logo
Low Danube waters bring huge mayfly swarms in Budapest

Low Danube waters bring huge mayfly swarms in Budapest

Yahoo3 days ago
STORY: :: Mayflies swarm the river Danube earlier than usual and in greater numbers
:: Budapest, Hungary
:: July 23, 2025
:: Gyorgy Kriska, Associate Professor, Eotvos Lorand University
'Since 2012 we have seen huge swarming in those years when the water levels are quite low. We think it is because the sun lights the riverbed more and the algae can breed more and that way the larvae find more food.'
:: Researchers put up special blue lights to guide the mayflies, which get confused by city lights
:: July 26, 2025
'What our lights are doing is that they keep them here, they don't let them fly above so they keep swarming around the lights, and often a swirl of insects form around the lights, which reaches the surface of the water and they splash into the water. Where the mayflies reach the water they place their eggs there. What we can achieve is that they stay in place over the water and the next generation is saved. They cannot go further up but at least their offspring survive.'
:: Mayflies, a protected species in Hungary, live for less than a day after they hatch
Hundreds of thousands, sometimes millions, of mayflies engage in a frantic rush to mate and reproduce before they perish within just a few hours. Mayflies live for less than a day after they hatch, and their abundance is closely connected to the health of the Danube.
Danube mayflies usually start swarming in August, but this year it began in mid-July, and is expected to last for weeks.
Danube mayflies, a protected species, did not swarm for about four decades as the river was too polluted. They returned in 2012 when the Danube became cleaner due to the construction of wastewater treating plants, he added.
As mayflies swarm upriver after mating, they can be confused by city lights or the shadows of bridges, causing them to crash on the riverbank instead of laying their eggs in the water.
To help them as much as possible, Hungarian researchers installed special blue lights on two bridges.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope
In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

In Darwin's wake: Two-year global conservation voyage sparks hope

After a two-year around-the-world ocean voyage inspired by Charles Darwin, scientists and crew sailed home on a historic vessel into Rotterdam Thursday bearing a warning about climate change -- but also a message of hope. The majestic three-masted Oosterschelde, the last remaining vessel from a fleet of Dutch schooners that criss-crossed the globe in the early 20th century, arrived to a welcome befitting a voyage of more than 40,000 nautical miles (74,000 kilometres, 46,000 miles). Ceremonially escorted by more than a dozen vessels ranging from tall ships to steamships, all blaring horns, the Oosterschelde received a "water cannon salute" from fire service boats, as hundreds waved and cheered from the banks. Like Darwin in 1831, the Oosterschelde departed the British port of Plymouth in August 2023 to embark on a voyage of discovery that took in the major stops explored during the British naturalist's world-changing mission aboard the HMS Beagle. From the Falkland Islands to the southern tips of Africa, South America and Australia, the trip closely shadowed Darwin's voyage that inspired his groundbreaking theory of natural selection described in "On the Origin of Species". Aboard the Oosterschelde at various points of the voyage were some of the world's best young conservationists, 100 scientists aged 18-25, selected to study a species also observed by Darwin, himself aged 22 at the time of his trip. Giant tortoises, Chilean dolphins, and howler monkeys were just some of the weird and wonderful creatures the young "Darwin Leaders" investigated, tracking changes since their appearance in "Origin of Species" two centuries ago. With "online classrooms" onboard and slick social media output, the mission also hoped to inspire a new generation around the message: "Conservation isn't about what we've lost, it's about protecting what we still have." - 'Barely anything left' - One of the Darwin Leaders, 23-year-old Lotta Baten, spent a week on the ship and conducted a study into the impact of tourism on forests in Tenerife, Spain. She said only roughly four percent of the forest that Darwin would have seen from the Beagle is still alive today, with much torn down to support the tourism industry. "There's barely anything left, mainly the strips around the coast," the Dutch-German scientist told AFP. She said it was "quite something" to follow in the footsteps of Darwin, but noted that the botanist's legacy is divided, as a European in colonial times. "He basically explored and discovered things that maybe had already been explored and discovered by people at the places themselves. And then he claimed he discovered them," said Baten. Science co-ordinator Rolf Schreuder admitted that "it's not a rosy picture", with habitat loss and climate change all transforming the environment beyond what Darwin would have recognised. "You see the natural world degrading in many places," the 55-year-old told AFP. But Schreuder, like many on board, found the mission inspiring rather than depressing. He ran more than 100 local projects during the trip with people seeking to preserve their landscapes. "We met so many great people that are actually on the ground working on the survival of those species," he said. He found himself inspired too by the young scientists, "full of ideas, full of commitment and determination to really make a difference." - 'Do another tour' - Crew member Daan van Roosmalen was a boy of 17 when he set sail on the Oosterschelde. He returned to his native Netherlands having just turned 19. "I've just been to so many places. To the Galapagos Islands, French Polynesia. We went so far away and to then sail back up this river and see the skyline of Rotterdam again is just super special," he told AFP. He said he hoped the round-the-world voyage completed by scientists and crew his age would send a message to his generation. "I think it's very important that we keep inspiring young people to look after our world, because we are going to be the ones taking over," he said. "So to see all these young conservationists putting so much effort in Mother Earth... I think that should inspire more people to also take care of our planet." And what of Darwin, the inspiration behind the mission? "I would say he would have been enthused by his fellow young people taking care of this natural world, which he described so nicely," said Schreuder. "I think he would hop on this boat again and do another tour." ric/srg/rmb

