Wednesday, August 06, 2025

 

There’s something fishy going on with great white sharks that scientists can’t explain



Florida Museum of Natural History
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Differences between the nuclear and mitochondrial DNA of white sharks, once thought to be caused by their migration patterns, is likely caused by another — as of yet unknown — factor.

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Credit: Photo by Greg Skomal





Key points

  • White sharks exhibit stark differences between the DNA in their nuclei and the DNA in their mitochondria. Until now, scientists have pointed to the migration patterns of great whites to explain these differences.

  • Scientists tested this theory in a new study by analyzing genetic differences between global white shark populations. In doing so, they discovered that great whites were restricted to a single population in the Indo-Pacific Ocean at the end of the last ice age 10,000 years ago and have since expanded to their current global distribution.

  • The results also invalidate the migration theory, but an alternative explanation remains elusive.

White sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) almost went bottom-up during the last ice age, when sea levels were much lower than they are today and sharks had to get by with less space. The most recent cold snap ended about 10,000 years ago, and the planet has been gradually warming ever since. As temperatures increased, glaciers melted, and sea levels rose, which was good news for great whites.

Results of a study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences show that white sharks had been reduced to a single, well-mixed population somewhere in the southern Indo-Pacific Ocean. White sharks began genetically diverging about 7,000 years ago, suggesting that they had broken up into two or more isolated populations by this time.

This is new information but not particularly surprising. There are never many white sharks around even at the best of times, as befits their status at the top of the tapered food chain, where a lack of elbow room limits their numbers. Today, there are three genetically distinct white shark populations: one in the southern hemisphere around Australia and South Africa, one in the northern Atlantic and another in the northern Pacific. Though widespread, the number of white sharks still remains low.

“There are probably about 20,000 individuals globally,” said study co-author Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum of Natural History. “There are more fruit flies in any given city than there are great white sharks in the entire world.”

Organisms with small populations can be pushed dangerously close to the edge of extinction when times are tough. Mile-high glaciers extended from the poles and locked away so much water that by 25,000 years ago, sea levels had plunged by about 40 meters (131 feet), eliminating habitat and restricting great whites to an oceanic corral.

But something happened to great whites during their big comeback that remains as much of a mystery now as it was when it was first discovered more than 20 years ago. The primary motivation for this study was to lay out a definitive explanation, but despite using one of the largest genetic datasets on white sharks ever compiled, things did not go quite according to plan.

“The honest scientific answer is we have no idea,” Naylor said.

Female great white sharks wander off for years to feed but come back home to breed

Scientists first got a whiff of something strange in 2001, when a research team published a paper that opened with the line, “… information about … great white sharks has been difficult to acquire, not least because of the rarity and huge size of this fish.”

The authors of that study compared genetic samples taken from dozens of sharks in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. They found that though the DNA produced and stored in the nuclei of their cells were mostly the same between individuals, the mitochondrial DNA of sharks from South Africa were distinctly different from those in Australia and New Zealand.

The seemingly obvious explanation was that great whites tend to stick together and rarely make forays into neighboring groups. Over time, unique genetic mutations would have accumulated in each group, which, if it went on long enough, would result in the formation of new species.

This would explain the observed differences in their mitochondrial DNA but not why the nuclear DNA was virtually identical among all three populations. To account for that, the authors suggested that male sharks traveled vast distances throughout the year, but females either never traveled far, or if they did, they most often came back to the same place during the breeding season, a type of migration pattern called philopatry.

This idea was based on the fact that nuclear and mitochondrial DNA are not inherited in equal proportion in plants and animals. The DNA inside nuclei is passed down by both parents to their offspring, but only one — most often the female — contributes mitochondria to the next generation. This is a holdover from the days when mitochondria were free-living bacteria, before they were unceremoniously engulfed and repurposed by the ancestor of eukaryotes.  

This was a good guess and had the added benefit of later turning out to be mostly accurate. Male and female great whites do travel large distances in search of food throughout the year, and females consistently make the return journey before it’s time to mate.

