logo
Meet the tiny Australian Moth that travels 1,000 km and navigates using the stars

Meet the tiny Australian Moth that travels 1,000 km and navigates using the stars

Yahoo22-06-2025
An Australian moth follows the stars during its yearly migration, using the night sky as a guiding compass, according to a new study.
When temperatures heat up, nocturnal Bogong moths fly about 1,000 kilometres to cool down in caves by the Australian Alps. They later return home to breed and die.
Birds routinely navigate by starlight, but the moths are the first known invertebrates, or creatures without a backbone, to find their way across such long distances using the stars.
Scientists have long wondered how the moths travel to a place they've never been. A previous study hinted that Earth's magnetic field might help steer them in the right direction, along with some kind of visual landmark as a guide.
Related
Does cutting off rhinos' horns protect them from poachers? New study supports controversial approach
Since stars appear in predictable patterns each night, scientists suspected they might help lead the way. They placed moths in a flight simulator that mimicked the night sky above them and blocked out the Earth's magnetic field, noting where they flew. Then they scrambled the stars and saw how the moths reacted.
When the stars were as they should be, the moths flapped in the right direction. But when the stars were in random places, the moths were disoriented. Their brain cells also got excited in response to specific orientations of the night sky.
The findings were published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
It 'was a very clean, impressive demonstration that the moths really are using a view of the night sky to guide their movements,' said Kenneth Lohmann, who studies animal navigation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and was not involved with the new research.
Researchers don't know what features of the night sky the moths use to find their way. It could be a stripe of light from the Milky Way, a colourful nebula or something else entirely.
Whatever it is, the insects seem to rely on that, along with Earth's magnetic field, to make their journey.
Related
Rare snail that can 'slurp up earthworms like noodles' caught on camera laying an egg from its neck
Scientists use special 'squeezing' and electrical probes to collect sperm from endangered kākāpō
Other animals harness the stars as a guide. Birds take celestial cues as they soar through the skies, and dung beetles roll their remains short distances while using the Milky Way to stay on course.
It's an impressive feat for Bogong moths, whose brains are smaller than a grain of rice, to rely on the night sky for their odyssey, said study author David Dreyer with Lund University in Sweden.
'It's remarkable that an animal with such a tiny brain can actually do this,' Dreyer said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

An Unexpected Clue To How Metformin, The World's Top Diabetes Drug, Works
An Unexpected Clue To How Metformin, The World's Top Diabetes Drug, Works

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

An Unexpected Clue To How Metformin, The World's Top Diabetes Drug, Works

Metformin is an unassuming hero of modern medicine. For more than sixty years, this humble pill has been a mainstay of diabetes care, helping millions of people manage their blood sugar. It lowers blood sugar, improves cholesterol, modestly reduces weight, and is so safe it's prescribed to millions worldwide. And yet, for decades, scientists haven't fully understood how it works. The standard explanation has long been that metformin works in the liver, reducing how much sugar it sends into the bloodstream. It also helps muscles and fat cells respond more effectively to insulin. More recent research added other suspects: the gut, which can tweak hormones and the microbiome, and a cellular pathway called mTOR, a major regulator of metabolism and longevity. But a new study published in Science Advances suggests that part of metformin's magic might be happening somewhere unexpected: in the brain. The Blood Sugar Command Center Researchers turned their attention to a protein called Rap1, found in a small pocket of the brain known as the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH). This area is a metabolic mission control, coordinating hunger, energy use, and glucose balance. When scientists switched off Rap1 in this brain region in mice, blood sugar levels fell, even without metformin. But when they kept Rap1 switched on, metformin lost its blood-sugar-lowering power. The results hint that, at the doses typically prescribed, metformin may partly work by silencing Rap1's activity in the brain, not just by acting on the liver or gut. Most of us think of blood sugar control as the domain of the pancreas, liver, and muscles. Yet the brain is deeply involved. The VMH works like an air traffic controller, taking in information from across the body and sending out signals to adjust glucose production and use. Metformin, it seems, may be tapping into this high-level control system. By dialing down Rap1 activity, the drug might trigger a cascade of neural instructions that ripple out to the rest of the body, improving how tissues handle sugar. Beyond Diabetes Metformin has drawn attention far beyond the diabetes world. It's being studied for its potential to slow certain aspects of aging, with researchers probing whether its effects on pathways like mTOR could help extend not just lifespan but healthspan. The discovery of the brain-Rap1 link opens new possibilities. Could this same circuit be part of metformin's longevity effects? If so, drugs that target Rap1 or its related pathways might someday offer more precise ways to improve metabolism or promote healthy aging, perhaps without some of metformin's side effects. When Old Drugs Tell New Tales This does not mean discarding what is already known about metformin's effects on the liver, muscles, and gut. Those mechanisms are still in play. But at everyday doses, the brain may have a starring role in how the drug works. At much higher doses, peripheral mechanisms can take over, but in real-world clinical use, the brain's contribution could be key. The finding is also a reminder that the brain and body are not separate actors in the story of metabolism. They are in constant conversation, adjusting and responding to keep systems in balance. And as this research shows, an old drug can reveal something entirely new about that conversation. Even after six decades, metformin still has secrets to share: secrets that may change how both the medicine itself and the intricate links between the brain, the body, and health are understood.

