Showing posts with label monthlyscienceroundup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monthlyscienceroundup. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

May 2026 science summary

Jon and Thor


Hi,

I'm pretty behind on even screening new research - if you have a favorite paper from the past few months please feel free to pitch it to me along with why it's worth covering! This month I've got a paper on an interesting ecological engineering approach to wetland restoration, one on causes of fire in the Gran Chaco, and one on interest among ranchers in the Brazilian Pantanal in sustainable certification.


Subscribe instructions - If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).



WETLAND RESTORATION:
Petrakis et al. 2026 uses satellite imagery to document the degradation and subsequent restoration of a spring-fed wetland in an arid part of New Mexico. It dried out after water diversion and use for irrigation in the 1940s, and from 2008-2015 a series of changes were made to increase water retention (the so-called "Zeedyk" approach named after the last author on the paper). This included plugging diversion ditches / channels, widening channels, and adding many small rock dams all of which allow for slower flow and more water retention and infiltration. They actually doubled the area of the original wetland via restoration. On the one hand, these structures would impede connectivity for aquatic organisms, but on the other so does the absence of water. I can see a case being made for these kinds of structures in ephemeral headwaters in particular.


FIRE / CHACO:
Baumann et al. 2026 look at 40 years of fire history in the Gran Chaco (2/3 of which burned in that time) to find key drivers. 70% of all fires originated from clearing habitat for agriculture (91% in Bolivia), followed by burning existing cropland or pastures (28%, 7% in Bolivia). Fire was most common when initially clearing land, followed by regular burning of pastures, whereas regular use of fire was uncommon for croplands. Drought led to fires burning almost 5% more land than in non-drought years, which was significant but much less than I expected. One reason is that as a dry ecosystem, fuel loads are low, especially after longer droughts or other fires. The authors note that "other fires" (not from clearing land or burning ag lands) still were often set by humans, and some fires classified as "other" still originated from pasture fires before extending into forests.


PANTANAL / CATTLE SUSTAINABILITY:
Nogueira et al. 2026 interviewed ranchers in the Pantanal about beliefs and interest in adopting a sustainable certification scheme. Interviewees felt a lot of pride and identity as Pantaneiros, their unique ability to ranch effectively, and their sustainability. This is fairly universal in similar research I’ve seen of ranchers across the Americas. The biggest driver of them being willing to try for sustainable certification is direct support (likely both technical and financial – they report sustainable practices are both difficult and expensive, despite ALSO believing they’re already sustainable). The second biggest driver is how open they say they are to new ideas of managing their property, followed by being familiar with FPS (the certification scheme in question). Recognition of Pantaneiro culture had the smallest impact on intention to adopt of the four factors that helped to some degree. Belief that the government does not currently support sustainable cattle ranching was the biggest predictor of opposition to adopting sustainable certification.


REFERENCES:
Baumann, M., Maillard, O., Gasparri, I., Burton, J., Gavier Pizarro, G., & Kuemmerle, T. (2026). Fire dynamics in the South American Chaco and their link to agriculture and drought. Nature Sustainability. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-026-01793-z

Nogueira, D. G., de Olivera Roque, F., Borges, J. A. R., Tomas, W. M., Mills, M., Jagadish, A., Nunes, A. V., Leimgruber, P., Legh‐Smith, C., Marchini, S., & Morais Chiaravalloti, R. (2026). What Drives Conservation Adoption? Social Science Insights from Cattle Ranchers in the Pantanal Wetland, Brazil. Conservation Letters, 19(2), 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1111/con4.70033

Petrakis, R. E., Norman, L. M., McGraw, M., Carson, S., Sponholtz, C., Weber, C., & Zeedyk, W. D. (2026). Regreening, restoring, and reconnecting a southwestern wetland ecosystem – the Zeedyk wetland. Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment, 42(November 2025), 101964. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rsase.2026.101964


Sincerely,

Jon


P.s. The adorable chunky puppy in the photo is Thor - until very recently he was one of almost 100 puppies currently available for adoption via Homeward Trails in addition to many quality adult dogs (already potty trained and no surprises about their eventual personality). He has been snapped up but as I write this his similar brother Loki and sister Freyja are somehow still up for grabs! This pic was taken at a puppy party I volunteered at which both raises funds for the shelter and helps pups find homes.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

April 2026 science summary

Jon and alligator kayaking at Loxahatchee park


Hello there,

This month I've got two articles about moisture cycling and water security, and one on predicted climate change and wildfire intensity in the Pantanal.

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me unless the link breaks again).

GLOBAL WATER SECURITY:
Posada-Marín et al. 2024 is an interesting take on water security, arguing that since 40% of originates on land (upwind, potentially out of the hydrologic basin), accounting for that reveals more vulnerabilities (Fig 3) and risks to water security (Fig 5). Some of the results in Fig 5 don't look right to me, like the Paraná seems to have the same hazard for upstream vs. upwind approach, the vulnerability goes down from an upwind perspective (to middle), but Fig 5 says its risk is very high and unchanged. But despite that, the core idea is important: without accounting for where precipitation comes from, water security cannot be assured.


PANTANAL:
In a local example of what the paper above found, Bergier et al. 2018 shows that because much of the rain that falls in the Pantanal originates via trees transpiring moisture in the Amazon, continued Amazonian deforestation could lead to a 30% decrease in rain by 2100 (relative to 1961-1990, Table 2). Their estimate of reduced "precipitable water" of 25% was a hand-wave though: they arbitrarily picked a number that was more conservative than Boers et al. 2017 (which found losing 30-50% of the forest would decrease rain in the remaining forest by 40%). In better news, they found a 3C temperature increase would only drop rainfall by 1%.

Under the most likely SSP2-4.5 climate change scenario, Neto et al. 2026 predict that extreme heat days (where daily max temp >the 90th percentile) in the Pantanal will increase from an average of 36.5 days over the last 30 years to 85.8 from 2030-2060 (a 135% increase ). And days experiencing heatwaves (six or more consecutive days of extreme heat) will increase from the recent average of 8.8 to 50.7 under SSP2-4.5 (a rise from ~1 heatwave per year to ~5-6). This in turn is likely to drive increased wildfire intensity. Fig. 9 shows the spatial pattern of warming by season (a=summer, b=fall, c=winter, and d= spring when the biggest increase is seen).


REFERENCES:
Bergier, I., Assine, M. L., McGlue, M. M., Alho, C. J. R., Silva, A., Guerreiro, R. L., & Carvalho, J. C. (2018). Amazon rainforest modulation of water security in the Pantanal wetland. Science of The Total Environment, 619–620, 1116–1125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.11.163

Neto, J. B. F., Shen, S., de Cássia Ramos, R., & Pereira, G. (2026). Towards a new climate regime: heatwaves proliferate and reshape seasonality in the world’s largest tropical wetland. Bulletin of Atmospheric Science and Technology, 7(1), 5. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42865-026-00122-8

Posada-Marín, J., Salazar, J., Rulli, M. C., Wang-Erlandsson, L., & Jaramillo, F. (2024). Upwind moisture supply increases risk to water security. Nature Water. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44221-024-00291-w


Sincerely,

Jon


P.s. If you look closely at the image above, you can see a big alligator chilling on the riverbank behind me. She was unconcerned by our kayaks though.


Thursday, March 26, 2026

March 2026 science summary

Tiny bunny rescue

Greetings,

Apologies for the double email last month! Hopefully the new platform will work right from here on. I've got one interesting global paper on how much freshwater we're pumping out to sea, and three on fire in the Pantanal and Brazil.

If you know someone who wants to subscribe to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).



FRESHWATER:
Chandanpurkar et al. 2025 found that all continents except Antarctica have undergone drying (decreasing water stored on land) from 2002-2024 (although Figs 1 and 5 makes that hard to see in some cases, especially tropical Africa). They expect that trend to continue. Wet areas have gotten wetter but shrunk, while dry areas have expanded (and are drying faster than wet areas are getting wetter). Groundwater depletion caused 68% of the decrease, with the remainder a mix of ice and permafrost melt in Canada, and droughts in Central America and Europe. Another scary finding: water loss from continents is causing 44% of global sea level rise, more than either Greenland (37%) or Antarctica (19%). The lower-right map in Fig 3A shows how much dryer 2019-2024 in particular have been. There's a great news article and map about this here: https://www.propublica.org/article/water-aquifers-groundwate...


