More stories

  • in

    Research in Chornobyl zone restarts amid ravages of war

    In early 2022, ecologist Bohdan Prots was ready to begin a bold new project to restore ecosystems around the Chornobyl nuclear power plant in northern Ukraine. Prots and his team were preparing to recreate lost wetlands there in an effort to rewild them and cut the risks of wildfires that spread radioactivity. His first step would be to survey the wildlife in the thickets of pines, birch, black alder and willow trees.But in February, the work came to a sudden halt when Russia invaded and immediately occupied the region around Chornobyl, which lies about 100 kilometres north of Kyiv. Hundreds of researchers and other workers were forced to leave. By the time Prots finally returned this April, he found armed soldiers guarding the route to his study site, which was studded with Ukrainian landmines. Prots says he never expected to find himself doing conservation work in a war zone, but “you need to work in any condition that’s possible”, he says.The war has devastated Ukraine and hobbled research nationwide, but the impacts on science in the Chornobyl region are particularly stark. For decades, the Chornobyl exclusion zone, a region that has been largely empty of people since the 1986 nuclear disaster, had been intensely studied by researchers keen to understand the long-term effects of radiation and how ecosystems change when unperturbed. The zone had developed a reputation as a unique natural laboratory and Soviet, Ukrainian and international researchers had accrued radiation and ecological data sets over more than 30 years.
    ‘In case I die, I need to publish this paper’: scientist who left the lab to fight in Ukraine
    The invasion shattered that research, as scientists fled, data collection was interrupted and labs were looted by Russian soldiers. Ukraine retook the region after just five weeks but, because the exclusion zone lies on a strategically important route from Belarus to Kyiv, it has endured months of environmental damage and military fortification. “Most of the scientific activity has come to a screeching halt,” says Timothy Mousseau, an ecologist at University of South Carolina, Columbia, who has studied Chornobyl since 2000. “The area has absolutely been decimated.”Now, as the war heads towards its third year, some researchers are finding creative ways to restart their studies — but the work is difficult and the environment has changed. Scientists at the Frankfurt Zoological Society in Germany, for example, are analysing footage from camera traps located in the Chornobyl Biosphere Reserve, a protected area for wildlife research that covers two-thirds of the exclusion zone. They hope to use the data to assess the war’s impact on animal behaviour. “It was an unexpected experiment,” says Denys Vyshnevskyi, head of the reserve’s science department.Accidental science zoneWhen Chornobyl’s reactor 4 exploded on 26 April 1986 in what was then part of the Soviet Union, the resulting fire ejected radioactive isotopes that contaminated 155,000 square kilometres of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia, and caused spikes in radioactivity as far away as Canada and Japan (see ‘Chornobyl in a conflict’). Authorities eventually evacuated an area of 4,760 square kilometres: around 2,600 square kilometres of northern Ukraine became the Chornobyl exclusion zone, with the rest in Belarus. Access to the reactor and to badly contaminated areas remained tightly controlled, but a changing cast of more than 3,000 workers came in. Some built a protective sarcophagus around the reactor’s ruins; others worked as guards, firefighters or tour guides for a growing stream of international tourists curious to visit the region.

