Saturday, March 16, 2024

 

Less social with age

Peer-Reviewed Publication

DEUTSCHES PRIMATENZENTRUM (DPZ)/GERMAN PRIMATE CENTER

Assamese macaques grooming 

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TWO FEMALE ASSAMESE MACAQUES OF THE STUDY POPULATION AT PHU KHIEO WILDLIFE SANCTUARY GROOMING.

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CREDIT: OLIVER SCHÜLKE




As people get older, they increasingly focus on their more important relationships, often turning to family and close friends. This active reorientation towards a few, particularly close relationships could explain why ageing humans live in ever smaller social networks. Since human behavior not only reflects the current conditions of our modern society, but is also the result of our evolutionary past, studies on social aging in our closest relatives can shed light on the biological roots of social behavior. Scientists from the Research Group Social Evolution in Primates at the German Primate Center (DPZ) - Leibniz Institute for Primate Research and the Department for Behavioral Ecology at the University of Göttingen tested several hypotheses on the drivers of social aging in free-living Assamese macaques (Macaca assamensis) in Thailand. The researchers collected data on the social behavior of females for eight years and found that the size of their social networks decreases with increasing age. The females continued to interact with their close social partners, but gradually withdrew from social interactions altogether. The results contribute to the understanding of the evolutionary origins of social ageing (Proceedings of the Royal Society B).

Social bonds promote health and well-being. However, as people age, they often reduce their social contacts and focus on the people who are most important to them – family and close friends. So far, it is unclear whether this change in social engagement is motivated by the knowledge of a limited lifespan, by physical limitations of an aging body or perhaps by the social exclusion of older people in modern societies. Baptiste Sadoughi, first author of the study and former PhD student in the Social Evolution in Primates Group at the German Primate Center turned to long-term social data on female Assamese macaques collected at the DPZ field site at Phu Khieo Wildlife Sanctuary to test the drivers of social aging in non-human primate species that lack a human-like sense of mortality. The team has been studying the behavior of Assamese macaques at Phu Khieo for years amassing thousands of hours of detailed observations of their social behavior.

“For the question of social aging, we focused on females, because they remain with their mothers, sisters and daughters in their natal group all their lives, which allowed us to track changes in behavior over their life span”, Sadoughi explains.

Active social withdrawal with a constant preference for important partners

Sadoughi found that with increasing age, the females approached other females less frequently and invested less time in actively grooming them. However, less social contact does not necessarily mean that the females are alone more often. In fact, older females were not more often spatially isolated than younger ones, they just interacted less. "We assume that older females try to keep up with the group at all costs, as proximity to others is one of the best protective mechanisms against predators. However, once they have achieved this, they lack the motivation or energy to engage socially with others,” says Sadoughi.

Given the parallels between social ageing in humans and macaques, the question now arose as to whether the increasing social selectivity assumed for humans could also explain the results in macaques. “Assamese macaque females are selective. Who a female has interacted with more in the past predicts who she will interact with now. But this tendency to be selective and prefer certain partners over others doesn't get stronger with age, as we know it from humans, it stays the same. Something that is constant over age cannot explain something that decreases with age. Selectivity in partner choice is therefore not sufficient to explain the age-dependent reduction of the social network,” explains Sadoughi.

Longitudinal data are needed for aging studies

Studying age-related changes is further complicated by another phenomenon that has little to do with what we usually think of as aging. “With age comes a greater risk of death. With poor social integration and fewer partners close by comes a greater risk of death, especially under natural predation pressure. This simple fact means that changes in social integration with age are partially confounded by the greater likelihood that individuals who reach old age will be exceptionally well-connected socially, because the less well-connected have already died, a phenomenon called selective disappearance,” explains Prof. Julia Ostner, head of the Social Evolution in Primates Group and senior author of the study. Access to longitudinal data has allowed the researchers to solve this problem and distinguish between changes that are truly related to aging, and those that are due to demographic trends.

