Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

Scientists link phosphorus spikes in ancient oceans to major mass extinctions



New study provides first direct geochemical evidence of long theorized but never before measured phenomena




University of Ottawa






An international collaboration involving researchers from the University of Western Australia, the University of Ottawa and several partner institutions specializing in geosciences has identified direct geological evidence linking sharp spikes in ocean phosphorus to environmental disruptions associated with two of the largest mass extinctions in the history of life on Earth. This new study provides the first direct geochemical evidence for a mechanism long theorized but never before measured.

Extinctions 400 million years in the making

The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction (roughly 445 million years ago) and the Late Devonian Mass Extinction (roughly 372 million years ago) wiped out approximately 85% and 80% of marine species, respectively. Scientists had long suspected that pulses of phosphorus flooding ancient oceans may have triggered episodes of anoxia, a dangerous depletion of oxygen in seawater, helping set off cascading biological collapses. Until now, that hypothesis lacked direct geochemical proof.

"Anticosti Island, located in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada, is one of the rare places in the world where Late Ordovician carbonate rocks are so well preserved and accessible," says AndrĂ© Desrochers, Adjunct Professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Ottawa. "The outcrops there gave us sedimentary archives of exceptional precision for reconstructing ocean conditions during the Ordovician."

New geochemical tool detects ancient ocean chemistry

The team applied an innovative technique called carbonate-associated phosphate (CAP), sampling rocks from seven globally distributed sites, including Anticosti Island in Quebec, to directly measure fluctuations in phosphorus levels in ancient seawater. The results reveal short but intense phosphorus spikes that occurred in global synchrony during critical intervals of both extinctions.

"What is striking is the global coherence of these signals," explains Professor Desrochers. "Rocks formed on different continents, in very different marine environments, all tell the same story at the same moment in time."

Lessons from the deep past

According to the model proposed by the research team, these influxes of phosphorus could have boosted biological productivity in the oceans, leading to increased oxygen consumption, the expansion of ocean anoxia, and global cooling through carbon burial, a chain of events with major consequences for marine biodiversity.

The study also indicates that phosphorus was not acting alone: climate cooling and sea-level change were also part of the crises, especially during the first Late Ordovician extinction pulse.

"This study reminds us that disruptions to nutrient cycles can have devastating consequences for marine ecosystems," concludes Professor Desrochers. "In a context of accelerating climate change and increasing agricultural nutrient runoff into the world's oceans, these lessons from the deep past are more relevant than ever."

Although today’s climate forcing differs from these ancient cooling events, the researchers suggest that a better understanding of these ancient mechanisms could help anticipate the risks posed by current anthropogenic nutrient loading in the modern ocean.

The study, titled “Recurring marine phosphorus spikes during major palaeozoic mass extinctions and climate change”, was published in Nature Communications. It was conducted by a multidisciplinary team comprising Matthew S. Dodd, Chao Li, Zihu Zhang, Aleksey Y. Sadekov, AndrĂ© Desrochers, Olle Hints, Detian Yan, Xiangrong Yang, Annette D. George, Maya Elrick, David White, Wenkun Qie, Bo Chen, Andrew S. Merdith & Benjamin J. W. Mills.

 

University of Pennsylvania awarded Institutional Challenge Grant to advance partnership on youth homelessness in Pennsylvania



A new partnership with Governor Josh Shapiro’s Office will examine the effectiveness of state policies in addressing youth homelessness.




University of Pennsylvania






The Housing Initiative at Penn has been selected to receive a 2026 Institutional Challenge Grant, a three-year, $650,000 award to support a research-practice partnership with the Shapiro Administration focused on addressing youth homelessness across the Commonwealth.

The grant is part of a $2.6 million funding initiative supported by the William T. Grant Foundation, which was joined this year by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, Bezos Family Foundation, Doris Duke Foundation, and the Spencer Foundation. The Institutional Challenge Grant encourages university-based research institutes, schools, and centers to strengthen research-practice partnerships with public agencies or nonprofit organizations to reduce inequality in youth outcomes.

