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Killer whales 'massage' each other using kelp

Killer whales 'massage' each other using kelp

BBC News23-06-2025
Orcas in the North Pacific have been seen "massaging" each other - rubbing pieces of kelp between their bodies. Using drones, researchers filmed the animals selecting and biting off the kelp, then placing the tube-shaped piece of seaweed onto the back of another whale. The scientists think the massages might have a health or hygiene function, but they also believe they are a form of social bonding. The findings, published in the journal Current Biology, appear to be an example of tool use in killer whales - with the animals fashioning a tubular piece of seaweed and using it for a specific, planned purpose.
"Let's call it a kelp massage," explained Prof Darren Croft from the University of Exeter and the Center for Whale Research in Washington State. "They're using the kelp to rub between themselves."During 12 days - between April and July 2024 - of studying a population of orcas known as the Southern Residents in the coastal waters off Washington State, the team recorded 30 bouts of kelp massage. "We see it multiple times per day," lead researcher, Dr Michael Weiss from the CWR, told BBC News. "When we get a drone over these animals, we're going to see at least one pair of whales doing this."This could be a marine version of what is known as allogrooming in primates. Many monkeys and apes groom other members of their groups - spending hours picking through fur, cleaning and removing parasites. The researchers have dubbed this behaviour as "allokelping". Physical touch in animals, Prof Croft explained, "is really important for building and maintaining social relationships."And these killer whales are incredibly social animals," he added.
The scientists have been using drones for almost a decade to study these marine mammals.That aerial view has given them new insight into underwater behaviour - including how and with whom the animals socialise. "What's incredible with this discovery is that - with high quality video - we could see that a lot of this physical contact [between these large whales] is happening with the aid of this relatively small piece of kelp." There was some indication that whales with "more peely skin" were more likely to engage in the massages. "That's pointing towards the idea that they're 'scratching an itch' - that it has a function in skin health," said Prof Croft. BBC Inside Science: Can science save our oceans? Orca mothers keep 5-tonne sons out of troubleSecrets of climate change hidden in whales' huge bodies
It is not clear whether this type of grooming behavior is unique to the Southern Residents or if it is more widespread among other whale populations - and even other species. But Dr Weiss said that the discovery - that whales were manufacturing tools, "and that these objects were being used in a way never before reported in marine mammals, was incredibly exciting". The study of this threatened killer whale population, which lives in the coastal waters between Vancouver and Seattle, was started by Dr Ken Balcomb more than 50 years ago. Initially, he wanted to examine the threats to their survival, particularly as the population was targeted for capture and sale to some marine parks.As well as garnering the southern resident killer whales official protected status, the ensuing years of work and observations went on to reveal insights into killer whale life that could only have come to light through decades of study. The studies have revealed, for example, the vital role of killer whale grandmothers and how much the females sacrifice to support their sons.Dr Weiss said the new finding highlighted "yet another way these whales' society and culture is unique and the importance of recovering the southern resident killer whale population".
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‘The American system is being destroyed': academics on leaving US for ‘scientific asylum' in France
‘The American system is being destroyed': academics on leaving US for ‘scientific asylum' in France

The Guardian

time34 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘The American system is being destroyed': academics on leaving US for ‘scientific asylum' in France