Only in the last twenty years have scientists recognized that wild animals also undergo physiological, morphological or social changes associated with the ageing process. For a long time, it was assumed that individuals in the wild do not survive long enough to show signs of ageing. “Only now are we beginning to realize the possibilities offered by long-term data on animal populations in their natural environment to study how individuals deal with the challenges of aging,” says Baptiste Sadoughi.

Portrait of an old female Assamese macaque near the DPZ research station Phu Khieo Wildlife Sanctuary.

CREDIT

Kittisak Srithorn



Prof. Dr. Julia Ostner is a professor at the University of Göttingen and head of the Social Evolution in Primates Group at the DPZ.

CREDIT

Ingo Bulla

Global warming may intensify the modulation of tropical cyclone genesis by summer intraseasonal oscillation


INSTITUTE OF ATMOSPHERIC PHYSICS, CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

The modulating effect of the BSISO on tropical cyclone generation and how it has enhanced under global warming 

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THE MODULATING EFFECT OF THE BSISO ON TROPICAL CYCLONE GENERATION AND HOW IT HAS ENHANCED UNDER GLOBAL WARMING

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CREDIT: ZHEFAN GAO





Global warming, the long-term warming of Earth’s overall temperature, has greatly accelerated in the last 100 years due to human factors such as the burning of fossil fuels. Along with this trend, certain atmospheric phenomena have also changed, such as typhoons and other types of disastrous weather becoming more intense than before and bringing about more serious impacts. The Boreal Summer Intraseasonal Oscillation (BSISO), one of the most pronounced subseasonal variabilities in the tropics during boreal summer, provides an important basis for subseasonal forecasting. Therefore, it is of great significance to study the BSISO and its changes under global warming.

Recently, the research group of Prof. Chaoxia YUAN from Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology compared the characteristics of BSISO activities in the northwest Pacific Ocean before and after global warming on the basis of the simulation results of a state-of-the-art climate model (EC-Earth3P-HR) and discussed the possible effects of BSISO changes on the generation of tropical cyclones under global warming. The results have been published in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters.

The BSISO has a period of 30 to 90 days and is mainly active in the Northern Hemisphere summer from May to October. Its life cycle is usually characterized by convective activity spreading from the tropical Indian Ocean to the western North Pacific Ocean. The BSISO can modulate the activity of tropical cyclones by adjusting the large-scale dynamic and thermal atmospheric conditions. During the convectively active period of the BSISO, the background convection and circulation, as well as the water vapor conditions, tend to be more favorable for the generation of tropical cyclones, while the opposite is true during the convectively suppressed period.

Comparison of the simulations before and after global warming produced by EC-Earth3P-HR showed that, under global warming, the water vapor content in the atmosphere increases, leading to an enhancement of BSISO convective activities. The BSISO circulation over the northwest Pacific Ocean moves to the northeast, showing an enhanced convective zone distributed in the northwest to southeast direction.

"The formation density of tropical cyclones also increases significantly in the area of convective enhancement; and, according to results from analyzing the genetic potential index, we found that the formation activity of tropical cyclones is better reflected", explains Prof. YUAN. "Therefore, further analysis showed that the relative humidity in the middle troposphere plays a leading role. Enhanced BSISO convection within the zone moistens the mid-tropospheric air, which helps to reduce the entrainment of normally dry tropospheric air by updrafts and the correction of the boundary layer by downdrafts, resulting in an enhanced density of tropical cyclone formation."

 

Meteorology: weak polar vortex makes weather more predictable



LUDWIG-MAXIMILIANS-UNIVERSITÄT MÜNCHEN





Events in the stratosphere are making long-range weather in Northern Europe easier to forecast, researchers at LMU have discovered.

Weather is a chaotic system and predicting weather conditions several weeks in advance poses considerable challenges. The accuracy of such long-range forecasts remains generally quite low. Accordingly, even moderate improvements can prove valuable for various sectors. For instance, farmers rely on these forecasts to determine optimal sowing and harvesting times, energy providers use them to anticipate fluctuations in renewable energy production, and public health officials use them to prepare for outbreaks of diseases such as malaria or dengue fever, which are correlated with specific weather conditions.