    Source: Institute for the Study of War

    The Chornobyl accident created a rare opportunity to study the effects of radiation. The exclusion zone became home to a cluster of research institutes that have been supported by Ukrainian authorities and partnerships with overseas universities since Ukraine became independent in 1991. Air, water and soil monitoring sites are scattered across the zone. From these, scientists have built up decades-long data sets on the decay, dispersal and impact of radionuclides.The data have shown that concentrations now vary from hazardous to low levels across the zone, and the pattern still reflects the wind direction immediately after the explosion — with a narrow smear of high radiation west of the exploded reactor, following the path of the radioactive plume. Researchers have also examined the long-term effects of radiation exposure on wildlife — with conflicting results. A 2009 study, for example, found that the abundance of insects and spiders in the Chornobyl zone declined with increasing radiation1; other studies found only subtle effects on ecosystems2.
    War shattered Ukrainian science — its rebirth is now taking shape
    The long-running data sets are the bedrock of Chornobyl’s status as an internationally important laboratory, says Jim Smith, an environmental scientist at the University of Portsmouth, UK, who has studied Chornobyl since 1990. In 2022, Smith’s team used data from 35 years of groundwater monitoring to show that radionuclides are no longer at dangerous levels across much of the zone, but that a few hotspots remain close to the reactor3. Research from the exclusion zone has also informed the development of nuclear power plants and nuclear emergency planning around the world, as well as the response to the Fukushima nuclear accident in 2011. “So it is a resource that is of benefit globally, not just locally,” says Mike Wood, an ecologist at the University of Salford, UK, who worked at Chornobyl.Early indicatorsResearchers at Chornobyl detected signs of Russia’s impending invasion four months before hostilities even began, says Mousseau. He and others were monitoring the movement of wolves and other wildlife using about 100 motion-activated cameras. Some in the Ukrainian exclusion zone picked up Russian troops making incursions across the border, prompting the team to alert the authorities — a fact that Mousseau was allowed to reveal publicly only in May.When the Russian army stormed the border on 24 February 2022, it immediately captured the exclusion zone. Sergii Paskevych, deputy director of research at the Kyiv-based Institute for Safety Problems of Nuclear Power Plants (ISP NPP) of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, was in the Chornobyl area with his colleagues that night. Amid fear and confusion, “all the main stations of the institute decided to evacuate everyone. We left everything in Chornobyl that night,” Paskevych says. As they drove away at 6 a.m., they saw Ukrainian troops arriving and placing explosives under bridges that, hours later, would be destroyed. “After that, I realized that it’s serious,” says Paskevych. “It’s not a simulation. It’s real war.”

    Zoologist Dennis Vyshnevskyi sets a photo-trap in the ghost city Pripyat near to Chernobyl Power Plant.Credit: Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty

    During Russia’s short occupation of the exclusion zone, the country’s forces looted and damaged many research labs and facilities. In Chornobyl town, for example, they destroyed servers and stole hard drives from Ecocentre, a laboratory that led radiation monitoring across the zone, says Gennady Laptev, a radiological monitoring expert at the Ukrainian Hydrometeorological Institute in Kyiv.This interrupted the long-term data collection in the region, and some researchers fear that historical data could be permanently lost. “Computers were stolen, records were destroyed,” says Smith. Wildlife studies were also disrupted, because researchers were unable to access field sites or retrieve many of the camera traps — some of which stopped working when their batteries ran out.Slow returnOn 31 March 2022, Ukraine announced that it had regained control of the exclusion zone, and from June that year, some researchers started making efforts to restart their work. But the return has been slow and halting. Work is punctuated by the sound of explosions and gunfire. “It is difficult to live under rocket attacks,” says Valery Kashparov, director of the Ukrainian Institute of Agricultural Radiology in Kyiv.The biggest issue now, say many scientists, is a lack of staff. Although scientists do not have to serve in the military, Paskevych and many others have volunteered to fight. At the ISP NPP, a skeleton crew of essential workers is now on site evaluating the safety risks, says ISP NPP radiobiologist Olena Pareniuk. And collaborators abroad are unable to return. “For most of us, our institutions aren’t overly keen on us saying ‘Right, we’d like to go and do fieldwork in an area where there remains active conflict’,” says Wood.
    Rebuilding Ukrainian science can’t wait — here’s how to start
    Access to research sites around Chornobyl is another huge problem. Scientists can enter around half of the exclusion zone, estimates Vyshnevskyi. About one-third is currently under strict military control, says Prots, including areas close to the Belarusian border. But in reality, many research sites are inaccessible because much of the land is now dotted with mines or tightly controlled by the army, which fears a Russian invasion through Belarus.Sharing the exclusion zone with the military comes with risks. Twice in the three months after Russia’s withdrawal, researchers from the Chornobyl Reserve were apprehended by Ukrainian soldiers, says Vyshnevskyi. The second time they were blindfolded and detained for a few hours before being returned to a local police checkpoint. Since then, scientists have learnt to give advanced warning of their movements, he says.A handful of Ukrainian researchers have made initial forays back into the forests to try to get ecological monitoring systems back online. Prots says the soldiers have been good-natured — if a little surprised — to find scientists out looking for bats and beavers in the middle of a war zone. Mousseau, whose wildlife cameras happened to pick up early signs of Russian troops, says that he and his team are now trying to install more. “That might be useful for Ukrainian security services as well as our wildlife studies,” he says.Vyshnevskyi says that his main focus now “is to assess the damage to the natural environment from the occupation”. Chornobyl researchers have joined with other scientists in an effort launched by Ukraine’s environment ministry in July 2022 to track military actions that cause environmental harm, from groundwater contamination to forest fires. By early December, a network of thousands of citizen reporters had submitted at least 2,600 reports of environmental harm, causing an estimated €52.4 billion (US$56.6 billion) worth of damage. Wood says that when international researchers are able to return to the zone, one obvious action will be to repeat work such as wildlife tracking, to quantify the changes. They will want to know “what was the zone like when we last did this? What’s it like now?”, he says.Wetland defencesProts is one of those trying to restart their work. The nuclear power plant is located in Polesia, Europe’s largest inland wetland wilderness. But long before it was built, and starting in earnest in the 1920s, the Soviet Union drained vast areas for farming.In the past few years, thanks to the drier land and climate change, wildfires have torn through forests around Chornobyl. Research conducted after fires swept through in 2020 suggests that the radionuclides released by the blazes pose little threat to people outside the exclusion zone4, but some local scientists want to see further research. They’re concerned that future fires could damage ecosystems, release carbon from peatlands and, by moving radionuclides around, complicate efforts to study — and eventually reopen — the zone.

