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New genetic research points to Wuhan animal market as origin of COVID pandemic, study says

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Saturday, September 21, 2024

A new analysis of genetic material gathered from a live-animal market in Wuhan in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic strengthens the case that the outbreak originated there when the coronavirus jumped from infected animals to humans, scientists said.The findings, reported the journal Cell, do not identify any specific infected animal that brought the SARS-CoV-2 virus to a Chinese city inhabited by more than 11 million people. Nor do they definitively prove that the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market was Ground Zero for a pandemic that has resulted in more than 7 million deaths.But the genetic evidence shows the market met the conditions necessary to spark an outbreak and makes it increasingly difficult to explain how the coronavirus could have emerged from a laboratory, a farm or even from another of the city’s four live-animal markets, the study authors said.“It’s like if a gorilla virus emerged in San Diego and first hit people who worked at the San Diego Zoo and lived nearby, then spread later more widely,” said Michael Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona who worked on the study. “It would not be difficult to reason that it very likely came from the gorillas at the zoo.”The root cause of the pandemic has been hotly debated since its early days. Wuhan is home to a government laboratory where scientists study coronaviruses similar to SARS-CoV-2, a fact that prompted politicians, national security experts, late-night talk show hosts and many scientists — including Worobey — to question whether the virus had leaked from the lab. Compelling though the argument may be, hard evidence to support the leak hypothesis has been lacking. Meanwhile, more information has come to light that has persuaded scientists with expertise in relevant fields that the virus that causes COVID-19 originated in animals, just like the viruses that cause SARS, MERS and influenza. The new results continue that trend, said Dr. Dominic Dwyer, a member of the international task force that investigated the pandemic’s origins for the World Health Organization. “You put all of these origin hypotheses on the table, and then some of them become stronger as you get evidence,” said Dwyer, a medical virologist at the University of Sydney and Westmead Hospital in Australia who wasn’t involved in the latest work. “This paper has more evidence that supports the animal origin through the Huanan market.” The analysis published Thursday was based on genetic data gleaned from hundreds of samples gathered in and around the Huanan market collected by researchers from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention soon after the market was shut down on Jan. 1, 2020. The Chinese team detected the coronavirus in 74 of the environmental samples they tested, according to their report last year in the journal Nature.Worobey and his colleagues dug deeper into that data. Using two distinct gene-sequencing techniques, they looked for pieces of SARS-CoV-2 as well as for DNA from animals and people. Then they plotted what they found on a map of the sprawling market, allowing the team to reconstruct how a few initial infections could have ballooned into a global health emergency. Among 585 samples gathered in early January 2020, the ones that contained the coronavirus were clustered in the southwestern section of the market. That happened to be the area where wild animals were held in cages for sale. “The market covers a couple of acres, and this comes down to one corner of the market, and to a couple of stalls,” Dwyer said. “That fits with an animal origin. If it was coming from people wandering around the market, you’d find it everywhere.”One market stall “stood out,” the study authors wrote. It had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in multiple places: on at least one cart, on an iron container, on the ground, and on a machine used to remove hair and feathers. The researchers dubbed it “wildlife stall A.”Another 60 samples were taken from the market’s drainage system at the end of January 2020. The researchers found genetic evidence of the coronavirus in four of them, including one in front of wildlife stall A.That drain was still testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 in mid-February. So were two drains downstream from it that could have been contaminated by runoff from wildlife stall A, the researchers wrote.The samples from the stall that contained the coronavirus also contained DNA from a variety of animals, including dogs, rabbits, hoary bamboo rats, Malayan porcupines and masked palm civets. The most abundant DNA was from raccoon dogs, and some was detected in a nearby garbage cart that also tested positive for the virus.The closest-known relatives to SARS-CoV-2 that exist in the wild are coronaviruses that circulate in horseshoe bats in southern China, Laos and Vietnam and in pangolins from southern China. But no DNA from