Japanese Encephalitis Continues to Spread in Australia
Japanese Encephalitis Continues to Spread in Australia

Medscape

time2 hours ago

  • Medscape

Japanese Encephalitis Continues to Spread in Australia

Japanese encephalitis virus continues to spread in Australia. It has been detected in the country's mosquito and arbovirus surveillance programs, as well as in feral pigs and commercial piggeries in most states and territories. The virus has claimed two lives this year and has been detected in mosquitoes collected in Queensland's capital city, Brisbane, for the first time. Japanese encephalitis virus was reported in regions of Australia for the first time in the summer of 2021-2022. At the time, experts described it as the 'most significant local arbovirus emergency in almost 50 years.' The outbreak, fueled by La Niña weather patterns, led Australia's acting chief medical officer to declare the outbreak a Communicable Disease Incident of National Significance in March 2022. It resulted in 45 cases and 7 deaths. 'One of the most critical things now is that Australians realize that mosquitoes are not just an annoyance,' Cameron Webb, PhD, associate professor of medical sciences at the University of Sydney, Sydney, and medical entomologist at NSW Health Pathology, Newcastle, told Medscape Medical News. 'In some parts of the country, they can kill you.' Changing Epidemiology Japanese encephalitis is a flavivirus related to dengue, yellow fever, and West Nile viruses. It is spread through bites from mosquitoes (primarily Culex tritaeniorhynchus ) that become infected after biting infected pigs and waterbirds. Japanese encephalitis is endemic in more than 20 countries across Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific. Between 67,500 and 100,000 cases are reported every year. While most cases are mild (resulting in fever and headache) or asymptomatic, about 1 in 250 infections result in severe illness. Among patients who become severely ill, the case fatality rate can be as high as 30%. Up to half of severely ill patients develop lifelong neurologic, behavioral, or cognitive problems. Most cases occur in children younger than 15 years. Before 2021-2022, Japanese encephalitis virus was considered to be limited to the far north of Australia. It was first detected in the Torres Strait Islands in 1995 and on the mainland in 1998 in the Cape York Peninsula. In the summer of 2021-2022, Japanese encephalitis virus was detected in commercial piggeries in southeastern Australia, highlighting the virus's changing epidemiology. 'Altered rainfall patterns and warmer temperatures affect mosquito breeding habitats and the distribution of reservoir hosts. These conditions can extend the mosquito season and expand the geographic range of mosquito vectors such as Culex species,' said Sarah McGuinness, MBBS, PhD, consultant physician in the Department of Infectious Diseases at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne. McGuinness also is a senior research fellow at the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Monash University in Melbourne. Urban Spread 'Urbanization also plays a role by creating peri-urban environments where humans, livestock, and wildlife interact more closely, increasing the risk of spillover.' While experts anticipated the virus to return in the 2023-2024 summer season, it didn't return until 2024-25. Its detection in Australia's third largest city was cause for concern. 'The emergence of Japanese encephalitis in mainland Australia and its spread to the southeastern states has been extremely concerning, particularly in relation to the high number of human cases and the impacts on pig farming due to reproductive losses in sows caused by the virus,' David Williams, PhD, group leader of diagnostics and mammalian infectious disease research at The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation's Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness, told Medscape Medical News. David Williams, PhD 'The finding that the virus has been circulating in Brisbane is particularly concerning, given the additional risks to more densely populated areas,' Williams added. 'Is Japanese encephalitis being reintroduced into the southern states from northern Australia, or is it wintering somewhere in the ecosystem and then reemerging when mosquito numbers start increasing? I don't think we understand this yet…but unfortunately, I think we can expect further cases in Australia.' Earlier this year, the World Health Organization released a technical brief on encephalitis (which many different pathogens can cause), stressing that it was a growing global concern 'due to population density, intensive farming, climate change, vaccine hesitancy, and human-animal proximity.' It stressed the role that vaccination can play in preventing Japanese encephalitis. Vaccination Efforts Australia offers free vaccination for identified priority groups and patients living in certain local government areas deemed of concern. Risk areas are determined by state and territory health departments on the basis of surveillance data. Two vaccines are licensed in Australia. But while vaccination is available, public awareness is limited. 'There's a real opportunity for healthcare providers to help raise awareness among the general population and among travelers,' McGuinness said. 'We're working to support these efforts by developing tools that facilitate conversations around Japanese encephalitis and vaccination.' Sarah McGuinness, MBBS, PhD McGuinness and colleagues have developed a Japanese encephalitis vaccine decision aid, which helps individuals assess their personal risk and make informed decisions. Continuing to raise public awareness is key, said Webb. 'We're very lucky in that we are generally free of some of the serious mosquito-borne diseases that impact many countries, like malaria and dengue. But we need to remind the community that it's important to take extra measures in some parts of the country to avoid mosquito bites.' 'We need to make people aware of the cheap and effective ways to protect themselves, such as how they dress, how they spend time near bushlands, and [how they use] repellent.' Surveillance Strategies Besides providing vaccination, Australia has also strengthened its surveillance systems, which include mosquito trapping and enhanced diagnostic capacity. But as Williams explained, affected states were able to capitalize on arbovirus surveillance programs that already were in place for other diseases. They pivoted to incorporate Japanese encephalitis into their sampling and testing activities. 'There has also been extensive work to sample wild animal populations such as waterbirds and feral pigs to understand their roles in the ecology of Japanese encephalitis virus,' said Williams. While the involvement of waterbirds had been well established, it's unclear which other species are involved. 'Data and information sharing is another area that has been a focus across jurisdictions to make this more seamless,' Williams added. '[It is] inherently challenging but critical for decision-makers during outbreaks and for our broader understanding of the epidemiology of Japanese encephalitis across the nation…there's still much we don't know about Japanese encephalitis virus in Australia and much more research to do.' Any information that can be gained will be helpful in filling in the gaps, Webb agreed. 'The problem that we're facing is that everything we previously knew about these types of viruses has recently been upended,' he said. 'For me, it's about thinking about how we can gather information to help professionals to make decisions by better understanding the parts of Australia at greater or lesser risk of regular activity of the virus.'