 

Researchers at LMU are now investigating a phenomenon that has its origin in the stratosphere, the layer of our atmosphere situated 15 to 50 kilometers above our heads. “Previous work has shown that during Northern winter the state of the circulation in the polar stratosphere may provide useful information for improved long-range forecasts, especially for weather over the North Atlantic and Eurasia,” explains Thomas Birner, Professor of Theoretical Meteorology at LMU. In particular, when the polar vortex (a band of strong eastward circumpolar flow at stratospheric levels) strongly weakens or breaks down, the North Atlantic jetstream tends to shift southward and the likelihood of cold spells over Eurasia increases. Such vortex breakdowns are relatively rare events that only happen approximately every other winter. But its time has come round again: “One such event is currently unfolding with corresponding expected impacts on Eurasian weather in the coming weeks.”

 

And now for the weather: cold, but less chaotic

In a study published recently in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, LMU meteorologists highlight an additional aspect of stratospheric influence on long-range weather forecasts: Weak polar vortex states, such as the one currently prevailing, are typically followed by reduced uncertainty of 3-5 week forecasts over Northern Europe. The authors found that ensembles of forecasts show a reduced range of possible weather conditions by about 25%. Such ensembles are made up of a large number of individual forecasts, which typically diverge at longer forecasting periods. After weak polar vortex events there is less spread among these forecasts over Northern Europe, making the weather more predictable.

 

“We attribute this reduced forecast uncertainty to the southward shift of the North Atlantic jetstream,” says Jonas Spaeth, doctoral student at LMU’s Meteorological Institute and lead author of the new study. The associated southward shift of the tracks of winter storms, which are the main source of forecast uncertainty during this season, causes less storm activity and thereby reduced forecast uncertainty over Northern Europe. Conversely, forecast uncertainty increases over Southern Europe.

 

“Our study sheds light on meteorological phenomena where uncertainty of weather forecasts several weeks in advance systematically reduces or increases,” says Jonas Spaeth. “Furthermore, it underscores how the practical use of long-range forecasts can benefit from a deeper understanding of the remote coupling across different atmospheric regions.”

Advances and challenges in understanding compound weather and climate extremes



SCIENCE CHINA PRESS





This study is led by Prof. Zengchao Hao (College of Water Sciences, Beijing Normal University) and Prof. Yang Chen (State Key Laboratory of Severe Weather, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences). In the context of global warming, many extremes, such as heatwaves, heavy precipitation, and droughts, have become increasingly frequent and intense, as expected theoretically. Somewhat unexpectedly, these extremes have also exhibited tightened linkage in both time and space, constituting compound weather and climate extremes with larger impacts. During the past decade, compound events received considerable attention, with much progress in event typology, impacts, changes and risks already made.

By synthesizing ~350 peer-reviewed papers, the authors thoroughly documented definition and impacts, physical mechanisms, historical/future changes as well as attribution evidences, with respect to 13 reported and relatively well-studied compound events. Some of these events are specific to East Asian monsoonal regions. They also pointed out deficiencies and gaps of existing studies on each of these events. At the end of the review, they attempted to identify data and methodological challenges common to the field and came up with outlooks on the future directions of the emerging topic.

More specifically, they laid out their review by the order of definition, mechanisms, changes and attribution. For each of reviewed events, the authors adopted an impact-centric approach to introduce the definition by illustrating how the fashion of compounding aggregated and amplified impacts. Distinct from previous reviews on some types of compound events focusing largely on long-term changes, the new review assigned a large volume of space to the underlying physical processes, especially from the dynamic (including monsoon dynamics) and multi-sphere interactive perspectives. Despite rapid development of event attribution methods, attribution dedicated to compound events remains in its infancy. The author team also tried to assess confidence of attribution conclusions for compound events, where are available, and to figure out the source of attribution uncertainties.    

