PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator

Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator
2015-06-04
(Press-News.org) This news release is available in Japanese.

Many species are migrating toward Earth's poles in response to climate change, and their habitats are shrinking in the process, researchers say. Two new reports focusing on marine organisms, which have been moving pole-ward at higher rates than terrestrial creatures, show how factors, including those not directly related to climate change, are limiting the ranges of corals and fish. Paul Muir and colleagues investigated 104 species of reef corals -- collectively known as the staghorn corals -- and confirmed the hypothesis that these sunlight-dependent organisms are restricted to shallower depths at higher latitudes, where sunlight doesn't penetrate surface water as well, especially during winter. Thus, the corals must nest in shallower water as they move away from the equator, according to the researchers. For the corals to continue moving pole-ward, Muir et al. suggest they will have to decrease their maximum depth by about 0.6 meters (or almost two feet) for every degree of latitude they migrate. However, staghorn corals can only go so shallow before issues such as temperature, salinity, and damage from waves and swells limit them, they say. In a separate study, Curtis Deutsch and colleagues suggest that habitats for many fish will contract by about 20% because warming ocean waters decrease oxygen abundance while simultaneously increasing metabolic demands. The researchers studied the metabolism and geographical distributions of species such as cod, rock crab, seabream, and eelpout in order to create a map of metabolic indices -- or the ratios of available oxygen to the oxygen needed by organisms at rest. If climate change proceeds along its current path, the researchers suggest that species' habitats will shrink near the equator and in some northern, high-latitude regions as oxygen levels fall below the required metabolic indices. A Perspective article by Joan Kleypas discusses these "invisible barriers to dispersal" in greater detail.

INFORMATION:

Article #11: "Climate change tightens a metabolic constraint on marine habitats," by C. Deutsch; R.B. Huey at University of Washington in Seattle, WA; A. Ferrel at University of California, Los Angeles in Los Angeles, CA; B. Seibel at University of Rhode Island in Kingston, RI; H.-O. Pörtner at Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven, Germany; A. Ferrel at Los Angeles Unified School District in Los Angeles, CA.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator 2 Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Your complete viral history revealed by VirScan

2015-06-04
This news release is available in Japanese. With less than a drop of blood, a new technology called VirScan can identify all of the viruses that individuals have been exposed to over the course of their lives. Researchers used the screening technique with 569 people from around the world and found that, on average, their participants had been exposed to about 10 viral species over their lifetimes. VirScan provides a powerful and inexpensive tool for studying interactions between the human virome -- the collection of viruses known to infect humans, some of which don't ...

News package explores emerging issues for isolated tribes

2015-06-04
This news release is available in Japanese. Some of the world's last isolated tribes are emerging from the Amazon rainforest, forcing scientists and policymakers in South America to reconsider their policies regarding contact with such people. In this special package of news, Science correspondents Andrew Lawler and Heather Pringle report from Peru and Brazil, respectively -- two countries that are dealing with a spate of first encounters. Lawler describes contact between isolated tribespeople emerging from the forest and indigenous Peruvian villagers, who themselves ...

Your viral infection history in a single drop of blood

2015-06-04
New technology developed by Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) researchers makes it possible to test for current and past infections with any known human virus by analyzing a single drop of a person's blood. The method, called VirScan, is an efficient alternative to existing diagnostics that test for specific viruses one at a time. With VirScan, scientists can run a single test to determine which viruses have infected an individual, rather than limiting their analysis to particular viruses. That unbiased approach could uncover unexpected factors affecting individual ...

Vanishing friction

2015-06-04
Friction is all around us, working against the motion of tires on pavement, the scrawl of a pen across paper, and even the flow of proteins through the bloodstream. Whenever two surfaces come in contact, there is friction, except in very special cases where friction essentially vanishes -- a phenomenon, known as "superlubricity," in which surfaces simply slide over each other without resistance. Now physicists at MIT have developed an experimental technique to simulate friction at the nanoscale. Using their technique, the researchers are able to directly observe individual ...

Internet privacy manifesto calls for more consumer power

2015-06-04
A revolutionary power shift from internet giants such as Google to ordinary consumers is critically overdue, according to new research from a University of East Anglia (UEA) online privacy expert. In a manifesto that ranges from "the right to be treated fairly on the internet" to finding a better, more nuanced approach to using the internet as an archive, Dr Paul Bernal of UEA's School of Law delves deeper into his research on the so-called 'right to be forgotten.' His paper, called 'A right to be remembered? Or the internet, warts and all,' will be presented today at ...

Shh! Don't wake the sleeping virus!