It was on a US-bound flight in March, as Brian Sandberg stressed about whether he would be stopped at security, that the American historian knew the time had come for him to leave his home country. For months, he had watched Donald Trump's administration unleash a multipronged attack on academia – slashing funding, targeting international students and deeming certain fields and even keywords off limits. As his plane approached the US, it felt as though the battle had hit home, as Sandberg worried that he would face reprisals over comments he had made during his travels to the French media on the future of research in the US. 'It makes you think about what your status is as a researcher and the principle of academic freedom,' he said. 'Things have really changed … The entire system of research and higher education in the United States is really under attack.' Soon after, he became one of the nearly 300 researchers to apply for a French university's groundbreaking offer of 'scientific asylum'. Launched by Aix-Marseille University, the programme was among the first in Europe to offer reprieve to researchers reeling from the US crackdown on academia, promising three years of funding for about 20 researchers. Last week, Sandberg was revealed as one of the 39 researchers shortlisted for the programme. 'The American system is being destroyed at the moment,' he told the 80 reporters who turned up to meet the candidates. 'I think a lot of people in the United States and as well as here in Europe have not understood the level to which all of higher education is being targeted.' As reports began to emerge of funding freezes, cuts and executive orders targeting institutions across the Atlantic, institutions across Europe sprang into action, announcing plans to lure US-based academics. At Aix-Marseille University, hundreds of applications came in from researchers tied to institutions such as Johns Hopkins University, Nasa, Columbia, Yale and Stanford. Three months after they launched their programme – named Safe Place for Science – the university said it had received more than 500 inquiries. It was a glimpse of the 'historic' moment the world was facing, said Éric Berton, the university's president. 'More than 80 years ago, as France was under occupation and repression, America welcomed exiled researchers, offering them a helping hand and allowing them to keep science alive,' he said. 'And now, in a sad reversal of history, some American scientists have arrived in France in search of a space for freedom, thought and research.' Last week, the university opened its doors, allowing reporters to meet a handful of the Americans who were in the final running to join the programme. As high-profile battles play out between universities such as Harvard and the White House, all of them asked that their institutions not be named, citing concerns that their employers could face reprisals. Some declined to speak to the media, while others asked that their full names not be used, offering a hint of how the Trump administration's actions are sowing anxiety among academics. 'The worry is that we've already seen that scientists are being detained at the border. Granted they're not US citizens, but they're even saying now that if you speak out against the government, they will deport you,' said a biological anthropologist who asked to be identified only as Lisa. 'And so I don't need anything against me at the moment until I can officially move here with my family.' Together the researchers painted a picture of a profession that had been plunged into uncertainty as the US government slashes spending on research grants and dismantles the federal institutions that manage and hand out funding. Months into Trump's second presidency, politics is increasingly blurring into academia as the government works to root out anything it deems as 'wokeism' from the post-secondary world. 'There's a lot of censorship now, it's crazy,' said Carol Lee, an evolutionary biologist, pointing to the list of terms now seen as off-limits in research grant applications. 'There are a lot of words that we're not allowed to use. We're not allowed to use the words diversity, women, LGBTQ.' Sign up to This is Europe The most pressing stories and debates for Europeans – from identity to economics to the environment after newsletter promotion While the swift pace of change had left many nervous about what may lie ahead, many were not taking any chances. 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I'm a top astrobiologist – here's why I am convinced aliens DID live on Mars…and they could have been smarter than us
I'm a top astrobiologist – here's why I am convinced aliens DID live on Mars…and they could have been smarter than us

The Sun

time40 minutes ago

  • The Sun

I'm a top astrobiologist – here's why I am convinced aliens DID live on Mars…and they could have been smarter than us