In the prospect section, the authors introduced unique requirements on data and methodological design to study compound events, as opposed to those for univariate extremes. In particular, much longer records, both in observations and simulations, are warranted to sufficiently sample compound events. For statistical fitting, model evaluation and metrics constructed for attribution, inter-event dependence or coincidence should be factored into. Regarding mechanistic diagnosis, potential interactions amongst drivers of different scales and spheres, and exposure and vulnerability altered by the concurrence and/or sequence of extremes need to be addressed in a proper manner. As with attribution, given the difficulty in simulating the interacting and cascading processes in most of free-running attribution models, a storyline scheme that is able to faithfully reproduce the dynamically unfolding of events represents a promising way forward. For the projection and risk assessment, internal variability of various scales should be no longer treated as noise; but rather seen as an indispensable driver that is equivalently important to external forcings in shaping the compounding patten of events.      

The review might be used as a general guide to identify and analyze compound events, and also adds some incentives for multi-disciplinary collaborations to better prepare against and adapt to compound hazards in a changing climate. 

See the article:

Hao Z, Chen Y. 2024. Research progresses and prospects of multi-sphere compound extremes from the Earth System perspective. Science China Earth Sciences, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-023-1201-y

 

Zoonoses now an SBV affiliated journal




COMPUSCRIPT LTD

 



We are delighted to announce that Zoonoses is now an affiliated journal of the Brazilian Society for Virology (SBV).

 

Zoonoses, an open access journal, has been established to be part of the broader goal of sharing scientific findings and viewpoints, promoting national/international collaborations, and to increase public awareness of the health risks of zoonoses.

 

Zoonoses currently imposes no article processing charges during the journal launch phase. SBV members will receive 20% discount on article processing charges after introduction of APCs.

 

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Zoonoses is fully open access journal for research scientists, physicians, veterinarians, and public health professionals working on diverse disciplinaries of zoonotic diseases.

 

Zoonoses is now open for submissions; articles can be submitted online at https://mc04.manuscriptcentral.com/zoonoses

 

Please visit https://zoonoses-journal.org/ to learn more about the journal.

Editorial Board: https://zoonoses-journal.org/index.php/editorial-board/

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Zoonoses is available on ScienceOpen (https://www.scienceopen.com/search#collection/839df240-327f-47dd-b636-9b728dff9700).

 

Submissions may be made using ScholarOne (https://mc04.manuscriptcentral.com/zoonoses).

There are no author submission or article processing fees.

 

Follow Zoonoses on Twitter @ZoonosesJFacebook (https://www.facebook.com/Zoonoses-Journal-100462755574114 ) and LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/zoonoses/)

 

eISSN 2737-7474

ISSN 2737-7466

Breakthrough in ultraviolet spectroscopy


Physicists achieve major leap in precision and accuracy at extremely low light levels



MAX-PLANCK-GESELLSCHAFT

Ultraviolet photon-counting dual-comb spectrometer 

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AN ULTRAVIOLET PHOTON-COUNTING DUAL-COMB SPECTROMETER. TWO ULTRAVIOLET FREQUENCY COMBS OF SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT PULSE REPETITION FREQUENCIES ARE GENERATED AT VERY LOW LIGHT LEVELS BY NONLINEAR FREQUENCY CONVERSION OF NEAR-INFRARED COMBS. ONE ULTRAVIOLET COMB PASSES THROUGH A SAMPLE. THE TWO FEEBLE COMBS ARE THEN SUPERIMPOSED WITH A BEAM SPLITTER AND DETECTED BY A PHOTON-COUNTING DETECTOR. AT POWER LEVELS MORE THAN ONE MILLION TIMES WEAKER THAN USUALLY EMPLOYED, THE STATISTICS OF THE DETECTED PHOTONS CARRIES THE INFORMATION ABOUT THE SAMPLE WITH ITS POSSIBLY HIGHLY COMPLEX OPTICAL SPECTRUM. (REPRODUCED FROM HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.1038/S41586-024-07094-9)

