Showing posts with label fauna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fauna. Show all posts

Sunday, June 08, 2025

Rewilding successes in urban areas

Amazing stuff! Bewildering! Reintroduction of natural fauna and flora into city life!

"A beaver glides through a restored wetland in London. Falcons raise chicks atop Chicago skyscrapers. Platypuses paddle through creeks on Sydney’s fringe. Leopard frogs soak up the sun in Las Vegas. Behind these scenes is a rising ecological movement: urban rewilding, where cities become havens for once displaced wildlife.

A new [survey] study ... reveals how cities across the globe are fighting back against biodiversity loss by restoring wildlife to the places it once called home. ...

team analysed 2,800 scientific papers on species reintroduction. Strikingly, fewer than 1% of rewilding programs focus on terrestrial animals in urban areas. Most efforts—about two-thirds—are still limited to vegetation. ..."

From the abstract:
"Rapid urbanization is contributing to unprecedented biodiversity decline worldwide. Despite biodiversity loss being more pronounced in cities, traditional conservation efforts such as establishing large, protected areas and restoring native vegetation are largely undertaken far from urban landscapes. More proactive approaches, such as rewilding, have garnered momentum as a conservation process but remain underused in cities.
In the present article, focusing on active faunal reintroductions, we explore urban rewilding as a process to restore ecological functions and enhance ecosystem resilience.
Through a systematic literature review, we assess the varied aims, challenges, and definitions of success in rewilding efforts in urban contexts. Moreover, we define the unique opportunities and benefits urban rewilding presents for reconnecting people with nature, fostering community engagement, and enhancing cultural connections.
Finally, we identify future research areas, including the need for long-term studies on ecological impacts, developing species selection frameworks, and exploring sociocultural dimensions of urban rewilding."

Rewilding successes in the urban jungles

Urban rewilding combats global biodiversity decline (press release) "Animals around the world are taking to city life."



Figure 1.Classification of the major rewilding types based on the method of animal reintroduction (active versus passive) and the landscape into which the animals are reintroduced.





Monday, February 17, 2025

Dancing sea turtles reveal how animals navigate magnetic fields for migration over thousands of kilometers and to find food

Amazing stuff!

"... But a new study has presented the first evidence that loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) use magnetic fields as a compass to determine direction and also use it to determine their geographical location.

There’s a little dance involved, too.

Sea turtles are extraordinary navigators, able to trace unseen pathways across thousands of kilometres of the ocean and return to the same feeding sites migration after migration. ..."

"...  sea turtles returning to the same feeding sites again and again throughout their lifetimes — despite traveling up to 10,000 miles across the planet. ... hypothesized that these turtles used Earth’s magnetic field to memorize specific geographic areas that they associated with food ...

team conditioned loggerhead turtles to magnetic fields replicating those that exist in various oceanic locations, repeatedly feeding the turtles in some magnetic fields while not feeding them in others. When later exposed to the fields in which they were fed, the turtles exhibited “turtle dancing behavior,” indicating that they associated that specific magnetic signature with food. ..."

From the abstract:
"Growing evidence indicates that migratory animals exploit the magnetic field of the Earth for navigation, both as a compass to determine direction and as a map to determine geographical position. It has long been proposed that, to navigate using a magnetic map, animals must learn the magnetic coordinates of the destination, yet the pivotal hypothesis that animals can learn magnetic signatures of geographical areas has, to our knowledge, yet to be tested.
Here we report that an iconic navigating species, the loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta), can learn such information. When fed repeatedly in magnetic fields replicating those that exist in particular oceanic locations, juvenile turtles learned to distinguish magnetic fields in which they encountered food from magnetic fields that exist elsewhere, an ability that might underlie foraging site fidelity. Conditioned responses in this new magnetic map assay were unaffected by radiofrequency oscillating magnetic fields, a treatment expected to disrupt radical-pair-based chemical magnetoreception, suggesting that the magnetic map sense of the turtle does not rely on this mechanism.
By contrast, orientation behaviour that required use of the magnetic compass was disrupted by radiofrequency oscillating magnetic fields. The findings provide evidence that two different mechanisms of magnetoreception underlie the magnetic map and magnetic compass in sea turtles."

Dancing turtles reveal how animals navigate magnetic fields





Thursday, February 13, 2025

Globally shark attacks are declining, only 47 unprovoked attacks in 2024 thanks to climate change

Why are these news not automatically linked to climate change? Short answer: The news is too positive or who cares about such a minute risk!

Or is the largely aging global population not so daring anymore and swims less? 😊

I suspect, shark attacks on humans are underreported. Most attacks are reported mainly from the US and Australia.

Simply don't swim to far from the shore!

"The International Shark Attack File, maintained by the Florida Museum of Natural History, provides data on what are considered unprovoked bites, defined as incidents in which a person does not initiate contact with a shark. Instances in which a person intentionally or unintentionally initiates contact, including spearfishing and releasing sharks from nets or hooks, are not included in the report.

The report shows worldwide, there were only 47 unprovoked attacks, down 22 from the previous year and well below the 10-year average of 70. Four of last year’s attacks resulted in fatalities, also a significant reduction from recent years."

Globally shark attacks are declining





Monday, February 03, 2025

For social bats, the hippocampus is the brain’s ‘who’s who’

Amazing stuff!

Keep in mind: Wind turbines are massive killers of bats in the hundreds if not millions of bats per year! Where are the animal rights activists when you need them! Who is paying them for their silence?