bats or pangolins turned up in any of the Huanan market samples.Raccoon dogs, masked palm civets, hoary bamboo rats and Malayan porcupines have transmitted bat coronaviruses before, the study authors noted. Could they have done so in Wuhan, they wondered? Security guards stand in front of the closed Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan on Jan. 11, 2020. (Noel Celis / AFP via Getty Images) It is unclear whether bamboo rats or Malayan porcupines can be infected with SARS-CoV-2, the study authors wrote. There is no hard evidence that masked palm civets can catch the virus, but cell lines from the animals were susceptible in laboratory experiments.Raccoon dogs, on the other hand, are known to catch and transmit SARS-CoV-2. And they were the most abundant animal in wildlife stall A.The researchers dug into the raccoon dog DNA to see if they could have come from southern China, where they might have crossed paths with bats. They couldn’t tell, but they were able to rule out a connection to raccoon dogs that lived on fur farms in northern China.Worobey and his colleagues also studied non-SARS-CoV-2 animal viruses that were detected in wildlife stalls to see if they offered clues about where the infected animals had come from. A kobuvirus that infected civets in the Huanan market was closely related to a virus detected in animals sold in Sichuan and Guangxi provinces, which are closer to the territory of horseshoe bats and pangolins. And a betacoronavirus that infected bamboo rats had a close relative on a bamboo rat farm in Guangxi, one of two southern provinces where market vendors were known to have sourced the animals.“These findings suggest some movement of infected animals from southern China to Wuhan, a trade conduit that could have also led to the emergence of SARS-CoV-2,” the study authors wrote. Nailing this down will require more sleuthing, including field work to collect samples from animals in China, said Florence Débarre, an evolutionary biologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris and the study’s senior author. Worobey said he plans to continue this line of inquiry.Dwyer praised the effort to determine where the animals in the market had come from — and by extension, how the virus could have gotten to the market. A second line of evidence also supports the hypothesis that the pandemic had a so-called zoonotic origin, scientists said.Among the samples collected at the Huanan market on Jan. 1, 2020, the researchers were able to identify four nearly complete SARS-CoV-2 genomes. One of them was from so-called lineage A, and the other three were from the closely related lineage B.The researchers weren’t able to tell whether those viruses were shed by animals or people, but the lineage A sample came from a stall where a worker sought medical attention in mid-December 2019. Although that was weeks before COVID-19 had been recognized as a disease, a report from the World Health Organization later described the worker as a suspected early patient. Confirming the presence of both lineages in the market allowed the team to compare their genomes and work backward to figure out when the two strains diverged, and what their most recent common ancestor looked like. They came up with six candidates, some of them more plausible than others.There was a 99% probability that one of the four most likely candidates was correct, and those four all had something important in common: They were “equivalent or identical” to the most recent common ancestor for the pandemic as a whole, said study leader Alexander Crits-Christoph, an independent computational microbiologist.That’s what they would expect to find if the outbreak began at the Huanan market, the study authors said. In that scenario, an animal or animals infected with the virus arrived at the market in November or early December. The virus then spread among animals held in close quarters indoors, as well as to their human handlers. Those conditions would have given the virus the multiple chances it needed to establish itself in people and begin spreading among its new hosts in a densely populated city.On the other hand, it’s getting more difficult to fit all of this evidence into a coherent story that has the coronavirus entering China via imported frozen food (as the Chinese government has claimed) or escaping from a virology lab with lax biosecurity protocols (as some members of the U.S. intelligence community have proposed), Dwyer said.“We’ve had nothing added to support the lab leak or the frozen food theories,” he said. “It just continues to strengthen the animal and market hypothesis.”Considering that the pandemic began in a city with a virology lab where scientists study coronaviruses, it makes sense to ask whether that’s more than a coincidence and to wonder whether incriminating evidence is being covered up, DéBarre said.“Many of us were extremely open to this idea,” she said. “But then data have accumulated, and they all go in the same direction — they all point to the market.”“In science you very rarely have final answers,” she added. “You say, ‘Given all the data we have, this looks like the most likely interpretation.’”