FIRE IN THE PANTANAL:
Concone et al 2026 found that two years after the 2020 megafires in the Pantanal, mammal diversity had been cut in half in the park they studied (see figs 2b and c), and abundance was reduced for at least 6 spp including capybara and giant armadillos (fig 4a). They found a combo of camera traps and eDNA was important to count all species (see fig 2a). 9 spp which typically favor drier and more open habitats were only found post-fire; the authors expect that to be temporary but since extreme fires have reoccurred they may have stuck around.

Whitney et al. 2026 looks at fire history in the Pantanal split by habitat type, using a mix of charcoal and diatom composition in lake sediment cores going back 3500 years, and satellite data from the last 20. In recent years, climate moisture index is the best predictor of fire, with maximum river depth during seasonal floods being an important variable. Fig 4 shows how the long-term fire trend differs for 5 habitat types. They note that the last 400 years had been getting more rain; while they don't discuss it, cattle ranching (along with fire to clear land) was introduced about 300 years ago and the wet period may have helped to contain the fires until the drying trend from the last 2 decades or so. Upland savannas are expected to see the biggest increase in fire as drying continues (based on historic data), with seasonally-dry tropical forest the least susceptible to increased fire.

Guedes et al.2026 looked at exposure of fish in temporary wetlands to fire across Brazil. They found over 1/4 of all temporary wetlands burned, including 34% of the wetlands in protected areas. In the Pantanal all protected temporary wetlands burned and 68% of the unprotected ones burned. They note that in the dry season that fewer connections between wetlands exist for fish to escape to, and that eggs buried in soil can be killed when fires burn surrounding areas.


REFERENCES:
Chandanpurkar, H. A., Famiglietti, J. S., Gopalan, K., Wiese, D. N., Wada, Y., Kakinuma, K., Reager, J. T., & Zhang, F. (2025). Unprecedented continental drying, shrinking freshwater availability, and increasing land contributions to sea level rise. Science Advances, 11(30), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adx0298

Concone, H. V. B., Magioli, M., Hilário, H. O., Semedo, T. B. F., Moreno, W. H. A., Saranholi, B. H., Ferreira, M. D. R., Batista, E. K. L., Botelho, M. T. de A., Lima, L. H. A., & Berlinck, C. N. (2026). Smoke on the water: Pervasive effects of megafires on the mammal fauna of the world’s largest wetland. Journal of Applied Ecology, 63(1), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70268

Guedes, G. H. S., & Araújo, F. G. (2026). Water and fire: Wildfires threaten fish habitats across Brazilian biomes, and protected areas offer insufficient safeguards. Biological Conservation, 315(November 2025), 111692. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111692

Whitney, B. S., Neves, D. M., Loughlin, N. J. D., D’Apolito, C., Carla, C. T., Hocking, E. P., Mayle, F. E., Power, M. J., Silva Aguinaldo, & Assine, M. L. (2026). Millennial-scale fire and climate dynamics in the world’s largest tropical wetland show emerging fire threat to flooded ecosystems. Global and Planetary Change, 259(April), 105318. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2026.105318

Sincerely,

Jon


P.s. These are some baby bunnies rescued from a neighbor's window well

Monday, February 2, 2026

February 2026 science summary

A four pound turnip

Greetings,


A new paper I'm a co-author on just came out in Conservation Letters. It's about what counts as a "rapid evidence assessment" and how to do one well. Here's a 275 word blog about it: https://sciencejon.blogspot.com/2026/01/new-paper-rapid-evidence-assessments.html , the full paper (~3400 words) is here: https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/con4.70005 , and I've summarized it below.

For any other map nerds out there; Esri has a new web map to make it easy to see 40 years of USGS land cover data at https://links.esri.com/LCExplorer . There's a blog about it at https://www.esri.com/about/newsroom/arcnews/40-years-of-usgs-land-cover-data-in-arcgis-living-atlas

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).

FRESHWATER PROTECTION:
Until very recently, we didn't have a decent estimate of which rivers were protected across the United States! Comte et al. 2026 describes how the first such database (the National Protected Rivers Assessment) was compiled and launched in Feb 2025. Since freshwater-specific protection is rare it relies mostly on assumptions about how likely different kinds of terrestrial protection are to effectively conserve the 5 key ecological attributes (KEAs) of rivers (flow, water quality, connectivity, habitat, and fish/wildlife/plants/etc. - see Fig 1). They find 19% of river length (12% of CONUS river length) has "viable" protection, although only 0.9% is comprehensively protected. Note their bar for "viable" protection (good enough) is fairly low - a score of 1.25/5 on their index. The index combines length and KEAs, so a 1.25 could mean 25% of the river provides protection for each of the 5 KEAs (overlapping or distinct), or all the river has protection for 1 KEA, and 25% has protection for another, but the other 3 KEAs are unaddressed. Hypothetically a river w/ 100% protection on 4 KEAs would score as "comprehensive" protection but could lack any protection from water withdrawals that would make the river run dry. See Fig 4 for rivers in the best shape that are most important for drinking water. This is a super useful resource. Explore the data at https://map.myriver.americanrivers.org/


CARBON AND WATER FOOTPRINT OF AI:
Xiao et al. has granular state projections of demand for AI through 2030, plus the carbon and water footprint of AI in each state. They recommend trying to steer data center growth to four states (TX, MT, NE, SD) given relatively low water scarcity and abundance of renewable energy (and potential to expand wind and solar). With the middle case assumptions by 2030 AI's water footprint would only be ~0.2% of current US crop water footprint, and the energy consumption would be ~2% of current total electric power generation. AI can have important local impacts and is growing fast, but national impacts are still projected to be relatively small.


IMPACT EVALUATION:
Neugarten et al. 2025 is a good overview to how to evaluate if conservation worked or not. They define impact evaluation and key terms like counterfactuals (what would have happened w/o conservation), confounders (variables that make understanding impact harder), and cover different types of evaluation (randomized experimental, quasi-experimental, and qualitative methods). They also discuss why looking at trends alone can be misleading (wildlife population might be dropping, but would have dropped more w/o action). They conclude recommending impact evaluation for projects that are high stakes, expensive, over big areas, untested, and/or assume additionality.


RAPID EVIDENCE ASSESSMENTS:
Webb et al. 2026 (I'm a co-author) proposes a consensus definition of what should count as a "rapid evidence assessment" (or REA) in conservation. It can be hard to find the sweet spot when assessing evidence. Too quick and dirty and you can get wrong answers, but too rigorous and the results 1) may come too late to be useful and 2) take a lot of resources that could be spent on multiple smaller studies. The paper has our final definition, recommended steps for a REA, and Table 1 has a nice little guide to picking what level of rigor may be the best fit in different circumstances.


REFERENCES:

Comte, L., Olden, J. D., Littlefield, C., Dickson, B. G., Zablocki, J., & Moryc, D. (2026). National assessment of river protection in the United States. Nature Sustainability. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-025-01693-8

Neugarten, R., Rodewald, A., Eklund, J., & O’Garra, T. (2025). An introduction to impact evaluation for conservation. Conservation Science and Practice, 7(11), 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.70169

Xiao, T., Nerini, F. F., Matthews, H. D., Tavoni, M., & You, F. (2025). Environmental impact and net-zero pathways for sustainable artificial intelligence servers in the USA. Nature Sustainability, 8(12), 1541–1553. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-025-01681-y

Webb, J. A., Schofield, K. A., Cook, C. N., Fisher, J. R. B., Cheng, S. H., Christie, A., Cooke, S. J., Dubois, N. S., Frampton, G., Macura, B., Nichols, S. J., Richards, R., Aicher, R. J., Mason, S., Anderson, E., Betley, E., Borsuk, M., Busch, J., Carlson, S., … Ridley, C. E. (2026). A Standardized Definition of Rapid Evidence Assessment for Environmental Applications. Conservation Letters, 19(1), 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1111/con4.70005


Sincerely,
 
Jon
 
p.s. This is a four pound turnip. I bought it at the farmer's market out of curiosity, and split it across two recipes and it was tasty!

