Monday, August 04, 2025

 

Assisted by sniffer dogs and DNA sequencing, researchers discover three new truffle species




University of Florida
Truffle find 

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Lolo, a Lagotto Romagnolo, stands proud after detecting a cache of truffles within a Pacific Northwest forest while Alana McGee, of the Truffle Dog Company, recovers the find.

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Credit: Heather Dawson




University of Florida biologists studying fungal evolution and ecology have discovered three new truffle species, including one capable of commanding hundreds of dollars per pound within culinary circles.

The researchers describe their discoveries in a study published in the scientific journal Persoonia. Their work shakes up the Morchellaceae truffle family tree, with key insights related to perhaps the most commercially valuable truffle in North America, the Oregon black truffle. Gourmet chefs, who sometimes grate the odoriferous truffle over dishes or infuse butter with it, have been known to pay as much as $800 per pound for the delicacy.

For decades, the Oregon black truffle has been known scientifically as Leucangium carthusianum. It was originally found in Europe and later found in the Pacific Northwest, from California to British Columbia. However, recent genetic testing and field analysis by researchers from UF’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS) revealed the North American variety is a distinct species. Scientists are giving this newly recognized species a name honoring the Cascadia region in which it is found: Leucangium cascadiense.

“Our paper confirms what a lot of people had suspected for a long time, which is that the North American truffle species is genetically very distinct from its European relatives,” said study co-author Benjamin Lemmond, a former UF student.

Lemmond, now a postdoctoral associate at the University of California at Berkeley, began his research into the truffles as a first-year doctoral student studying under professor Matthew Smith of the UF/IFAS plant pathology department. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Lemmond couldn’t access the campus greenhouse where he was conducting an experiment, so Smith secured hundreds of dried truffle specimens from Oregon State University for him to study. The stash included slivers of the Oregon black truffle, a dark-colored, potato-shaped species with tiny, pyramid-shaped warts.

When pandemic restrictions relaxed, Lemmond and Smith conducted genetic testing of the Oregon State specimens and others borrowed from Polish, Greek, Italian, French and Japanese collections.

Their tests indicated Oregon black truffles from North America had at one point diverged from their European counterparts on the Morchellaceae evolutionary tree, according to the study. They also established the existence of another distinct and very rare species, Imaia kuwohiensis, a pale-colored truffle with dark warts, which is native to threatened spruce-fir habitats in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Their name for the truffle comes from the Cherokee word for the Great Smoky Mountains’ highest peak, Kuwohi.

Field tests followed. The researchers wanted to understand the origin of Oregon black truffles’ energy.

“Understanding the fundamental, basic biology and life cycle of this truffle is really important,” Lemmond said. “It’s a very valuable commodity, and this knowledge might help us to cultivate the truffle in the future. It also supports long-term conservation and management.”

Most gourmet truffles are mycorrhizal, meaning they obtain energy from trees, Lemmond said. It had long been suspected that Oregon black truffles obtain energy through a symbiotic relationship with young Douglas fir trees, but no one had conclusively proven it.

Lemmond traveled to the Pacific Northwest and worked with specially trained sniffer dogs capable of detecting truffles buried as deep as 10 inches beneath soil and leaf litter. With the dogs’ help, he unearthed Oregon black truffles nestled among Douglas fir stands. He used fluorescent stain that bonded with the fungal tissue, coloring it green to show where the truffle fungus grew between the cells of the tree root tissue.

“The truffle fungi surround the whole root, but the fungus is healthy, and the plant is healthy,” Smith said. “The two trade nutrients back and forth.”

DNA sequencing of the roots subsequently proved the truffles rely on the trees as their main source of carbon, according to the study.

As the researchers conducted genome sequencing of the Oregon black truffle, they learned of a peculiar find reported by a citizen scientist on iNaturalist, an online science data network: a Leucangium truffle growing among Eastern hemlock trees in Oneida County, New York.

It was the first time anyone had ever reported a Leucangium species in the United States, east of the Rocky Mountains, Lemmond said.

