Mammal

Gone in a puff of smoke: 52,000 sq km of ‘long unburnt’ Australian habitat has vanished in 40 years

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

The pattern of fire most commonly experienced within an ecosystem is known as the fire regime.

Key Points: 
  • The pattern of fire most commonly experienced within an ecosystem is known as the fire regime.
  • We wanted to find out how Australian fire regimes are changing and what this means for biodiversity.
  • Read more:
    Research reveals fire is pushing 88% of Australia's threatened land mammals closer to extinction

Uncovering long-term changes

  • However, evidence of how fire regimes are shifting within both threatened species’ ranges and protected areas is scarce, particularly at the national scale and over long periods.
  • To address this gap, we compiled maps of bushfires and prescribed burns in southern Australia from 1980 to 2021.

More fire putting wildlife at risk

  • Meanwhile, areas of recently burnt vegetation (5 years or less since the most recent fire) are growing.
  • On average, the percentage of long unburnt vegetation within reserves declined from 61% to 36% over the four decades we studied.
  • Going from about 42,000 sq km to about 64,000 sq km in total, which is an increase of 22,000 square kilometres.

Which areas have seen the biggest changes?

  • This pattern was most prominent in southeastern Australia, including the Kosciuszko and Alpine national parks.
  • Feral horses are finishing the job

    In these locations, dry years with low rainfall can make abundant vegetation more flammable.

  • These conditions contribute to high fire risk across very large areas, as observed in the 2019–20 fire season.

What does this mean for Australia’s wildlife?

  • Indigenous land management, including cultural burning, is one approach that holds promise in reducing the incidence of large fires while providing fire for those species that need it.
  • We can also help wildlife become more resilient to shifting fire regimes by reducing other pressures such as invasive predators.
  • Our findings underscore the increased need for management strategies that conserve threatened species in an increasingly fiery future.
  • William Geary is affiliated with the Victorian Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action.
  • Dale Nimmo receives funding from the Australian Research Council, the Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Attractions, and the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action.

Wild turkey numbers are falling in some parts of the US – the main reason may be habitat loss

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

But people killed them indiscriminately year-round – sometimes for their meat and feathers, but settlers also took turkey eggs from nests and poisoned adult turkeys to keep them from damaging crops.

Key Points: 
  • But people killed them indiscriminately year-round – sometimes for their meat and feathers, but settlers also took turkey eggs from nests and poisoned adult turkeys to keep them from damaging crops.
  • Thanks to this unregulated killing and habitat loss, by 1900 wild turkeys had disappeared from much of their historical range.
  • Turkey populations gradually recovered over the 20th century, aided by regulation, conservation funding and state restoration programs.
  • We are wildlife ecologists working to determine why turkey populations are shrinking in portions of their range.

Fewer open spaces

  • While turkeys may appear at home in urban areas, their habitat is open forest – areas with sparse trees that allow near-full sunlight to reach herbaceous plants at ground level.
  • In 1792, naturalist William Bartram described the eastern U.S. as “Grande Savane,” or big savanna, a landscape with abundant wild turkeys.
  • The open spaces that are left often are not suitable for wild turkeys: They need a well-developed layer of vegetation at ground level that includes mainly wild flowers, native grasses and young shrubs and trees to provide cover for nesting and raising their young.
  • Turkeys can persist in these denser, shaded forests, but they don’t reproduce as successfully, and fewer of their young survive.
  • Over the past 50 years, populations of bird species that live in open forests and grasslands have fallen by more than 50%.

The roles of food, predators and hunting

  • For example, blame is often placed on more abundant predators that eat turkey eggs, such as raccoons and opossums.
  • But these predators probably are more abundant in part due to changes in turkey habitat.
  • This suggests that prescribed fire across the wild turkey’s range creates an environment that’s more favorable for turkeys than for their predators.
  • Lastly, some observers have proposed that the timing of hunting could be affecting turkey reproduction.

Creating space for turkeys

  • Land owners can help by managing for native grasses and wildflowers on their property, which will provide breeding habitat for turkeys.
  • We have produced podcast episodes that discuss which plants are valuable to turkeys and other wildlife, and how to promote and maintain plants that are turkey-friendly.


Marcus Lashley receives funding from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, the National Wild Turkey Federation, and Turkeys for Tomorrow. William Gulsby receives funding from the Alabama Wildlife Federation, Turkeys for Tomorrow and the National Wild Turkey Federation.

