Tuesday, September 16, 2025

 

When smoke signals danger: How Australian lizards evolved to escape fire




Macquarie University

Sleepy Lizard - Northern Territory 

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Credit Matt Clancy

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Credit: Matt Clancy




Australian researchers have discovered that sleepy lizards (Tiliqua rugosus) can recognise the smell of smoke as a sign of approaching fire and attempt to escape, but they do not respond to the sound of fire.

The study, published this month in Biology Letters, provides the first empirical test of an amusing anecdote: when zookeepers at a US zoo burnt their lunch, they noticed they were not alone in smelling the acrid smoke. Captive sleepy lizards became agitated by the smell wafting through the building, while other reptiles remained calm. Despite being mostly captive-bred, the lizards tongue-flicked, paced, and tried to escape—behaviour researchers now show appears innate, not learned.

“Many animals from fire-prone regions, such as Australia, appear to have this miraculous ability to survive their homes being burnt. Our study demonstrates that some lizards innately recognise smoke as a cue of approaching fire and respond by running away,” said lead author Dr Chris Jolly of Macquarie University.

Why it matters

With wildfires intensifying under climate change, understanding how animals survive fires is critical. While people often assume wildlife caught in fires have little chance of survival, research is revealing that many species have evolved strategies to detect and escape fire.

This study suggests that fire-prone environments have shaped the sensory systems and behaviours of animals such as sleepy lizards, enabling them to respond to smoke as an early-warning signal.

“As fires become more frequent, intense and unpredictable—including in habitats that rarely burned in the past, like rainforests—we need to know which species can respond to fire cues, and which are most vulnerable,” Dr Jolly said.

Study details

  • Researchers exposed sleepy lizards to smoke and to the crackling sound of fire, paired with appropriate controls.
  • Lizards fled from smoke but not from sound, showing their response is tuned to olfactory cues.
  • The findings support the idea that species from fire-prone regions evolved behavioural adaptations to survive wildfire.

Broader impact

The work highlights the urgent need to understand animal survival strategies in a rapidly changing climate. Fires are becoming more destructive worldwide, and biodiversity loss is accelerating as species face novel fire regimes.

Authors: Dr. Chris Jolly (Macquarie University and Charles Darwin University), Prof. Dale Nimmo (Charles Sturt University), Dr. Alex Carthey (Macquarie University), Ms. Emma van de Pas (Van Hall Larenstein University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands), and Prof. Martin Whiting (Macquarie University).
Journal: Biology Letters, August 2025.

 

Study reveals how different messages motivate people to take conservation actions




Cornell University





ITHACA, NY—A new study published today in the journal Biological Conservation finds that different communication approaches can influence whether people take action to prevent birds from colliding with windows, a leading cause of bird mortality that kills over 1 billion birds annually in the United States and Canada.

Researchers from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology tested different message framing approaches among bird enthusiasts and the general public to understand what motivates people to make their windows safer for birds. “If we want people to take action to reduce bird and window collisions, we really have to understand how to communicate with them,” said Tina Phillips, co-author and assistant director for the Center for the Engagement in Science and Nature at the Cornell Lab.

The team surveyed nearly 5,000 people across the United States and Canada, to better understand what types of messaging motivates people to prevent bird collisions at their home. Researchers sent detailed surveys to participants to understand how likely they were to take an action after receiving different types of messaging. The content of the messages ranged from just stating the problem to adding context around efficacy, emotion, morality, and normative behavior.

The study found that emphasizing the effectiveness of collision prevention measures, such as placing tape, decals, or film in a 2” x 2” pattern on windows, motivated bird enthusiasts to treat their windows, while emotional appeals were most persuasive for the general public.

 “People who cared about birds responded best to messaging that emphasized the efficacy of treating their windows…they want to know if their action is actually going to make a difference,” Shelby Carlson, lead author and research associate at the Cornell Lab. 

The general public were more likely to install window treatments designed to prevent collisions, when they were shown images and text that appealed to their emotions, such as a bird that was a victim to a collision or language that heightened people's emotions, the researchers found. 