Thus, the nuclear DNA of great whites should have less variation, because itinerant males go around mixing things up, while the mitochondrial DNA in different populations should be distinct because philopatric females ensure all the unique differences stay in one place. This has remained the favored explanation for the last two decades, one that seemed to fit like a well-worn glove. Except, no one ever got around to actually putting it on to test its size. This is primarily because the data needed to do so was hard to get for the same reasons mentioned in the touchstone study: There aren’t many great white sharks, and when researchers do manage to find one, taking a DNA sample without losing any appendages in the process can be tricky business.

Shark migration cannot explain nuclear and mitochondrial discordance, so what can?

Naylor and his colleagues began collecting the necessary data back in 2012. “I wanted to get a white shark nuclear genome established to explore its molecular properties,” he said. “White sharks have some very peculiar attributes, and we had about 40 or 50 samples that I thought we could use to design probes to look at their population structure.”

Over the next few years, they also sequenced DNA from about 150 white shark mitochondrial genomes, which are smaller and less expensive to assemble than their nuclear counterparts. The samples came from all over the world, including the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans.

When they compared the two types of DNA, they found the same pattern as the one discovered in 2001. At the population level, white sharks in the North Atlantic rarely mixed with those from the South Atlantic. The same was true of sharks in the Pacific and Indian oceans. At a molecular level, the nuclear DNA among all white sharks remained fairly consistent, while the mitochondrial DNA showed a surprising amount of variation.

The researchers were aware of the philopatric theory and ran a few tests to see if it held up, first by looking specifically at the nuclear DNA. If the act of returning to the same place to mate really were the cause of the strange mitochondrial patterns, some small signal of that should also show up in the nuclear DNA, of which females contribute half to their offspring.

“But that wasn’t reflected in the nuclear data at all,” Naylor said.

Next, they concocted a sophisticated test for the mitochondrial genomes. To do this, they first had to reconstruct the recent evolutionary history of white sharks, which is how they discovered the single southern population they’d been reduced to during the last ice age.

“They were really few and far between when sea levels were lowest. Then the population increased and moved northward as the ice melted. We suspect they remained in those northern waters because they found a reliable food source,” Naylor said. Specifically, they encountered seals, which are a dietary staple among white sharks and one of the main reasons why they have such a strong fidelity to specific locations.

“These white sharks come along, get a nice blubbery sausage. They fatten up, they breed, and then they move off around the ocean.”

Knowing when the sharks split up was key, as each group would have begun genetically diverging from each other at this time. All the researchers had to do was determine whether the 10,000 years between now and the last ice age would have been enough time for the mitochondrial DNA to have accumulated the number of differences observed in the data if philopatry was the primary culprit.

They ran a simulation to find the answer, which came back negative. Philopatry is undoubtedly a behavioral pattern among great whites, but it was not responsible for the large mitochondrial schism.

So Naylor and his colleagues went back to the drawing board to figure out what sort of evolutionary force could account for the differences.

“I came up with the idea that sex ratios might be different — that just a few females were contributing to the populations from one generation to the next,” Naylor said. This type of reproductive skew can be observed in a variety of organisms, including meerkats, cichlid fish and many types of social insects.

But yet another test showed that reproductive skew did not apply to white sharks.

There is a third, albeit less likely, option the team members said they can’t rule out at this stage, namely that natural selection is responsible for the differences. The reason why this is far-fetched has to do with the relative strength of evolutionary forces. Natural selection — the idea that the organisms best suited to leave behind offspring will, in fact, generally be the ones that have the most offspring — is always active, but it has the strongest effect in large populations. Smaller populations, in contrast, are more susceptible to something called genetic drift, in which random traits — even harmful ones — have a much higher chance of being passed down to the next generation.

Florida panthers, for example, are highly endangered, with only a few hundred individuals left in the wild. Most of them have a kink at the end of their tail, likely inherited from a single ancestor. In a large population, subject primarily to natural selection, this trait would have either remained uncommon or disappeared entirely over time. But in a small population, a single cat with a kinked tail can change the world purely by chance through the auspices of genetic drift.