The award will support work led by Vincent Reina, a professor of city and regional planning at the Weitzman School of Design and the founder and faculty director of the Housing Initiative at Penn (HIP), in partnership with Governor Shapiro’s Office. The partnership will examine the effectiveness of state policies in addressing youth homelessness while building lasting infrastructure for meaningful collaboration between Penn and the Commonwealth.

“The partnership will provide a valuable blueprint for how Penn faculty can meaningfully collaborate with state government institutions by developing shared goals and expectations, establishing dedicated channels for collaboration and data-sharing, and building trust and capacity for using rigorous research to advance effective policy,” says Reina. “We will create a guidebook and webinar series for Penn faculty to replicate this model and develop a curriculum to encourage emerging research-practice collaborations to become formal partnerships.”

Leveraging New Strategies for Lasting Change

Approximately 50,000 children and youth were identified as homeless in the 2023-2024 school year in Pennsylvania—the highest recorded number to date. Child and youth homelessness has been shown to exacerbate and perpetuates racial, educational, and health inequalities.

Like many other states, Pennsylvania’s housing and homelessness initiatives are siloed across various agencies. To address this issue, Governor Shapiro signed an executive order creating Pennsylvania’s first-ever Housing Action Plan, aligning state and local leaders, builders, advocates, and communities around a shared vision: building and preserving more homes, stabilizing housing outcomes, and expanding housing opportunity for all Pennsylvanians.

In partnering with the Governor’s Office, HIP plans to build on two strategies spearheaded by the Administration: (1) the Housing Action Plan, which was released earlier this year; and (2) the Interagency Council on Homelessness (ICH), which was created in 2025 and convenes stakeholders from various agencies to develop and execute an integrated strategy on youth homelessness.

As part of the grant, HIP and the Governor’s office will jointly develop a research agenda to embed evidence into the decision-making processes conducted by ICH, with the ultimate goal of creating an evidence-based policy menu of state and local programs that have proven effective at reducing homelessness.

In addition, HIP will conduct a study to understand the effects on child and youth homelessness of Pennsylvania’s increase in the amount of its Child and Dependent Care Enhancement Tax Credit. Governor Shapiro tripled the relief available through this tax credit in 2024—eligible Pennsylvanians can receive between $600 and $2,100, depending on their income level and number of dependents. Because very few evaluations of this type of state-level program exist, the study is expected to benefit researchers and policymakers nationwide.

“The Shapiro Administration believes that housing is the foundation of opportunity, security, and dignity – that’s why the Governor created a long-term Housing Action Plan to build and preserve more affordable homes, address homelessness, and expand opportunity for all Pennsylvanians," says Akbar Hossain, Secretary of Policy and Planning for Governor Josh Shapiro. “This collaboration between the Shapiro Administration and leading researchers will provide evidence and data to inform future state policy on housing and create a long-term model for future research collaborations. We look forward to working with the University of Pennsylvania to get more data on the impact of state policies and collaborate on evidence-backed policy to improve the lives of young people facing homelessness in the Commonwealth.”

The Shapiro Administration has also significantly expanded the Pennsylvania Housing Affordability and Enhancement Fund (PHARE) fund for building and repairing affordable homes. Since 2023, Pennsylvania has funded over 1,000 projects to build or repair more than 8,200 housing units, launched a statewide Right-to-Counsel initiative, and piloted Pennsylvania’s first middle market housing development program.

Expanding Research-Practice Partnerships to Reduce Inequality

A research unit of the Weitzman School of Design, the Housing Initiative at Penn (HIP) was established to pursue more effective housing policy at the local, state, and national levels. From developing housing action plans for the cities of Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Philadelphia to evaluating emergency rental assistance plans in Atlanta, Baltimore, Oakland, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles, HIP has a track record of developing new evidence and translating it for policy audiences.

In the Commonwealth, HIP has been a frequent collaborator with the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency to develop a statewide housing assessment and dashboard, and has collaborated with the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development to analyze the Whole Home Repair program.

