Researchers discover unexpected threat to dolphins off US shores — here's what's happening
Researchers found that declining seagrass beds (which support everything from shrimp to fish) are making it harder for dolphins to hunt and survive, the Orlando Sentinel reported.
The Indian River Lagoon, one of North America's most biodiverse estuaries, has lost more than half its seagrass over the past decade due to poor water quality, algae blooms, and nutrient pollution.
Without seagrass, fish populations plummet. In this case, dolphins, which once thrived in the area, are now showing signs of malnutrition and habitat stress.
As the base of the ecosystem vanishes, so do the species that dolphins rely on to feed. Some have been found severely underweight, while others are showing unusual foraging behavior that signals growing distress.
Researchers from the University of South Florida and the University of Central Florida said 17% of the dolphin deaths between 2000 and 2020 were caused by malnutrition, a number that is likely an undercount.
The collapse of marine habitats like seagrass meadows isn't just threatening dolphins — it threatens the fishing industries and local economies that depend on them. Events like these weaken coastal protections and signal a broader breakdown of biodiversity.
While dolphins could look for another location where food is more plentiful, they typically stay within their territories.
As seagrass disappears, species like shrimp and ladyfish are losing habitat. This provides the dolphins with less to eat. It's a stark reminder that when we harm nature's foundation, the damage affects the entire food chain, including us.
Fortunately, some areas of the Indian River Lagoon are beginning to recover, with seagrass making a small comeback.
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Florida has pledged $100 million to upgrade septic systems and reduce runoff through the Indian River Lagoon Protection Program.
Meanwhile, The Nature Conservancy is backing tech that cuts pollution from urban neighborhoods, offering hope that targeted investment and restoration efforts may reverse some of the damage. On a personal level, being aware of local environmental issues is also key to mitigating them.
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Atlantic
4 days ago
- Atlantic
The Sea Slug Defying Biological Orthodoxy
This week, a friend sent me our horoscope—we're both Gemini—from Seven Days, a beloved Vermont weekly, because, improbably, it was about the sea slug I'd been telling her about just days before. 'The sea slug Elysia chlorotica is a small, unassuming creature that performs a remarkable feat: It eats algae and steals its chloroplasts, then incorporates them into its own body,' the horoscope explained. Years ago I had incorporated this fact into my own view of the world, and it had changed my understanding of the rules of biology. This particular slug starts life a brownish color with a few red dots. Then it begins to eat from the hairlike strands of the green algae Vaucheria litorea: It uses specialized teeth to puncture the alga's wall, and then it slurps out its cells like one might slurp bubble tea, each bright-green cellular boba moving up the algal straw. The next part remains partially unexplained by science. The slug digests the rest of the cell but keeps the chloroplasts—the plant organelles responsible for photosynthesis—and distributes these green orbs through its branched gut. Somehow, the slug is able to run the chloroplasts itself and, after sucking up enough of them, turns a brilliant green. It appears to get all the food it needs for the rest of its life by way of photosynthesis, transforming light, water, and air into sugar, like a leaf. The horoscope took this all as a metaphor: Something I'd 'absorbed from another' is 'integrating into your deeper systems,' it advised. 'This isn't theft, but creative borrowing.' And in that single line, the horoscope writer managed to explain symbiosis—not a metaphor at all, but an evolutionary mechanism that may be more prevalent across biology than once thought. Elysia chlorotica is a bewitching example of symbiosis. It is flat, heart-shaped, and pointed at the tail, and angles itself toward the sun. Its broad surface is grooved by a web of veins, like a leaf's is. Ignore its goatish head, and you might assume this slug was a leaf, if a particularly gelatinous one. Sidney Pierce, a marine biologist retired from the University of South Florida, remembers his surprise when a grad student brought a specimen into his office in the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, on Cape Cod, more than two decades ago. Photosynthesis requires specialized equipment and chemistry, which animals simply do not have—'yet here was an animal that's figured out how to do it,' he told me. He spent the next 20-odd years trying to find the mechanism. 'Unfortunately, I didn't get all the way to the end,' he said. No one has, as my colleague Katherine J. Wu has written. The algae and the slug may have managed some kind of gene transfer, and over time, produced a new way of living, thanks not to slow, stepwise evolution—the random mutation within a body—but by the wholesale transfer of a piece of code. A biological skill leaked out of one creature into another. All of us are likely leakier than we might assume. After all, every cell with a nucleus, meaning all animal and plant cells, has a multigenetic heritage. Mitochondria—the organelles in our cells responsible for generating energy—are likely the product of an ancient symbiosis with a distant ancestor and a microbe, and have their own separate DNA. So we are walking around with the genetic material of some other ancient life form suffused in every cell. And the earliest ancestor of all plants was likely the product of a fusion between a microbe and a cyanobacterium; plants' photosynthesizing organelles, too, have distinct DNA. Lynn Margulis, the biologist who made the modern case for this idea, was doubted for years until new genetic techniques proved her correct. Her conviction about the symbiotic origins of mitochondria and chloroplasts was a monumental contribution to cell biology. But Margulis took her theory further; in her view, symbiosis was the driving force of evolution, and many entities were likely composites. Evolution, then, could be traced not only through random mutation, but by combination. 