Samples taken in the pandemic's early weeks reinforce hypothesis that coronavirus emerged from live animal market, not a laboratory, new study says.

A new analysis of genetic material gathered from a live-animal market in Wuhan in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic strengthens the case that the outbreak originated there when the coronavirus jumped from infected animals to humans, scientists said.

The findings, reported the journal Cell, do not identify any specific infected animal that brought the SARS-CoV-2 virus to a Chinese city inhabited by more than 11 million people. Nor do they definitively prove that the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market was Ground Zero for a pandemic that has resulted in more than 7 million deaths.

But the genetic evidence shows the market met the conditions necessary to spark an outbreak and makes it increasingly difficult to explain how the coronavirus could have emerged from a laboratory, a farm or even from another of the city’s four live-animal markets, the study authors said.

“It’s like if a gorilla virus emerged in San Diego and first hit people who worked at the San Diego Zoo and lived nearby, then spread later more widely,” said Michael Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona who worked on the study. “It would not be difficult to reason that it very likely came from the gorillas at the zoo.”

The root cause of the pandemic has been hotly debated since its early days. Wuhan is home to a government laboratory where scientists study coronaviruses similar to SARS-CoV-2, a fact that prompted politicians, national security experts, late-night talk show hosts and many scientists — including Worobey — to question whether the virus had leaked from the lab.

Compelling though the argument may be, hard evidence to support the leak hypothesis has been lacking. Meanwhile, more information has come to light that has persuaded scientists with expertise in relevant fields that the virus that causes COVID-19 originated in animals, just like the viruses that cause SARS, MERS and influenza.

The new results continue that trend, said Dr. Dominic Dwyer, a member of the international task force that investigated the pandemic’s origins for the World Health Organization.

“You put all of these origin hypotheses on the table, and then some of them become stronger as you get evidence,” said Dwyer, a medical virologist at the University of Sydney and Westmead Hospital in Australia who wasn’t involved in the latest work. “This paper has more evidence that supports the animal origin through the Huanan market.”

The analysis published Thursday was based on genetic data gleaned from hundreds of samples gathered in and around the Huanan market collected by researchers from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention soon after the market was shut down on Jan. 1, 2020. The Chinese team detected the coronavirus in 74 of the environmental samples they tested, according to their report last year in the journal Nature.

Worobey and his colleagues dug deeper into that data. Using two distinct gene-sequencing techniques, they looked for pieces of SARS-CoV-2 as well as for DNA from animals and people.

Then they plotted what they found on a map of the sprawling market, allowing the team to reconstruct how a few initial infections could have ballooned into a global health emergency.

Among 585 samples gathered in early January 2020, the ones that contained the coronavirus were clustered in the southwestern section of the market. That happened to be the area where wild animals were held in cages for sale.

“The market covers a couple of acres, and this comes down to one corner of the market, and to a couple of stalls,” Dwyer said. “That fits with an animal origin. If it was coming from people wandering around the market, you’d find it everywhere.”

One market stall “stood out,” the study authors wrote. It had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in multiple places: on at least one cart, on an iron container, on the ground, and on a machine used to remove hair and feathers. The researchers dubbed it “wildlife stall A.”

Another 60 samples were taken from the market’s drainage system at the end of January 2020. The researchers found genetic evidence of the coronavirus in four of them, including one in front of wildlife stall A.

That drain was still testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 in mid-February. So were two drains downstream from it that could have been contaminated by runoff from wildlife stall A, the researchers wrote.

The samples from the stall that contained the coronavirus also contained DNA from a variety of animals, including dogs, rabbits, hoary bamboo rats, Malayan porcupines and masked palm civets. The most abundant DNA was from raccoon dogs, and some was detected in a nearby garbage cart that also tested positive for the virus.

The closest-known relatives to SARS-CoV-2 that exist in the wild are coronaviruses that circulate in horseshoe bats in southern China, Laos and Vietnam and in pangolins from southern China. But no DNA from bats or pangolins turned up in any of the Huanan market samples.

Raccoon dogs, masked palm civets, hoary bamboo rats and Malayan porcupines have transmitted bat coronaviruses before, the study authors noted. Could they have done so in Wuhan, they wondered?

Security guards stand in front of a large warehouse at night.

Security guards stand in front of the closed Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan on Jan. 11, 2020.

(Noel Celis / AFP via Getty Images)

It is unclear whether bamboo rats or Malayan porcupines can be infected with SARS-CoV-2, the study authors wrote. There is no hard evidence that masked palm civets can catch the virus, but cell lines from the animals were susceptible in laboratory experiments.

Raccoon dogs, on the other hand, are known to catch and transmit SARS-CoV-2. And they were the most abundant animal in wildlife stall A.

The researchers dug into the raccoon dog DNA to see if they could have come from southern China, where they might have crossed paths with bats. They couldn’t tell, but they were able to rule out a connection to raccoon dogs that lived on fur farms in northern China.

Worobey and his colleagues also studied non-SARS-CoV-2 animal viruses that were detected in wildlife stalls to see if they offered clues about where the infected animals had come from.

A kobuvirus that infected civets in the Huanan market was closely related to a virus detected in animals sold in Sichuan and Guangxi provinces, which are closer to the territory of horseshoe bats and pangolins. And a betacoronavirus that infected bamboo rats had a close relative on a bamboo rat farm in Guangxi, one of two southern provinces where market vendors were known to have sourced the animals.

“These findings suggest some movement of infected animals from southern China to Wuhan, a trade conduit that could have also led to the emergence of SARS-CoV-2,” the study authors wrote.

