dong, Chinese Center for Disease Control & Prevention, Beijing, China

Professor Haidong Wang, Shanxi Agricultural University, Jinzhong, China

 

Fish fed to farmed salmon should be part of our diet, too, study suggests


The public are being encouraged to eat more wild fish, such as mackerel, anchovies and herring, which are often used within farmed salmon feeds. These oily fish contain essential nutrients including calcium, B12 and omega-3 but some are lost from our diet


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE






Paper available at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/144cIFPtY2VSaqV8AfFHy_hh6xlDcLShy?usp=sharing

The public are being encouraged to eat more wild fish, such as mackerel, anchovies and herring, which are often used within farmed salmon feeds. These oily fish contain essential nutrients including calcium, B12 and omega-3 but some are lost from our diets when we just eat the salmon fillet.

Scientists found that farmed salmon production leads to an overall loss of essential dietary nutrients. They say that eating more wild ‘feed’ species directly could benefit our health while reducing aquaculture demand for finite marine resources.

Researchers analysed the flow of nutrients from the edible species of wild fish used as feed, to the farmed salmon they were fed to. They found a decrease in six out of nine nutrients in the salmon fillet – calcium, iodine, iron, omega-3, vitamin B12 and vitamin A, but increased levels of selenium and zinc.

Most wild ‘feed’ fish met dietary nutrient recommendations at smaller portion sizes than farmed Atlantic salmon, including omega-3 fatty acids which are known to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke.

“What we’re seeing is that most species of wild fish used as feed have a similar or greater density and range of micronutrients than farmed salmon fillets,” said lead author, Dr David Willer, Zoology Department, University of Cambridge.

“Whilst still enjoying eating salmon and supporting sustainable growth in the sector, people should consider eating a greater and wider variety of wild fish species like sardines, mackerel and anchovies, to get more essential nutrients straight to their plate.”

In the UK, 71% of adults have insufficient vitamin D in winter, and teenage girls and women often have deficiencies of iodine, selenium and iron. Yet while, 24% of adults ate salmon weekly, only 5.4% ate mackerel, 1% anchovies and just 0.4% herring.

“Making a few small changes to our diet around the type of fish that we eat can go a long way to changing some of these deficiencies and increasing the health of both our population and planet,” said Willer.

The researchers found consuming one-third of current food-grade wild feed fish directly would be the most efficient way of maximising nutrients from the sea.

“Marine fisheries are important local and global food systems, but large catches are being diverted towards farm feeds. Prioritising nutritious seafood for people can help improve both diets and ocean sustainability,” said senior author Dr James Robinson, Lancaster University.

This approach could help address global nutrient deficiencies say the team of scientists from the University of Cambridge, Lancaster University, University of Stirling and the University of Aberdeen.

The study was published today in the journal, Nature Food

The scientists calculated the balance of nutrients in edible portions of whole wild fish, used within pelleted salmon feed in Norway, compared to the farmed salmon fillets.

They focused on nine nutrients that are essential in human diets and concentrated in seafood – iodine, calcium, iron, vitamin B12, vitamin A, omega-3 (EPA + DHA), vitamin D, zinc and selenium.

The wild fish studied included Pacific and Peruvian anchoveta, and Atlantic herring, mackerel, sprat and blue whiting – which are all marketed and consumed as seafood.

They found that these six feed species contained a greater, or similar, concentration of nutrients as the farmed salmon fillets. Quantities of calcium were over five times higher in wild feed fish fillets than salmon fillets, iodine was four times higher, and iron, omega-3, vitamin B12, and vitamin A were over 1.5 times higher.

Wild feed species and salmon had comparable quantities of vitamin D.

Zinc and selenium were found to be higher in salmon than the wild feed species – the researchers say these extra quantities are due to other salmon feed ingredients and are a real mark of progress in the salmon sector.

“Farmed salmon is an excellent source of nutrition, and is one of the best converters of feed of any farmed animal, but for the industry to grow it needs to become better at retaining key nutrients that it is fed. This can be done through more strategic use of feed ingredients, including from fishery by-products and sustainably-sourced, industrial-grade fish such as sand eels”, said Dr Richard Newton of the Institute of Aquaculture, University of Stirling, whose team also included Professor Dave Little, Dr Wesley Malcorps and Björn Kok.

 “It was interesting to see that we’re effectively wasting around 80% of the calcium and iodine from the feed fish – especially when we consider that women and teenage girls are often not getting enough of these nutrients”.

Willer said “These numbers have been underacknowledged by the aquaculture industry’s standard model of quoting Fish In Fish Out (FIFO) ratios rather than looking at nutrients.

The researchers would like to see a nutrient retention metric adopted by the fishing and aquaculture industries. They believe that if combined with the current FIFO ratio, the industry could become more efficient, and reduce the burden on fish stocks that also provide seafood. The team are building a standardised and robust vehicle for integrating the nutrient retention metric into industry practice.

“We’d like to see the industry expand but not at a cost to our oceans,” said Willer.

“We’d also like to see a greater variety of affordable, convenient and appealing products made of wild ‘feed’ fish and fish and salmon by-products for direct human consumption.”

The research was funded by the Scottish Government’s Rural and Environmental Science and Analytical Services Division (RESAS), a Royal Society University Research Fellowship, a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship a Henslow Fellowship at Murray Edwards College and the University of Cambridge.

ENDS.

Reference:

D. Willer et al. Wild fish consumption can balance nutrient retention in farmed fish Nature Food DOI: 10.1038/s43016-024-00932-z

Contact details:

Charis Goodyear, University of Cambridge: researchcommunications@admin.cam.ac.uk

Dr David Willer, University of Cambridge dw460@cam.ac.uk

About the University of Cambridge

The University of Cambridge is one of the world’s leading universities, with a rich history of radical thinking dating back to 1209. Its mission is to contribute to society through the pursuit of education, learning and research at the highest international levels of excellence.

Cambridge was second in the influential 2024 QS World University Rankings, the highest rated institution in the UK.

The University comprises 31 autonomous Colleges and over 100 departments, faculties and institutions. Its 24,000 students include around 9,000 international students from 147 countries. In 2023, 73% of its new undergraduate students were from state schools and more than 25% from economically disadvantaged backgrounds.

Cambridge research spans almost every discipline, from science, technology, engineering and medicine through to the arts, humanities and social sciences, with multi-disciplinary teams working to address major global challenges. In the Times Higher Education’s rankings based on the UK Research Excellence Framework, the University was rated as the highest scoring institution covering all the major disciplines.

2023 report found that the University contributes nearly £30 billion to the UK economy annually and supports more than 86,000 jobs across the UK, including 52,000 in the East of England. For every £1 the University spends, it creates £11.70 of economic impact, and for every £1 million of publicly-funded research income it receives, it generates £12.65 million in economic impact across the UK.

The University sits at the heart of the ‘Cambridge cluster’, in which more than 5,000 knowledge-intensive firms employ more than 71,000 people and generate £21 billion in turnover. Cambridge has the highest number of patent applications per 100,000 residents in the UK.

www.cam.ac.uk