'Life did not take over the globe by combat, but by networking. Life forms multiplied and complexified by co-opting others, not just by killing one another,' she wrote, with her son, in 1986. This remains pure conjecture, and an exaggeration of the role of symbiosis beyond what mainstream evolutionary theory would support; random mutation is still considered the main driver of speciation. Yet more scientists now wonder if symbiosis may have played a larger role in the heritage of many species than we presently understand. Phillip Cleves, a geneticist at the Carnegie Institution for Science who studies the symbiotic relationship between corals and their algae symbionts, told me how, as an undergraduate, he was blown away by the fact that corals' alliance with algae made possible ecosystems—coral reefs—that support a quarter of all known marine life. The algae cells live, whole, inside coral cells, and photosynthesize as normal, sustaining the coral in nutrient-poor tropical waters. 'I realize now that that type of interaction between organisms is pervasive across the tree of life,' he said. It's probable that the ancestors of all eukaryotes were more influenced by bacteria in their environments than modern evolutionary theory has accounted for. 'All animals and plants likely require interactions with microbes, often in strong, persistent symbiotic associations,' Margaret McFall-Ngai, a leading researcher of the role of microbes in animal development, wrote in 2024. These interactions, she argued, are so fundamental to life that the animal immune system should perhaps be thought of as a sort of management system for our many microbial symbionts. Although biology has been slow to recognize symbiosis's significance, she thinks this line of research should now take center stage, and could alter how all stripes of biologists think about their work. Cleves, too, sees himself as working to build a new field of science, by training people on how to ask genetic questions about symbiotic relationships in nature: When I called him, he was preparing to teach a four-week course at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole on exactly that. Genomic research has only relatively recently been cheap enough to apply it routinely and broadly to all sorts of creatures, but now scientists can more easily ask: How do animals' interactions with microbes shape the evolution of individual species? And how does that change dynamics in an ecosystem more broadly? Elysia chlorotica is also a lesson in how easily the boundaries between an organism and its environment can be traversed. 'Every time an organism eats, a whole wad of DNA from whatever it's eating passes through the animal. So DNA gets transferred all the time from species to species,' Pierce told me. Most times it doesn't stick, but on the rare occasions when it does, it can reroute the fate of a species. 'I think it happens more than it's recognized, but a lot of times it's hard to recognize because you don't know what you're looking for. But in these slugs, it's pretty obvious,' he said. They're bright green. Still, attempts to understand what is happening inside Elysia chlorotica have mostly fallen short. Scientists such as Pierce presume that, over time, elements of the algal genome have been transferred to the slug, allowing it to run photosynthesis, yet they have struggled to find evidence. 'It's very hard to find a gene if you don't know what you're looking for,' Pierce said—plus, slug DNA is too muddled to parse a lot of the time. Slugs are full of mucus, which can ruin samples, and because the chloroplasts are embedded inside the slug cells, many samples of slug DNA end up picking up chloroplast DNA too. After years of trying, and at least one false start by a different lab, Pierce and his colleagues did manage to find a gene in the slug that was involved with chloroplast repair, hinting that a genetic transfer had occurred, and offering a clue as to how the animal manages to keep the plant organelles alive. But another research team showed that related species of photosynthesizing slugs can survive for months deprived of sunlight and actual food: They may simply be hardy. Why, then, if not to make nutrients, might the slugs be photosynthesizing? Perhaps for camouflage. Or perhaps they're stashing chloroplasts, which themselves contain useful fats and proteins, as food reserves. (Pierce, for one, is skeptical of those explanations.) Whatever benefit Elysia chlorotica derives from the chloroplasts, there couldn't be a leakier creature. It crosses the divide between plant and animal, one species and another, and individual and environment. I first read about the slug in a book titled Organism and Environment by Sonia Sultan, an evolutionary ecologist at Wesleyan University, in which she forwards the argument that we should be paying more attention to how the environment influences the way creatures develop, and how those changes are passed generationally, ultimately influencing the trajectory of species. While Elysia chlorotica is an extreme example of this, a version of it happens to us, and our bodies, all the time. Encounters with the bacteria around us reshape our microbiomes, which in turn affect many aspects of our health. Encounters with pollution can reroute the trajectory of our health and even, in some cases, the health of our offspring. Researchers think access to healthy foods—a factor of our environments—can modify how our genes are expressed, improving our lives in ways that scientists are just beginning to understand. We are constantly taking our environment in, and it is constantly transforming us.