    The city of Pripyat was abandoned after the 1986 nuclear accident, with homes and the stadium left empty.Credit: Patrick Ahlborn/DeFodi Images News via Getty

    Prots wants to study whether reintroducing wetlands to the area would cut those potential risks. This would follow on from work done since 2007 on a wetland conservation and restoration project in the Carpathian mountain forests in western Ukraine5. Since 2021, Prots has been funded by the Whitley Fund for Nature, a UK conservation charity, to study whether rewilding could safely and affordably prevent wildfires, as part of an international coalition including Smith and Laptev.Before the invasion, Prots had finalized plans for a pilot project, due to start in 2022, that involved clearing silt and debris from the ageing network of canals and sluice gates and using the waters to flood an 8-square-kilometre patch of former swampland near the Pripyat River. He had hoped this would create conditions that would lure back the Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber), a rodent whose dam-building can support wetland ecosystems in the long term. “If we start this restoration, beavers will come,” he says. During the pilot, the team planned to observe the effects of restored wetland on wildlife and carefully monitor radionuclides to ensure that flooding did not cause dangerous levels to run off into surrounding areas. Then, if successful, the approach could be scaled up to restore wetlands across the exclusion zone.
    Ukrainian science has survived against the odds — now let’s rebuild together
    To Prots’ surprise, as the war drags on, his proposal has drawn fresh interest from firefighters keen to avert increasingly frequent wildfires, and from Ukraine’s military, which hopes that swamps will provide effective defences against Russian troops. “Many people are recognizing now that in this border area, the best war defence would be having natural habitats,” says Prots. “This could be a big win of this war: to have restored moist wetlands.”In theory, Prots’ project could begin as soon as Ukraine’s military can spare the services of a ‘sapper’ to clear the tracks of explosives, which were placed to prevent Russian troop advances. But the team’s hope of starting this summer were dashed. The sappers were needed elsewhere, especially following Ukraine’s counteroffensive, which encountered heavily mined Russian lines.Uncertain futureWith no end to the war in sight, some researchers fear that science at Chornobyl will never recover to pre-war levels and that many of the scientists who left the country will not return. Sergey Gashchak, deputy director of science at the Chornobyl Center’s International Radioecology Laboratory, says that research was already struggling with insufficient funding from the Ukrainian government and a long-term decline in science education, resulting in fewer qualified scientists and little funding for PhDs. The war has finally “killed” science here, Gashchak wrote in an e-mail. “No projects, no money, no people.”Others are more optimistic that their data collection and studies can be resumed — if the break is not too long. “If it’s another year, let’s say, it wouldn’t be that big a problem, because many of the ecological dynamics are not that fast,” says Germán Orizaola, a zoologist at the University of Oviedo, Spain, who studies amphibians in Chornobyl. But Orizaola worries that the interruption of international collaborations by the war and the COVID-19 pandemic will result in a lasting reduction in foreign funding, which was a key source of support. “All that money is not reaching Ukraine now,” says Orizaola.Whenever the conflict ends, scars around Chornobyl are likely to persist for some time. Along the Ukraine–Belarusian border, a 100-metre-wide strip of vegetation has been razed and now divides the forest. Prots says these zones are laid with explosives, which animals triggered routinely during his visit, and he and other researchers fear the strip could become entrenched. Prots compares the zone of deforestation to the barbed-wire-topped barriers of the old Iron Curtain. “We are facing, now, this completely new reality.” More