Lemmond contacted Purdue University, which was preserving the specimen, and requested a sample. The truffle’s physical characteristics, including its dense external hairs and lack of warts, distinguished it from other Leucangium species. DNA analysis confirmed significant variation, too. The researchers named the new truffle species Leucangium oneidaense to recognize the county where it was unearthed.

A few years later, just before the researchers submitted their study for publication, someone found a second Leucangium oneidaense specimen growing in Massachusetts, Lemmond said.

“It was great timing, and it suggests to me that there are still a lot of undiscovered truffles out there, waiting to be found,” he said.

Study author Benjamin Lemmond, a former UF student, holds a truffle specimen discovered by Roo, the truffle-sniffing dog.

 

Why “sleeping on it” may improve learning and memory



Learning a motor task shapes brain activity during sleep that can predict how much people improve their task performance after sleeping




Society for Neuroscience






When faced with difficult tasks, sometimes people hit a mental wall and make the decision to “sleep on it.” Returning to the task after sleeping, they often perform better. Why? Rhythmic brain activity during sleep transforms task-related information into stronger, longer-term memory. A new JNeurosci paper on research led by Dara Manoach, from Harvard Medical School, advances understanding of where in the brain this rhythmic activity appears to improve motor learning. 

In the study, 25 participants learned a typing sequence while the researchers recorded their brain activity. After training, brain recordings continued as study participants napped. During sleep, cortical brain areas active during training had more rhythmic activity. Increased brain rhythms in these areas correlated with how much participants improved in the task after the nap. Notably, pre- and postnap task performance had different neural correlates; learning during training was associated with increased brain rhythms in movement execution areas during sleep, while postnap performance was linked to increased brain rhythms in movement planning areas during sleep. Says Manoach, “Brain rhythms occur everywhere in the brain during sleep. But the rhythms in these regions increase after learning, presumably to stabilize and enhance memory.” 

The researchers theorize from their work that brain rhythms in motor execution areas may represent the memory of a task, while the rhythms in motor planning areas improve future performance.  

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Please contact media@sfn.org for full-text PDF. 

About JNeurosci 

JNeurosci was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship. 

About The Society for Neuroscience 

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 35,000 members in more than 95 countries. 

 

New review highlights significant need for comprehensive care for gun violence survivors



UM School of Medicine trauma surgeons offer their insights into best practices to ensure more standardized care

University of Maryland School of Medicine




A new review article published in JAMA underscores the critical need for comprehensive long-term medical care for patients treated for firearm injuries, which has become an epidemic in the U.S. fueled by years of rising gun violence. More than 48,000 people died of firearm injuries in the U.S. in 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with 120,000 suffering from gunshot wounds that they recover from.

While emergency care protocols are well established, long-term recovery pathways for survivors—particularly in the outpatient setting—remain poorly defined and inconsistently applied, according to the review paper authors who are all professors of surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM).

This review consolidates the latest evidence on the physical, neurological, psychological, and social consequences of firearm injury, excluding injuries to the brain and spinal cord. “We wanted to provide guidance for primary care physicians, psychiatrists, and rehabilitation specialists to help them manage the long term care of these patients to help facilitate a full recovery,” said study first author Bethany Strong, MD, an assistant professor of surgery at UMSOM who practices at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center.

Key findings from the review include:

  • Chronic Pain: Nearly 68% of firearm injury survivors report daily pain 6 to 12 months after injury, a higher rate than those severely injured in motor vehicle crashes. A multimodal pain management approach is recommended, combining pharmacologic treatments with physical and alternative therapies.
  • Peripheral Nerve Injury: Gunshot wounds can lead to varying degrees of nerve damage, especially in high-velocity injuries. While some patients regain function without surgery, referral to specialists and early rehabilitation are essential for optimal outcomes.
  • Thomas M. Scalea, MD