The researchers also found that prior experience with a collision event at their home, educational attainment, and mutualist views of wildlife were positively associated with respondents’ intention to adopt bird-safe windows. 

Messaging that focused on a personal obligation to protect birds from collisions (i.e., moral messaging) or perceived social influence from adapting bird-safe windows (i.e., normative messaging) did not increase the respondent’s intent to treat their windows. Researchers also noted that older adults and respondents that identified as male were less likely to treat their windows.

“What makes this study unique,” said Phillips, “is that we're using social science research and insights to try to understand how to effectively change human behavior to mitigate this problem. By understanding the kinds of messages that people relate to, we can better achieve our goals of trying to encourage people to take action on behalf of birds.” 

“If we want to reduce bird and window collisions, we ultimately have to change human behavior, and we can start to do that by tailoring our messaging for specific audiences,” said Carlson. 

####

Carlson, S. C., and T. B. Phillips. (2025). Mitigating Collision-Caused Bird Mortality Through Message Framing: Insights from residents’ intentions for bird-safe windows. Biological Conservation. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111438

This research was supported by the Cornell Center for Social Sciences Grant.

Learn more about bird collisions at stopbirdcollisions.org

About the Cornell Lab of Ornithology
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology is a nonprofit, member-supported organization dedicated to the understanding and protection of birds, wildlife, and our shared planet through research, education, participatory science, and conservation. The mission of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology is to interpret and conserve the earth’s biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused on birds. birds.cornell.edu

Media Contact:
Kathi Borgmann, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, (607) 254-2137, klb274@cornell.edu

A new way to produce ammonia more efficiently



By boosting ammonia production, the price of electricity from hydrogen could drop




Princeton University





Ammonia is used in fertilizer and many industrial processes. It is also seen as a promising way to store and transport energy, as it is safer and easier to handle ammonia than hydrogen gas. Using plasma, the fourth state of matter, scientists have created a material that boosts ammonia production. 

“If one needs industrial hydrogen someplace else than where it is made, it will be easier and safer to transport hydrogen as ammonia and store it until it is needed. Ideally then one would decompose the ammonia where the hydrogen is needed, on demand,” said Emily Carter, senior strategic advisor and associate laboratory director for Applied Materials and Sustainability Sciences (AMSS) directorate at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). “So, one needs methods to synthesize and decompose ammonia from and to hydrogen efficiently and cheaply, and we are working on both at PPPL in the electromanufacturing science division of AMSS.”

The research was done by a multidisciplinary team from various institutions, including DOE’s PPPL and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Princeton University, Rutgers University and Rowan University. A scientific article about the work was recently published in ACS Energy Letters. 

“The current method for making ammonia is expensive,” said Zhiyuan Zhang, a doctoral candidate at Rutgers University-Newark and the lead author of the research. “You need a big factory to make the ammonia using processes that require extreme temperatures and pressures.” 

Storing and transporting hydrogen as ammonia
Ammonia can be used as a carrier for hydrogen, meaning it can store and transport the chemical before it is converted into hydrogen for energy. Hydrogen requires large manufacturing plants and storage facilities. This new method could create ammonia in far smaller facilities located closer to where it is needed — potentially even on-site. If the ammonia does have to be transported long distances, that, too, would be less expensive. 

“Hydrogen has a very low energy density, and moving hydrogen around is extremely difficult. Ammonia has a higher energy density — twice compared to compressed hydrogen — and can be transported over long distances more easily than hydrogen,” said Yiguang Ju, a principal investigator, managing principal research physicist and head of electromanufacturing science at PPPL, and a Princeton University professor. “This could open up a transformative change in energy storage and transportation.” 

PPPL: A leader in low-temperature plasma simulations

Mark Martirez, the deputy advisor for sustainability science at AMSS and a research physicist, is now creating simulations of some of the experiments detailed in the new paper so the team can fully understand what’s happening during the chemical reaction at an atomic level. “Simulations are essential to fully understanding the mechanism that the chemical species undergoes to produce ammonia from water and nitrogen,” Martirez said. “They could only guess the positions of the different atoms based on an image of the experiment.” Martirez brings a rare understanding of the quantum chemistry involved in the process, which is broadly known as plasma catalysis and is a relatively new field. 

