Hello Nature readers, would you like to get this Briefing in your inbox free every day? Sign up here

An aerial view of a grass fire in the fields in Bolotnoye District, south Siberia

Northern fires (like the one shown here in the Novosibirsk region of south Siberia) released record-setting amounts of carbon dioxide this year.Credit: Kirill Kukhmar/TASS/Getty

Arctic fires emit record CO2

Wildfires that incinerated tundra along the Arctic Circle this summer released a record 244 megatonnes of carbon dioxide — 35% more than last year, which was also a record breaker. Scientists think the fires are so bad in part because they’re torching peatlands, which have accumulated carbon over many millennia, making them the most carbon-dense ecosystem on Earth. The fires are part of a vicious cycle: their emissions fuel global heating, leading to ever-worse fires, which release yet more carbon. Recent research shows that northern peatlands could eventually shift from being a net sink for carbon to a net source of carbon — and, say scientists, the transformation is already under way.

Nature | 5 min read

Reference: PNAS paper

More than 100 journals online have vanished

Dozens of open-access journals — and many of the papers published in them — have disappeared from the Internet over the past two decades. Most of the 176 ‘vanished’ journals are in the humanities and social sciences. Journals can disappear for a number of reasons: the publisher might stop paying for the website, for example, and the pages might not be preserved in digital archives. The analysis also found 900 journals that are still online but have stopped publishing papers, making them vulnerable to disappearing in the near future.

Nature | 5 min read

Reference: arXiv preprint

Huge decline in abundance of life on Earth

Wildlife populations plunged by 68% between 1970 and 2016, and only 25% of the planet can still be considered ‘wilderness’. The grim numbers come from a report by wildlife charity WWF and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), based on global data on 20,811 populations of 4,392 vertebrate species. Worst hit is Latin America and the Caribbean, where the animal population dropped by an average of 94% during that period. Food production is the biggest driver of nature loss, says the report, with about 50% of the world’s habitable land area already used for agriculture. “We are wrecking our world — the one place we call home — risking our health, security and survival here on Earth,” says WWF chief executive Tanya Steele.

BBC | 5 min read

Reference: WWF and ZSL Living Planet Report

The science of orange wildfire skies

Another year of record wildfires in the western United States has turned the skies orange over cities such as San Francisco, California. The effect is down to more than just smoke blocking the Sun. Trapped by a layer of fog that lingers over the cool ocean, soot particles from the fires refract different wavelengths of light from clear air. With red and orange wavelengths dominating the view — no more blue skies.

Forbes | 3 min read

Features & opinion

Don’t ignore genetic data from minority populations

Efforts to build representative studies are defeated when scientists discard data from certain groups, argue eight genomics researchers and ethicists. Instead, researchers should work to balance statistical needs with fairness. The authors suggest an approach used in health care — a framework called accountability for reasonableness (A4R) — to help researchers make analytical decisions that are ethically as well as scientifically sound.

Nature | 9 min read

Left out. Graphic comparing UK biobank minority recruitment with analyses.

Source: Analysis by C. Ben-Eghan et al.

Weapons for when bigotry claims science as its ally

Science writer and geneticist Adam Rutherford’s book How to Argue with A Racist is urgently relevant to the present moment, writes reviewer Alondra Nelson. “Many nations have seen an efflorescence of anti-racist reading lists. Rutherford’s book is rightfully on them,” writes Nelson. “But like many such volumes, after reading, the question remains: in this moment, could arguing the facts, even with Rutherford’s compelling narrative and nuance, possibly be enough?”

Nature | 7 min read

Podcast: Computer chips cooled from within

Controlling heat is a major hurdle when it comes to increasing electronics’ power. This week, the Nature Podcast explores a new way to integrate tiny microfluidic channels directly into circuits, to help them keep their cool. Plus, coronavirus mutations and the people left out of genetic studies.

Nature Podcast | 39 min listen

Subscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify.

Reference: Nature paper

Where I work

Peter Tsai at the Carbon Fiber Technology Facility’s melt-blown material production line.

Peter Tsai is a materials scientist in Knoxville, Tennessee.Credit: Carlos Jones/Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Peter Tsai, the inventor of the electrostatically charged filter used in face masks, has emerged from retirement to help boost filter production and reuse. Here, he’s pictured at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, where he has loaned his own equipment to the filter-production line. “Even though I’m mostly working for free, I feel a responsibility to help out during the pandemic,” says Tsai. “Otherwise, I would regret it for the rest of my life.” (Nature | 3 min read)