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

Southern hemisphere dominates decline in global water availability

2023-11-02
(Press-News.org) Driven in part by large-scale atmospheric climate modes, the Southern Hemisphere accounts for more than 95% of the recent decline in global water availability, according to a new study. Global land water availability has varied due to climate change and increased human water use. Although this crucial resource underpins livelihoods, socioeconomic development, and ecosystems worldwide, it remains unclear how water availability has changed in recent decades and what is driving these changes at a global scale. Yongqiang Zhang and colleagues combine various data, including streamflow observations of large river basins of the world with terrestrial precipitation data and satellite measurements of evaporation and water storage to calculate global land water availability for the last 20 years. Overall, global land water availability declined from 2001 to 2020, according to the findings. However, global water availability was dominated by variability and a negative trend in water availability in the Southern Hemisphere, which contributed to more than 95% of the global variance in land water availability despite only accounting for ~26% of the global land surface. The water availability across the Southern Hemisphere decreased significantly across the study period – roughly 3.55 millimeters per year over the last 20 years. Conversely, a complex mix of positive and negative trends in different regions of the Northern Hemisphere have largely canceled each other out, resulting in a negligible change in land water availability over the same period. Zhang et al. show that the variability and trend in water availability observed in the Southern Hemisphere are driven mainly by changes in large-scale atmospheric climate modes, particularly the El Niño-Southern Oscillation. In a related Perspective, Günter Blöschi and Pedro Chaffe discuss the study in greater detail.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers caution that biodiversity benefit-sharing needs a radically new approach

Researchers caution that biodiversity benefit-sharing needs a radically new approach
2023-11-02
At the 2022 COP-15 meeting,  signatories of the Convention on Biological Diversity reached a new agreement called the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, which contained provisions to establish a separate, multilateral benefit-sharing mechanism for the use of “digital sequence information” (DSI), that is, the biological data associated with, or derived from, genetic resources such as nucleotide sequences and epigenetic, protein, and metabolite data. In a new Policy Forum analysis published ...

Research outlines how sex differences have evolved

2023-11-02
­­­Francis Crick Institute press release Under strict embargo: 18:00hrs GMT Thursday 2 November 2023 Peer reviewed Observational study People and animals    Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute and Heidelberg University in Germany have shown that sex differences in animals vary dramatically across species, organs and developmental stages, and evolve quickly at the gene level but slowly at the cell type level. Mammals have different traits depending on sex, like antlers in male deer. These are known as ‘sexually dimorphic’ traits, and include differences which aren’t visible, ...

UCLA researchers develop solid-state thermal transistor for better heat management

UCLA researchers develop solid-state thermal transistor for better heat management
2023-11-02
A team of researchers from UCLA has unveiled a first-of-its-kind stable and fully solid-state thermal transistor that uses an electric field to control a semiconductor device’s heat movement.  The group’s study, which will be published in the Nov. 3 issue of Science, details how the device works and its potential applications. With top speed and performance, the transistor could open new frontiers in heat management of computer chips through an atomic-level design and molecular engineering. The advance could also further the understanding of how heat is regulated in the human body. “The precision control of how heat flows through materials has been a long-held ...

Good news, bad news on dental pain care seen in new study

2023-11-02
Americans who have a tooth pulled or another painful dental procedure in the United States today are far less likely to get opioid painkillers than they were just a few years ago, a new study shows. That’s good news, since research shows that opioids are not necessary for most dental procedures. But the COVID-19 pandemic seems to have thrown a wrench into the effort to reduce opioid use in dental care – and not just in the few months after dentists and oral surgeons started providing routine care again after a pause in spring 2020. The decline in opioid prescriptions filled by dental patients was much faster in the pre-pandemic ...

Researchers identify female sex determining gene in mice

2023-11-02
Francis Crick Institute press release Under strict embargo: 18:00hrs GMT Thursday 2 November 2023 Peer reviewed Experimental study Animals   Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute and the Université Cote d’Azur, together with other labs in France and Switzerland, have identified a gene which is an early determining factor of ovary development in mice. Typically, mice with XY sex chromosomes develop testes, and mice with XX chromosomes develop ovaries. Whether early gonads become ovaries or testes is due to cells either ...