Get Inspired for Summer with 101 Abu Dhabi Do's!

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 8, 2024

ABU DHABI, UAE, April 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Planning your summer holidays, and looking for a unique mix of culture, adventure, and inspiration? Then Abu Dhabi is the destination for you! With the summer season just around the corner, Experience Abu Dhabi has introduced 101 Abu Dhabi Do's to bring your travel plans to life, unveiling the vast diversity of what the emirate has to offer like never before.

Key Points: 
  • With the summer season just around the corner, Experience Abu Dhabi has introduced 101 Abu Dhabi Do's to bring your travel plans to life, unveiling the vast diversity of what the emirate has to offer like never before.
  • Every moment in Abu Dhabi is rooted in Emirati hospitality, with culture at the heart of every experience – each more enticing than the last.
  • 101 Abu Dhabi Do's is more than just a list of experiences, it is a curated selection of enriching moments that highlight opportunities for adventure and discovery at every turn.
  • The full list of 101 Abu Dhabi Do's is now live, ready to guide your next travel adventure – with more experiences than can be discovered in just one summer.

Get Inspired for Summer with 101 Abu Dhabi Do's!

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 8, 2024

ABU DHABI, UAE, April 8, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Planning your summer holidays, and looking for a unique mix of culture, adventure, and inspiration? Then Abu Dhabi is the destination for you! With the summer season just around the corner, Experience Abu Dhabi has introduced 101 Abu Dhabi Do's to bring your travel plans to life, unveiling the vast diversity of what the emirate has to offer like never before.

Key Points: 
  • With the summer season just around the corner, Experience Abu Dhabi has introduced 101 Abu Dhabi Do's to bring your travel plans to life, unveiling the vast diversity of what the emirate has to offer like never before.
  • Every moment in Abu Dhabi is rooted in Emirati hospitality, with culture at the heart of every experience – each more enticing than the last.
  • 101 Abu Dhabi Do's is more than just a list of experiences, it is a curated selection of enriching moments that highlight opportunities for adventure and discovery at every turn.
  • The full list of 101 Abu Dhabi Do's is now live, ready to guide your next travel adventure – with more experiences than can be discovered in just one summer.

Flowers may be more ancient than dinosaurs – but scientists can’t agree on when they evolved

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Including more than 350,000 known species, they dominate the ecological system, shape food webs and play a vital role in oxygen production.

Key Points: 
  • Including more than 350,000 known species, they dominate the ecological system, shape food webs and play a vital role in oxygen production.
  • Plus, many of them are valuable commercial crops – think of roses, grains and tomatoes.
  • A step change in research is shaking up the way scientists think about plants: they are far more complex and more like us than you might imagine.
  • But not all scientists agree it is an angiosperm, due to the different definitions of flower organs.
  • This is the largest known amber-preserved fossil flower, measuring about 3cm across and about three times as large as most floral fossils, showing beautiful details of this ancient flower.

Jurassic or Cretaceous?

  • The timing of flowers’ evolution is still a matter of debate between scientists, but most scientists are in one of two camps: Jurassic or Cretaceous.
  • Analyses using molecular data (DNA or protein sequences) suggest flowers could be much older than the fossil record shows – a Jurassic (145 million years ago) or even Triassic origin (201 million years ago).

Deciphering the past by molecular data

  • One technique scientists use to determine the timing of evolutionary events is the “molecular clock”.
  • This concept originated from the understanding that genetic mutations tend to accumulate at a constant rate across both time and species.
  • To construct a molecular clock, researchers analyse gene segments that have been conserved throughout a species’ evolution.

Piecing the puzzle together

  • Scientists examine fossil plants and observe the gradual changes in structures such as leaves, flowers and seeds over time.
  • Comparing their anatomy allows researchers to identify similarities and differences between extinct and still-living species, or species in different clades.
  • Biological traits which appear similar may be a result of convergent evolution, indicating changes in characteristics for environmental adaptation, rather than genetic similarity.

Mathematical approach can also help

  • There is also a mathematical approach to estimating the age of angiosperms – for instance, using the Bayesian Brownian Bridge (BBB) method.
  • This statistical model is a scientific formula that uses the distribution of fossils through time to estimate the age of a group.
  • By using the BBB method, an international research team found that the origin of angiosperms supports a pre-Cretaceous hypothesis.