Archaeologists perplexed to find West African ancestry in early medieval England
Archaeologists perplexed to find West African ancestry in early medieval England

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Archaeologists perplexed to find West African ancestry in early medieval England

DNA recovered from skeletons buried in a 7th-century cemetery on the south coast of England reveals the buried individuals had West African ancestry, raising further questions about early medieval migrations to Europe. Archaeologists documented significant migration during this period into England from continental northern Europe, with historical accounts describing the settlement of Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. However, the extent of movement from further afield has remained unclear. To further understand early medieval migration in Europe, researchers performed DNA analysis on individuals buried at two 7th-century AD cemeteries on England's south coast – Updown in Kent and Worth Matravers in Dorset. The findings, published in two studies in the journal Antiquity, show clear signs of non-European ancestry of two buried individuals with affinity to present-day groups living in sub-Saharan West Africa. While most of the individuals buried at the cemeteries had either northern European or western British and Irish ancestry, one person at each cemetery had a recent ancestor from West Africa, scientists said. "Kent has always been a conduit for influence from the adjacent continent, and this was particularly marked in the 6th century – what might be termed Kent's 'Frankish Phase,'' said Duncan Sayer, an author of one of the studies from the University of Lancashire. "Updown is also located near the royal centre of Finglesham, indicating that these connections were part of a wider royal network,' Dr Sayer said. In contrast, Dorset was on the fringes of continental influence, researchers say. "The archaeological evidence suggests a marked and notable cultural divide between Dorset and areas to the west, and the Anglo-Saxon-influenced areas to the east,' said Ceiridwen J Edwards, one of the authors of the other study, from the University of Huddersfield. The individuals showed clear signs of non-European ancestry with affinity to present-day Yoruba, Mende, Mandenka, and Esan groups from sub-Saharan West Africa, the study noted. Further DNA analysis revealed they had mixed descent, with both having one paternal grandparent from West Africa. The Updown grave was found to contain several goods, including a pot likely imported from Frankish Gaul, and a spoon hinting at the individual's Christian faith or connections to the Byzantine Empire. This cemetery was part of Kent's royal network, and these grave goods and genetic indicators point to the region's continental connections, the study noted. The other individual at the Worth Matravers grave site was buried alongside a male with British ancestry and an anchor made of local limestone. The fact that the individuals were buried along with typical members of their communities indicates that they were valued locally, archaeologists noted. "What is fascinating about these two individuals is that this international connection is found in both the east and west of Britain,' said Dr Sayer. 'Updown is right in the centre of the early Anglo-Saxon cultural zone and Worth Matravers, by contrast, is just outside its periphery in the sub-Roman west,' he explained. The findings, according to researchers, raise further questions about long-distance movement and demographic interaction in Britain during the Early Middle Ages. "Our joint results emphasise the cosmopolitan nature of England in the early medieval period, pointing to a diverse population with far-flung connections who were, nonetheless, fully integrated into the fabric of daily life,' Dr Edwards concluded.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store