David Rivers Published: Invalid Date, ASTRONAUTS visiting Mars could unearth a museum of alien fossils that may have belonged to an intelligent civilisation. Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe backed NASA 's plan to send humans to Mars in the 2030s and Elon Musk's bid to colonise the planet. 5 5 The Buckingham Centre for Astrobiology astrobiologist thinks alien life 'unquestionably' existed on the Red Planet. And he's even suggested explorers could unearth fossils pointing to alien life, possibly more intelligent than us. Prof Wickramasinghe told The Sun: 'I think it is entirely plausible that Mars, sometime in the past, was a green planet full of life. 'Then something happened that made it a virtually dead planet or nearly a dead planet. 'This could have happened after impact. An episode of comet asteroid impacts could have destroyed all life that existed on it if it did exist on Mars. It could have destroyed it just as on the Earth. 'If there was a huge protracted episode of asteroid comet impacts, then this planet would be a dead planet. 'The fact that Mars and Earth are very similar, geologically very similar, have seasons and they have very similar patterns of oscillation of temperature and so on makes it entirely possible that, in the past, Mars was the home of life. 'I don't rule out intelligent life. He added: 'I think astronauts will explore all those fossils discussed by Barry DiGregorio, examine them more carefully and decide whether they're artifacts or real fossils. 'They would encounter bacteria and I think they would find a planet that is very easy to terraform, to make it a living planet like the earth. Hidden ocean on Mars found that 'could cover entire planet with a mile of water' and 'should be able to sustain life' 'If you go with enough resources, you could build houses and build a civilisation on Mars, and I don't think that's impossible. 'I can't rule out an intelligent civilisation.' Asked what that life may have looked like, he said: "It's speculation. It could have been as intelligent as you or I or maybe even more intelligent. "Who knows? I think evidence has been virtually stamped out of existence possibly through an impact episode, if it did exist." DiGregorio had claimed alien fossils had been discovered by NASA's Curiosity rover in 2018. He accused NASA of failing to investigate properly so it could boost publicity for a manned mission to Mars. 5 5 NASA said it believed the images likely showed signs of crystal growth, not alien fossils. Billionaire Musk has long signalled his intent to colonise Mars through his SpaceX company. Last year, the X owner even suggested humans could land there in four years and be living in a self-sustaining city in 20. NASA says on its website it intends to send humans to Mars in the 1930s. In 1976, NASA landed two Viking landers on Mars. NASA scientist Gilbert Levin ran an experiment to test the soil and concluded there were positive signs of life through the presence of radioactive gas. NASA and its other scientists disagreed, and separate experiments from Viking concluded the soil did not show signs of life. But Levin spent the rest of his life claiming he'd found signs of alien life until his death in 2021. Prof Wickramasinghe said: 'We have unquestionably found microbial life on Mars, the most secure discovery was the Gilbert Levin discovery in the 1970s when they did the Viking land experiments.' NASA's mission to Mars NASA hopes to send astronauts to Mars as early as the 2030s. The space company has been working to advance its technologies in a bid to send a human crew to the Red Planet. It would take astronauts up to nine months to reach Mars - which even at its closest is 33.9 million miles away. Astronauts could then spend up to 500 days on the planet's surface before returning to Earth - which would take another nine months. The crew would spend their time on the planet collecting data and assessing the planetary alignment that would allow the spacecraft to land and depart from Mars on the same orbit. Last year, the agency completed a year-long simulated mission that saw four crew members out in a replica habitat in Houston, Texas. They logged 378 days in the 1,700-square-foot, 3D-printed habitat called Mars Dune Alpha. He added: 'That result was overwhelmingly positive. They got the result that they wanted. 'So almost immediately Levin, who I'd known for a long time, made the announcement on behalf of NASA that we have discovered life on Mars. 'This was a step too far for the NASA establishment, and they then revoked that statement.' On its website, NASA says: "Mars remains our horizon goal for human exploration because it is one of the only other places we know where life may have existed in the solar system. "What we learn about the Red Planet will tell us more about our Earth's past and future, and may help answer whether life exists beyond our home planet. "Like the Moon, Mars is a rich destination for scientific discovery and a driver of technologies that will enable humans to travel and explore far from Earth." Mars facts Here's what you need to know about the red planet... Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun It is named after the Roman god of war The landmass of Mars is very similar to Earth, but due to the difference in gravity, you could jump three times higher there than you can here. Mars is mountainous and hosts the tallest mountain known in the Solar System called Olympus Mons, which is three times higher than Everest Mars is considered the second most habitable planet after Earth. It takes the planet 687 Earth days to orbit the Sun The planet has a diameter of 4,212 miles, and has an average distance from Earth of 140 million miles Martian temperatures can vary wildly, reaching as high as 70F/20C or as low as -225F/-153C

