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

Archaeological data demand new approaches to biodiversity conservation

Archaeological data demand new approaches to biodiversity conservation
2021-04-19
(Press-News.org) Professor Nicole Boivin, Director of the Department of Archaeology at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Jena, Germany, is part of an international initiative to examine the implications of past land use for contemporary conservation efforts.

The multi-disciplinary team, which includes archaeologists, ecologists, anthropologists and conservation managers, has reconstructed ancient population and land use to show that already by 12,000 years ago, humans had re-shaped much of the terrestrial biosphere.

Their data challenge the idea that conservation is about returning lands to their natural and pristine state.

"Much of the land area we regard today as 'wild' has in fact been shaped by millennia of human activity," observes Professor Boivin. "But not all human activity is 'bad.' Our study found a close correlation between areas of high biodiversity and areas long occupied by Indigenous and traditional peoples."

Beginning thousands of years ago, human societies have long re-shaped landscapes through practices of burning, management, agriculture and plant and animal domestication. These activities have made landscapes more productive for human use. But what is also clear is that in many cases they have supported high species richness and enriched biodiversity.

"The problem is not human use per se," notes Professor Boivin. "The problem is the kind of land use we see in industrialised societies - characterized by unsustainable agricultural practices and unmitigated extraction and appropriation."

The work has major implications for conservation practices. Rather than trying to return land to an unattainable 'pristine' state, the authors demonstrate how many conservation efforts would achieve more by empowering traditional and Indigenous societies and supporting local, community-based sustainable ecosystem management.

By comparing millennia of global land use with current levels of biodiversity, the scientists demonstrate how natural and cultural heritage often go hand in hand. "Conservation has so much to gain from working more closely with archaeologists and anthropologists to understand the long-term history of the regions they work in," says the study's lead author, Professor Erle C. Ellis of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

"Some earlier conservation efforts focused on removing people from the equation to protect natural landscapes, or to allow human-altered landscapes to return to their pristine state," states Professor Boivin. "We are arguing for something different. We need to recognize that some types of human activity - particularly more traditional land management practices that we see in the archaeological record or practiced today by many Indigenous peoples - are actually really supportive of biodiversity. We need to promote and empower that."

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Archaeological data demand new approaches to biodiversity conservation

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

People have shaped Earth's ecology for at least 12,000 years, mostly sustainably

2021-04-19
New research published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) shows that land use by human societies has reshaped ecology across most of Earth's land for at least 12,000 years. The research team, from over ten institutions around the world, revealed that the main cause of the current biodiversity crisis is not human destruction of uninhabited wildlands, but rather the appropriation, colonization, and intensified use of lands previously managed sustainably. The new data overturn earlier reconstructions of global land use history, some of which indicated that most of Earth's land was uninhabited even as recently as 1500 CE. Further, ...

Clemson researchers find snake venom complexity is driven by prey diet

Clemson researchers find snake venom complexity is driven by prey diet
2021-04-19
Diversity in diet plays a role in the complexity of venom in pit vipers such as rattlesnakes, copperheads and cottonmouths. But new collaborative research by Clemson University scientists found the number of prey species a snake ate did not drive venom complexity. Rather, it was how far apart the prey species were from each other evolutionarily. "It's not just diet that drives the variation in venom across snakes. It's the breadth of diet," said Christopher Parkinson, a professor in the College of Science's Department of Biological Sciences. "If a snake eats 20 different species of mammals, its venom will not be very complex. But if it eats a centipede, a frog, a bird and a mammal, it's going to have a highly complex venom because each component of that venom ...

Defensive symbiosis leads to gene loss in bacterial partners

Defensive symbiosis leads to gene loss in bacterial partners
2021-04-19
Antibiotics on the cocoon protect the offspring of beewolves, a group of digger wasps, from detrimental fungi. These protective substances are produced by symbiotic bacteria of the genus Streptomyces, which live in these insects. In a new study in PNAS, researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology and the University of Mainz, together with an international team, showed that these beneficial bacteria are losing genetic material that is no longer needed. The genome of these bacteria is of great interest for understanding the process of genome erosion and elucidating how the cooperation and the mutual benefit between bacteria and their host insects have evolved over long periods of time (PNAS, doi: 10.1073/pnas.2023047118, ...

Racial violence and the mental health of Black Americans

2021-04-19
Police violence against Black Americans is shamefully common in the United States and devastates communities. For incidents that get widespread media exposure, a collective trauma is felt across the nation, especially for Black individuals. Research supports that experiencing racism even vicariously can harm the mental and physical health of others of the same racial group, yet its effect on a population level is unclear. A new study analyzed how highly publicized acts of racial violence impacted the mental health of Black Americans in the U.S. The authors identified 49 incidents that occurred between 2013 and 2017, including police killings of Black individuals, hate-crime murders and decisions not to indict or convict the officers involved. The researchers measured ...

Shedding light on the long and the short of plant growth

Shedding light on the long and the short of plant growth
2021-04-19
What keeps some plants squatting close to the soil while others - even those closely related - reach high for the skies? New research addressing the architecture and growth habit of plants has provided an answer to this question and may assist in the development of better performing crops. The way plants grow must sometimes satisfy contradictory needs. Growing close to the ground, decreases the chances of being grazed, but this presents the need to rise rapidly to allow seeds to disperse. This can be observed in dandelions and in Arabidopsis, a model species commonly used to study plant development. Agriculture has taken advantage of the diversification of growth habit so that ...