"Egyptian fruit bats are remarkably social animals, often roosting in caves with dozens to thousands of other bats. These furry creatures can’t just flip through a magazine to find out the latest colony gossip, so how do they keep track of who’s who?

To find out more about how these animals navigate their complicated social environments, scientists housed groups of wild fruit bats together in laboratory “caves” for several months. Once the bats had gotten to know each other, the team outfitted some with electrodes, allowing them to monitor activity in a part of the brain known as the hippocampus. Neurons in this region are known to play a prominent role in memory and spatial navigation, thus representing an animal’s place within its physical environment, but the researchers saw them light up during social interaction too. It turns out that these same hippocampal neurons also encode distinguishing features of other bats, including their sex, their place within the colony dominance hierarchy, and whether they were perceived as friends or enemies.

“We found that the same neural network, the same neurons, represented all of these factors together,”  ... 

This isn’t the first time Egyptian fruit bats have proven themselves to be brainy: Previous studies have revealed that these communal cave dwellers learn new dialects from the colony members around them, are able to  recall past experiences and plan ahead for the future, and can even recognize the scientists performing experiments on them."

From the editor's summary and structural abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Classic work on cognitive maps has shown that neurons in the hippocampus code an organism’s environment and their place within it. However, most organisms, and especially social species, exist in complex worlds that include not just their place in their environment, but also the place and identity of other individuals relative to themselves. Ray et al. monitored fruit bats within a naturalistic environment and found that neurons in the hippocampus also coded for distinct individuals, including their sex, rank, location, and unique identity. Thus, the hippocampus creates not only an individual’s cognitive map, but also a complex map of their social environment. ...
Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Social animals live in groups and interact volitionally in complex ways. To perform real-life social behaviors, the brain needs to code other individuals’ identities, represent various types of social interactions, and encode key social factors such as the sex, dominance hierarchy, and social affiliation of multiple other individuals.
However, our understanding of how the brain deals with such diverse requirements stems from constrained laboratory experiments in which an animal typically exhibits one specific behavior with one other animal in one particular task. This leaves the fundamental question unexplored: How does the brain actually represent the real world with its complex, multianimal settings?
RATIONALE
To understand natural social coding in the mammalian brain, we studied Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus), which are highly social mammals, and focused on the hippocampus, a brain area that in previous studies has been shown to be important for memories of social identities, episodic events, and spatial locations. We hypothesized that in natural scenarios, when all of these disparate aspects occur simultaneously, hippocampal neurons would bind together all of these different types of information. To create a naturalistic environment, we established a laboratory-based “cave,” housing mixed-sex groups of five to 10 wild-caught bats. The bats lived together continuously (24/7) for several months, engaging in natural social behaviors without any imposed tasks. During this time, we conducted wireless neural recordings from the dorsal hippocampus area CA1 of both male and female bats and tracked their positions, head directions, and social interactions with each other.
RESULTS
The freely behaving bats formed a stable social network and displayed three key behaviors: (i) flying between two nets located at opposite corners of the setup, (ii) engaging in social interactions, and (iii) being active on the net and observing each other. We found that hippocampal “place cells,” neurons known to represent the animal’s own position, were modulated during flight by the social context, i.e., whether the bat was flying to meet another bat or to be alone. These cells also encoded the identities of other bats. This identity coding was invariant to the bat’s flight direction. We also found that many hippocampal cells encoded social-interaction events, with different neurons typically encoding distinct types of social interactions such as affiliative grooming or aggressive boxing. During active observation on the nets, we used methods from machine learning and game theory to reveal that neurons encoded the bat’s own position and head direction, together with the positions, directions, and identities of multiple other individuals. Identity-coding neurons encoded the same specific bat across different locations and different behavioral states, both in-flight and on the net, providing another example of social invariance. The strength of identity coding was modulated by the sex, dominance hierarchy, and social affiliation of the other bats.
CONCLUSION
Our use of a naturalistic social colony allowed us to discover that the classical hippocampal cognitive map of space also integrates rich social information, forming a sociospatial cognitive map. We found neurons that encoded social interaction events, identities and sex of other individuals, dominance hierarchy, and social affiliation, along with the position and direction of both self and others. These findings combine the historically disparate views on hippocampal function, which suggested that the hippocampus is important for encoding memory, social identity, or spatial maps. Here, we have shown that all of these factors are represented together in the same neural network."

ScienceAdviser

Coding bonus: Bats’ hippocampal cells log spatial, social cues "The neurons represent not only an animal’s place in space, but also the distinguishing features of its fellow bats, including their sex and social status."



Hippocampal place cells also encode social information, forming a sociospatial cognitive map.


Thursday, January 23, 2025

A pilgrimage to the corpse flower in Sydney

A rare moment for our noses to behold! Or fragrance is in the nose of the nose of the beholder! 😊

"With bated breath—and plugged noses—spectators are waiting for the rare blossoming of a giant, rancid flower in Sydney. 

The endangered corpse flower, lovingly named “Putricia,” is poised to bloom for just 24 hours at the Royal Botanic Gardens of Sydney—the first blossom in 15 years. And the plant has gained a cult following, despite the fact that its aroma has been likened to “wet socks, hot cat food, or rotting possum flesh.” 

Thousands of viewers have tuned in to the Gardens’ livestream, though there’s not much to see yet: “Putricia stands silent and tall in front of a brown curtain, comfortably ensconced behind a red velvet rope,”"

Global Health NOW: 012325

Corpse Flower: A Plant to Die For "A Corpse Flower — Bunga Bangkai — is about to bloom in Sydney for the first time in fifteen years."