  • in

    Domestic cats eat whatever they can catch

    Domestic cats (Felis catus) are beloved companions for many people, but they are also invasive predators that have been linked to numerous birds, mammals and reptiles going extinct. Their eating habits are of interest to ecologists, to determine the risk these cats pose to endangered species. Writing in Nature Communications, Lepczyk et al. report a global assessment of the diet of free-ranging domestic cats — and find that they are not picky eaters (C. A. Lepczyk et al. Nature Commun. 14, 7809; 2023).
    Competing Interests
    The author declares no competing interests. More

  • in

    The Tree of Life, emoji version

    .readcube-buybox { display: none !important;}
    Imagine reconstructing Earth’s biodiversity using only emojis. Based on these digital pictograms, one would think that giant pandas, wolves, frogs and other vertebrates were the most common forms of life. Meanwhile, the true rulers of the planet by sheer numbers of individuals — unicellular life forms — are represented by just a single emoji.

    Access options

    /* style specs start */
    style{display:none!important}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 *{align-content:stretch;align-items:stretch;align-self:auto;animation-delay:0s;animation-direction:normal;animation-duration:0s;animation-fill-mode:none;animation-iteration-count:1;animation-name:none;animation-play-state:running;animation-timing-function:ease;azimuth:center;backface-visibility:visible;background-attachment:scroll;background-blend-mode:normal;background-clip:borderBox;background-color:transparent;background-image:none;background-origin:paddingBox;background-position:0 0;background-repeat:repeat;background-size:auto auto;block-size:auto;border-block-end-color:currentcolor;border-block-end-style:none;border-block-end-width:medium;border-block-start-color:currentcolor;border-block-start-style:none;border-block-start-width:medium;border-bottom-color:currentcolor;border-bottom-left-radius:0;border-bottom-right-radius:0;border-bottom-style:none;border-bottom-width:medium;border-collapse:separate;border-image-outset:0s;border-image-repeat:stretch;border-image-slice:100%;border-image-source:none;border-image-width:1;border-inline-end-color:currentcolor;border-inline-end-style:none;border-inline-end-width:medium;border-inline-start-color:currentcolor;border-inline-start-style:none;border-inline-start-width:medium;border-left-color:currentcolor;border-left-style:none;border-left-width:medium;border-right-color:currentcolor;border-right-style:none;border-right-width:medium;border-spacing:0;border-top-color:currentcolor;border-top-left-radius:0;border-top-right-radius:0;border-top-style:none;border-top-width:medium;bottom:auto;box-decoration-break:slice;box-shadow:none;box-sizing:border-box;break-after:auto;break-before:auto;break-inside:auto;caption-side:top;caret-color:auto;clear:none;clip:auto;clip-path:none;color:initial;column-count:auto;column-fill:balance;column-gap:normal;column-rule-color:currentcolor;column-rule-style:none;column-rule-width:medium;column-span:none;column-width:auto;content:normal;counter-increment:none;counter-reset:none;cursor:auto;display:inline;empty-cells:show;filter:none;flex-basis:auto;flex-direction:row;flex-grow:0;flex-shrink:1;flex-wrap:nowrap;float:none;font-family:initial;font-feature-settings:normal;font-kerning:auto;font-language-override:normal;font-size:medium;font-size-adjust:none;font-stretch:normal;font-style:normal;font-synthesis:weight style;font-variant:normal;font-variant-alternates:normal;font-variant-caps:normal;font-variant-east-asian:normal;font-variant-ligatures:normal;font-variant-numeric:normal;font-variant-position:normal;font-weight:400;grid-auto-columns:auto;grid-auto-flow:row;grid-auto-rows:auto;grid-column-end:auto;grid-column-gap:0;grid-column-start:auto;grid-row-end:auto;grid-row-gap:0;grid-row-start:auto;grid-template-areas:none;grid-template-columns:none;grid-template-rows:none;height:auto;hyphens:manual;image-orientation:0deg;image-rendering:auto;image-resolution:1dppx;ime-mode:auto;inline-size:auto;isolation:auto;justify-content:flexStart;left:auto;letter-spacing:normal;line-break:auto;line-height:normal;list-style-image:none;list-style-position:outside;list-style-type:disc;margin-block-end:0;margin-block-start:0;margin-bottom:0;margin-inline-end:0;margin-inline-start:0;margin-left:0;margin-right:0;margin-top:0;mask-clip:borderBox;mask-composite:add;mask-image:none;mask-mode:matchSource;mask-origin:borderBox;mask-position:0 