“When universities and communities work together, they demonstrate just how powerful engaged research can be to address some of the most pressing issues facing young people today,” says Adam Gamoran, president of the William T. Grant Foundation. “We are proud to support these partnerships as they advance their research agendas, challenge their institutions to reward collaborative, community-embedded scholarship, and work toward reducing inequality.”


 

Environmental chemicals may interfere in infants’ bone development




European Society of Endocrinology

image: 

ECE 2026 takes place from 9-12 May in Prague Czech Republic and online

view more 

Credit: European Society of Endocrinology











Infants exposed to certain environmental chemicals, including breast milk and everyday products such as personal care items, are more likely to have lower bone density in the first year of their lives, according to research presented at the 28th European Congress of Endocrinology in Prague. The findings highlight how exposure to environmental pollutants early in life may negatively affect bone development, and the use of which urgently needs to be better regulated on a national and international level.


Endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) used in the manufacture of plastics, cosmetics, pesticides and medicines can interfere with the normal function of our hormones, as we are constantly exposed to these in our daily lives. EDCs have previously been associated with puberty and child development, including skeletal development. However, except for perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) which are well-known to have a negative effect on bone health, there is little research on bisphenols and phthalates.

 

In this study, researchers from the University of Parma, University Hospital of Parma, University of Florence, University of Messina and G. Martino University Hospital of Messina in Italy analysed 52 different chemicals in urine of 88 healthy one-month-old infants. By using Radiofrequency Echographic Multi Spectrometry (REMS) technology, they also measured the infants’ bone mineral density (BMD) — at 48 hours after birth, one month, three months, six months and one year.


The researchers found that at least 21 of the environmental chemicals analysed were detectable in one-month-old infants and only boys had a lower bone mineral density only at birth. Higher levels of Bisphenol A (BPA) were associated with lower bone density at birth, while higher levels of phthalates were linked to lower bone density at both six and 12 months of age. This association was stronger at 12 months when BPA and several phthalates were combined. In addition, several PFAS, including PFHxS, and parabens were also implicated in lower bone density at different months.


“Evidence has suggested that EDCs may adversely affect skeletal development that begins in fetal life and continues through infancy, but hardly any studies have measured bone mineral density during the first 12 months and assessed these chemicals at such a young age as we did in ours,” said lead investigator, Professor Maria Elisabeth Street from the University of Parma.


She added: “Measuring the bone mineral density in infants is very difficult due to technical, biological and practical barriers.”


“Our study shows that early exposure to some EDCs — such as PFAS and a combination of Bisphenol A, phthalates and parabens — is associated with a lower bone mineral density at 12 months after birth, suggesting that infancy is a vulnerable window for environmental exposure and skeletal development,” said Professor Street. “This calls for protection and action to reduce exposure during pregnancy and after delivery for better bone health in future generations.”


--------ENDS--------


Abstract
OC8.5


Bone mineral density (BMD) evaluated using REMS is associated during the first year of life with early life exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs)


Background: Human data on early exposure to EDCs and bone outcomes remain limited. This study-clinical trial (NCT06750523) evaluated bone status from intrauterine life and investigated factors affecting BMD in infants. We present data on early-life exposure to EDCs and BMD from birth to 12 months of age.


Materials and methods: This prospective, longitudinal cohort study analyzed urinary concentrations of EDCs in 88 full-term, healthy AGA infants at 1 month of age. 52 compounds were analyzed, including bisphenols (BPA, BPS, BPF, BPFDGE), phthalates (DBP, BBP, DEHP, DEP, DMP, DnOP, MBP, MBzP, MEHP, MEHHP, MEOHP, MEP, MMP, MnOP), parabens (EtPB, MePB, PrPB, iBuPB, iPrPB) and per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS: 11Cl- PF3OUdS, 4-2_FTS,8-2_FTS,6-2_FTS,9Cl-PF3ONS, ADONA, FBSA, FOSA, GenX_HFPO-DA, PFBA, PFBS, PFDA, PFDS, PFDoDA, PFHpS, PFHxS, PFNA, PFNS, PFOA, PFOS, PFPHpA, PFPHxA, PFPeA, PFPeS, PFTrDA,PFTreDA, PFUnDA) by UPLC-MS/MS. BMD was assessed using Radiofrequency Echographic Multi Spectrometry (REMS), and BMD z-scores were defined at 48hours after birth(V0), at 1 (V1), 3 (V3), 6 (V6) and 12 months of life (V12). Associations between urinary EDC concentrations and BMD z-scores across time points were evaluated by correlation and principal component (PCA) analyses.