Monday, January 5, 2026

Best science summaries of 2025

Ceiling decorations at the Carnegie hotel in New York City

Happy New Year!

As always, I’ve compiled the summaries of my favorite 15 papers from 2025 (more or less – I left out some papers I loved to make room for a more well-rounded set). I also wanted to re-share two non-paper tidbits:

  1. You all sent me lots of great advice for scientists, much of which was similar to a paper I co-authored (and we have lots of companion products for that paper).
  2. A case study of effective science communications (from this video overview): People struggle to understand the risk of relatively safe medical procedures (like anesthesia). The “micromort” is an activity with a one in a million chance of resulting in death (Howard 1989, “Microrisks for Medical Decision Making”), allowing you to compare risks between activities you understand and those new to you. Table 1 in Keage and Loetscher 2018 has a nice comparison of understandable risks, from 1 micromort (walking 27 miles), to going under anesthesia once (10 μmorts = walking 270 miles), to giving birth (120 μmorts), and even climbing Mt Everest (12,000 μmorts). Doctors can use this to explain risk, as in Sieber and Adams 2017 which note the risk of getting lymphoma from breast implants is lower than a day of skiing or drinking 500 mL of wine. Table 1 in Ahmad et al. 2015 has a table comparing the risk of a range of medical procedures, making a great complement to the “everyday risk” table in Keage and Loetscher (e.g., elective open heart surgery is risky, but 5 times safer than emergency open heart surgery).


If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).


DEFORESTATION:
Franco et al. 2025 looks at how deforestation and climate change have affected temperature and precipitation in the Amazon. Losing trees not only increases atmospheric carbon which drives global warming, for tropical forests in particular it also increases LOCAL warming and especially decreases water cycling. They found that deforestation caused 3/4 of the decline in dry season precipitation but only 17% of the increase in temperature. This is similar to other work which has found deforestation has delayed the onset of the rainy season in the Cerrado (Spera et al. 2016) and Pantanal (Lázaro et al. 2020).
Roquette et al. 2025 is ostensibly about the technical details around land use mapping in Mato Grosso, Brazil. But it actually makes a much broader point: boring things like data sources and algorithms used can have an outsize backdoor policy impact. They argue that a shift in how land use was classified could sneakily allow a ton of deforestation. Basically by changing how "forest" is defined and reclassifying some forest as a type of savanna (confusingly, cerrado is an ecosystem but the Cerrado is a biome / region), this could allow deforestation since 80% of forest has to be set aside from development but only 35% of savanna does. In some cases the new map actually does the reverse (classifying what was savanna as forest) but that can be reversed upon request. The worst case scenario is that up to 4,1 million ha could be authorized for deforestation.
 

FOREST DEGRADATION:
Bourgoin et al. 2024 is a global analysis of degradation of tropical moist forests using LiDAR satellite data (from GEDI) along with Landsat optical imagery. It's worth reading the whole paper, but a few key findings: 1) degradation is hard to sense but is also a) a good predictor of deforestation in addition to b) being inherently meaningful. 2) Forest height is reduced by selective logging (15%) and fire (50%) and recovery is low after 20 years. 3) Expansion of ag and roads leads to a 20-30% drop in forest canopy height and biomass at the edge, with effects up to 1.5km in from the edge. Fig 1 has maps of global results - it's a bit confusing but the x-axis of the charts is height in meters, so lower numbers mean more degradation or younger forests. There's an article about this one at https://phys.org/news/2024-07-reveals-human-degradation-tropical-forests.html#google_vignette
 

FORESTATION (REFORESTATION AND AFFORESTATION):
Wang et al. 2025 finds that earlier estimates of how much of the world could be forested were much too high. One the one hand - this means we can't count on trees to do as much sequestering as some models hoped for. But as one of the authors (Susan Cook-Patton) points out (in this excellent post) the larger area wasn't feasible anyway, so this smaller estimate gives us more actionable priorities for planting. She also notes that while reducing fossil fuels (and protection of acutely threatened forests) is higher priority than forestation, we absolutely need all of the above. Note: reforestation is restoring trees where they used to be, afforestation is planting trees in what used to be grasslands or other ecosystems, forestation is both.


FIRE:
Ellis et al. 2022 is a global analysis of fire risk over the past 41 years, using estimated moisture trends in fuel (surface litter and dead plant debris) as the key metric. Fig 2a shows the % of days during the fire season where fuel moisture is expected to be below 10% (and thus at high fire risk), while 2b shows the total # of fire season days at high fire risk and Fig 4 shows the trend in high fire risk over time (36% of ecoregions are drying vs. only 4% getting wetter). They note that days w/ dry fuel isn't the only key driver of risk; consistent dry conditions limit fuel accumulation and thus the risk of severe fire. So surprisingly historically wet forests which accumulate lots of plant matter in wet years between fires may be the most at risk (as other research has shown).

Siquiera et al. 2025 has a helpful reminder that finer data isn't always better. They found free MODIS data (which is relatively fast and easy to process due to 500m resolution) actually did a little better at detecting areas that had burned in the Pantanal than Sentinel 2 data (also free but needs more babying and at 10m [2500* finer resolution] it takes a ton more processing time). LANDSAT (at 30m) did worse than either. The only caveat is that their validation for “burned areas” is fire foci which are partly derived from MODIS which likely biases the results somewhat. But anytime we can get away with using coarser data to save time and money it’s good news! One of my papers has a table about when coarser vs. finer data may be better, and that table is also in a blog about how to pick the right spatial resolution of data

Guzmán-Rojo et al. 2025 is an interesting model of how fires in the Bolivian Chiquitano dry forest affect water availability, focusing on soil changes (crusting, ash deposition, and reduced porosity which can decrease infiltration and increase runoff) rather than vegetation loss. They found ~40% lower recharge in the first year after a hypothetical very severe fire, returning to ~10% lower than pre-fire after two years. However, they note that field data showed that moderate to severe fires actually reduced soil porosity by 39%, while their hypothetical very severe fire assumed a 70% reduction which is probably an upper bound for how much soil permeability could be reduced. They also note that if they had accounted for vegetation loss in their model, the recharge may have been lower in some areas where dense vegetation transpires more water than it intercepts. While they had limited data to validate their model they used other studies and proxies where they could.
 

FRESHWATER
Sayer et al. 2025's headline is that 1/4 of freshwater animals are threatened with extinction. But that's similar to other estimates; to me the new thing here is guidance on how to prioritize sites to conserve with limited data. They found that 1) prioritizing with just threatened freshwater tetrapod data (animals with four legs like some amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals) does well for overall freshwater biodiversity (range-size rarity) but 2) prioritizing on abiotic factors alone (low flow / water stress, nitrogen as a proxy for water pollution) does worse than random! Also from Fig 2b permanent rivers are home to almost all of the threatened FW species, while species in other fresh wetlands fare much better.

Petry et al. 2025 has predictions of changing streamflow and flooding across South America by 2100 under a moderate climate change scenario. Figure 4 has the key findings about how much more or less frequent floods may be. Note that “RP” means “return period” as in a “5 year flood” or “100 year flood” (the magnitude of flooding you’d expect on that frequency / rarity, so higher numbers mean more severe flooding). RPCF means how much more or less frequent those floods would be (with negative sign indicating less frequent flooding, e.g. the -2 on the Paraguay river in the Pantanal means half as often). But much more flooding is expected in Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Southern Brazil, and parts of the Amazon will see 1/10 as much flooding as they historically have. They find Pantanal floods (in the Paraguay River and some tributaries like Cuiaba and Negro) will be roughly half as frequent and half as severe, they don’t have a clear trend in the Chaco, and in Chile the area from roughly Santiago to Valdivia has some rivers where flooding will be ~2-3 times less frequent while the northern part of Chile will only see slightly less flooding.
 