Instead of using the high heat and pressure required for thermal catalysis — the old approach for making ammonia from hydrogen and nitrogen — the new method uses electricity, water, nitrogen and low-temperature plasma. In low-temperature plasma, the uncharged molecules are relatively cool or at room temperature. However, the electrons are very hot. The electrons have enough energy to change the surface of catalysts, knocking out certain atoms, and implanting nitrogen or hydrogen atoms in their outermost layers. 

A catalyst is an ingredient that speeds up chemical reactions without changing in the process. The catalyst used in the experiments has a unique structure, which enables more energy-efficient chemical transformations. Scientists call this structure a heterogeneous interfacial complexion (HIC).

“The catalysts, tungsten oxide and tungsten oxynitride, are not new. What is new is the structure and the plasma-enabled method to fabricate it in a controllable and scalable way,” said Huixin He, a Rutgers University professor who was one of the principal investigators of the research. 

Structure of the catalyst is key to its efficiency 

The special design of HIC helps create highly active hydrogen atoms right where they’re needed to form tiny voids, known as nitrogen vacancies, that are a perfect fit for a nitrogen molecule. These features work together: The hydrogen atoms convert the nitrogen into ammonia, and the vacant spots attract more nitrogen from the air to keep the process going. This method significantly increases the amount of ammonia produced compared to older methods. It also minimizes unwanted side reactions, like the creation of hydrogen gas instead of ammonia.

“The process of producing this catalyst was reduced from approximately two days to 15 minutes,” Zhang said. The process also outperformed other similar methods in terms of the amount of ammonia generated. The researchers will continue to study ways to improve ammonia production with the HIC catalyst.

Also involved in the research were: PPPL’s Sophia Kurdziel; Christopher Kondratowicz, Yijie XuElizabeth Desmet and Eddie Tang from Princeton University; Jacob Smith and Miaofang Chi from Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Pavel Kucheryavy, Junjie Ouyang and Michael Adeleke from Rutgers University; and Aditya Dilip Lele from Rowan University. 

Funding for the research was provided by the National Science Foundation under awards 2428523 and ECCS-2025064, the Rutgers Research Council Awards, DOE under grants DEAC0209CH11466 and DOE FES DE-SC0025371, the Analytical Instrumentation Facility at North Carolina State University, the state of North Carolina and PPPL’s Strategic Partnership Projects program under prime contract number DE-AC02-09CH11466.

PPPL is mastering the art of using plasma — the fourth state of matter — to solve some of the world’s toughest science and technology challenges. Nestled on Princeton University’s Forrestal Campus in Plainsboro, New Jersey, our research ignites innovation in a range of applications including fusion energy, nanoscale fabrication, quantum materials and devices, and sustainability science. The University manages the Laboratory for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, which is the nation’s single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences. Feel the heat at https://energy.gov/science and https://www.pppl.gov.  

 

Shared genetic mechanisms underpin social life in bees and humans


Some genes that influence sociability in honey bees have also been linked to social behavior in humans




PLOS

Shared genetic mechanisms underpin social life in bees and humans 

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bCoded bee on flower

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Credit: Dr. Zachary Huang (CC-BY 4.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)





Several genetic variants associated with social behavior in honey bees are located within genes that have previously been linked to social behavior in humans, Ian Traniello at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA, and colleagues report on September 16th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology. The results hint at ancient roots to social behavior that have been conserved across species.

In social species, there is individual variation in sociability — some individuals are highly social and well-connected within their society, whereas others prefer less social interaction. This variation can be driven by many factors, including mood, social status, previous experience, and genetics. However, the genetic and molecular mechanisms that influence sociability are poorly understood.

Researchers used a combination of genome sequencing, brain gene expression analysis, and behavioral observations to investigate the genetic mechanisms underpinning variation in social behavior in western honey bees (Apis mellifera). They collected adult honeybees from three colonies and attached tiny barcodes to their bodies, enabling automated tracking of their social behaviors within glass-walled observation hives. Whole-genome sequencing of 357 bees revealed 18 genetic variants associated with the tendency to share nutritious liquid with nestmates — a social behavior known as ‘trophallaxis’. Several of those variants were located within two genes, neuroligin-2 and nmdar2, which share a similar sequence to genes that have previously been linked to autism in humans. Transcriptome sequencing also revealed over 900 genes that were more highly expressed in the brain the more frequently a bee interacted with her nestmates.