0;mask-repeat:repeat;mask-size:auto;mask-type:luminance;max-height:none;max-width:none;min-block-size:0;min-height:0;min-inline-size:0;min-width:0;mix-blend-mode:normal;object-fit:fill;object-position:50% 50%;offset-block-end:auto;offset-block-start:auto;offset-inline-end:auto;offset-inline-start:auto;opacity:1;order:0;orphans:2;outline-color:initial;outline-offset:0;outline-style:none;outline-width:medium;overflow:visible;overflow-wrap:normal;overflow-x:visible;overflow-y:visible;padding-block-end:0;padding-block-start:0;padding-bottom:0;padding-inline-end:0;padding-inline-start:0;padding-left:0;padding-right:0;padding-top:0;page-break-after:auto;page-break-before:auto;page-break-inside:auto;perspective:none;perspective-origin:50% 50%;pointer-events:auto;position:static;quotes:initial;resize:none;right:auto;ruby-align:spaceAround;ruby-merge:separate;ruby-position:over;scroll-behavior:auto;scroll-snap-coordinate:none;scroll-snap-destination:0 0;scroll-snap-points-x:none;scroll-snap-points-y:none;scroll-snap-type:none;shape-image-threshold:0;shape-margin:0;shape-outside:none;tab-size:8;table-layout:auto;text-align:initial;text-align-last:auto;text-combine-upright:none;text-decoration-color:currentcolor;text-decoration-line:none;text-decoration-style:solid;text-emphasis-color:currentcolor;text-emphasis-position:over right;text-emphasis-style:none;text-indent:0;text-justify:auto;text-orientation:mixed;text-overflow:clip;text-rendering:auto;text-shadow:none;text-transform:none;text-underline-position:auto;top:auto;touch-action:auto;transform:none;transform-box:borderBox;transform-origin:50% 50%0;transform-style:flat;transition-delay:0s;transition-duration:0s;transition-property:all;transition-timing-function:ease;vertical-align:baseline;visibility:visible;white-space:normal;widows:2;width:auto;will-change:auto;word-break:normal;word-spacing:normal;word-wrap:normal;writing-mode:horizontalTb;z-index:auto;-webkit-appearance:none;-moz-appearance:none;-ms-appearance:none;appearance:none;margin:0}.LiveAreaSection-193358632{width:100%}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 .login-option-buybox{display:block;width:100%;font-size:17px;line-height:30px;color:#222;padding-top:30px;font-family:Harding,Palatino,serif}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 .additional-access-options{display:block;font-weight:700;font-size:17px;line-height:30px;color:#222;font-family:Harding,Palatino,serif}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 .additional-login >li:not(:first-child)::before{transform:translateY(-50%);content:””;height:1rem;position:absolute;top:50%;left:0;border-left:2px solid #999}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 .additional-login >li:not(:first-child){padding-left:10px}.LiveAreaSection-193358632 .additional-login >li{display:inline-block;position:relative;vertical-align:middle;padding-right:10px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780{display:flex;flex-wrap:wrap;flex:1;flex-direction:row-reverse;margin:-30px -15px 0}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .box-inner{width:100%;height:100%}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .readcube-buybox{background-color:#f3f3f3;flex-shrink:1;flex-grow:1;flex-basis:255px;background-clip:content-box;padding:0 15px;margin-top:30px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .subscribe-buybox{background-color:#f3f3f3;flex-shrink:1;flex-grow:4;flex-basis:300px;background-clip:content-box;padding:0 15px;margin-top:30px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .subscribe-buybox-nature-plus{background-color:#f3f3f3;flex-shrink:1;flex-grow:4;flex-basis:100%;background-clip:content-box;padding:0 15px;margin-top:30px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .title-readcube,.