2015-06-04
The red, itchy rash caused by varicella-zoster - the virus that causes chickenpox - usually disappears within a week or two. But once infection occurs, the varicella-zoster virus, or VZV, remains dormant in the nervous system, awaiting a signal that causes this "sleeper" virus to be re-activated in the form of an extremely unpleasant but common disease: herpes zoster, or shingles. In a study recently published in PLOS Pathogens, scientists at Bar-Ilan University report on a novel experimental model that, for the first time, successfully mimics the "sleeping" and "waking" ...

Panel recommends improvements in estrogen testing accuracy

2015-06-04
Washington, DC-Unreliable estrogen measurements have had a negative impact on the treatment of and research into many hormone-related cancers and chronic conditions. To improve patient care, a panel of medical experts has called for accurate, standardized estrogen testing methods in a statement published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM). The panel's recommendations are the first to address how improved testing methods can affect clinical care, and were developed based on discussions at an estrogen measurement workshop hosted ...

Moderate exercise helps prevent gestational diabetes and reduce weight gain during pregnancy

2015-06-04
Women who exercise during pregnancy are less likely to have gestational diabetes, and the exercise also helps to reduce maternal weight gain, finds a study published on 3 June 2015 in BJOG: an International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Gestational diabetes is one of the most frequent complications of pregnancy. It is associated with an increased risk of serious disorders such as pre-eclampsia, hypertension, preterm birth, and with induced or caesarean birth. It can have long term effects on the mother including long term impaired glucose tolerance and type ...

Forks colliding: How DNA breaks during re-replication

2015-06-04
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (June 4, 2015) - Leveraging a novel system designed to examine the double-strand DNA breaks that occur as a consequence of gene amplification during DNA replication, Whitehead Institute scientists are bringing new clarity to the causes of such genomic damage. Moreover, because errors arising during DNA replication and gene amplification result in chromosomal abnormalities often found in malignant cells, these new findings may bolster our understandings of certain drivers of cancer progression. At the core of system, developed in the lab of Whitehead ...

New species of horned dinosaur with 'bizarre' features revealed

New species of horned dinosaur with bizarre features revealed
2015-06-04
About 10 years ago, Peter Hews stumbled across some bones sticking out of a cliff along the Oldman River in southeastern Alberta, Canada. Now, scientists describe in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on June 4 that those bones belonged to a nearly intact skull of a very unusual horned dinosaur--a close relative of the familiar Triceratops that had been unknown to science until now. "The specimen comes from a geographic region of Alberta where we have not found horned dinosaurs before, so from the onset we knew it was important," says Dr. Caleb Brown of the Royal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

First Editorial of 2026: Resisting AI slop

Joint ground- and space-based observations reveal Saturn-mass rogue planet

Inheritable genetic variant offers protection against blood cancer risk and progression

Pigs settled Pacific islands alongside early human voyagers

A Coral reef’s daily pulse reshapes microbes in surrounding waters

EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering new approach to fusion ignition

Groundbreaking discovery reveals Africa’s oldest cremation pyre and complex ritual practices

First breathing ‘lung-on-chip’ developed using genetically identical cells

How people moved pigs across the Pacific

Interaction of climate change and human activity and its impact on plant diversity in Qinghai-Tibet plateau

From addressing uncertainty to national strategy: an interpretation of Professor Lim Siong Guan’s views

Clinical trials on AI language model use in digestive healthcare

Scientists improve robotic visual–inertial trajectory localization accuracy using cross-modal interaction and selection techniques

Correlation between cancer cachexia and immune-related adverse events in HCC

Human adipose tissue: a new source for functional organoids

Metro lines double as freight highways during off-peak hours, Beijing study shows

Biomedical functions and applications of nanomaterials in tumor diagnosis and treatment: perspectives from ophthalmic oncology

3D imaging unveils how passivation improves perovskite solar cell performance

Enriching framework Al sites in 8-membered rings of Cu-SSZ-39 zeolite to enhance low-temperature ammonia selective catalytic reduction performance

AI-powered RNA drug development: a new frontier in therapeutics

Decoupling the HOR enhancement on PtRu: Dynamically matching interfacial water to reaction coordinates

Sulfur isn’t poisonous when it synergistically acts with phosphine in olefins hydroformylation

URI researchers uncover molecular mechanisms behind speciation in corals

Chitin based carbon aerogel offers a cleaner way to store thermal energy

Tracing hidden sources of nitrate pollution in rapidly changing rural urban landscapes

Viruses on plastic pollution may quietly accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance

Three UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s faculty elected to prestigious American Pediatric Society

Tunnel resilience models unveiled to aid post-earthquake recovery

Satellite communication systems: the future of 5G/6G connectivity

Space computing power networks: a new frontier for satellite technologies

[Press-News.org] Habitats contracting as fish and coral flee equator