USA Today
14-07-2025
- USA Today
Memory loss isn't always worrisome. But here's when it is, what to do.
It's normal to occasionally forget where you left your keys, struggle to recall a new name or wonder if you've already taken your daily medication. 'Everyone has memory slips now and again,' says Bryce Mander, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and human behavior at the University of California, Irvine. But when forgetfulness progresses, becomes frequent or interferes with relationships or daily life, it may be a sign of something more serious. At the same time, not all memory problems point to dementia, and many issues are preventable, treatable and even reversible. Here's how to recognize memory loss, what causes it and how to manage the problems it creates for yourself or someone you love. What is memory loss? Memory loss refers to the inability to remember information or events that should easily be retrievable. Some common symptoms include forgetting recent conversations or events, asking the same questions over and over, difficulty completing familiar tasks, frequently misplacing items, being unable to retrace steps, becoming confused about time or location or having difficulty following a conversation. 'Progressive memory loss extending over time is the key warning sign,' explains Mander. 'If someone starts forgetting entire experiences or things they were once clear about – like the route to a longtime hairdresser – that becomes concerning.' Ditto for if memory loss starts impacting relationships or impeding day-to-day life. When memory loss progresses to states of dementia, "memory failures become so frequent a person eventually loses the ability to recall recent events or plans completely,' says David Diamond, PhD, a psychologist and neuroscience professor at the University of South Florida. Noted: 1 in 3 older Americans take aspirin daily. What does it do? What causes memory loss? Some of the most common causes of short-term or long-term memory loss include: What is sleep apnea? The sleep disorder you might have could be why you're sluggish How is memory loss prevented and treated? Memory loss treatments vary depending on the underlying cause of the problem. "If the memory loss is due to something reversible, such as poor sleep, medication side effects, a vitamin deficiency or a thyroid disorder, the treatment is pretty straightforward," says Budson. Sometimes simple dietary or behavioral changes are all that is needed. 'There's no silver bullet,' Mander explains, 'but good sleep, exercise, maintaining a diet high in vitamin B12 and mental stimulation all support brain health.' Even something as common and feared as Alzheimer's disease "is not an inevitable result of advanced age,' adds Diamond. "Strong physical health is associated with reducing your risk and a very low rate of dementia." And "for the best outcomes," stresses Yassa, "early intervention is key to living longer without cognitive decline."

Yahoo
11-07-2025
- Yahoo
Pictures: First look at Kennedy Space Center's Gantry at LC-39 attraction
The stands to watch launches at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Kennedy Space Center Visitor Center guests check out the Gantry at LC-39, a new experience that includes a test-fire simulation. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) A J-2 engine with real components from an Apollo era J-2 rocket engine at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) The Earth Information Center at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Kennedy Space Center Visitor Center guests check out the Gantry at LC-39, a new experience that includes a test-fire simulation. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) A short film in the Earth Information Center at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Mounted binoculars provide views of the launch pads during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, on Thursday. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Mobile Launcher 2 under construction, seen from The Gantry at LC-39 during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39A seen during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Kennedy Space Center Visitor Center guests check out the Gantry at LC-39, a new experience that includes a test-fire simulation. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) A J-2 engine, whose top has real components from an Apollo-era J-2 rocket engine. Media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) A simulated J-2 engine test at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) The stands to watch launches at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Stools made from pistons taken from one of NASA's Crawler-Transporters at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Sign for the Earth Information Center during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) The Vehicle Assembly Building seen from The Gantry at LC-39 during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) A short film in the Earth Information Center during a media tour of The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel) Show Caption1 of 20A rocket builder activity at The Gantry at LC-39, a new guest experience at Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel)Expand