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .title-buybox{display:block;margin:0;margin-right:10%;margin-left:10%;font-size:24px;line-height:32px;color:#222;padding-top:30px;text-align:center;font-family:Harding,Palatino,serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .title-asia-buybox{display:block;margin:0;margin-right:5%;margin-left:5%;font-size:24px;line-height:32px;color:#222;padding-top:30px;text-align:center;font-family:Harding,Palatino,serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .asia-link{color:#069;cursor:pointer;text-decoration:none;font-size:1.05em;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:1.05em6}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .access-readcube{display:block;margin:0;margin-right:10%;margin-left:10%;font-size:14px;color:#222;padding-top:10px;text-align:center;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:20px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .access-asia-buybox{display:block;margin:0;margin-right:5%;margin-left:5%;font-size:14px;color:#222;padding-top:10px;text-align:center;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:20px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .access-buybox{display:block;margin:0;margin-right:10%;margin-left:10%;font-size:14px;color:#222;opacity:.8px;padding-top:10px;text-align:center;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:20px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-buybox{display:block;font-size:30px;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;padding-top:30px;text-align:center}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-buybox-to{display:block;font-size:30px;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;text-align:center}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-info-text{font-size:16px;padding-right:10px;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-value{font-size:30px;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-per-period{font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .price-from{font-size:14px;padding-right:10px;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:20px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .issue-buybox{display:block;font-size:13px;text-align:center;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:19px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .no-price-buybox{display:block;font-size:13px;line-height:18px;text-align:center;padding-right:10%;padding-left:10%;padding-bottom:20px;padding-top:30px;color:#222;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .vat-buybox{display:block;margin-top:5px;margin-right:20%;margin-left:20%;font-size:11px;color:#222;padding-top:10px;padding-bottom:15px;text-align:center;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:17px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .tax-buybox{display:block;width:100%;color:#222;padding:20px 16px;text-align:center;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;line-height:NaNpx}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .button-container{display:flex;padding-right:20px;padding-left:20px;justify-content:center}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .button-container >*{flex:1px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .button-container >a:hover,.Button-505204839:hover,.Button-1078489254:hover,.Button-2496381730:hover{text-decoration:none}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .readcube-button{background:#fff;margin-top:30px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .button-asia{background:#069;border:1px solid #069;border-radius:0;cursor:pointer;display:block;padding:9px;outline:0;text-align:center;text-decoration:none;min-width:80px;margin-top:75px}.BuyBoxSection-683559780 .button-label-asia,.ButtonLabel-3869432492,.ButtonLabel-3296148077,.ButtonLabel-1651148777{display:block;color:#fff;font-size:17px;line-height:20px;font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,”Segoe UI”,Roboto,Oxygen-Sans,Ubuntu,Cantarell,”Helvetica Neue”,sans-serif;text-align:center;text-decoration:none;cursor:pointer}.Button-505204839,.Button-1078489254,.Button-2496381730{background:#069;border:1px solid #069;border-radius:0;cursor:pointer;display:block;padding:9px;outline:0;text-align:center;text-decoration:none;min-width:80px;max-width:320px;margin-top:10px}.Button-505204839 .readcube-label,.Button-1078489254 .readcube-label,.Button-2496381730 .readcube-label{color:#069}
    /* style specs end */Access Nature and 54 other Nature Portfolio journalsGet Nature+, our best-value online-access subscription$29.99 / 30 dayscancel any timeSubscribe to this journalReceive 51 print issues and online access$199.00 per yearonly $3.90 per issueRent or buy this articlePrices vary by article typefrom$1.95to$39.95Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout

    Additional access options:

    doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-03807-8

    References

    Subjects

    Biodiversity

    Latest on:

    Biodiversity More

  • in

    Eat less meat: Will the first global climate deal on food work?

    “Reducing the consumption of animal products in high-consuming countries would deliver the biggest results in the short term,” says food systems researcher Helen Harwatt.Credit: Vladimir Popovich/Alamy

    Last week at the start of the COP28 climate conference in Dubai, 134 countries signed a declaration pledging to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from processes related to producing and consuming food.It’s the first time in nearly three decades of climate summits, which were established to set the world’s direction in tackling climate change, that the importance of food systems has been recognized in this way. Also, for the first time, on 10 December, COP28 will dedicate a day to discussing ways to reduce emissions from food and agriculture.Many have welcomed the moves. “It’s great to finally have food on the COP menu,” says Clement Metivier, a climate and biodiversity policy expert at the World Wildlife Fund for Nature in the UK, who is attending COP28. “There is really a growing momentum around food systems transformation to tackle both the biodiversity and climate crisis.” But equally, researchers say not enough is being done to reduce emissions in one of the world’s biggest, largely untackled sources – and that will involve some tough political decisions.Making food systems more sustainable is crucial to keeping alive the dream of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, agreed at COP21 in Paris in 2015. Getting food from farm to food-table accounts for around a third of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to a 2021 study by Monica Crippa and Adrian Leap of the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre in Ispra, Italy. The researchers estimated that in 2015, some 70% of these emissions came just from the practice of doing agriculture and land-use changes – such as cutting down trees to clear land for crops.There is also obvious scope to reduce some of these impacts, for example by limiting the use of fossil-fuel-hungry fertilizers, or by reducing food waste. Roughly half of food systems emissions come from food that is lost in the supply chain – before reaching the consumer – or wasted, according to a study published in March in Nature Food from Xunchang Fei based at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and colleagues. Halving food loss and waste could remove around one-quarter of greenhouse gas emissions from the food system, the team has estimated.The declaration signed on 1 December means nations will need to include food and agriculture in their next round of emissions reduction plans – known as Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) – that represent their commitment to helping meet the Paris goal. But its initial impact looks likely to be limited.The declaration is not legally binding. It also fails to mention the role of fossil fuels in food systems such as that used to transport food as well as in powering farm machinery and refrigeration. Food systems, moreover, are not mentioned in the draft text that all nations must agree when COP28 ends on 11 December. “It was a glaring omission,” says Metivier, who hopes that this will be rectified in the final version.“It’s at least a commitment at the highest level, but there’s still not much specificity in terms of what actually needs to be done,” says biodiversity and agriculture researcher Lim Li Ching at the Third World Network, a non-governmental organization based in Penang, Malaysia. “We need an inclusion of food systems and phasing out of fossil fuels to be built into the revision of national climate commitments,” she says.Cutting food carbon …Perhaps the most contentious aspect of reducing food-related emissions is connected with what we eat. Meat, dairy and other animal products generate more emissions than other food types such as fruit and vegetables. In China, for example, halving meat consumption could reduce global food system emissions by nearly one-quarter if the calories were replaced by other food types, according to the authors of the Nature Food study.“Reducing the consumption of animal products in high-consuming countries would deliver the biggest results in the short term and should be the priority,” says food systems researcher Helen Harwatt at Chatham House, an international-affairs think tank in London. Part of this transition should involve financially supporting countries that heavily rely on livestock for development, such as India and countries in Africa, she adds. Currently just 4% of global climate finance goes towards food systems, according to an analysis from the Climate Policy Initiative think tank…. is not straightforwardBut changing how people eat on a global scale is complex. It is firstly “political”, says Patty Fong, a programme director at the Global Alliance for the Future of Food, a group of philanthropic foundations, who is also attending COP28: complex political decisions are required to achieve these goals.Often, governments argue that safe and nutritious food that also achieves economic growth means prioritizing industrial-scale food production. Such an approach, however, can give less emphasis to environmental impacts, says biodiversity and agriculture researcher Li Ching of the Third World Network.Li Ching also points out that large corporations – including fossil fuel companies — have good access to governments and can therefore press these arguments, compared with small-scale farmers or Indigenous people who are at the frontline of climate impacts, but have comparatively less influence on policymakers.There is also a nutritional dimension, says Saswati Bora, an executive with The Nature Conservancy, a conservation organization based in New York city, who is also attending COP28. While people in high income countries might be able to cut down on meat consumption, that is not so straightforward in low-and-middle-income nations where meat is a rare source of protein for many, but where consumption is increasing.Highlighting this hurdle, in a 2019 study, a group of 37 researchers from 16 countries— the EAT–Lancet Commission on Food, Planet, Health crafted a diet – consisting mainly of plant-based foods with a small amount of meat or fish. But other researchers questioned whether the diet would provide enough nutrition for people in low-income settings.Such questions of global equity are not the least reason why global recommendations on how to reduce food-related emissions have so far not been on the menu – and could be difficult for many to swallow. More

  • in

    From the archive: Uri Geller’s tricks, and willows to the rescue

    Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain
    the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in
    Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles
    and JavaScript. More