By way of comparison, gravity exerts a force at all scales of matter and energy, but it is by far the weakest of the four fundamental physical forces. At the scale of planets and stars, gravity can hold solar systems and galaxies together, but it has very little influence on the shape or interactions of atoms, which are governed by the three stronger but more localized forces, such as electromagnetism.

According to the study’s results, genetic drift cannot explain the differences between mitochondria in great whites. Because it is a completely random process, it cannot selectively target one type of DNA and spare another. If it were the culprit, similar changes would also be evident in the nuclear DNA.

This leaves natural selection as the only other possibility, which seems unlikely because of the small population sizes among white sharks. If it is the causative agent, Naylor said, the selective force “would have to be brutally lethal.”

If you collect enough mass in a concentrated space, say on the order of a black hole, the otherwise benign force of gravity becomes powerful enough to devour light.

If natural selection is at play in this case, it would manifest itself in a similarly powerful way. Any deviation from the mitochondrial DNA sequence most common in a given population would likely be fatal, thus ensuring it was not passed on to the next generation.

But this is far from certain, and Naylor has his doubts about the validity of such a conclusion. For now, scientists are left with an open-ended question that can only be resolved with further study.

Additional co-authors of the study are: Romuald Laso-Jadart, Elise Gaya, Pierre Lesturgie and Stefano Mona of the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle; Shannon L. Corrigan, Lei Yang and Adrian Lee of the Florida Museum of Natural History; Olivier Fedrigo of the The Rockefeller University; Christopher Lowe and Kady Lyons of California State University Long Beach; Greg Skomal of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth; Geremy Cliff of the University of KwaZulu-Natal; Mauricio Hoyos Padilla of Pelagios-Kakunjá Marine Conservation; Charlie Huveneers of Flinders University; Keiichi Sato of the Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium; and James Glancy of the British Museum of Natural History.

 

Unlocking the value of intangible assets abroad requires strong board oversight, new study finds



Strategic Management Society






As companies increasingly compete on the basis of technology, brand, and knowledge, a new study reveals that the effectiveness of corporate boards plays a critical role in maximizing the value of intangible assets—especially during international expansion through acquisitions.

In a study recently published in the Global Strategy Journal, researchers Xavier Martin (Tilburg University) and Tao Han (emlyon business school) analyzed 675 cross-border acquisitions by U.S. public firms to understand how intangible assets contribute to firm value abroad—and under what conditions.

Their findings are clear: while firms with high R&D and advertising intensity generally enjoy stronger market reactions to foreign acquisitions, those benefits are significantly enhanced when the company’s board is structured for effective governance.

"Intangible assets like proprietary technologies or brands are central to global competitiveness," said Professor Martin. "But they travel poorly across borders. Without the right oversight and strategic insight at the board level, firms risk leaving substantial value on the table."

The research assessed market returns using event-study methodology and focused on two key types of intangibles—technology (measured by R&D intensity) and marketing (measured by advertising intensity). Crucially, the study matched each acquisition with four critical dimensions of board effectiveness:

  • Independence: Boards with a higher proportion of independent (non-executive) directors and a clear separation of CEO and board chair roles
  • Expertise: Directors with international managerial experience
  • Bandwidth: Fewer overextended board members (i.e., those serving on multiple boards)
  • Motivation: Higher director share ownership aligning board interests with shareholder value

The study found that companies with boards scoring highly on these dimensions achieved greater abnormal stock returns following acquisition announcements, especially when deploying technology-intensive strategies abroad. The results suggest that effective governance structures help companies navigate the challenges of internationalizing intangibles—including information gaps, unfamiliar markets, and strategic disclosure decisions.

These insights are timely given the escalating global race for innovation leadership, particularly in fast-moving sectors like artificial intelligence. As investment in intangibles grows, so does the need for governance models that can translate such assets into sustained competitive advantage.