 
CLIMATE CHANGE - CARBON MARKETS AND ALBEDO:
Riley et al. 2025 have an update on an issue I've written about several times: that the albedo of trees (how much they reflect sunlight compared to bare soil) can reduce or even fully negate the climate benefit of trees in some cases. They looked at 172 tree planting projects in the voluntary carbon market to see how carbon credits issued compared to true climate impact once albedo was considered. On average 18% of the issued credits shouldn't have been, and 25% of the projects offered more than double the credits they should have once albedo was considered. 12% of the projects (a subset of that 25%) were even net harmful (representing 30% of total credits issued). In good news, 9% of projects actually had more benefit than estimated, and over half of projects had 0-25% of their issued carbon credits negated by albedo. This is important to get right, but a shortcut is to focus protection and forestation in more tropical places while avoiding areas with heavy snow cover and/or very light-colored soils (the pink places in Fig 2a are good to avoid).


CATTLE AND CLIMATE CHANGE:
Meo-Filho et al. 2024 is an important study (part of a special issue of papers around the sustainability of animal foods and plant alternatives, https://www.pnas.org/topic/561). There's been lots of research with hyperbolic claims about red algae reducing methane production in cattle (mostly in vitro, or tests in a petri dish). I believe this is the first paper to measure methane reductions not only 1) in vivo (a test of what happens in real animals) but 2) in the grazing phase of their life cycle. Most American cattle graze for very roughly 15 months before spending 3 months in a feedlot, and they emit more methane per day when grazing. Only 15% of total cattle production GHGs come from the feedlot phase, so even big reductions then can't touch cattle's high carbon footprint. But this paper found supplementing with seaweed reduced GHGs relative to control animals by 38% over 90 days with no side effects! That is great news and this is work worth following up, BUT a few key caveats: 1) this was a study of only 24 animals, 2) the animals began at 15 months when they would typically go to a feedlot, to show how much this could really reduce the total carbon footprint of cattle (and if any side effects crop up eventually) it would need to be tested on calves from when they are weaned off of milk to when they go to slaughter, and 3) variations in cattle breed, the dominant type of grass they're eating, and climate could all affect the results. So it's very good news, but does not yet mean it's possible to produce a burger w/ 1/3 less carbon. Also, while the numbers are hotly contested, remember that the carbon footprint of beef is very roughly 10* that of pork or chicken (~50* the GHG of beans), so even if the reduction IS scalable, beef will still be a high carbon food.
 

BIODIVERSITY OFFSETTING:
While Lourival et al. 2025 ponders 10 questions for biodiversity offsetting in the Brazilian Pantanal and its watershed (listed at the top of the 3rd page), it's relevant to biodiversity offsets in general. I especially like Fig 4 with different ways to think about equivalence for offsets (area, economic value, ecosystem value, or a mix). So for example if you clear high-value land in the Cerrado, you could need to protect a much larger lower-value area in the Pantanal. They find 57% of properties in the highlands feeding the Pantanal are out of compliance with the Forest Code (Table 1, Fig 3). Properties WITHIN the Pantanal are only 22% out of compliance, so considering the whole river basin could offer opportunities BUT ecological equivalence may be low and state regulations restrict what is possible. One could argue that's a huge market for offset purchases OR evidence the law is toothless and demand will be low.
 

GLOBAL THREATS:
Oakleaf et al. 2024 is a long-awaited global analysis of likelihood of short-term (by 2030) habitat conversion (1 km resolution, see Fig 5 for the results). They include not only cropland and city expansion, but also land use change for energy (fossil or renewable) and mining, and considered several suitability factors (like slope and land cover). Their approach assumes recent trends (2000-2015) will continue rather than modeling different scenarios of economic development. Like any global data you can find places where it seems wrong, but it's a great resource nonetheless. You can grab the data or view the data in a web map. There's also a blog about the paper.
 

WILDLIFE:
Kopf et al 2024 really made me think. They summarize some of the important contributions of old (and often "wise"!) animals, and proposes "longevity conservation" as a strategy to retain them. Old animals are especially important for species who rely on cultural transmission (like migratory species) and those who reproduce more as they age and grow, and the article goes into detail with examples of both. The article also covers some of the impacts of losing large and old animals, like changing ecosystem structure and function, pack instability, and even infanticide. The ability of older animals to help their group adapt to drought or food shortages maybe increasingly important as climate changes (although the individual resilience of older animals is likely to lower to some stresses like disease). With trophy hunting and fishing selecting for larger (typically older) animals, they argue for the importance of better population modeling, setting age class targets for fisheries, restricting hunting of larger and older animals, and going beyond tracking biomass or abundance to watch for "longevity depletion."
 

CHOCOLATE:
Gopaulchan et al. 2025 advances the frontier of scientific understanding of flavor development in chocolate. It has a few components. First they measured changes in temperature and pH over a week in fermenting Colombian cacao beans to estimate microbial activity (they correlated with the color changes used to assess fermentation end point). Second they sequenced the genome every 24 hours to watch diversity decline for both bacteria (Fig 1e, Acetobacteraceae dominating over time) and fungi (Fig 1f, Saccharomycetaceae dominating over time). But crucially, they third compared how these shifts happened at three farms w/ similar genetics but different microbial mixes. Look at Fig 2e and 2f!!! The two new farms had diversity increase again eventually, and one farm had significant populations of families that were only present in trace amounts before! OK, stay with me. Fourth, they extracted cocoa liquor and compared their three farms to reference chocolates (Fig 3b). One farm tastes "West African" (roasty, dark wood, tobacco), and two taste more "Malagasy" (one emphasizing light / caramelly / tropical flavors, and the other more fruity and bitter). Fifth they figured out which families of microbes were likely most essential for flavor (Fig 4) and sixth put together different inoculant mixes (most had the full diversity of microbes minus a different single strain missing for each mix, plus a random mix). They then (seventh) did controlled cacao bean fermentation w/ each mix plus an uninoculated control (in the lab so it wouldn't have the wild strains), and tasted the results (eighth), finding that the beans inoculated with the full mix of strains had better flavors than those inoculated w/ fewer strains or none at all (Fig 5h). The authors argue that with synthetic starters and controlled fermentation, chocolate flavor could be improved in more industrial-scale chocolate.
 
 
REFERENCES:
Bourgoin, C., Ceccherini, G., Girardello, M., Vancutsem, C., Avitabile, V., Beck, P. S. A., Beuchle, R., Blanc, L., Duveiller, G., Migliavacca, M., Vieilledent, G., Cescatti, A., & Achard, F. (2024). Human degradation of tropical moist forests is greater than previously estimated. Nature, 631(8021), 570–576. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07629-0

Ellis, T. M., Bowman, D. M. J. S., Jain, P., Flannigan, M. D., & Williamson, G. J. (2022). Global increase in wildfire risk due to climate‐driven declines in fuel moisture. Global Change Biology, 28(4), 1544–1559. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16006

Franco, M. A., Rizzo, L. V., Teixeira, M. J., Artaxo, P., Azevedo, T., Lelieveld, J., Nobre, C. A., Pöhlker, C., Pöschl, U., Shimbo, J., Xu, X., & Machado, L. A. T. (2025). How climate change and deforestation interact in the transformation of the Amazon rainforest. Nature Communications, 16(1), 7944. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63156-0

Gopaulchan, D., Moore, C., Ali, N., Sukha, D., Florez González, S. L., Herrera Rocha, F. E., Yang, N., Lim, M., Dew, T. P., González Barrios, A. F., Umaharan, P., Salt, D. E., & Castrillo, G. (2025). A defined microbial community reproduces attributes of fine flavour chocolate fermentation. Nature Microbiology, 10(9), 2130–2152. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-025-02077-6