  • in

    Forecast warns when sea life will get tangled in nets — one year in advance

    Researchers have developed a way to forecast when whales and turtles are likely to get entangled in fishing gear — up to one year in advance. The technique, published in Nature Communications1 on 5 December, could protect animals and benefit fisheries.Researchers have previously developed ways to predict how heatwaves will affect the distribution of wild fish and the productivity of fish farms. But few forecasting tools have focused on protecting marine animals from hazardous human activities such as fishing.“There’s a lot of power in a forecast approach,” says marine ecologist Stephanie Brodie, at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Brisbane, Australia. The technique that Brodie and her colleagues developed can help both conservationists and those trying to make fisheries sustainable, she says. It is also more accessible to researchers than previous methods.Ecological forecasting models can predict where marine animals are likely to be on the basis of sea-surface temperatures. Previous tools often required researchers to infer sea temperatures of a specific region from lower-resolution global data, which is a complex process that requires powerful computers, says Brodie.Rope injuriesInstead, Brodie and her team have shown that they can use widely available, low-resolution, global forecasts of sea-surface temperature to accurately predict when whales are likely to swim near the shore off the coast of California, where a local fishery lays down crabbing pots on the seabed from around November to June. Ropes extending upwards from these pots pose a risk to the animals.“That rope gear is what whales can get entangled in,” says Brodie. This can cause rubbing injuries on their fins, mouth or tail, preventing them from diving or feeding. It can sometimes even kill them, she says.To avoid this, the local crab fishery uses the past month of sea-surface temperatures in the region to make decisions on whether crabbing can go ahead, on the basis of whether a current of cold, nutrient-rich water — which attracts whales — has been compressed towards the shore.This phenomenon is quantified using a metric called the Habitat Compression Index (HCI). When this value falls below a certain threshold, whales are likely to move inshore, and so fishers are recommended to suspend crabbing. But this leaves little time for the fishers to adapt to the economic impacts of fishing closures, says Brodie.The team found that using global temperature forecasts to calculate monthly HCI — over the course of a 33-month heatwave during 2014 to 2016 — allowed them to accurately forecast when the whale’s habitat was compressed towards the shore, up to 11.5 months in advance.Protecting turtlesThe researchers also studied another local fishery that deploys floating fishing nets. It uses the past six months of unusual sea-surface temperatures to decide whether loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) are at high risk of getting caught in nets. Turtles tend to track warmer waters, so if the waters where people fish are warmer, the fishery might have to close, says Brodie. “When turtles get caught in those nets it could strangle them, or stop them being able to move and feed,” says Brodie.The team found that they could use forecasts for global sea-surface temperatures to accurately predict when closures were necessary to protect turtles during the 2014–16 heatwave, also up to 11.5 months in advance.“These results raise optimism for reliable ecological forecasts in regions for which high-resolution local ocean models may not be available,” says Kathy Mills, a marine ecologist at the Gulf of Maine Research Institute in Portland. “As ocean resource users, managers and communities make decisions, they need relevant, timely and reliable information,” especially amid climate change and increasingly frequent marine heatwaves, she adds. More

  • in

    Hard data: looking deep into Indigenous forests

    I work with the Pessamit band of the Innu First Nation in Nitassinan, the traditional land of the Innu Indigenous people. This is a vast boreal forest region in Canada, covering some 130,000 square kilometres northeast of Quebec City. It’s a fairly open landscape dominated by black spruce (Picea mariana), with some balsam fir (Abies balsamea). It’s not uncommon to find forests that are 300 years old here.I study the southern portion of these forests, an area of roughly 30,000 square kilometres, to see how their structure and diversity change over time and respond to disturbance. I did this first as a graduate student, and then as a forest ecologist for the federal government. Now, I’m employed by the Pessamit community.Logging started here in the 1920s and shot up in the 1970s; now, about one million cubic metres of logs, such as those pictured here, are cut each year. Logging has completely changed the age structure of the forest. Large tracts of old growth have declined from about 40% of the landscape 30 years ago, to less than 20% today.Moose enter the logged areas, where they feed on new deciduous growth. Wolves follow the moose, travelling along logging roads, and prey on caribou.I’m not against logging, but I’m against the speed with which it’s done here. Loggers have been moving from south to north, and in five to ten years they’ll reach the commercial-logging boundary. Then they’ll go back south and start again. Sustainable forest management means maintaining the species that are associated with these forests. And that’s not what is happening.Many groups are pushing for an Indigenous-led conservation area. The Innu are also interested in the possibility of carbon credits. They want to find ways to manage the forest, while continuing their cultural practices. I’m keen to contribute to something that I believe in. I feel that the Innu and I share the same ecological values. More

  • in

    Pesticide cocktails harm bumblebees in European fields

    RESEARCH BRIEFINGS
    29 November 2023

    Exposure to the complex mix of pesticides used in agriculture in Europe significantly reduces bumblebees’ health. This suggests that current risk-assessment processes, in which pesticides are assessed separately, are not fit for purpose. Continuous monitoring is needed to quantify the real-world effects of pesticides on pollinator health. More