Nailing this down will require more sleuthing, including field work to collect samples from animals in China, said Florence Débarre, an evolutionary biologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris and the study’s senior author. Worobey said he plans to continue this line of inquiry.

Dwyer praised the effort to determine where the animals in the market had come from — and by extension, how the virus could have gotten to the market.

A second line of evidence also supports the hypothesis that the pandemic had a so-called zoonotic origin, scientists said.

Among the samples collected at the Huanan market on Jan. 1, 2020, the researchers were able to identify four nearly complete SARS-CoV-2 genomes. One of them was from so-called lineage A, and the other three were from the closely related lineage B.

The researchers weren’t able to tell whether those viruses were shed by animals or people, but the lineage A sample came from a stall where a worker sought medical attention in mid-December 2019. Although that was weeks before COVID-19 had been recognized as a disease, a report from the World Health Organization later described the worker as a suspected early patient.

Confirming the presence of both lineages in the market allowed the team to compare their genomes and work backward to figure out when the two strains diverged, and what their most recent common ancestor looked like. They came up with six candidates, some of them more plausible than others.

There was a 99% probability that one of the four most likely candidates was correct, and those four all had something important in common: They were “equivalent or identical” to the most recent common ancestor for the pandemic as a whole, said study leader Alexander Crits-Christoph, an independent computational microbiologist.

That’s what they would expect to find if the outbreak began at the Huanan market, the study authors said. In that scenario, an animal or animals infected with the virus arrived at the market in November or early December. The virus then spread among animals held in close quarters indoors, as well as to their human handlers. Those conditions would have given the virus the multiple chances it needed to establish itself in people and begin spreading among its new hosts in a densely populated city.

On the other hand, it’s getting more difficult to fit all of this evidence into a coherent story that has the coronavirus entering China via imported frozen food (as the Chinese government has claimed) or escaping from a virology lab with lax biosecurity protocols (as some members of the U.S. intelligence community have proposed), Dwyer said.

“We’ve had nothing added to support the lab leak or the frozen food theories,” he said. “It just continues to strengthen the animal and market hypothesis.”

Considering that the pandemic began in a city with a virology lab where scientists study coronaviruses, it makes sense to ask whether that’s more than a coincidence and to wonder whether incriminating evidence is being covered up, DéBarre said.

“Many of us were extremely open to this idea,” she said. “But then data have accumulated, and they all go in the same direction — they all point to the market.”

“In science you very rarely have final answers,” she added. “You say, ‘Given all the data we have, this looks like the most likely interpretation.’”

Read the full story here.
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How the new wildlife crossing over I-5 will help delicate Oregon ecosystem

The new crossing will be in southern Oregon in the Siskiyous, where the freeway bisects the home of an impressive list of flora and fauna