Guzmán-Rojo, M., Silva de Freitas, L., Coritza Taquichiri, E., & Huysmans, M. (2025). Groundwater Vulnerability in the Aftermath of Wildfires at the El Sutó Spring Area: Model-Based Insights and the Proposal of a Post-Fire Vulnerability Index for Dry Tropical Forests. Fire, 8(3), 86. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire8030086

Kopf, R. K., Banks, S., Brent, L. J. N., Humphries, P., Jolly, C. J., Lee, P. C., Luiz, O. J., Nimmo, D., & Winemiller, K. O. (2024). Loss of Earth’s old, wise, and large animals. Science, 2705, 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.ado2705

Lourival, R. F. F., de Roque, F. de O., Bolzan, F. P., Guerra, A., Nunes, A. P., Lacerda, A. C. R., Nunes, A. V., Alves, A., Filho, A. C. P., Ribeiro, D. B., Eaton, D. P., Brito, E. S., Fischer, E., Neto, F. V., Porfirio, G., Seixas, G. H. F., Pinto, J. O. P., Quintero, J. M. O., Sabino, J., … Tomas, W. M. (2025). Ten relevant questions for applying biodiversity offsetting in the Pantanal wetland. Conservation Science and Practice, July 2022, 1–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.13274

Meo-Filho, P., Ramirez-Agudelo, J. F., & Kebreab, E. (2024). Mitigating methane emissions in grazing beef cattle with a seaweed-based feed additive: Implications for climate-smart agriculture. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 121(50), 2–9. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2410863121

Oakleaf, J., Kennedy, C., Wolff, N. H., Terasaki Hart, D. E., Ellis, P., Theobald, D. M., Fariss, B., Burkart, K., & Kiesecker, J. (2024). Mapping global land conversion pressure to support conservation planning. Scientific Data, 11(1), 830. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-024-03639-9

Petry, I., Miranda, P. T., Paiva, R. C. D., Collischonn, W., Fan, F. M., Fagundes, H. O., Araujo, A. A., & Souza, S. (2025). Changes in Flood Magnitude and Frequency Projected for Vulnerable Regions and Major Wetlands of South America. Geophysical Research Letters, 52(5). https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL112436

Riley, L. M., Cook-Patton, S. C., Albert, L. P., Still, C. J., Williams, C. A., & Bukoski, J. J. (2025). Accounting for albedo in carbon market protocols. Nature Communications, 16(1), 8810. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-64317-x

Roquette, J. G., Vacchiano, M. C., Daher, F. R. G., & Finger, Z. (2025). Pseudo-legal deforestation due to changes in the classification of native vegetation in Mato Grosso, Brazil. Environmental Conservation, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1017/S037689292510012X

Sayer, C. A., Fernando, E., Jimenez, R. R., Macfarlane, N. B. W., Rapacciuolo, G., Böhm, M., Brooks, T. M., Contreras-MacBeath, T., Cox, N. A., Harrison, I., Hoffmann, M., Jenkins, R., Smith, K. G., Vié, J.-C., Abbott, J. C., Allen, D. J., Allen, G. R., Barrios, V., Boudot, J.-P., … Darwall, W. R. T. (2025). One-quarter of freshwater fauna threatened with extinction. Nature, 3(December 2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08375-z

Siqueira, R. G., Moquedace, C. M., Silva, L. V., de Oliveira, M. S., Cruz, G. D. B., Francelino, M. R., Schaefer, C. E. G. R., & Fernandes-Filho, E. I. (2025). Do finer-resolution sensors better discriminate burnt areas? A case study with MODIS, Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2 spectral indices for the Pantanal 2020 wildfire detection. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 00(00), 1–24. https://doi.org/10.1080/01431161.2025.2496000

Wang, Y., Zhu, Y., Cook-Patton, S. C., Sun, W., Zhang, W., Ciais, P., Li, T., Smith, P., Yuan, W., Zhu, X., Canadell, J. G., Deng, X., Xu, Y., Xu, H., Yue, C., & Qin, Z. (2025). Land availability and policy commitments limit global climate mitigation from forestation. Science, 389(6763), 931–934. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adj6841


Sincerely,
 
Jon

 
p.s. I found these Christmas decorations at the Carnegie Hotel in New York especially striking b/c of the contrast w/ the dark background, lights, and glittery balls

Monday, December 1, 2025

December 2025 Science Summary

Woody debris in underpass to improve small mammal conductivity

Greetings,


This month I am summarizing three science papers about climate change plus I wanted to share a cool idea I recently learned about.

Here's the cool idea: recent research in Colorado (by Julia Kintsch from ECO-resolutions among others) has found that simply adding lines of woody debris underneath underpasses (see the photo above) boosted underpass use by small mammals. Cover features composed of salvaged logs and branches with sufficient interstitial space through which small animals can move doubled the number of species documented using large bridges under an interstate to access habitats on either side. They detected 17 species using the cover features, including small mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and the federally threatened Preble’s meadow jumping mouse. This is a really cheap intervention worth trying out more broadly, please help spread the word!

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).


FORESTATION (REFORESTATION AND AFFORESTATION):
Wang et al. 2025 finds that earlier estimates of how much of the worth could be forested were much too high. One the one hand - this means we can't count on trees to do as much sequestering as some models hoped for. But as one of the authors (Susan Cook-Patton) points out (in this excellent post) the larger area wasn't feasible anyway, so this smaller estimate gives us more actionable priorities for planting. She also notes that while reducing fossil fuels (and protection of acutely threatened forests) is higher priority than forestation, we absolutely need all of the above. Note: reforestation is restoring trees where they used to be, afforestation is planting trees in what used to be grasslands or other ecosystems, forestation is both.

CLIMATE CHANGE - CARBON MARKETS AND ALBEDO:
Riley et al. 2025 have an update on an issue I've written about several times: that the albedo of trees (how much they reflect sunlight compared to bare soil) can reduce or even fully negate the climate benefit of trees in some cases. They looked at 172 tree planting projects in the voluntary carbon market to see how carbon credits issued compared to true climate impact once albedo was considered. On average 18% of the issued credits shouldn't have been, and 25% of the projects offered more than double the credits they should have once albedo was considered. 12% of the projects (a subset of that 25%) were even net harmful (representing 30% of total credits issued). In good news, 9% of projects actually had more benefit than estimated, and over half of projects had 0-25% of their issued carbon credits negated by albedo. This is important to get right, but a shortcut is to focus protection and forestation in more tropical places while avoiding areas with heavy snow cover and/or very light-colored soils (the pink places in Fig 2a are good to avoid).

DEFORESTATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE:
Franco et al. 2025 looks at how both deforestation and climate change have affected temperature and precipitation in the Amazon. Losing trees not only increases atmospheric carbon which drives global warming, for tropical forests in particular it also increases LOCAL warming and especially decreases water cycling. They found that deforestation caused 3/4 of the decline in dry season precipitation but only 17% of the increase in temperature. This is similar to other work which has found deforestation has delayed the onset of the rainy season in the Cerrado (Spera et al. 2016) and Pantanal (Lázaro et al. 2020).


REFERENCES:

Franco, M. A., Rizzo, L. V., Teixeira, M. J., Artaxo, P., Azevedo, T., Lelieveld, J., Nobre, C. A., Pöhlker, C., Pöschl, U., Shimbo, J., Xu, X., & Machado, L. A. T. (2025). How climate change and deforestation interact in the transformation of the Amazon rainforest. Nature Communications, 16(1), 7944. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63156-0

Lázaro, W. L., & Oliveira-júnior, E. S. (2020). Thematic Section : Opinions about Aquatic Ecology in a Changing World Climate change reflected in one of the largest wetlands in the world : an overview of the Northern Pantanal water regime. Acta Limnologica Brasiliensia, 32, 8.