Results: At V0, BMD z-score was 1.31+0.87; -0.09+0.61at V1; -0.06+0.99 at V3; -0.03+0.97at V6, and -0.04+1.01 at V12. At birth, BMD z-scores were different in males and females (p:0.028), but this disappeared thereafter. In the infant’s urine, BPA was detected in 62.5% of samples, BPS in 19.3%; EtPB in 1.1%,MePB in 21.6%,PrPB in 9.1%. Among PFAS,6-2_FTS was detected in 73.9% of samples, PFBA in 70.5%, PFDA in 3.4%,PGHxS in 29.5%, PFNA in 15.9%, PFOA in 69.3%, PFOS in 76.1%, PFPHpA in 78.4%, PFPHxA in 63.6%. DBP was detected in 2.3%, MBP in 100%, MBzP in 22.7%, MEHHP in 62.5%, MEHP in 1.1%, MEOHP in 42.0% and MEP in 98.9%. BPA and PFDA were associated with BMD z-score at V0 (r: -0.31,p:0.025 and r:0.99,p:0.038, respectively). MePB was associated with BMD z-scores at V6 and V12 (r:-0.52,p:0.044 and r:-0.738,p:0.009). PFHxS,PFNA and PFOS presented associations with BMD z-scores at V6 (r:-0.49, p:0.015; r:-0.615, p:0.037; r:-0.287,p:0.030). Phthalates showed the most consistent associations with BMD at both V6 and V12. DEP showed a linear association with BMD z-scores at 6 (r:-0.557,p:0.039) and 12 (r:-0.703, p:0.035) months. MBP,MBzP and MEOHP were associated with BMD z-scores at V12 (r:-0.346, p:0.015; r:-0.654,p:0.040; r:-0.501, p:0.021). Notably, PCA found a cluster (19%) of BPA and phthalates(MBzP, MBP, MEOHP) with BMD z-score at V12, suggesting that higher exposure is associated with lower BMD at 1 year of age. Additionally, PFHxS contributed to BMD z-scores at V1,V3 and V6 (13.4%).


Funding: PNNR-MAD-2022–12376819; Project funded under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP, M6/C2_CALL 2022 Italian Ministry of Health funded by the European Union – NextGenerationEU).

 

Studying how online images feed polarization wins Boston University scholar prestigious Andrew Carnegie Fellowship




Ayse Lokmanoglu aims to help people think more critically about internet content, especially during politically charged moments




Boston University






Boston University’s Ayse Lokmanoglu is studying a key crossroads in our cultural moment: political polarization and how it’s fed by online images, including those generated by artificial intelligence (AI). Her timely research has won her admission to a select group, as one of 24 Andrew Carnegie Fellows for 2026.

Lokmanoglu, a BU College of Communication assistant professor of emerging media studies, will spend two years investigating how images “spread online during politically charged moments like elections, and whether seeing those images actually makes people more polarized and distrustful,” she says. She’ll use several computational methods and experiments.

“On the computational side, I will track how images travel across mainstream social media platforms, using a tool I codesigned called VisTopics,” says Lokmanoglu, who’s also affiliated with the BU Faculty of Computing & Data Sciences. “On the experimental side, I will examine how people respond to AI-generated political images and whether media literacy prompts can help with identifying non-authentic images.”

Gloria Waters, BU’s provost and chief academic officer, says that “in an increasingly polarized society, Dr. Lokmanoglu’s research has clear implications for the way we consume media and engage with the world. 

“This honor is a just recognition of the importance of her work in understanding today’s political climate, and highlights the critical role Boston University faculty play in advancing understanding of complex societal issues.” 