Mysterious interstellar object caught on camera as scientist says it could be an alien spacecraft
Mysterious interstellar object caught on camera as scientist says it could be an alien spacecraft

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Mysterious interstellar object caught on camera as scientist says it could be an alien spacecraft

A mysterious interstellar object hurtling through the solar system has been caught on camera for the first time. First spotted by on July 1, scientists from around the world have now confirmed that this unexpected visitor has travelled through space from a distant star. Officially titled 3I/ATLAS, the rare interloper is 12 miles (20km) long and hurtling towards the sun at 135,000 miles per hour. Now, using a powerful telescope in Hawaii, the European Space Agency (ESA) has captured the first video of 3I/ATLAS as it journeys through space. The short video shows that the object is extremely bright, which means it is either many times larger than any other interstellar object or has another source of illumination. Most experts agree that this extra illumination is caused by the fact that 3I/ATLAS is an active comet, producing a glowing 'coma' of ice and gas as it approaches the sun. However, one Harvard professor claims that the light might not be able to be explained by natural means. Professor Avi Loeb, a physicist at Harvard University, told MailOnline: 'If it is not a comet, then its large brightness would be a big surprise and potentially signal a non-natural origin, perhaps from artificial light.' 3I/ATLAS was detected as a faint speck of light by NASA's Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) telescope. Since then, professional and amateur astronomers around the world have scrambled to gather more data. Scientists quickly combed older data to find observations of the object that had previously been missed, in a process called precovery. Combining these with hundreds of new observations, scientists were able to officially confirm that 3I/ATLAS is an interstellar object. Currently 420 million miles (670 million kilometres) away from Earth, 3I/ATLAS's trajectory and incredible speed mean it must be passing through our solar system after being ejected by its own star. NASA predicts that it will reach its closest point to the sun on October 30, at a distance of 130 million miles (210 million km) - passing just within the orbit of Mars. Thankfully, the object poses no threat to Earth and will pass harmlessly at around 150 million miles (240 million km) away at its closest point. This is only the third time that scientists have managed to spot an interstellar object passing through the solar system. The first interstellar object was Oumuamua in 2017, followed by Borisov in 2019. When Oumuamua was first detected, certain irregularities in its spin and velocity prompted Professor Loeb and his co-author, Dr Shmuel Bialy, to suggest that it could be alien in origin. Professor Loeb said: 'Oumuamua exhibited a large non-gravitational acceleration which was anomalous given its lack of evaporation.' Similarly, Professor Loeb now suggests that 3I/ATLAS could be a similar type of alien craft. While experts say there is no evidence to support this idea, some researchers say we can't rule out the possibility just yet. Professor Michael Garrett, Director of Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics said: 'More observations are definitely needed.' Asked whether the object could be an alien craft, Professor Garret responded: 'Who knows - it could be - that's why it will be important to make as many different measurements as possible to test all hypotheses. 'It's unlikely that it is, but that doesn't mean to say we shouldn't check. We don't know much about these interstellar objects, so we learn more each time we encounter one.' However, Professor Garret added that there is currently no evidence the object is alien in nature, and it is more likely to be 'an icy body that has escaped from another planetary system and wandered by the solar system by chance'. Currently, the overwhelming majority of evidence points to the fact that 3I/ATLAS is a comet. This is because astronomers have spotted a nebulous envelope of gas and dust known as a coma surrounding the object as it is heated by the sun. Based on these observations, both NASA and ESA are now confident enough to confirm that 3I/ATLAS is an interstellar comet. Dr Mark Norris, an astronomer from the University Of Central Lancashire, said: 'If there's a coma, it by definition is a comet, because this means that it is outgassing. 'This thing is still quite far from the sun, so you can expect, therefore, as it gets closer, you should get a bigger cloud of material; and that should become clear as we get more observations going forward.' However, by the time the comet reaches its closest point to the Earth, it will be hidden behind the sun, so astronomers will need to wait until it reemerges in December to catch the best observations.

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