Stanford researchers use AI to empower environmental regulators

Stanford researchers use AI to empower environmental regulators
2021-04-19
Like superheroes capable of seeing through obstacles, environmental regulators may soon wield the power of all-seeing eyes that can identify violators anywhere at any time, according to a new Stanford University-led study. The paper, published the week of April 19 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), demonstrates how artificial intelligence combined with satellite imagery can provide a low-cost, scalable method for locating and monitoring otherwise hard-to-regulate industries. (WATCH VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHvRgKmJOK8) "Brick kilns have proliferated across Bangladesh to supply the growing economy with construction materials, which makes it really hard for regulators to keep up with new kilns that are constructed," ...

Learning about system stability from ants

Learning about system stability from ants
2021-04-19
A new type of collective behaviour in ants has been revealed by an international team of scientists, headed by biologist Professor Iain Couzin, co-director of the Cluster of Excellence "Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour" at the University of Konstanz and director at the co-located Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, and Matthew Lutz, a postdoctoral researcher in Couzin's lab. Their research shows how ants use self-organized architectural structures called "scaffolds" to ensure traffic flow on sloped surfaces. Scaffold formation results from individual sensing and decision-making, ...

POT1 gene mutation predisposes to glioma and affects survival in a sex-specific manner

2021-04-19
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and collaborators at other institutions have discovered that POT1, a gene known to be associated with risk of glioma, the most common type of malignant brain tumor, mediates its effects in a sex-specific manner. Researchers found that female mice with glioma that lacked the gene survived less than males. This led them to investigate human glioma cells, where they found that low POT1 expression correlated with reduced survival in females. Published in the journal Cancer Research, the study also shows that, compared to males', female tumors had reduced expression of immune signatures and increased expression of cell replication markers, suggesting that the immune response and tumor cell proliferation seemed to be ...

Scientists identify protein that could serve as a therapeutic target in lung cancer

2021-04-19
Scientists at VCU Massey Cancer Center have identified a protein that operates in tandem with a specific genetic mutation to spur lung cancer growth and could serve as a therapeutic target to treat the disease. Mutations in the p53 gene are found in more than half of all cancers, but it remains difficult to effectively target the gene with drugs even decades after its discovery. Though previous research has shown that p53 acts as a tumor suppressor and initiates cancer cell death in its natural state, a new study led by Sumitra Deb, Ph.D., suggests that gain-of-function (GOF) mutations -- a type of mutation where the changed gene has an added function ...

New AI tool tracks evolution of COVID-19 conspiracy theories on social media

New AI tool tracks evolution of COVID-19 conspiracy theories on social media
2021-04-19
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., April 19, 2021--A new machine-learning program accurately identifies COVID-19-related conspiracy theories on social media and models how they evolved over time--a tool that could someday help public health officials combat misinformation online. "A lot of machine-learning studies related to misinformation on social media focus on identifying different kinds of conspiracy theories," said Courtney Shelley, a postdoctoral researcher in the Information Systems and Modeling Group at Los Alamos National Laboratory and co-author of the study that was published last week in the Journal of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Modeling and analysis reveals technological, environmental challenges to increasing water recovery from desalination

Navy’s Airborne Scientific Development Squadron welcomes new commander

TāStation®'s analytical power used to resolve a central question about sweet taste perception

NASA awards SwRI $60 million contract to develop next-generation coronagraphs

Reducing antimicrobial resistance: accelerated efforts are needed to meet the EU targets

Gaming for the good!

Early adoption of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor in patients hospitalized with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction

New study finds atrial fibrillation common in newly diagnosed heart failure patients, and makes prognosis significantly worse

Chitnis receives funding for study of wearable ultrasound systems

Weisburd receives funding for safer stronger together initiative

Kaya advancing AI literacy

Wang studying effects of micronutrient supplementation

Quandela, the CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay and Université Paris Cité join forces to accelerate research and innovation in quantum photonics

Pulmonary vein isolation with optimized linear ablation vs pulmonary vein isolation alone for persistent AF

New study finds prognostic value of coronary calcium scores effective in predicting risk of heart attack and overall mortality in both women and men

New fossil reveals the evolution of flying reptiles

Redefining net zero will not stop global warming – scientists say

Prevalence of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic syndrome stages by social determinants of health

Tiny worm makes for big evolutionary discovery

Cause of the yo-yo effect deciphered

Suicide rates for young male cancer survivors triple in recent years

Achalasia and esophageal cancer: A case report and literature review

Authoritative review makes connections between electron density topology, future of materials modeling and how we understand mechanisms of phenomena in familiar devices at the atomistic level

Understanding neonatal infectious diseases in low- and middle-income countries: New insights from a 30-year study

This year’s dazzling aurora produced a spectacular display… of citizen science

New oral drug to calm abdominal pain

New framework champions equity in AI for health care

We finally know where black holes get their magnetic fields: Their parents

Multiple sclerosis drug may help with poor working memory

The MIT Press releases workshop report on the future of open access publishing and policy

[Press-News.org] Archaeological data demand new approaches to biodiversity conservation