Ruolin Wu does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Mechanism Found to Determine which Memories Last

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 28, 2024

Now, a new study proposes a mechanism that determines which memories are tagged as important enough to linger in the brain until sleep makes them permanent.

Key Points: 
  • Now, a new study proposes a mechanism that determines which memories are tagged as important enough to linger in the brain until sleep makes them permanent.
  • Events followed by very few or no sharp wave-ripples failed to form lasting memories.
  • The current study found that sharp wave-ripples represent the natural tagging mechanism during such pauses after waking experiences, with the tagged neuronal patterns reactivated during post-task sleep.
  • For memories that are remembered, those same cells fire at high speed, as we sleep, "playing back the recorded event thousands times per night."

Postal Service Hopes Stamp Will Help Save Manatees

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 27, 2024

SILVER SPRINGS, Fla., March 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- It's Manatee Appreciation Day! The U.S. Postal Service celebrated the occasion by dedicating its new Save Manatees stamp here today beside a clear, warm spring that the marine mammals frequent.

Key Points: 
  • Postal Service celebrated the occasion by dedicating its new Save Manatees stamp here today beside a clear, warm spring that the marine mammals frequent.
  • "Postage stamps are miniature works of art designed to reflect the American experience," said Lisa Bobb-Semple, Stamp Services director for USPS.
  • "This adorable stamp will increase awareness and hopefully encourage people to learn how they can help save manatees, too."
  • The booklet cover features an enlarged crop of the stamp artwork, with the words "SAVE MANATEES" in white capitals.

Novel research leverages AI to identify dogs at higher risk for cancer

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Findings may help identify dogs at higher risk for DLBCL.

Key Points: 
  • Findings may help identify dogs at higher risk for DLBCL.
  • The team plans to provide pet owners and veterinarians with intervention strategies to help lower the risk in identified dogs.
  • Beyond its direct impact on dogs, this research effort could influence numerous research avenues in other mammals, including cats, endangered species and even humans, Modiano added.
  • The approach may also provide insights into aging, cancer risk and chronic conditions, extending the study's significance beyond companion dogs.

ReadWorks Announces Earth Day 2024 Reading and Illustration Contest

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, March 26, 2024

BROOKLYN, N.Y., March 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- ReadWorks, a leading educational platform committed to delivering free resources and tools to support teachers and improve student's reading comprehension, is excited to announce the launch of its Earth Day 2024 Illustration Contest.

Key Points: 
  • BROOKLYN, N.Y., March 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- ReadWorks, a leading educational platform committed to delivering free resources and tools to support teachers and improve student's reading comprehension, is excited to announce the launch of its Earth Day 2024 Illustration Contest.
  • The Earth Day 2024 Illustration Contest provides a platform for students to showcase their artistic talents while also fostering a connection to NFWF's fun and interesting passages about saving the monarch butterfly, coral reefs, or flying mammals.
  • - Susanne Nobles Chief Academic Officer at ReadWorks
    The Earth Day 2024 Illustration Contest is open to all second through fifth-grade students, regardless of their artistic background or skill level.
  • For more information about the Earth Day 2024 Illustration Contest, including official rules and guidelines, please visit the illustration contest webpage .

Exposed: the dark reality of profit-driven wildlife farms

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, March 14, 2024

NEW YORK, March 14, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Published today, World Animal Protection's new report entitled Bred for Profit: The Truth about Global Wildlife Farming reveals for the first time the vast scale of this exploitative industry. Extensive research uncovered that billions of wild animals are bred each year and suffer on wildlife farms for uses such as "pets," entertainment, tourism, hunting, fashion, luxury goods, and traditional medicine. There is an astonishing lack of transparency and inadequate monitoring across this global multi-billion-dollar industry.

Key Points: 
  • Extensive research uncovered that billions of wild animals are bred each year and suffer on wildlife farms for uses such as "pets," entertainment, tourism, hunting, fashion, luxury goods, and traditional medicine.
  • Animals held on wildlife farms suffer from malnourishment, disease, stress-induced behaviors, injuries, infected wounds—and even cannibalism.
  • Shockingly, some captive wildlife populations are now larger than those living free.
  • World Animal Protection is urging governments worldwide to take immediate action by implementing a comprehensive and timely phase out of commercial wildlife farms and associated trade.