    Retained Bullet Fragments & Lead Toxicity: Approximately 75 percent of gunshot wound survivors are discharged with bullet fragments still in their bodies. These fragments pose a risk for lead poisoning, particularly if located near joints or vital structures. Regular blood lead level testing is recommended, and surgical removal should be considered when medically feasible.
  • Psychological Impact: Over 50 percent of survivors screen positive for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) within a year of injury. Doctors should screen patients recovering from firearm wounds for this condition. Effective treatments include trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy, antidepressant medication, and treatments for sleep issues.
  • Functional Decline and Social Impact: A significant portion of survivors report long-term functional limitations, with nearly 60 percent not returning to work within a year. Quality of life measures are notably lower than in other trauma populations.
  • Risk of Reinjury: Nearly 10 percent of survivors suffer a second firearm injury, with young Black men at the highest risk. Hospital-linked violence intervention programs have shown promise in reducing recidivism through holistic support services.

“This review serves as a wake-up call,” said corresponding author Thomas Scalea, MD, Professor of Trauma Surgery at UMSOM and Physician-in-Chief at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center. “We can apply our best trauma surgery skills to our patients, but the medical community must go beyond our acute care efforts to address the lasting effects of firearm injury—pain, disability, mental health, and risk of reinjury.”

Added UMSOM Dean Mark T. Gladwin, MD: “Every day, 125 people in the U.S. are killed with guns, and more than 200 are shot and wounded. Gun violence costs our nation $557 billion every year, equivalent to 2.6 percent of our gross domestic product. These costs can be reduced by improving access to long-term health care and supportive services for gun violence victims, a disproportionate percentage of whom come from low-income communities where adequate healthcare is lacking.”

Margaret Lauerman, MD, Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery at UMSOM was an additional author on the paper.

Watch the video of gunshot wound survivors discussing their long-term needs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXKC3cpFWMc

 

Integrating human and animal health care increases access to services for homeless youth





University of Washington





Every year, nearly 2 million young Americans experience homelessness. As many as a quarter of them own pets, which can be both a crucial source of emotional support and a barrier to receiving services such as housing or medical care. Studies have shown that unhoused people with pets may be less likely to visit medical facilities. Some may choose veterinary care for their animals over obtaining health care for themselves.  

The Seattle One Health Clinic was designed to address those barriers. Led by the University of Washington’s Center for One Health Research operated in collaboration with the Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine, and supported by two nonprofit organizations, the clinic offers free veterinary care alongside its medical services. A paper published July 31 in the Journal of Primary Care & Community Health found that the integrated approach increased access to preventative medical care for both people and their pets. 

“It’s truly integrated — human and animal providers working together is a unique approach,” said Natalie Rejto, lead author of the paper and a postdoctoral researcher in the Center for One Health Research. 

At the One Health Clinic, a nurse practitioner and veterinarian, often accompanied by veterinary students, provide primary care services while UW students volunteer as patient navigators, helping to coordinate care and address shared health needs such as extreme weather, environmental contaminants and zoonotic disease. The clinic also helps clients document their pets as emotional support animals, which enables them to access a wider range of housing and other services.  

“The data clearly shows that this model of care is building trust,” Rejto said. “It’s special to see holistic care that takes into account the environment, the animal, the person and their relationships in society, to provide care to these young people. It’s incredibly important for people to have preventative care, and that in turn has a great impact on public health.”  

The study analyzed medical and veterinary records of clinic visits between 2019 and 2022. The majority of human participants were 23 years old or younger. Of the 88 human clients who visited the clinic during that period, 75 saw a health care provider at least once, and 40 patients established care for the first time in at least the past two years. Most of those patients returned for at least one follow-up appointment within two years of their first visit. 

Most significantly, nearly 80% of all visits to the One Health Clinic resulted in clients receiving human health care. That includes 69% of visits where clients initially intended to seek care only for their pets. 

“Adding veterinary care to a primary care clinic creates a supportive environment that is vastly different from a typical medical care facility”, said co-author Dr. Peter Rabinowitz, one of the founders of the One Health Clinic and director of the UW Center for One Health Research, who is also a UW professor of environmental and occupational health sciences and an associate professor of medicine in the UW School of Medicine. “This unique atmosphere encourages clients to seek care for themselves as well as their animals.”   