Riley, L. M., Cook-Patton, S. C., Albert, L. P., Still, C. J., Williams, C. A., & Bukoski, J. J. (2025). Accounting for albedo in carbon market protocols. Nature Communications, 16(1), 8810. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-64317-x

Spera, S. A., Galford, G. L., Coe, M. T., Macedo, M. N., & Mustard, J. F. (2016). Land-use change affects water recycling in Brazil’s last agricultural frontier. Global Change Biology, 22(10), 3405–3413. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13298

Wang, Y., Zhu, Y., Cook-Patton, S. C., Sun, W., Zhang, W., Ciais, P., Li, T., Smith, P., Yuan, W., Zhu, X., Canadell, J. G., Deng, X., Xu, Y., Xu, H., Yue, C., & Qin, Z. (2025). Land availability and policy commitments limit global climate mitigation from forestation. Science, 389(6763), 931–934. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adj6841



Sincerely,
 
Jon

Monday, November 3, 2025

November 2025 Science Summary

Post-dog art

Aloha,


As we head into the season of sweets in the United States (from Halloween to New Year's Eve), I wanted to include a fascinating article (Gopaulchan et al. 2025) on how scientists recently learned a trick to get fancier-tasting chocolate by using the right mix of bacteria and fungi! It's a jam-packed wild read. I've also got two articles on the Pantanal. 

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).

FIGURING OUT WHAT MAKES CHOCOLATE TASTIER
Gopaulchan et al. 2025 advances the frontier of scientific understanding of flavor development in chocolate. It has a few components. First they measured changes in temperature and pH over a week in fermenting Colombian cacao beans to estimate microbial activity (they correlated with the color changes used to assess fermentation end point). Second they sequenced the genome every 24 hours to watch diversity decline for both bacteria (Fig 1e, Acetobacteraceae dominating over time) and fungi (Fig 1f, Saccharomycetaceae dominating over time). But crucially, they third compared how these shifts happened at three farms w/ similar genetics but different microbial mixes. Look at Fig 2e and 2f!!! The two new farms had diversity increase again eventually, and one farm had significant populations of families that were only present in trace amounts before! OK, stay with me. Fourth, they extracted cocoa liquor and compared their three farms to reference choocolates (Fig 3b). One farm tastes "West African" (roasty, dark wood, tobacco), and two taste more "Malagasy" (one emphasizing light / caramelly / tropical flavors, and the other more fruity and bitter). Fifth they figured out which familiies of microbes were likely most essential for flavor (Fig 4) and sixth put together different incoculant mixes (most had the full diversity of microbes minus a different single strain missing for each mix, plus a random mix). They then (seventh) did controlled cacao bean fermentation w/ each mix plus an uninoculated control (in the lab so it wouldn't have the wild strains), and tasted the results (eighth), finding that the beans inoculated with the full mix of strains had better flavors than those inoculated w/ fewer strains or none at all (Fig 5h). The authors argue that with synthetic starters and controlled fermentation, chocolate flavor could be improved in more industrial-scale chocolate.



PANTANAL:

Fernando et al. 2025 looks at variation in fish biodiversity across the Upper Paraguay River Basin (the Pantanal and its headwaters, see Fig 1). They found the Pantanal floodplain has higher fish species richness than the headwaters, BUT note that the headwaters have: more undescribed species (at least 60), clear threats to the hydrology, likely more endemic species, and headwater threats are likely to impact species in the floodplain as well. Mid-altitudes had high richness in a small area due to overlap in species from below and above. Considering all factors, the authors recommend more conservation focus on the headwaters.

Tomas et al. 2025 recommends eight principles for good conservation policy in the Pantanal: 1) manage the entire Upper Paraguay River Basin; 2&3) use a range of management options for the entire region (not only some habitats); 4) maintain environmental heterogeneity and functionality; 5) Maintain hydrological integrity and connectivity; 6) expand protected areas to represent all ecosystems; 7) incentivize conservation (e.g., via carbon or biodiversity credits, payment for ecosystem services, etc.); and 8) support Indigenous people and their way of living.


REFERENCES:
Fernando, A. M. E., Severo‐Neto, F., Ferreira, F. S., Mateus, L., Tondato‐Carvalho, K. K., Kashiwaqui, E. A. L., Gimenes Junior, H., Domingues, W. M., Pavanelli, C. S., Pinho, H. L. L., Penha, J., & Súarez, Y. R. (2025). Fish distribution across altitudinal gradients in the Upper Paraguay River Basin: Implications for conservation in the Pantanal region. Conservation Science and Practice, 7(7), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.13290

Gopaulchan, D., Moore, C., Ali, N., Sukha, D., Florez González, S. L., Herrera Rocha, F. E., Yang, N., Lim, M., Dew, T. P., González Barrios, A. F., Umaharan, P., Salt, D. E., & Castrillo, G. (2025). A defined microbial community reproduces attributes of fine flavour chocolate fermentation. Nature Microbiology, 10(9), 2130–2152. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-025-02077-6

Tomas, W. M., Andrade, M. H., Berlinck, C. N., Bolzan, F., Camilo, A. R., Catella, A. C., Chiaravalloti, R. M., da Cunha, C. N., Damasceno Junior, G. A., Fernando, A. M. E., Garcia, L. C., Girard, P., Ikeda‐Castrillon, S. K., da Silva, C. J., Laps, R., Mateus, L., Morato, R. G., Mourão, G., Nunes, A. V., … Urbanetz, C. (2025). Eight basic principles for the elaboration of public policies and development projects for the Pantanal. Conservation Science and Practice, 7(7), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.13207


Sincerely,
 
Jon
 
p.s. The paintings were both made partly by a dog; we put paint on a board, covered it with plastic wrap, and put a "pup cup" on top so as the dog ate the treat it smeared the paint and made art! Here's a pic of the painting on the right before the dog helped, and another of the dog (Jito) in action.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

October 2025 Science Summary

Puppy party

Greetings,


I've got a mixed bag of four mostly unrelated science articles this month.

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me).


CLIMATE CHANGE:
Chen et al. 2025 reviews the evidence (from 21 studies with at least 10 years of data) that climate change may cause 3 problems (see Fig 1): mountaintop species going extinct when conditions become too warm for them, species not able to move upslope as fast as conditions change, and bottomland diversity declining b/c no warm-tolerant species can replace areas abandoned by species moving upslope. Using a model they found that mountaintop extinctions are not happening more than expected w/o climate change, many species ARE moving upslope but rarely having range contract, and only limited homogenization of bottomland species. They note including moisture changes and nitrogen deposition could have changed the results, and more research is needed to figure out why these problems are occurring in limited cases.


FOREST CARBON:
Schnabel et al 2025 has experimental evidence that after 16 years, planted forests in Panama with a mix of 5 native species sequestered 57% more aboveground carbon than monocultures. Both treatments lost soil carbon relative to the pasture they started with (see section 4.3 for possible explanations) but still gained a net of 24.7 t C / ha (90.7 t CO2e/ha) due to the aboveground gains. See  https://news.mongabay.com/2025/04/diverse-forests-and-forest-rewilding-offer-resilience-against-climate-change/ for more.


DATA AND DEFORESTATION:
Roquette et al. 2025 is ostensibly about the technical details around land use mapping in Mato Grosso, Brazil. But it actually makes a much broader point: boring things like data sources and algorithms used can have an outsize backdoor policy impact. They argue that a shift in how land use was classified could sneakily allow a ton of deforestation. Basically by changing how "forest" is defined and reclassifying some forest as a type of savanna (confusingly, cerrado is an ecosystem but the Cerrado is a biome / region), this could allow deforestation since 80% of forest has to be set aside from development but only 35% of savanna does. In some cases the new map actually does the reverse (classifying what was savanna as forest) but that can be reversed upon request. The worst case scenario is that up to 4,1 million ha could be authorized for deforestation.


MINING AND TOXICITY:
Foerster et al. 2025 found that giant otters in the Pantanal are showing evidence of mercury contamination in the Pantanal – higher when they’re closer to gold mines (except for streams close to the mine over land but not connected by water). Their results aren’t conclusive but it seems likely that the values are high enough to be causing toxicity, and that otters aren’t able to flush out the mercury by molting their fur, nor by having selenium bind to the mercury. They measured mercury in fur rather than directly in the liver, but based on other research they think it’s likely levels are high enough in some animals to cause serious toxicity and perhaps even death. 