"Our study underscores that it’s not enough for firms to invest in R&D or build strong brands," said Professor Han. "They must also empower their boards to provide the oversight, expertise, and incentive alignment needed to realize that value in complex global markets."

The findings offer actionable takeaways for corporate leaders, investors, and policymakers seeking to strengthen international performance. As intangible assets become ever more central to value creation, companies must view board governance as a strategic asset in its own right.

To read the full context of the study and its methods, access the full paper available in the Global Strategy Journal.

About the Strategic Management Society

The Strategic Management Society (SMS) is the leading global member organization fostering and supporting rigorous and practice-engaged strategic management research. SMS enjoys the support of 3,000 members, representing more than 1,100 institutions and companies in more than 70 countries. SMS publishes three leading academic journals in partnership with Wiley: Strategic Management JournalStrategic Entrepreneurship Journal, and Global Strategy Journal. These journals publish top-quality work applicable to researchers and practitioners with complementary access for all SMS Members. The SMS Explorer offers the latest insights and takeaways from the SMS Journals for business practitioners, consultants, and academics.

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Tuesday, August 05, 2025

 

‘Solastalgia’ might help explain effects of climate change on mental health


It’s caused by environmental change and is linked to depression, anxiety, and PTSD


BMJ Group




Solastalgia’ might help explain the negative effects of climate change on mental health, suggests a review of the available research, published in the open access journal BMJ Mental Health.

Solastalgia is caused by changes to the home or surrounding environment and is associated with depression, anxiety, and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the findings show.

A blend of the words ‘solace’ and ‘nostalgia’, the term solastalgia was first coined in 2003 to refer to the lack of solace and feelings of pain or sickness caused by changes in a person’s immediate or surrounding environment.

Several scales have since been developed and validated to measure solastalgia, but the extent to which it might contribute to the effects of climate change on mental health aren’t known.

To explore this further, the researchers scoured research databases for studies on solastalgia and mental health published between 2003 and 2024. Out of an initial haul of 80, 19 were eligible for inclusion in the review: 5 quantitative studies in the core search; 14 qualitative studies in the extended search.

The studies were carried out in Australia, Germany, Peru and the USA, and involved a total of 5000+ participants.

The study findings of the core search consistently showed positive associations between solastalgia and mental health problems, including depression, anxiety, PTSD and somatisation—physical symptoms caused or worsened by psychological distress. 

The extended search backed up these findings, with qualitative studies suggesting that solastalgia is a very useful concept to understand the emotional responses of people affected by environmental change, including pessimism and lowered resilience.

“These findings are in line with the literature on positive links between environmental distress more generally and mental ill health. Notably, solastalgia is one of several eco-emotions, such as eco-anxiety, eco-grief, or eco-shame/-guilt, which might be important in explaining mental health problems arising from ecological crises,” point out the researchers. 

The researchers note that the strength of the observed associations wasn’t as strong for responses to natural disasters as it was for those associated with ongoing environmental destruction.

“This suggests that solastalgia might either be more intense or salient in scenarios of ongoing environmental destruction as opposed to one-time events, or in scenarios which are clearly human-made and not attributable to any other causes (eg, the weather instead of climate change). This notion fits in well with long-standing evidence in trauma research, according to which interpersonal traumas are most likely to cause PTSD,” they explain.

One plausible explanation for the link between solastalgia and mental health problems lies in the theory of learned helplessness, which suggests that depressive symptoms stem from a perceived loss of control and resulting powerlessness,” they suggest. 

“Indeed, studies have shown that solastalgia often involves feelings of helplessness and resignation, as environmental changes typically lie beyond the affected individual’s control.” 

The researchers acknowledge that they were only able to draw on a limited number of published studies on solastalgia, added to which all the included studies were observational, making it impossible to establish cause.

Nevertheless, they conclude: “Solastalgia can be seen as a valuable concept for assessing the mental health risks among populations exposed to environmental change. While solastalgia is a rational response to environmental change, it appears correlated with worse mental health.”