The terrain south of Ashland and stretching to the California border sits at an incredible intersection of ecological systems.Here, the ancient Siskiyou Mountains meet the volcanic Cascades, the high desert of the Great Basin, the Klamath Mountains and the oak woodlands of Northern California.Dubbed an “ecological wonderland” and home to an impressive list of flora and fauna, the area was designated as the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument in 2000.Plowing through all that biodiversity is Interstate 5, which carries 17,000 vehicles per day. The four-lane interstate essentially severs the monument into two.Animals don’t have an easy time getting from one side of the road to the other. Due to its location, however, the area is a hotbed of wildlife activity and considered a “red zone” for vehicle collisions.“The traffic volume on most portions of I-5 would be considered to be a permanent barrier to wildlife movement,” Tim Greseth, executive director of the Oregon Wildlife Foundation, tells Columbia Insight. “The oddity with this particular location is it’s smack dab in the middle of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument, which was established primarily because of the biodiversity of the region.”Now there’s good news, for wildlife and motorists alike.Artist's rendering of Oregon's first overcrossing for wildlife, proposed for just north of the California border.ODOTThe area will soon get a lot safer thanks to a $33 million federal grant to the Oregon Department of Transportation to construct a massive wildlife crossing over I-5 just north of the Oregon-California border.“The grant award will allow ODOT to construct a wildlife crossing over Interstate 5 in southern Oregon in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument,” according to the ODOT website. “This will be the first wildlife overcrossing for Oregon and for the entire stretch of I-5 between Mexico and Canada.”Announced in December, the grant award for the Southern Oregon Wildlife Overcrossing is the result of years of work and collaboration spearheaded by the Southern Oregon Wildlife Crossing Coalition, which formed in 2021 to push for animal crossings in the monument.ODOT will provide another $3.8 million in matching funds that will come from a pot of money created by the 2021 Oregon Legislature to support wildlife crossings across the state.Construction is expected to begin in 2028, according to ODOT.Overcross vs. undercrossEach year in Oregon, officials document about 6,000 vehicle collisions with deer and elk.Wildlife crossings are effective at reducing such collisions.Oregon’s six existing wildlife undercrossings—tunnels constructed beneath roads—have resulted in an 80-90% decrease in vehicle-wildlife collisions in impacted areas, according to ODOT and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.“There’s a real advantage to doing overcrossings versus undercrossings,” says Greseth. “Overcrossings get a lot more diversity of species use. If you think about an underpass—and think about even people and how we might approach something where we’re going underneath a busy road—each of us individually would probably approach that with some trepidation. Animals aren’t going to be different.”The proposed I-5 overcross will consist of soil, vegetation and landscaping elements to make the crossing feel safer to wildlife. It will include retaining walls and sound walls along its length to dampen interstate noise and shield wildlife from light on the road.Dense plantings of vegetation will offer cover from predators for smaller animals, while open paths along the crossing will give animals using the bridge the ability to see their destination, according to ODOT spokesperson Julie Denney.ODOT’s landscape architect and a multidisciplinary subgroup are planning which plants to use on the bridge. The team is “focusing on the plants that will help make the crossing the most attractive for the species we expect to utilize the crossing,” says Denney. Those species include deer, elk, bear, cougar, birds and even insects.Potential plants for the crossing include sugar pine, desert gooseberry, deer brush, Oregon white oak, dwarf Oregon white oak, rubber rabbitbrush, antelope bitterbrush and spreading dogbane.The structure will span northbound and southbound lanes, and have fencing stretching two-and-a-half miles in each direction and on either side of the interstate. The fencing will help funnel wildlife onto the bridge.“Our goal is to provide an environment for the crossing to be as natural as possible, hopefully in a way that the wildlife are unaware they are crossing a major interstate,” says Denney.Kendra Chamberlain is Columbia Insight’s contributing editor. As a freelance journalist based in Eugene, she covers the environment, energy and climate change. Her work has appeared in DeSmog Blog, High Country News, InvestigateWest and Ensia.Columbia Insight, based in Hood River is a nonprofit newsroom focused on environmental issues of the Columbia River Basin and the Pacific Northwest.

Chained Monkey Among Latest Wildlife Rescues in Costa Rica

Although Costa Rica is committed to protecting wildlife, unscrupulous individuals continue to violate the rules and insist on keeping wild animals as pets. The National System of Conservation Areas (SINAC) rescued a white-faced monkey that was held in captivity in Jacó. The animal was tied with a chain around its neck, which caused serious injuries, […] The post Chained Monkey Among Latest Wildlife Rescues in Costa Rica appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Although Costa Rica is committed to protecting wildlife, unscrupulous individuals continue to violate the rules and insist on keeping wild animals as pets. The National System of Conservation Areas (SINAC) rescued a white-faced monkey that was held in captivity in Jacó. The animal was tied with a chain around its neck, which caused serious injuries, according to SINAC personnel. “He no longer had any hair to protect him around the neck because of the chain. He had open wounds that must have caused him a lot of pain,” officials stated. The animal was taken to Zooave, located in La Garita de Alajuela, where it is receiving veterinary medical attention. SINAC emphasized that keeping wildlife in captivity is a crime and urges people to report any cases they know of. “For those who had this animal in captivity, the corresponding complaint was filed with the Public Prosecutor’s Office,” SINAC confirmed. Parrots, parakeets, turtles, snakes, and iguanas are among the wild animals protected by the Wildlife Conservation Law in Costa Rica.   On the other hand, a two-toed sloth cub was rescued in the canton of Upala during an operation involving the Public Force, local residents, and SINAC. The rescue occurred after the officers received information about the female sloth cub, which had been found abandoned by a local family. According to authorities, the animal was handed over to the officers, who, while feeding and caring for her, began searching for the mother in the vicinity. Despite their efforts to locate her, it was not possible. On Wednesday, they coordinated with the wildlife rescue center “Toucan Rescue Ranch” in Río Frío, Sarapiquí, to transfer the calf, where it is receiving the proper care. “The two-toed sloth is a species facing a population decline in Costa Rica, mainly due to the destruction of its natural habitat and illegal capture for keeping as pets,” environmental authorities highlighted. Keeping animals in captivity is a crime in Costa Rica, which carries monetary penalties and even a prison sentence. The post Chained Monkey Among Latest Wildlife Rescues in Costa Rica appeared first on The Tico Times | Costa Rica News | Travel | Real Estate.