REFERENCES:
Chen, Y.-H., Lenoir, J., & Chen, I.-C. (2025). Limited evidence for range shift–driven extinction in mountain biota. Science, 388(6748), 741–747. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adq9512

Foerster, N., Soresini, G., Leuchtenberger, C., Bócoli, D. de A., Paiva, J. de B., Brait, C. H. H., & Mourão, G. (2025). Pervasive mercury contamination of a semi-aquatic apex predator across the Pantanal wetland. Environmental Conservation, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892925100155

Roquette, J. G., Vacchiano, M. C., Daher, F. R. G., & Finger, Z. (2025). Pseudo-legal deforestation due to changes in the classification of native vegetation in Mato Grosso, Brazil. Environmental Conservation, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1017/S037689292510012X

Schnabel, F., Guillemot, J., Barry, K. E., Brunn, M., Cesarz, S., Eisenhauer, N., Gebauer, T., Guerrero‐Ramirez, N. R., Handa, I. T., Madsen, C., Mancilla, Lady, Monteza, J., Moore, T., Oelmann, Y., Scherer‐Lorenzen, M., Schwendenmann, L., Wagner, A., Wirth, C., & Potvin, C. (2025). Tree Diversity Increases Carbon Stocks and Fluxes Above—But Not Belowground in a Tropical Forest Experiment. Global Change Biology, 31(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70089


Sincerely,
 
Jon
 
p.s. These four foster puppies were getting some wiggles out in my yard before a "puppy party" which raises money for an animal rescue (Homeward Trails) and helps them find homes

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

September 2025 science summary

Patagonian snowy mountains and clouds

Hi there,


This month I've got three articles on water scarcity, and two on fire and human health in South America. But before I get to the science, here are a couple of very old blog posts and more pictures...

In case you want more pics like the one above, here's an album full of similar pics of snowy mountains and clouds I took on the flight from Punta Arenas (Chile) to Santiago. This was the most beautiful plane flight I've ever taken.

Also, way back in 2013 I wrote an article about how I came to appreciate house centipedes (along w/ nematodes) for their ecological role in pest control, and recently was tickled to see people are still reading and commenting on it 12 years later! Here it is if anyone is curious: https://blog.nature.org/2013/02/08/everyday-nature-how-i-came-to-love-house-centipedes

Finally, the Washington Post and New York Times recently did their own taste tests about real sugar / high fructose corn syrup (including Mexican vs. American Coke) BUT neither was double-blind and neither involved multiple samples of each to improve statistical confidence in the results. Here's one way to do a more rigorous test if you're interested: https://sciencejon.blogspot.com/2012/10/does-real-sugar-make-mexican-coke-taste.html

If you know someone who wants to sign up to receive these summaries, they can do so at http://subscribe.sciencejon.com (no need to email me). OK, with that, here are the science summaries (finally):

FIRE AND HUMAN HEALTH:
dos Santos et al. 2025 found that the smoke plumes from the 2020 Pantanal fire combined with heatwaves, lack of rain to wash smoke particles from the air, and COVID to drive an increase of 21% in premature non-COVID deaths in São Paulo state (see Fig 5) – not counting nonlethal hospitalizations. In other words, improved fire management in the Pantanal could benefit even city dwellers far away. Fig 2 shows the smoke plume trajectories, Fig 3 shows the resulting PM2.5 (small particulate matter air pollution) levels, and Fig 7 is a nice schematic of how the different hazards combine to drive excess mortality. The authors call for more widespread integrated fire management, and continued reductions in sugarcane burning.

Palmeiro-Silva et al. 2025 is an opinion piece arguing that with wildfires increasing across South America, we need to do more to consider human health impacts of fire prevention and management. Using the 2024 wildfires in the Pantanal and the Amazon as a case study, they note that in addition to impacts on the environment and obvious human health impacts like death and air pollution, economic and mental health impacts are also important. They call for better and faster communication to affected communities, co-development of fire plans with local residents, and coordination across multiple sectors to address wildfires via a comprehensive fire risk reduction strategy.


WATER SCARCITY:
Womble et al. 2025 covers several potential ways to address water scarcity (via mandatory cutbacks, several types of water markets focused just on water consumption, and strategically considering impact on fish habitat when selecting places to buy water from). Fig 3 shows the room for improvement from the perspective of fish, often with relatively little extra cost. But an interesting twist is that depending on how the market is structured, the cost and incentives to consider fish habitat varies a lot. The default least cost "authorized market" authorized by the 2019 legislation is not great for fish (the "strategic portfolio" would cost 55% more) but for other markets the extra cost is from <1% to 8% higher to improve fish habitat. Specifically: "strategically investing <1% more funding than a least-cost plan nearly doubles fish habitat improved to intermediate status in an authorized water market with aggressive water-use reductions" and "investing 8% more than a least-cost plan ... nearly triples restored intermediate habitat in an expanded water market with aggressive water-use reductions, more water-user participation and more protections for restored flows". Finally - just 10 transactions yield 1/4 of that potential tripled habitat benefit at 1% of the cost. My overall take-aways are that there could be a lot of secondary effects of market structure, and that a little bit of focused spending to improve fish habitat can have a huge impact!

Given the outsize impact of alfalfa in the SW states, Waring et al. 2025 has some potentially useful ideas about how IF you had a well-designed water market, alfalfa irrigation could be reduced to save water (compensating farmers for reduced yield). Essentially they would cut and sell alfalfa fewer times each year b/c it goes dormant under low water, which they estimate could reduce 16-50% of alfalfa’s water use. See Table 3 for why that’s a big range – it depends on how many fields participate, how many cuttings participating fields have under BAU, and assumptions of irrigation efficiency. Almost half the fields have a short season (3-4 cuttings), which is why in Table 3 you see that scenarios like 3 and 5 that reduce participation by short-season fields result in a lot of missed opportunity. Fig 2d shows the % of total water consumption in each state due to alfalfa from Jul-Oct (note consumption is the amount of water evaporated and transpired from both rain and irrigation, unlike withdrawal which is the volume of irrigation water applied). 

Coelho et al. 2025 shows the trend for overall streamflow and flooding in the Pantanal, and also shows how three upland basins (Jauru, Taquari, and Miranda) connect to their floodplains and the Upper Paraguay (UP) River. I find Fig 11 to be pretty compelling in showing the drying trend for the Pantanal, and Fig 3 shows how the three upland basins flow into their respective floodplains and then to the UP river channel.


REFERENCES:
Coelho, M. E. M. S., Chaves, H. M. L., & Fonseca, M. R. (2025). Trends, Patterns, and Persistence of Rainfall, Streamflow, and Flooded Area in the Upper Paraguay Basin (Brazil). Water, 17(10), 1549. https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101549

dos Santos, D. M., de Oliveira, A. M., Duarte, E. S. F., Rodrigues, J. A., Menezes, L. S., Albuquerque, R., Roque, F. de O., Peres, L. F., Hoelzemann, J. J., & Libonati, R. (2024). Compound dry-hot-fire events connecting Central and Southeastern South America: an unapparent and deadly ripple effect. Npj Natural Hazards, 1(1), 32. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44304-024-00031-w

Palmeiro-Silva, Y., Llerena-Cayo, C., Blanco-Villafuerte, L., Rojas-Rueda, D., Borchers Arriagada, N., Vela-Clavo, Z., de Camargo, T., Rusticucci, M., Valdes-Velasquez, A., & Hartinger, S. M. (2025). The 2024 South America ablaze: health impacts and policy imperatives for protecting population health in an era of wildfires. The Lancet Regional Health - Americas, 48, 101160. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2025.101160

Waring, E., Dahlke, H. E., Abatzoglou, J. T., Medellín-Azuara, J., Yost, M. A., Bali, K. M., Naughton, C. C., Putnam, D. H., Sabie, R., Kishore, S., Santos, N. R., & Viers, J. H. (2025). Reimagining alfalfa as a flexible crop for water security in the Southwestern USA. Science of The Total Environment, 990(June), 179851. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.179851

Womble, P., Gorelick, S. M., Thompson, B. H., & Hernandez-Suarez, J. S. (2025). A strategic environmental water rights market for Colorado River reallocation. Nature Sustainability. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-025-01585-x


Sincerely,
 
Jon
 
p.s. The pic above is one of the many beautiful snow covered mountains I saw in Chile between Punta Arenas and Santiago (in June so during winter). More pics are here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jaundicedferret/albums/72177720327724315/with/54674270850

Friday, August 1, 2025

August 2025 science summary & advice for scientists

Summoning my dinner

Hey,


Thanks to those of you who sent in your advice for scientists! If you don't care about that, wait until September - I figured there was too much here to cram in normal reviews. In addition to summarizing your advice, I also added some of my own advice, and have a case study I love with a novel and effective way to communicate risk to inform medical decisions (the "micromort").