How organs of male and female mammals differ

How organs of male and female mammals differ
2023-11-02
The development of sex-specific characteristics is frequently seen in mammals. These characteristics stem from the activation of corresponding genetic programmes that until now have been largely undescribed by the scientific community. An international research team from the Center for Molecular Biology of Heidelberg University and The Francis Crick Institute in London has, for the first time, decoded the programmes that control the sex-specific development of major organs in selected mammals – humans, mice, rats, rabbits, and opossums. By comparing these programmes, the researchers were also able to trace the ...

New designs for solid-state electrolytes may soon revolutionize the battery industry

New designs for solid-state electrolytes may soon revolutionize the battery industry
2023-11-02
Researchers led by Professor KANG Kisuk of the Center for Nanoparticle Research within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), have announced a major breakthrough in the field of next-generation solid-state batteries. It is believed that their new findings will enable the creation of batteries based on a novel chloride-based solid electrolyte that exhibits exceptional ionic conductivity. A pressing concern with current commercial batteries their reliance on liquid electrolytes, which leads to flammability ...

Black holes are messy eaters

Black holes are messy eaters
2023-11-02
New observations down to light-year scale of the gas flows around a supermassive black hole have successfully detected dense gas inflows and shown that only a small portion (about 3 percent) of the gas flowing towards the black hole is eaten by the black hole. The remainder is ejected and recycled back into the host galaxy.   Not all of the matter which falls towards a black hole is absorbed, some of it is ejected as outflows. But the ratio of the matter that the black hole “eats,” and the amount “dropped” ...

New strategy attacks treatment-resistant lymphomas

New strategy attacks treatment-resistant lymphomas
2023-11-02
A surprising mechanism that makes some cancers treatment-resistant has been discovered by Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian investigators.  The mechanism, which involves the shuttling of messenger RNAs (mRNAs) from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, ultimately facilitates DNA repair in cancer cells. These cancer cells can thereby thwart treatments aimed at damaging their DNA. In a project encompassing both fundamental research and clinical studies they demonstrated that a combination of approved chemotherapies, ...

At least 14% of Americans have had long COVID

2023-11-02
One in seven people in the US reported having had long Covid by the end of 2022, suggests a large-scale investigation of long Covid and symptom prevalence by academics at UCL and Dartmouth. Having had long Covid is associated with anxiety and low mood, as well as an increased likelihood of continued physical mobility problems and challenges with memory, concentration or understanding, according to the findings published in PLOS ONE. The risk of anxiety and low mood appeared to be lower for those who have been vaccinated, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Artificial nighttime lighting is suppressing moth activity

What causes chronic pain? New study identifies key culprit in the brain

Counting the carbon cost of E-waste

Stanford research teams tackle environmental impacts of U.S. policy

Grant to expand self-cloning crop technology for Indian farmers

Atlantic nurse sharks show faster growth patterns in Biscayne Bay than nearby Bimini, Bahamas

Tests uncover unexpected humpback sensitivity to high-frequency noise

Paracetamol and ibuprofen safe in first year of life

Major US tobacco brands flouting platform + federal policies to restrict young people’s access to their content on Instagram

Sleeping without pillows may lower harmful high internal eye pressure in people with glaucoma

More than just ‘daydreaming’ – dissociation is the mind’s survival tactic

Researchers identify genetic blueprint of mania in bipolar disorder

Delivery of magnetic energy to the brain is a cost-effective treatment option for patients with depression, finds a new study

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Candida Rebello secures $3. 7 million NIH grant to study muscle retention in older adults

Badged up for success

FAU leaps ahead as state’s first university to host an onsite quantum computer

International team led by HonorHealth Research Institute and U of A develop 3D chip platform for laboratory testing in cancer research

Clinical trial seeks improved survival for head and neck cancer patients

COVID-19 viral fragments shown to target and kill specific immune cells in UCLA-led study

Research findings may lead to earlier diagnoses of genetic disorder

In polar regions, microbes are influencing climate change as frozen ecosystems thaw, McGill review finds

The Vertebrate Genome Laboratory at The Rockefeller University receives support from Google.org for AI science research

Scientists develop first gene-editing treatment for skin conditions

New cancer-killing material developed by Oregon State University nanomedicine researchers

Physicists predict significant growth for cadmium telluride photovoltaics

Purdue team announces new therapeutic target for breast cancer

‘Nudging’ both patients and providers boosts flu vaccine numbers

How do nature and nurture shape our immune cells?

Speeding, hard braking reduced in insurance plans that base rates on driving behavior, offer rewards

Shared process underlies oral cancer pain and opioid tolerance

[Press-News.org] Southern hemisphere dominates decline in global water availability