Fears of ‘rogue rewilding’ in Scottish Highlands after further lynx sightings

Environmentalists condemn unauthorised releases as ‘reckless’ and ‘highly irresponsible’For a brief moment this week, lynx have been roaming the Scottish Highlands once again. But this was not the way conservationists had hoped to end their 1,000-year absence.On Wednesday, Police Scotland received reports of two lynx in a forest in the Cairngorms national park, sparking a frantic search. That episode ended in less than a day. Both animals were quickly captured by experts from the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) and taken to quarantine facilities at Highland wildlife park. Continue reading...

For a brief moment this week, lynx roamed the Scottish Highlands once again. But this was not the way conservationists had hoped to end their 1,000-year absence.On Wednesday, Police Scotland received reports of two lynx in a forest in the Cairngorms national park, sparking a frantic search. That episode ended in less than a day. Both animals were quickly captured by experts from the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) and taken to quarantine facilities at Highland wildlife park.Yet their delight at a successful operation was shortlived. Early on Friday morning, the RZSS’s network of wildlife cameras caught two more lynx in the same stretch of forest, near Kingussie. The baited traps were redeployed, and its specialists were hunting again.Screen grab taken from video issued by the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) of one of the two Lynx captured in the Cairngorms on Thursday. Photograph: Royal Zoological Society of Scotland/PASpeculation has erupted over who was responsible for the illegal release, and police said enquiries were continuing to establish the full circumstances. Both lynx – who are shy, solitary animals in the wild and not dangerous to humans – appeared tame and showed little sign of being able to survive on their own, according to a witness. The witness said the lynx were found near straw bedding left beside a layby with dead chicks and porcupine quills.On social media, some pointed the finger at rogue rewilders taking the law into their own hands by making the return of lynx a fact on the ground, akin to how beavers returned to the UK through unauthorised “beaver bombing” . Studies indicate that the Highlands could support as many as 400 lynx in the wild and there is strong support for their return among environmental groups. But leading voices in the rewilding sector were quick to condemn this week’s unauthorised release as “reckless” and “highly irresponsible”.Dave Barclay, the RZSS expert leading the hunt for the lynx, was furious. These animals were semi-tame, and “highly habituated to people”, he said, yet had been released in deep winter. Temperatures locally had plunged below -5C, with deep snow cover, and they had been released at the mouth of a forest track heavily used by logging machinery.“All of that compromises the welfare of these animals,” he said. “It is abhorrent what has happened here, and against all international good practice.”Investigators now suspect the lynx could be from a family group. The two captured yesterday are understood to be juveniles, cubs aged about 1 or 2 years of age, while the two spotted on Friday are thought to be an adult and a third juvenile.Ben Goldsmith, an environmentalist who said he was not involved with the release, said: “Like many others, I have been momentarily thrilled by the notion of lynx once again stalking the Cairngorms. Lynx are an iconic native species missing from Britain and they should be back here. The habitat is perfect, these are secretive animals, and there are no good reasons not to reintroduce them.“We don’t know the story behind these missing lynx – perhaps they are abandoned pets that have become unmanageable. Whatever has happened, it seems to have been poorly thought through,” he added.The lynx were found on Danish billionaire Anders Povlsen’s Killiehuntly estate. A spokesperson for WildLand, the company that runs his Scottish estates, said they believed that native predators should only be reintroduced lawfully and in close collaboration with local people.In the UK, citizens must apply to their local council to keep wild animals legally. According to figures collected by Born Free in 2023, 31 lynx were kept by private collectors, although all were housed in England. Experts said that more lynx were likely to be held in unauthorised private collections that were difficult to monitor.“There could be far more lynx in private hands that are actually recorded. If they have cubs, they may not register them. People would be gobsmacked of what people have in their back garden. I know of people who have snow leopards and cougars in their back garden. It’s shocking. It should be banned,” said Dr Paul O’Donoghue, director of the Lynx UK Trust, who also said he was not involved with therelease.Were it not for the English Channel, lynx would probably already have returned to the UK. Now a protected species in Europe, the Eurasian lynx has recovered from a few hundred in the 1950s to as many as 10,000. Research shows there is mixed support for their return in the UK, with strong opposition from the agricultural community, who fear they will attack livestock.Edward Mountain, MSP for the Highlands and Islands and a landowner, said there was a “genuine fear” amongst locals about “guerrilla rewilding”. “We saw it with beavers on the Tay, now there’s talk of reintroducing sea eagles and goshawks. It can change an entire local ecosystem and that’s dangerous if it’s not done properly,” he said.