Further research is needed to tease out exactly how it might affect mental health, say the researchers. “[This] is crucial to ensure that the world is adequately prepared to address the mental health consequences of the climate crisis,” they insist. 

 

Childhood verbal abuse shows similar impact to adult mental health as physical abuse



While often not immediately obvious, its effects may be no less damaging or protracted; Prevalence of verbal abuse has risen substantially while that of physical abuse has halved


BMJ Group






Experiencing childhood verbal abuse shows a similar impact to adult mental health as physical abuse, suggests a large intergenerational study, published in the open access journal BMJ Open.

While often not immediately obvious, the effects of verbal abuse may be no less damaging or protracted, the findings indicate. This large retrospective study of more than 20,000 participants examining birth cohorts from the 1950s onwards showed reductions in childhood physical abuse but increases in childhood verbal abuse.

Globally, an estimated 1 in 6 children endures physical abuse from family and caregivers. As well as the immediate physical trauma, physical abuse can exert lifelong effects on mental and physical health and wellbeing, note the researchers. 

This can manifest as higher levels of anxiety and depression, problematic alcohol and drug use, other ‘risky’ behaviours, violence towards others, and serious health issues, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes, they explain.

Like physical abuse, verbal abuse is a source of toxic stress, which may affect the neurobiological development of children. It is thought that around one in three children around the globe is subjected to it, they add.

But despite its high prevalence, policies and initiatives to prevent violence against children have tended to focus on physical abuse, often overlooking the potential impact of verbal abuse, they point out.

To better glean the long-term effects on adult mental health of childhood physical and verbal abuse, separately and combined, the researchers pooled the data from 7 relevant studies, involving 20,687 adults from England and Wales, and published between 2012 and 2024.

The studies had all involved questions on childhood physical and verbal abuse using the validated Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) tool, and the short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale to measure individual and combined components of adult mental wellbeing.

The survey asked participants how often over the past 2 weeks they had been: feeling optimistic about the future; feeling useful; feeling relaxed; dealing with problems well; thinking clearly; feeling close to other people; and able to make up their own mind about things.

Responses were scored from 1 (none of the time) to 5 (all of the time), and added up. Low mental wellbeing was considered as being more than one standard deviation below average scores (equivalent to around 1 in 6 of the sample).

Analysis of all the data showed that experience of either physical or verbal abuse as a child was independently associated with a similar significant increase (52% and 64%, respectively) in the likelihood of low mental wellbeing as an adult.

And experience of both abuse types more than doubled this likelihood compared with no exposure to either type. 

Even when physical abuse was part of a person’s childhood experiences, those who had also experienced verbal abuse as a child faced an additional risk, with the prevalence of low mental wellbeing rising from 16% with no abuse to 22.5% (physical abuse only), 24% (verbal abuse only) and 29% (both physical and verbal abuse). 

Individual components of mental wellbeing also showed similar associations, with the prevalence of never or rarely having felt close to people in the preceding fortnight rising from 8% for neither abuse type, to 10% for physical abuse alone, to just over 13.5% for verbal abuse alone, and to just over 18%  for both types, after adjusting for potentially influential factors. 

Those born in or after 2000 had higher likelihoods of all individual poor mental wellbeing components as well as overall low mental wellbeing. And men were more likely to report never or rarely feeling optimistic, useful, or close to other people, while women were more likely to report never or rarely feeling relaxed.

The prevalence of child physical abuse halved from around 20% among those born between 1950 and 1979 to 10% among those born in 2000 or later. But the reverse was true of the prevalence of verbal abuse, which rose from 12% among those born before 1950 to around 20% among those born in 2000 or later.

Reported physical and verbal abuse were both highest among those who lived in areas of greatest deprivation.

This is an observational study, and as such, can’t establish cause and effect. The researchers also acknowledge that the study relied on the retrospective recall and report of verbal and physical abuse, so inaccuracies may have crept in. 

Nor were they able to measure the severity of either type of abuse, the age at which it had occurred, or how long it had gone on for, all of which might be highly influential, they suggest.

