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Sea-turtle poaching is on the wane
The first worldwide estimate of the number of adult sea turtles moved on the black market suggests that 1.1 million of the reptiles were illegally harvested between 1990 and 2020. But poaching is dropping sharply, and most populations worldwide are doing well. “The silver lining is that, despite the seemingly large illegal take, exploitation is not having a negative impact on sea-turtle populations on a global scale. This is really good news,” says co-author and marine conservation scientist Jesse Senko.
Reference: Global Change Biology paper
China’s weather challenged scientists
Many parts of China are just emerging from an extreme heatwave that was followed by a severe drought and out-of-season wildfires. Some 360 million people experienced temperatures above 40 °C at some point during the two-month-long heatwave. And the Yangtze River basin, home to nearly one-third of China’s population, received up to 80% less rain than the 30-year average for that period. “We did not predict that the intensity would be so high,” says climatologist Sun Shao. Scientists say the severity of these events shows how important it is becoming to study several extreme weather events together.
Features & opinion
Embryo tests make controversial promises
Some companies offer tests that rank embryos generated by in vitro fertilization (IVF) on the basis of their risk of developing complex diseases, such as schizophrenia or heart disease. Scientists use the genetic contributions of hundreds, thousands or even millions of single-DNA-letter changes in the genome to calculate a ‘polygenic risk score’, which estimates someone’s likelihood of getting a disease. Critics say the tests don't have adequate predictive power for many conditions and that the results are ripe for misinterpretation. And some warn that these tests are unethical, putting pressure on parents to make a ‘perfect’ baby, narrowing our view of what is acceptable in a child and further entrenching health inequities.
How fireflies flash in sync
Growing up, computational biologist Orit Peleg had never even seen a firefly. But as a student, she read about them as an example of how simple systems achieve synchrony. “It’s just so beautiful that it somehow stuck in my head for many, many years,” she says. Her group has captured the first comprehensive, global real-world data about the insects — and found that real firefly swarms don’t match up with mathematical idealizations.
The mother of all queues
At its longest, the queue to view Queen Elizabeth II lying in state was 16 kilometres long and took 24 hours to traverse. “Nobody’s ever seen a queue as long as this before,” says crowd-safety consultant Andy Hollinson, who helped to plan the events following the queen’s death. Crowd scientists outline how infrastructure, modelling and the psychology of British people combined to make a queue fit for a queen.