Google AI Model Helps Us See the Planet as We Never Have Before
Google AI Model Helps Us See the Planet as We Never Have Before

CNET

time2 hours ago

  • CNET

Google AI Model Helps Us See the Planet as We Never Have Before

It's a view of Mother Earth as we've never seen her, and it just might help us solve some our most existential issues: Google has launched a new AI model called AlphaEarth Foundations, which can take a bunch of images and measurements from satellites and other sources to create current and accurate digital representations of lands and waters. With all this data, scientists and researchers can monitor problems like water scarcity, deforestation and crop health, among others. Google says AlphaEarth's AI modeling has already been helpful. "Our partners are already seeing significant benefits, using the data to better classify unmapped ecosystems, understand agricultural and environmental changes, and greatly increase the accuracy and speed of their mapping work," the Google DeepMind blog said Wednesday. Satellites deliver a treasure trove of data every day, but all this information varies in its modalities -- such as satellite, radar, simulations and laser mapping -- and how current it is. AlphaEarth can integrate all that data and "weaves all this information together to analyze the world's land and coastal waters in sharp, 10x10 meter squares." AlphaEarth also creates summaries for each of these squares that "require 16 times less storage space than those produced by other AI systems that we tested and dramatically reduces the cost of planetary-scale analysis," Google said. Scientists "no longer have to rely on a single satellite passing overhead."

Musk's Neuralink to test brain chips in clinical study in Great Britain
Musk's Neuralink to test brain chips in clinical study in Great Britain

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Musk's Neuralink to test brain chips in clinical study in Great Britain

(Reuters) - Elon Musk's brain implant company Neuralink said on Thursday it will launch a clinical study in Great Britain to test how its chips can enable patients with severe paralysis to control digital and physical tools with their thoughts. The company is partnering with the University College London Hospitals trust and Newcastle Hospitals to conduct the study, it said in a post on X. Neuralink said patients living with paralysis due to conditions such as spinal cord injury and a nervous system disease called Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) qualify to participate in the study. The company raised $650 million in its latest funding round last month. It began human trials in 2024 on its brain implant after resolving safety concerns flagged by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which had initially rejected Neuralink's application in 2022. According to the company, five patients with severe paralysis are currently using its device to control digital and physical tools with their thoughts. Neuralink, founded in 2016, has raised about $1.3 billion from investors and is valued at roughly $9 billion, according to media reports, citing PitchBook.

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