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CREDIT: NATHALIE PICQUÉ / NATURE




Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics (MPQ) have successfully developed a new technique for deciphering the properties of light and matter that can simultaneously detect and precisely quantify many substances with high chemical selectivity. Their technique interrogates the atoms and molecules in the ultraviolet spectral region at very feeble light levels. Exciting prospects for conducting experiments in low-light conditions pave the way for novel applications of photon-level diagnostics, such as precision spectroscopy of single atoms or molecules for fundamental tests of physics and ultraviolet photochemistry in the Earth’s atmosphere or from space telescopes. The work is published today in the scientific journal Nature.

Ultraviolet spectroscopy plays a critical role in the study of electronic transitions in atoms and rovibronic transitions in molecules. These studies are essential for tests of fundamental physics, quantum-electrodynamics theory, determination of fundamental constants, precision measurements, optical clocks, high-resolution spectroscopy in support of atmospheric chemistry and astrophysics, and strong-field physics. Scientists in the group of Nathalie Picqué at the Max-Planck Institute of Quantum Optics have now made a significant leap in the field of ultraviolet spectroscopy by successfully implementing high-resolution linear-absorption dual-comb spectroscopy in the ultraviolet spectral range. This groundbreaking achievement opens up new possibilities for performing experiments under low-light conditions, paving the way for novel applications in various scientific and technological fields.

Dual-comb spectroscopy, a powerful technique for precise spectroscopy over broad spectral bandwidths, has been mainly used for infrared linear absorption of small molecules in the gas phase. It relies on measuring the time-dependent interference between two frequency combs with slightly different repetition frequencies. A frequency comb is a spectrum of evenly spaced, phase-coherent laser lines, that acts like a ruler to measure the frequency of light with extreme precision. The dual-comb technique does not suffer from the geometric limitations associated with traditional spectrometers, and offers great potential for high precision and accuracy.

Dual-comb spectroscopy now available for low light intensities

Nathalie Picqué and some of her team members in one of her dual comb labs at MPQ. 

However, dual-comb spectroscopy typically requires intense laser beams, making it less suitable for scenarios where low light levels are critical. The MPQ team have now experimentally demonstrated that dual-comb spectroscopy can be effectively employed in starved-light conditions, at power levels more than a million times weaker than those typically used. This breakthrough was achieved using two distinct experimental setups with different types of frequency-comb generators. The team developed a photon-level interferometer (Fig.1) that accurately records the statistics of photon counting, showcasing a signal-to-noise ratio at the fundamental limit. This achievement highlights the optimal use of available light for experiments, and opens up the prospect of dual-comb spectroscopy in challenging scenarios where low light levels are essential.

The MPQ researchers addressed the challenges associated with generating ultraviolet frequency combs and building dual-comb interferometers with long coherence times, paving the way for advances in this coveted goal. They exquisitely controlled the mutual coherence of two comb lasers with one femtowatt per comb line, demonstrating an optimal build-up of the counting statistics of their interference signal over times exceeding one hour. “Our innovative approach to low-light interferometry overcomes the challenges posed by the low efficiency of nonlinear frequency conversion, and lays a solid foundation for extending dual-comb spectroscopy to even shorter wavelengths”, comments Bingxin Xu, the post-doctoral scientist who led the experiments.

Indeed, an exciting future application is the development of dual-comb spectroscopy at short wavelengths, to enable precise vacuum- and extreme-ultraviolet molecular spectroscopy over broad spectral spans. Currently, broadband extreme-UV spectroscopy is limited in resolution and accuracy, and relies on unique instrumentation at specialized facilities. “Ultraviolet dual-comb spectroscopy, while a challenging goal, has now become a realistic one as a result of our research. Importantly, our results extend the full capabilities of dual-comb spectroscopy to low-light conditions, unlocking novel applications in precision spectroscopy, biomedical sensing, and environmental atmospheric sounding”, Nathalie Picqué concludes. 