Why sabre-toothed animals evolved again and again

Sabre teeth can be ideal for puncturing the flesh of prey, which may explain why they evolved in different groups of mammals at least five times

The skull of a saber-toothed tiger (Smilodon)Steve Morton Predators have evolved sabre teeth many times during the history of life – and we now have a better idea why these teeth develop as they do. Sabre teeth have very specific characteristics: they are exceptionally long, sharp canines that tend to be slightly flattened and curved, rather than rounded. Such teeth have independently evolved in different groups of mammals at least five times, and fossils of sabre-tooth predators have been found in North and South America, Europe and Asia. The teeth are first known to have appeared some 270 million years ago, in mammal-like reptiles called gorgonopsids. Another example is Thylacosmilus, which died out about 2.5 million years ago and was most closely related to marsupials. Sabre teeth were last seen in Smilodon, often called sabre-toothed tigers, which existed until about 10,000 years ago. To investigate why these teeth kept re-evolving, Tahlia Pollock at the University of Bristol, UK, and her colleagues looked at the canines of 95 carnivorous mammal species, including 25 sabre-toothed ones. First, the researchers measured the shapes of the teeth to categorise and model them. Then they 3D-printed smaller versions of each tooth in metal and tested their performance in puncture tests, in which the teeth were mechanically pushed into gelatine blocks designed to mimic the density of animal tissue. This showed that the sabre teeth were able to puncture the block with up to 50 per cent less force than the other teeth could, says Pollock. The researchers then assessed the tooth shape and puncture performance data using a measure called the Pareto rank ratio, which judged how optimal the teeth were for strength or puncturing. “A carnivore’s teeth have to be sharp and slender enough to allow the animal to pierce the flesh of their prey, but they also need to be blunt and robust enough to not break while an animal’s biting,” says Pollock. Animals like Smilodon had extremely long sabre teeth. “These teeth were probably popping up again and again because they represent an optimal design for puncture,” says Pollock. “They’re really good at puncturing, but that also means that they’re a little bit fragile.” For instance, the La Brea Tar Pits in California have lots of fossils of Smilodon, some with broken teeth. Other sabre-toothed animals also had teeth that were the ideal shape for a slightly different job. The cat Dinofelis had squatter sabre teeth that balanced puncturing and strength more equally, says Pollock. The teeth of other sabre-toothed species sat between these optimal shapes, which might be why some of them didn’t last too long. “These kinds of things trade off,” says Pollock. “The aspects of shape that make a tooth good at one thing make it bad at the other.” One of the main hypotheses for why sabre-tooth species went extinct is that ecosystems were changing and the huge prey they are thought to have targeted, such as mammoths, were disappearing. The team’s puncture findings back this up. The giant teeth wouldn’t have been as effective for catching prey that were more like the size of a rabbit, and the risk of tooth breakage here may have increased, so the sabre-toothed animals would have been outcompeted by predators that are more effective at hunting such prey, like cats with smaller teeth, says Pollock. “As soon as the ecological or environmental conditions change, the highly specialised sabre-tooth predators were unable to adapt quickly enough and became extinct,” says Stephan Lautenschlager at the University of Birmingham, UK. “I think that’s part of the reason why this sabre-tooth morphology hasn’t evolved again in the present – we don’t have the megafauna,” says Julie Meachen at Des Moines University in Iowa. “The prey is not there.”

Oregon approves key permit for controversial biofuel refinery on Columbia River

Oregon environmental regulators gave a key stamp of approval to a proposed $2.5 billion biofuel refinery along the Columbia River despite continued opposition from environmental groups and tribes over potential impacts to the river and salmon.

