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

Leading the way comes at a cost for feathered friends

2025-07-22
(Press-News.org) Like humans, animals can become stressed when trying to lead a group of peers in a particular direction, a new study from The Australian National University (ANU) has shown.  

According to study co-author Associate Professor Damien Farine, many animal groups make decisions in a very democratic way, taking a “majority rules” approach.  

While effective, it can also take a toll.  

“We already have evidence of how this decision-making can work – it’s like a voting process. So, individuals might start to move away from the group in the direction they want to go to find food and if they get enough support, the group follows. Alternatively, if no one follows then they fail and return to the group,” Associate Professor Farine said. 

“The strongest predictor of the direction the group will eventually take is the option with the greatest number of votes. 

“Some individuals lead more than others, while some follow more. We were interested in the consequences of this process.” 

The researchers tracked a group of wild guineafowl in Kenya over a period of four months using heart rate monitors and GPS tracking devices.  

The guineafowl experienced the highest heart rate when trying to lead their group by initiating movements, especially when trying to do so against the majority of their group members. 

“It is noticeable when they're trying to do something that very few individuals in their group would want to do. They also experience a much higher heart rate when they fail to lead in these situations,” co-author Dr James Klarevas-Irby said.  

“We also found that just moving as part of a group had a noticeable impact on the heart rate of the birds, which was much higher than when they were moving on their own.  

“Most of us can relate - it's like when you’re with a bunch of friends and you’re trying to decide where to go for dinner, and you really want to go to a particular restaurant but most of your friends want to go somewhere else. 

“While initiating and leadership  are beneficial in theory for animals like the guinea fowl, because if they succeed, they get to go to the ’restaurant’ of their choice, if they find themselves in the minority, it comes at a substantial cost.” 

The study is published in Current Biology. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Psychedelics and cannabis offer treatment hope for people with eating disorders

2025-07-22
A pioneering international survey of people living with eating disorders has found that cannabis and psychedelics, such as ‘magic mushrooms’ or LSD, were best rated as alleviating symptoms by respondents who self-medicated with the non-prescribed drugs. The worst-rated drugs were alcohol, tobacco, nicotine and cocaine. Prescribed drugs, such as antidepressants, were generally not well rated for treating eating-disorder symptoms but were positively rated for effects on general mental health. The research, led by PhD student Sarah-Catherine ...

Answer ALS launches AI drug development collaboration with GATC Health, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, and Tulane to advance ALS treatment discovery

2025-07-22
NEW ORLEANS, July 22, 2025 — Answer ALS is proud to announce the launch of a groundbreaking collaborative initiative aimed at accelerating AI-powered drug discovery for ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases. This effort, known as the Louisiana AI Drug Development Infrastructure for ALS (LADDIA), brings together leading institutions and innovators, including GATC Health, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, and Tulane University —  a tech-bio innovator using validated AI models to accelerate drug discovery from large-scale multiomics data —  to harness the power of artificial ...

Restricted diet triggers individualized microbiome shifts without community convergence

2025-07-22
How much can six days of eating just oats, milk, and water change your gut microbiome?  According to a recent exploratory study published in eGastroenterology, the answer is more complex than expected. Researchers from KU Leuven and collaborating institutions conducted a tightly controlled dietary intervention, known as the "Oatmeal Study", to examine whether restricting food variety could induce convergence in the gut microbiota across individuals. Surprisingly, while participants' diets became nearly identical, their microbiomes did not follow suit. It ...

How tickling builds trust: Scientists identify oxytocin’s role in human-rat bonding

2025-07-22
Pleasant tactile stimulation drives social bonding in many animal species, especially mammals. Tactile stimulation forms the basis of the infant-caregiver relationship and often leads to affinity-like behavior, indicating the formation of social bonds. Juvenile-adolescent rats often engage in rough-and-tumble play, during which they emit characteristic ultrasonic vocalizations. These vocalizations, typically in the 50 kHz frequency range, are thought to be associated with pleasurable emotional states. Juvenile adolescent rats also emit 50 kHz ultrasonic vocalizations in response to tickling with human hands, which mimics natural rough-and-tumble play. Moreover, these rats develop a ...

LAHB: A bioplastic that may solve marine plastic pollution problem

2025-07-22
Researchers have demonstrated a new eco-friendly plastic that decomposes in deep ocean conditions. In a deep-sea experiment, the microbially synthesized poly(d-lactate-co-3-hydroxybutyrate) (LAHB) biodegraded, while conventional plastics such as a representative bio-based polylactide (PLA) persisted. Submerged 855 meters underwater, LAHB films lost over 80% of their mass after 13 months as microbial biofilms actively broke down the material. This real-world test establishes LAHB as a safer biodegradable plastic, supporting global efforts to reduce marine plastic waste. ...