A fully integrated model may be a new concept to many, requiring novel partnerships between human health and veterinary professionals, Rejto acknowledged. But the results suggest that health care providers should give greater consideration to the health impact of the human animal bond between people and their pets.  

“Potentially a good start would be to increase collaboration and communication between animal and human health care, to have human health facilities that are in communication with veterinary facilities. That could help identify diseases and shared environmental risks,” Rejto said. “It’s about expanding providers’ and human health care workers’ framework for addressing health.” 

Other authors include Julianne Meisner, a UW assistant professor of global health and of epidemiology and deputy director of the Center for One Health Research; Hannah Fenelon, Michael Xie, Alice Tin and Erin Tabor of the UW Center for One Health Research; Katie Kuehl of the Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine; Kate Schneier and Andrew Nee of Neighborcare Health; and Amanda Richer of Uplift Consulting. 

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Nursing Research Training Program in Global Health Nursing at the UW, the New Tudor Foundation, and by a gift from the now-shuttered Y/YA Shelter “Peace for the Streets by Kids from the Streets.” Funding for the publication of this study was provided by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ (ASPCA) Open-Access Publishing Fund.

 



 

Solar panels and rice fields thrive together in Japanese agrivoltaics pilot



Research demonstrates that a dual-axis sun-tracking agrivoltaic system can simultaneously produce competitive solar power and maintain high-quality rice yields



SPIE--International Society for Optics and Photonics

Agriphotovoltaic (agriPV) or agrivoltaic rice paddy plant with a dual-axis, sun-tracking system developed in Miyada-mura, Nagano prefecture, Japan. 

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Agriphotovoltaic (agriPV) or agrivoltaic rice paddy plant with a dual-axis, sun-tracking system developed in Miyada-mura, Nagano prefecture, Japan. PV panels can be tilted to minimize shading and prioritize rice growth bottom (top panels) or may be positioned to prioritize electricity production (bottom panels).

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Credit: Y. Okada et al., doi 10.1117/1.JPE.15.032704




As countries race to expand renewable energy infrastructure, balancing clean electricity production with land use for food remains a pressing challenge—especially in Japan, where mountainous terrain limits space. A recent study led by researchers from the University of Tokyo explores a promising solution: integrating solar panels with traditional rice farming in a practice known as agrivoltaics.

As reported in the Journal of Photonics for Energy, the research team installed a dual-axis sun-tracking photovoltaic (PV) system over a rice paddy in Miyada-mura, Nagano Prefecture. Positioned three meters above the ground, the solar panels generated electricity while allowing rice cultivation to continue underneath. The system was designed to adjust panel angles daily and seasonally, prioritizing rice growth during the planting season and maximizing energy production during the off-season.

Over two growing seasons, the agrivoltaic system achieved rice yields of 75 percent and 85 percent compared to nearby traditional paddies. While slightly lower in the first year, yield improved significantly in the second year after fine-tuning the amount of sunlight reaching the crops. Importantly, the rice also met Japan’s highest grain quality standards.

At the same time, the PV panels generated nearly 44,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity annually—an efficiency (961.4 kWh/kW) that compares favorably with similar systems in Europe. Over a projected 20-year lifespan, and without government subsidies, the estimated cost of electricity production was about 27 yen per kilowatt-hour—roughly equivalent to Japan’s household electricity rate at the time.

The study underscores the tradeoffs involved in balancing crop productivity with solar energy output. Researchers showed that careful management of shading, including adjusting the panels’ angles throughout the day and season, can help achieve both goals. They also highlight future directions such as using AI to optimize sunlight sharing in real time and experimenting with high-efficiency or semi-transparent solar panels to further reduce crop shading.

With Japan aiming to dramatically increase its solar capacity by 2030, the researchers hope their results will inform broader adoption of agrivoltaics—particularly in rural areas where preserving food production is essential. By combining energy and agriculture, they argue, it may be possible to support both sustainability and economic resilience on the same piece of land.

See the original Gold Open Access article by Y. Okada et al., “Case study of rice farming in Japan under agriphotovoltaic system,” J. Photon. Energy 15(3), 032704 (2025), doi: 10.1117/1.JPE.15.032704.