The Carnegie Corporation of New York whittled down hundreds of nominations to select this year’s two dozen fellows, based on “originality and potential impact of the [research] proposal, as well as the capacity to communicate the findings to a broad audience,” according to the fellowship’s website. Industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie established his namesake corporation in 1911 to fund the development and dissemination of knowledge. The fellows program provides each honoree with $200,000 for their research.

Per Carnegie’s criteria, Lokmanoglu will publicize her research beyond academia. She also plans to host a workshop at BU for journalists, educators, and students. “Ultimately, I hope this gives people better tools to think critically about the images they encounter online, especially during politically tense periods,” she says, “and that it feeds into larger policy conversations around AI and information integrity.”

Lokmanoglu’s research has previously received grants from such sources as the National Institute of Justice (the research arm of the US Department of Justice) and the Global Network on Extremism and Technology. She has been on the BU faculty two years, joining from Clemson University.

“Receiving this award so early in my time here feels surreal,” she says. “I have studied and admired the work of many past and current recipients, so being included in that group is both humbling and deeply meaningful. I’m also very grateful to Carnegie Corporation of New York for their generosity and pioneering support of this field, and to BU for nominating me. 

“I really hope this work can contribute—even in a small way—to helping mitigate polarization.”

MISOGYNY IS FEMICIDE

How honor cultures and shame societies shape mental health



Wiley






New research in the PsyCh Journal introduces and validates a psychological concept called atimiaphobia—defined as an intense fear of losing honor or being labeled shameless. Atimiaphobia is culturally specific in its origins and manifests through intrusive thoughts, hypervigilance, emotional turmoil, and compulsive conformity to social norms tied to moral reputation and familial dignity.

Investigators developed the Atimiaphobia Scale (AtiPhoS), a 15-item tool designed to measure this specific fear across four dimensions: fear of being labeled shameless, fear of violating social norms, fear of public judgment, and fear of losing self-respect and honor.

The researchers found that atimiaphobia is positively correlated with both anxiety and general experiences of shame, confirming that it is part of a cluster of negative emotional states. They also found that higher levels of atimiaphobia predict lower social intelligence, suggesting that the intense fear of judgment and dishonor can hinder a person's ability to navigate social situations effectively, understand social cues, and maintain healthy relationships. In addition, women and married individuals reported significantly higher levels of atimiaphobia, indicating heightened social pressures for these groups.

“The distinctiveness of atimiaphobia warrants recognition as a discrete mental health condition within clinical diagnostic frameworks,” said lead author Waqar Husain, PhD, of the COMSATS University Islamabad, in Pakistan.

URL upon publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pchj.70095

 

Additional Information
NOTE:
 The information contained in this release is protected by copyright. Please include journal attribution in all coverage. For more information or to obtain a PDF of any study, please contact: Sara Henning-Stout, newsroom@wiley.com.

About the Journal
PsyCh Journal is China's first international psychology journal, bridging the knowledge gap between China and the rest of the world. We explore basic mechanisms of the human mind and behaviour, delivering scientific knowledge to enhance the world's understanding of culture and society.

About Wiley      
Wiley is a global leader in authoritative content and research intelligence for the advancement of scientific discovery, innovation, and learning. With more than 200 years at the center of the scholarly ecosystem, Wiley combines trusted publishing heritage with AI-powered platforms to transform how knowledge is discovered, accessed, and applied. From individual researchers and students to Fortune 500 R&D teams, Wiley enables the transformation of scientific breakthroughs into real-world impact. From knowledge to impact—Wiley is redefining what's possible in science and learning. Visit us at Wiley.com and Investors.Wiley.com. Follow us on FacebookXLinkedIn and Instagram.

 

Do megafires drive prairie grouse into sub-optimal habitats?




Wiley






Grasslands and associated wildlife in the Great Plains of North America have declined precipitously and are now experiencing an increase in large wildfire activity. In a Journal of Wildlife Management study that evaluated habitat use by lesser prairie-chickens—a prairie-grouse of conservation concern—before and immediately after a 2017 megafire, investigators found that the birds were forced out of formerly high-quality habitat in large, contiguous grasslands and into sub-optimal habitat and smaller grassland patches near cropland.