The Holobiont Revolution: How wheat is becoming more climate-resilient through nature-based plant breeding and machine learning

2025-07-22
Nitrogen fertilizers used in agriculture contribute significantly to global warming. A new breeding concept, specifically for wheat, could help reduce nitrogen fertilization. This holobiont principle places the complex interactions between plants and soil microbiomes at the center of plant breeding. In combination with machine learning, this could lead to the use of new wheat varieties, as well as other crops, that are more resilient to climate change and contribute to soil health. Two recent studies led by Wolfram Weckwerth from the University of Vienna have been published in the journals Plant Biotechnology and Trends in Plant Science. To increase the supply ...

International radiology consensus outlines best practices for post-COVID CT

2025-07-22
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Experts representing multiple societies and institutions across 14 countries have published guidance for computed tomography (CT) imaging in patients with residual lung abnormalities after COVID-19 illness. The consensus statement appears today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). The statement’s authors seek to standardize the indications for when chest CT is appropriate for patients with post–COVID-19 condition, the methods for acquiring images and the terminology used for reporting residual ...

Yellowstone aspen showing signs of recovery following 1995 reintroduction of wolves to park

2025-07-22
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Yellowstone National Park is celebrating an ecological milestone along with a key anniversary this summer, Oregon State University researchers report. A paper published today in Forest Ecology and Management documents the first new generation of overstory aspen trees in Yellowstone’s northern range in 80 years, three decades after wolves were reintroduced to the nation’s oldest national park. Without predation pressure from wolves, which had been extirpated from the park by 1930, elk populations grew to the point that their browsing was thwarting the growth of young aspen. The ecosystem effects ...

Post-COVID-related lung abnormalities almost always regress

2025-07-22
Visible on chest CT scans, post-COVID-19 residual lung abnormalities, which affect up to 50% of patients who have had an infection requiring hospitalization, may be associated with persistent or progressive respiratory symptoms and are often related to changes in respiratory function tests. But unlike other non-infectious abnormalities, they tend to stabilize or regress over time, indicating that they are non-progressive and only post-infectious in nature. Published in the journal Radiology, the paper is the result of a multi-society consensus statement developed by 21 chest radiologists belonging to the European Society of Thoracic Imaging (ESTI), the Society ...

City of Hope research spotlight, June 2025

2025-07-22
LOS ANGELES — City of Hope® Research Spotlight offers a glimpse into groundbreaking scientific and clinical discoveries advancing lifesaving cures for patients with cancer, diabetes and other chronic, life-threatening diseases. Each spotlight features research-related news, such as recognitions, collaborations and the latest research defining the future of medical treatment.  This roundup highlights a new drug combination that slows the spread of advanced prostate cancer, a novel artificial intelligence (AI) conversation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Can Amazon Alexa or Google Home help detect Parkinson’s?

X chromosome switch offers hope for girls with Rett syndrome

Study shows a need for vigilance when observing long COVID symptoms in younger children

Utah engineers develop novel material that efficiently removes ‘forever chemicals’

Study documents unhealthy noise in Portland, provides research framework for other cities

Study lays groundwork for preventing dangerous falls on dry spills

Many high street health tests are unfit-for-purpose and need greater regulation, warn experts

The Lancet Public Health:  Aiming for 7,000 daily steps can reduce risk of chronic diseases, cognitive decline, and death, finds new study

Stopping HRT leads to a period of higher risk of bone fracture for most women

Rethink the 10,000 a day step goal, study suggests

New play in the chemical-reaction playbook uncovered

Fungicides intended to suppress turfgrass diseases may damage fairways

Measuring how – and where – Antarctic ice is cracking with new data tool

Simulating the unthinkable: Models show nuclear winter food production plunge

New research supports Ivermectin as an effective strategy to control malaria transmission

New research reveals scars of Gambia’s witch hunts

McGill scientists develop cleaner, cheaper way to make lithium-ion batteries

Forever chemicals, lasting effects: Prenatal PFAS exposure shapes baby immunity

Colonial-era land-use changes in India led to severe decline in grassland birds, study finds

Use of antiseizure drugs with known or uncertain risks during pregnancy continues

Healthy European peatlands require specific temperature and water level parameters

Matches in online dating illuminated in study of Czech app

Gender disparities in Italian medical academia have persisted or worsened since 2014, with a continued "leaky pipeline" of women not progressing to senior roles

Grand Canyon was a ‘Goldilocks zone’ for the evolution of early animals

This tiny brain network could hold the key to beating cocaine addiction

Dinosaur tracks show first evidence of multispecies herding

Teen smokers and vapers have higher rates of depression and anxiety, study finds

Immunity to seasonal flu protects against severe illness from bird flu in ferrets

Innovative imaging tool could improve diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss

Researchers develop new microscope for neurovascular coupling imaging

[Press-News.org] Leading the way comes at a cost for feathered friends