YOUR ADVICE FOR SCIENTISTS:
There was a lot of agreement in the advice for scientists. Copilot gave me a summary (unasked for) and it picked up on the same trend I noticed; while most people focused on improving communication, people identifying as non-scientists emphasized clarifying how to use the results, while scientists focused more on helping people to understand the results.
 
Here’s the Copilot summary:
“The analysis reveals two key insights:

  • Scientists: The advice emphasizes improving communication and ensuring it resonates with scientific understanding and accessibility.
  • Non-scientists: The focus is on providing actionable insights, clarity in implications, and supporting decision-making processes.
These findings highlight the importance of tailoring communication strategies to the audience's needs and expectations.”
 
Here is a bit more of what you all shared:
  • Before starting research, meet w/ the people you hope to inform to understand their needs and constraints. Iterate with them as research progresses to get feedback and check for understanding.
  • Be super clear about "directive" (but not "prescriptive") messages. What decisions can your work inform and what do decision-makers need to know and do? Too much nuance and complexity can be paralyzing.
  • Consider if "less data" could be enough to meet the decision needs of the problem you’re researching. Only collect more data if it can accelerate action (not delay it), e.g. by providing rigor or clarity decision-makers require.
  • Communicate more often in the language your audience needs. Get training on how to communicate to different audiences and practice what you learn. Don’t forget to "talk less, smile more" (and I’d add “listen more” as something many scientists don’t do enough of, I have to work really hard at it to be even mediocre).
  • Write with less jargon & more context. Explain trends, compare abstract numbers to things people understand (note: see the case study I include below for a great example).
  • Be more open w/ sharing data and tools to support collective learning.
  • Adapt when things aren't working - don't hold onto pet theories.

MY ADVICE FOR SCIENTISTS:
I was struck when reading the above that some of it overlaps pretty well with the advice in a paper I co-authored (on helping scientists have impact) that many of you contributed to. The paper has a nice decision tree for scientists, and here’s a simple graphical abstract of the paper:
https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/cms/asset/f0f15c79-e734-4f7c-ab83-4708e9b25fe3/csp2210-fig-0001-m.jpg
 
In the spirit of communicating for different audiences, we made a lot of companion products for that paper (http://impactblog.sciencejon.com ), from a 2-page high-level overview aimed at college students (one of my moms requested a version of the paper she could give to her gerontology students “without all that science bullshit”), a video recording of a webinar, a panel discussion w/ research impact experts, and more.

Finally, someone also recently reminded me that I wrote a blog when I left TNC in 2019 w/ some advice for scientists; it's missing plenty but think it holds up pretty well! https://sciencejon.blogspot.com/2019/02/tips-for-being-more-effective-scientist.html

A CASE STUDY OF REALLY EFFECTIVE SCIENCE COMMUNICATION:
Given the focus on not only thinking about your audience but improving both their understanding AND their ability to make informed decisions, I wanted to share a great example of that I just learned about (via this video overview). People struggle to understand the risk of relatively safe medical procedures (like anesthesia). The “micromort” is an activity with a one in a million chance of resulting in death (Howard 1989, “Microrisks for Medical Decision Making”), allowing you to compare risks between activities you understand and those new to you. Table 1 in Keage and Loetscher 2018 has a nice comparison of understandable risks, from 1 micromort (walking 27 miles), to going under anesthesia once (10 μmorts = walking 270 miles), to giving birth (120 μmorts), and even climbing Mt Everest (12,000 μmorts). Doctors can use this to explain risk, as in Sieber and Adams 2017 which note the risk of getting lymphoma from breast implants is lower than a day of skiing or drinking 500 mL of wine. Table 1 in Ahmad et al. 2015 has a table comparing the risk of a range of medical procedures, making a great complement to the “everyday risk” table in Keage and Loetscher (e.g., elective open heart surgery is risky, but 5 times safer than emergency open heart surgery).

FULL RESPONSES OF ADVICE FOR SCIENTISTS:

  • Adapt. Too many people in the science/conservation world choose what works best for them & not the collective. Too many people in this profession refuse to use tools that would make their data/knowledge broadly accessible, opting for private file sharing in an artisinal, hand-shared way. Our profession, our progress toward our goals, can't operate in a vacuum - we are dependant on others & the longer we continue to operate in a me-first way, the less likely our needs & goals are met. Adopting a group-focused/sharing-first mentality is critical at this moment in time.
  • Communicate in a way that resonates with the scientific understanding and language accessibility of the general public.
  • Before starting a new science project or initiative, meet with those you are intending to inform through your work to understand their needs and constraints. Continue to use these connections to iteratively test your thinking and deliverables throughout the process of undertaking your work.
  • Less jargon, more focus on directional implications (rather than the third decimal), make the "why" of your research not a research-focused 'why' (e.g. i'm looking into this because it will tell us whether x impacts y) but a real-world 'why' (e.g. I'm looking into this because it will tell us whether we should allow / support / restrict / include / exclude xyz in this or that policy / discussion / legislation / budget etc.)
  • Realize that many land managers are spread extremely thin and actually benefit from directive messaging, which is a careful balance to not lean towards prescriptive messaging, but is a different approach than only presenting very nuanced or complex statements that leave people with very little clarity as to what they should be doing or not doing as land managers. I would like to see scientists speaking with precision about what's know and not known, and then verbally distinguishing that they are stepping into a different space to offer clear advice on key decision-points.
  • Recognize the opportunity cost of more or better information: only ask for more data when you are certain that it will accelerate, rather than delay, action.
  • Present information in context. Absolute numbers (especially large ones) in isolation mean very little. Present enough historic or comparative context to explain trends. Scale numbers to human-scale (millions or billions are incomprehensible in everyday life).
  • Communicate, communicate, communicate. Find ways to disseminate findings (published and unpublished) and package in ways your audience can understand and can inform policy or action. Also, science is slow, but try to find ways to move quicker while still maintaining accuracy and scientific integrity.
  • Practice communicating the key messages of your science to non-scientists frequently! Do less: explaining the finer details or process. Do more: breaking it down into 1. The problem 2. What solution your science offers 3. Why the listener / reader should care, and why now. 4. What you’d like them to do (call to action).
  • My advice for scientists is simple: communications training. Get as much practice as possible explaining your work to all kinds of audiences - talk to journalists, visit elementary school class rooms, post on social media, get on a university podcast. The more you talk about your science, the better you'll be at doing so. Authenticity is key - don't be afraid to be funny, earnest and geeky. It is more important than ever for "regular people" to get exposed to scientists of all kinds. This is necessary to build trust in the scientific community writ large.
  • I’m not sure “effective” is meaningful outside of a specific decision context, but I strive to be plain about my values, biases, and assumptions in the hope that candor builds a foundation of trust for better communication. But “talk less, smile more” also isn’t necessarily bad either…


Sincerely,
 
Jon
 
p.s. Since my mushroom dinner at a meal during a work event came in a little cauldron for some reason, I was asked to look like a wizard and this was the result
p.p.s. If you'd like to keep track of what I write as well as what I read, I always link to both my informal blog posts and my formal publications (plus these summaries) at http://sciencejon.blogspot.com/