   

Nathalie Picqué and some of her team members in one of her dual comb labs at MPQ. 

CREDIT

Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics

Arctic nightlife: Seabird colony bursts with sound at night



HOKKAIDO UNIVERSITY
Flying little auks 

VIDEO: 

FLYING LITTLE AUKS. (SIORAPALUK, GREENLAND, 2022; VIDEO: MONICA OGAWA)

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CREDIT: MONICA OGAWA




Acoustic recordings of a colony of little auks reveal their nocturnal activities and offer valuable monitoring means for avian biology in the Arctic.

A collaborative study conducted by researchers from the Arctic Research Center at Hokkaido University and the Department of Ecoscience at Aarhus University, Denmark, delves into the captivating activities of the most abundant seabird in the North Atlantic (little auk, Alle alle). The study sheds light on birds’ daily rhythmic behavior under the endless daylight of the Arctic summer. Led by Associate Professor Evgeny A. Podolskiy, Hokkaido University, the findings were published in the journal Communications Biology.

In the remote wilderness of Northwest Greenland, the research team employed passive acoustic and imaging technologies to uncover the hidden rhythms of little auk colonies. Every summer,  approximately 60 million birds come to this region to breed and forage, and while their vocalization is a familiar summer soundscape for the local inhabitants, little is known to science about their daily routines and calling habits. The study revealed a “nocturnal” surge in vocalization activity, contrary to expectations of mid-latitude inhabitants familiar with a dawn chorus. Due to a lower number of birds in the afternoon, the calling and wing-flapping rates decreased. The study improves our understanding of avian behavior in continuous daylight environments. 

"These findings provide a fascinating glimpse into the intricate rhythms of Arctic life, and remind us that bird counts depend on the time of day,” says Podolskiy. "Under the perpetual daylight, little auks exhibit an acoustic pattern that mirrors their behavioral cycles—such as attendance, feeding, and fledging—offering valuable insights into their ecological dynamics." 

“The little auk, also known as the dovekie, emerges as a sentinel species in monitoring Arctic environmental shifts,” says Dr. Anders Mosbech, co-author from Aarhus University. “Understanding their behavioral dynamics is paramount for effective conservation and ecosystem management in the face of rapid environmental transformations.”

“The significance of this study extends beyond mere curiosity, emphasizing the crucial role of passive acoustic monitoring in studying wildlife behavior in remote and difficult-to-access regions,” adds Podolskiy.

The study advocates for the continued use of acoustic monitoring as a non-invasive and efficient method for studying bird colonies in the Arctic. Traditional methods of field observation could be less practical due to their laborious nature and the remoteness of seabird breeding colonies. “By combining audio data with other monitoring techniques, such as time-lapse cameras or radar systems, and engaging local communities, we can enhance conservation efforts for important seabird populations while also promoting sustainability,” explains Monica Ogawa, co-author of the study and a Ph.D. candidate at the Graduate School of Environmental Science, Hokkaido University.

The research team plans to continue their investigations into the acoustic ecology of Arctic seabirds, leveraging interdisciplinary collaborations to delve deeper into the avian biology and environmental changes affecting it. Through their efforts, the researchers hope to expand our understanding of the complex web of interactions that sustain life in one of the most extreme environments on Earth.

Little auks flying over the colony (Siorapaluk, Greenland, 2022; Photo: Monica Ogawa).

Little auk vocalizations and w [AUDIO] | 

Recording of little auk vocalizations and wing-flapping

CREDIT

Evgeny A. Podolskiy, et al. Communications Biology. March 15, 2024.

The research team from Japanese institutions, from right to left: Evgeny A. Podolskiy, Jean-Baptiste Thiebot, and Monica Ogawa. (Photo: Evgeny A. Podolskiy)

CREDIT

Evgeny A. Podolskiy

  

Anders Mosbech, Aarhus University, co-author of the study. (Photo: Anders Mosbech)

CREDIT

Anders Mosbech