The results highlight similarities in the genetic mechanisms underpinning social behavior in humans and bees — species that diverged over 600 million years ago. Sociability is a complex characteristic, controlled by many genes, but these shared genomic features suggest there are ancient molecular building blocks of social life that have been conserved through millions of years of evolution, even if humans and bees evolved social life independently, the authors say.

The authors add, “It is a central feature of all societies that group members often engage with one another, but vary in their tendency to do so. Combining automated monitoring of social interactions, DNA sequencing, and brain transcriptomics in honey bee colonies, we identified evolutionarily conserved molecular roots of sociability shared across phylogenetically distinct species, including humans.”

Ian Traniello adds, “Social insects are ideal for whole-colony behavioral tracking, and the technology is such that we can monitor what each bee is doing throughout the majority of her life.
In this study, we sought to push things a step forward, thinking, ‘We can follow all of these animals, we know who they're socially engaging via food-sharing interactions, we know how they move and where they spend their time. The honey bee molecular toolkit is vast and growing, and we can also explore the structure of the genome or gene expression patterns within the brain as they relate to variation in social interactivity.’ We asked: ‘How can we bring these technologies together, to ask general questions about the molecular underpinnings of social organization and test the hypothesis that some of these features might be conserved across species?’ And that's exactly what we did.”


In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biologyhttps://plos.io/45UeLwl

Citation: Traniello IM, Avalos A, Gachomba MJM, Gernat T, Chen Z, Cash-Ahmed AC, et al. (2025) Genetic variation influences food-sharing sociability in honey bees. PLoS Biol 23(9): e3003367. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003367

Author countries: United States, United Kingdom

Funding: This work was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under ERC-2017-StG Grant Agreement 757583 (Brain2Bee; to JLC and GER) and an Agriculture Research Service Award (8042-21000-291-047S, to GER). IMT is presently supported by the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics as a Lewis-Sigler Scholar. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.


Tracked honey bees on frame

Credit

Dr. Tim Gernat (CC-BY 4.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

‘Fuck ICE and Free Palestine’: Hannah Einbinder’s Emmy Moment

“I feel like it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the State of Israel,” said the award-winning actress.


Hannah Einbinder accepts the Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series award for “Hacks” during the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards at the Peacock Theater on September 14, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
(Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Jon Queally
Sep 15, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

Hanna Einbinder took home the Emmy for best supporting actress in a comedy on Sunday night. She ended her acceptance speech with a deeply serious message, denouncing President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown across the US and calling for the liberation of the Palestinian people, both in the Occupied West Bank and those suffering daily under Israel’s genocidal attack in Gaza.

Einbinder, who plays the character of Ava Daniels in the hit shows Hacks, accepted the award in typical fashion, but before l
eaving the microphone, “I just want to say: Go Birds, fuck ICE, and free Palestine.”

The birds refer to the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles, and ICE is the acronym for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Since Trump took office in January, ICE has been conducting increasing numbers of high-profile raids and community sweeps in communities across the country.



Einbinder, who is Jewish and wore a red Artists4Ceasefire button on her dress throughout the glitzy award show, was asked about her comments regarding Palestine backstage.

“I thought it was important to talk about Palestine,” Einbinder explained, “because it’s an issue that’s very dear to my heart. I have friends in Gaza who are working as frontline workers, as doctors, right now in the north of Gaza, to provide care for pregnant women and for school children to create schools in the refugee camps. And it’s an issue that’s really close to my heart for many reasons.”


“I feel like it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the State of Israel,” she added, “because our religion and our culture are such an important and long-standing institution that is really separate to this sort of ethno-nationalist state.”


This is not the first time Einbinder has spoken out on behalf of Gaza and Palestinian rights. Earlier this year, accepting an award from the Human Rights Campaign, she said, “As a queer person, as a Jewish person, and as an American, I am horrified by the Israeli government’s massacre of well over 65,000 Palestinians in Gaza.”