Oregon environmental regulators gave a key stamp of approval to a proposed $2.5 billion biofuel refinery along the Columbia River despite continued opposition from environmental groups and tribes over potential impacts to the river and salmon.The NEXT Energy refinery, also known as NXTClean Fuels, plans to manufacture renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel at the deepwater port of Port Westward, an industrial park on the outskirts of Clatskanie in Columbia County. Biofuels are considered renewable because they are produced from plants and organic waste products such as cow manure or agricultural residue.The Department of Environmental Quality on Tuesday approved a water quality certification for NEXT, allowing the Houston-based company to move forward with the project. The certification – marking the final comprehensive state review – is a requirement for the refinery to secure a federal permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.The state agency previously twice denied NEXT’s application for the certification, in 2021 and 2022, “due to insufficient information to evaluate the permit application.” More recently, the company secured state approvals for a removal fill permit and air permit in 2022 and county land-use permits in 2024.Proponents hail biofuels for their ability to reduce carbon emissions as a stop-gap measure before the transportation sector can move to full-on electrification as climate groups advocate. Countries across the world, including the U.S., individual states like Oregon and cities such as Portland have bet on biofuels to reduce carbon emissions from cars and trucks via fuel blending mandates that require a certain percentage of biofuels to be mixed with traditional fossil fuels.Environmental groups have raised concerns in recent years about the impacts of biofuel production, storage and transportation, including deforestation, the displacement of food production and the significant greenhouse gas emissions from various biofuel sources.The Port Westward refinery plans to produce up to 50,000 barrels per day – or more than 750 million gallons a year – of renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel. The fuels will be shipped offsite via pipelines, trucks and railcars to markets worldwide.Environmental groups this week said state regulators “caved in” to pressure from the building trades, putting the river and people’s well-being at risk from possible spills.DEQ spokesperson Michael Loch declined to directly comment on that statement.“DEQ carefully reviewed NEXT’s application for a 401 water quality certification and determined that the proposed project meets the state’s water quality standards,” Loch said.NEXT has said it plans to make the biofuels at Port Westward from used cooking oil, fish grease, animal tallows and seed oils. It already has an agreement with a Vietnamese company to import fish grease, company spokesperson Michael Hinrichs said. And it’s in discussions with other companies for used cooking oil and animal tallows from Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Singapore, Brazil and Canada, he said.Conservation groups in Oregon dispute those promises, pointing to the company’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.“NEXT’s documentation shows that the majority of its feedstocks will be from corn and soybean oil, which are purpose-grown feedstocks with a higher carbon footprint, and will be shipped to the facility on long trains,” said Audrey Leonard, a staff attorney with Columbia Riverkeeper, a Portland-based environmental group focused on protecting the river that has fought the project for years.Columbia Riverkeeper and other opponents of the project also argue the refinery could damage water quality in the Columbia and its tributaries, including several area sloughs, and degrade local wetlands in the event of spills from the refinery and its railyard caused by accidents or a major earthquake.The proposed refinery would be built on unstable soil behind dikes that are next to high-value farmland and salmon habitat, Leonard said. Renewable fuels are just as flammable as fossil fuels, she said.In addition, the proposed refinery would use large volumes of fracked gas, a fossil fuel, in the production of renewable fuels, resulting in significant greenhouse gas emissions, Leonard said. NEXT’s air permit allows over 1 million tons a year of greenhouse gas emissions from the fracked gas operations to produce the fuel at the refinery. For comparison, the average petroleum refinery emits 1.2 million tons per year and Intel’s two campuses are authorized to emit a combined 1.7 million tons of greenhouse gases per year.The region’s tribes also have sent letters opposing the refinery, saying it will degrade water quality and negatively affect juvenile salmon and other aquatic species.“This project is a massive step backwards from the years of effort to improve aquatic habitat,” wrote Aja K. DeCoteau, executive director with the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission which manages fisheries for local tribes.Other groups have expressed support for the project and see it as a climate change solution that will reduce emissions and pollution.“On our way to a zero-emission future, we must do everything we can to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and toxic air pollution in the short term through strategies like rapidly expanding the use of renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel,” wrote Tim Miller, the director of Oregon Business for Climate, a nonprofit group focused on mobilizing industry support to advance climate policy in Oregon.Now that the refinery has the water certification in hand, the Army Corps of Engineers will issue a draft environmental impact statement for public review later this year and will evaluate whether to issue a federal water quality permit for the project.NEXT still must secure two state stormwater permits, though those are routine and typically filed after approval of the federal permit.The company is also developing a second biofuel refinery in Lakeview, 100 miles east of Klamath Falls, after acquiring an existing never-opened facility in 2023 from Red Rock Biofuels when that company went into foreclosure. The Lakeview plant will use wood waste from local forest thinning, logging and wildfire management activities to make renewable natural gas, known as RNG. The company has yet to announce when the plant will launch.— Gosia Wozniacka covers environmental justice, climate change, the clean energy transition and other environmental issues. Reach her at gwozniacka@oregonian.com or 971-421-3154.Our journalism needs your support. Subscribe today to OregonLive.com.

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