But they nevertheless conclude: “Verbal abuse may not immediately manifest in ways that catch the attention of bystanders, clinicians, or others in supporting services with a responsibility for safeguarding children. However, as suggested here, some impacts may be no less harmful or protracted. 

“In an increasing range of countries, parents, caregivers, teachers, and others are in roles where legislation now prevents the physical abuse of children, regardless of whether the intent would previously have been considered abusive, punitive, or educational. This leaves a potential void which should be filled with instructional advice and support on appropriate parenting, discipline, and control of children.

“Without such support, and in an absence of public knowledge of the damages caused by child verbal abuse, measures to reduce the physical punishment of children risk simply swapping one type of harmful abuse for another, with equally long-term consequences.”


New term for systematic, deliberate attacks on healthcare as acts of war: ‘healthocide’



BMJ Group




The deliberate destruction of health services and systems as an act of war should be termed ‘healthocide’ and medical practitioners should call out and stand firm against this weaponisation of healthcare, insists a thought-provoking commentary published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health.

Silence implies complicity and approval, and undermines international humanitarian law as well as medical and professional ethics, say Dr Joelle Abi-Rached and colleagues of the American University of Beirut, Lebanon.

Although they refer to other conflicts in El Salvador, Ukraine, Sudan, and Syria, the authors focus primarily on the impact of armed conflict on healthcare in Lebanon and Gaza. 

Data from Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health show that between 8 October 2023 and 27 January 2025, 217 healthcare workers were killed by the Israel Defense Forces; 177 ambulances were damaged; 68 attacks on hospitals were recorded; and 237 attacks on emergency medical services took place, they say.

Israel’s military operations in Gaza since October 7, 2023 have resulted in at least 986 medical workers’ deaths: 165 doctors; 260 nurses; 184 health associates; 76 pharmacists; 300 management and support staff; and 85 civil defence workers, they add.  

“Both in Gaza and Lebanon, healthcare facilities have not only been directly targeted, but access to care has also been obstructed, including incidents where ambulances have been prevented from reaching the injured, or deliberately attacked,” note the authors. 

“What is becoming clear is that healthcare workers and facilities are no longer afforded the protection guaranteed by international humanitarian law,” they add.

Yet faced with such wanton destruction, doctors have done little, the authors suggest.

“These attacks have been met with astounding silence or, at best, terse and often belated statements from American, European, or Israeli medical associations, professional groups, and journals,” they point out.

“Are medical doctors ready to forsake the principle of medical neutrality, first forged amidst the carnage of 19th century wars and profoundly reshaped following the liberation of Nazi death camps in 1945? And if so, at what cost?” they ask.

“As difficult as this question is, it is one that physicians must address as they grapple with the normalisation of healthcare’s weaponisation in a world where warfare has changed dramatically, marked by the use of Artificial Intelligence for mass killing, the reliance on drones and killing robots, the deployment of internationally banned weapons, which carry devastating public health and ecological consequences, and, of course, the looming threat of nuclear weapons,” they write.

The ‘normalisation’ of healthcare attacks has increased alarmingly over the past few years, say the authors. “But what we are witnessing today is more pernicious than mere normalisation of such attacks, something that could be described as ‘healthocide’: the deliberate killing and/or destruction of health services and systems for ideological purposes.”

Normalising or excusing healthocide sets a dangerous precedent, the authors argue, as it emboldens future violators and erodes the principle of medical neutrality, which is essential for ensuring impartial and humane care during conflict.

“Medical neutrality is not ‘apolitical’; for us it means standing with humanity, social justice, and health-enabling policies, they add.

The actions medical practitioners must take include advocating for enforcement of justice and international humanitarian law; and documenting and exposing abuses to medical neutrality by both state and non-state actors, insist the authors.

“Rather than passively observe the erosion and normalisation of the weaponisation of health and healthcare, [we call] for critical reflection and decisive action, underscoring that silence implies complicity, approval, or the toleration of double-standards — all of which stand in clear opposition to international humanitarian law and medical deontology [ethics],” they conclude.

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