“I am ashamed and infuriated,” she continued, “that this mass murder is funded by our American tax dollars. It should not be controversial to say that we should all be against murdering civilians. I know that calling for a ceasefire and the release of all hostages begs for the safety, security, and preservation of life of both Palestinians and Israelis.”

“I know that my call for a liberated Palestine,” Einbinder said, comes from a desire for mutual safety of all people living in the region and I know that my condemnation of Israel’s bombardment of Gaza is not despite what I learned in Hebrew school, but because of it.”

















16 Nations Warn Israel Against Attacking Gaza-Bound Global Sumud Flotilla

The countries’ foreign ministers urged Israel to “refrain from any unlawful or violent act against the flotilla” and “to respect international law.”


An activist waves a Palestinian flag from the bow of a Freedom Flotilla Coalition 
vessel en route to Gaza.
(Photo: Tan Safi/Freedom Flotilla Coalition)



Brett Wilkins
Sep 16, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

The foreign ministers of 16 nations on Tuesday implored Israel to not attack the Global Sumud Flotilla, a fleet of around 40 boats attempting to deliver desperately needed humanitarian aid to the embattled Gaza Strip, where Palestinians are suffering 22 months of US-backed genocidal war and forced famine.

“The Global Sumud Flotilla has informed about its objective of delivering humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip and raising awareness about the urgent humanitarian needs of the Palestinian people and the need to stop the war in Gaza,” the foreign ministers of Bangladesh, Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Ireland, Libya, Malaysia, Maldives, Mexico, Pakistan, Qatar, Oman, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, and Türkiye said in a joint statement.
Many of those nations are supporting South Africa’s genocide case against Israel currently before the International Court of Justice.

“We therefore call on everyone to refrain from any unlawful or violent act against the flotilla” and “to respect international law and international humanitarian law,” the ministers continued. “We recall that any violation of international law and human rights of the participants in the flotilla, including attacks against the vessels in international waters or illegal detention, will lead to accountability.”

Hundreds of activists from dozens of nations participating in the Global Sumud Flotilla—“sumud” means perseverance in Arabic—have set sail toward Gaza from ports around the world since August. More than two dozen vessels arrived in Sicily on Tuesday after departing the Tunisian port of Bizerte following an 11-day delay caused in part by multiple drone attacks on flotilla boats.



Israel—which has attacked past flotillas, including in a 2010 raid that killed nine volunteers aboard the MV Mavi Marmara, among them Turkish-American teenager Furkan DoÄŸan—has not claimed responsibility for the drone attacks.

“Pulling off the largest grassroots maritime mission to break Israel’s siege has posed many challenges, but through it all we remained determined, steadfast, and united,” Global Sumud Flotilla said Tuesday on Instagram.

Prominent flotilla participants include Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, American actress Susan Sarandon, Irish actor Liam Cunningham, leftist Portuguese parliamentarian Mariana Mortágua, former Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, and Mandla Mandela, the grandson of former South African President Nelson Mandela.

“We’re carrying a lot of humanitarian aid, but we’re also carrying a message of support from the peoples of the world that we are with the Palestinian people,” flotilla spokesperson Bruno Gilga told Middle East Eye.

Earlier this year, Freedom Flotilla Coalition vessels Conscience, Madleen, and Handala each separately tried to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza but were thwarted by Israeli forces in international waters, an apparent violation of maritime law. Flotilla activists were beaten, kidnapped, jailed, interrogated, and deported by Israel.

Global Sumud Flotilla’s attempt to break Israel’s siege comes as Israeli forces push deeper into Gaza City as they execute Operation Gideon’s Chariots 2, a campaign to conquer, occupy, and ethnically cleanse the strip. At least 64,964 Palestinians—mostly civilian men, women, and children—have been killed by Israeli forces over the past 711 days, although experts say the actual toll is likely far higher.

On Tuesday, a commission of independent United Nations experts became the latest in a growing number of individuals and groups to accuse Israel of committing genocide in Gaza.