The researchers noted that megafires can pose a threat to grassland-dependent wildlife by removing large areas of high-quality habitat in the short-term, but conserving key habitat patches in sub-optimal areas may aid persistence.

“When most people think of megafires in the US, they think of big forest fires. But after another record fire year for the Great Plains in 2026, it’s increasingly important to understand how these fires affect already fragmented grasslands and wildlife that depend on them,” said corresponding author Nicholas Parker, who is a PhD candidate currently at Colorado State University but conducted this work while at Kansas State University.

URL upon publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jwmg.70205

 

 

Additional Information
NOTE:
 The information contained in this release is protected by copyright. Please include journal attribution in all coverage. For more information or to obtain a PDF of any study, please contact: Sara Henning-Stout, newsroom@wiley.com.

About the Journal
The Journal of Wildlife Management publishes original research contributing to fundamental wildlife science. Topics encompass biology and ecology of wildlife and their habitats with implications for conservation or management. Published research covers habitat use, genetics, demographics, behavior, population ecology, human dimensions, and contemporary conservation issues. Our aim is to support wildlife practitioners. Our journal welcomes theoretical advancements, quantitative analyses, modeling, and reviews offering a new synthesis. The Journal of Wildlife Management is a journal by The Wildlife Society.

About Wiley      
Wiley is a global leader in authoritative content and research intelligence for the advancement of scientific discovery, innovation, and learning. With more than 200 years at the center of the scholarly ecosystem, Wiley combines trusted publishing heritage with AI-powered platforms to transform how knowledge is discovered, accessed, and applied. From individual researchers and students to Fortune 500 R&D teams, Wiley enables the transformation of scientific breakthroughs into real-world impact. From knowledge to impact—Wiley is redefining what's possible in science and learning. Visit us at Wiley.com and Investors.Wiley.com. Follow us on FacebookXLinkedIn and Instagram.

 

How can renewable energy be most efficiently integrated into the electric grid?




Wiley





Renewable energy–based distributed energy resources (DERs) such as solar panels and electric vehicles can help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but their integration in distribution grids introduces challenges due to the variable output of renewables and insufficient energy storage capacity. A study in IET Renewable Power Generation assessed DERs’ effects on the vulnerability of low-voltage distribution systems (the final stage of the electric grid that delivers power from distribution transformers to homes and other buildings).

Results indicated that although use of solar panels and electric vehicles lowers emissions and costs, it causes voltage regulation challenges. Overvoltage happens during the day with the increased solar energy generation, but undervoltage occurs at night due to vehicle charging demand and no solar energy generation. Use of community-scale battery energy storage systems was the most viable solution for mitigating the technical vulnerabilities imposed on distribution networks by DERs. Moreover, they were approximately 52% more cost-effective than individual household battery installations.

“Cleaner energy brings new grid challenges, making coordinated storage essential for voltage stability,” said corresponding author Khalil Gholami, PhD, of Deakin University, in Australia.

URL upon publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1049/rpg2.70244

 

Additional Information
NOTE:
 The information contained in this release is protected by copyright. Please include journal attribution in all coverage. For more information or to obtain a PDF of any study, please contact: Sara Henning-Stout, newsroom@wiley.com.

About the Journal
IET Renewable Power Generation is a fully open-access journal which serves as a forum for the presentation of novel research, development and applications of renewable energy. We publish works pertaining to any renewable energy source, enabling technologies such as storage systems and systems integration methods, and studies of relevant techno-economic issues.

About Wiley      
Wiley is a global leader in authoritative content and research intelligence for the advancement of scientific discovery, innovation, and learning. With more than 200 years at the center of the scholarly ecosystem, Wiley combines trusted publishing heritage with AI-powered platforms to transform how knowledge is discovered, accessed, and applied. From individual researchers and students to Fortune 500 R&D teams, Wiley enables the transformation of scientific breakthroughs into real-world impact. From knowledge to impact—Wiley is redefining what's possible in science and learning. Visit us at Wiley.com and Investors.Wiley.com. Follow us on FacebookXLinkedIn and Instagram.