2016: Editor’s choice

Extracts from selected news and feature articles published this year.

Astrophysics

An international team of scientists, including from New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD), managed to directly observe structural components of one slowly rotating star, thanks to asteroseismology. This new technique, 10,000 times more precise than its predecessor, reveals a star’s flatter, rounder contours and different rotational speeds. It allows scientists to ‘see’ the nature of the stellar interior with very high precision.

Marine science

In an unprecedented study on non-model organisms in captivity, scientists from Saudi Arabia, Australia and Norway were able to create large sequence datasets on how reef fish and their offspring react to the phenomenon of decreasing pH levels, called ocean acidification, brought on by climate change. Acidification happens due the uptake of atmospheric carbon dioxide. “The amount of sequencing data we generated is unparalleled for a non-model organism,” says Timothy Ravasi, the senior author of the paper. Scientists discovered that the offspring of some reef fish can tolerate acidification by adjusting their circadian rhythm to night time function throughout the day.

Ecology and evolution

An international consortium of researchers analysed the coding portions of genes, or “exomes”, belonging to 1,794 nationals of Greater Middle Eastern (GME) countries, a region spanning from Morocco in the west to Pakistan in the east. “As expected for a region so rich in history and at the crossroads of many civilizations, the Middle East ‘variome’ [the set of genetic variations in a given population] suggests mixing with other populations, although the percentage varies greatly depending on which subpopulation you look at,” says geneticist Fowzan Alkuraya from Saudi Arabia’s King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center. Northwest African genes were found in people across northern Africa, most likely representing the Berber genetic background. Arabian Peninsular genes were observed in nearly all GME peoples studied, possibly the result of the Arab conquests of the seventh century. Similarly, Persian expansion in the fifth century into the Turkish peninsula, the Syrian Desert region and parts of northeast Africa probably accounts for the Persian and Pakistan genetic signal present in the peoples of those regions. The peoples of the Syrian Desert and Turkish peninsular regions show the highest levels of mixing with European populations.

Geology

Shallow, dense magma reservoirs may be responsible for the most hazardous type of volcano on Earth, according to a new study. Ivan Koulakov and colleagues, including scientists from Saudi Arabia, present a fresh seismic model, based on studying magma paths beneath the Toba volcano in Indonesia, which last erupted some 74,000 years ago. The model explains why the magma system under Toba causes large, devastating eruptions, and how such large volumes of magma are generated.

Archaeology

“We always say it can’t get any worse, and then it does — and that’s the hardest part,” says Allison Cuneo, project manager for the American Schools of Oriental Research’s Cultural Heritage Initiative (CHI), which documents the loss of Syrian heritage. CHI reported 851 incidents of damage to cultural heritage between September 2015 and August 2016, mostly concentrated in areas of northern Syria controlled by forces opposed to President Bashar al-Assad. With such extensive damage, there “is so much data on destruction to report, it’s like holding the ocean back with a broom,” says Michael Danti, the academic director of CHI.

Environment

A world atlas of artificial night sky brightness, published earlier this year in Science Advances, captured the extent to which we are smothered in light. It reveals Kuwait, Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia as the most light-polluted places to live on the planet, topped only by Singapore. More than half of people living in Israel and Libya live through extremely bright nights, and the widest connected twilight zone in the world is along the Nile Delta in Egypt. No more can people in Kuwait and Qatar see the glowing band of the Milky Way from their homes. For more than 97 per cent of people in the United Arab Emirates, Israel, and Egypt, this is also true. “The night sky is the beginning of our civilization. It leads to all religions, philosophy, science, literature and the arts. The cultural significance of a sky full of stars is huge. The new generations have lost this source of inspiration,” says Fabio Falchi, of the Italian Light Pollution Science and Technology Institute’s Fabio Falchi, who led the study.

Astronomy

The Qatar Exoplanet Survey (QES) has discovered three new “exoplanets” outside our solar system. The planets, named Qatar-3b, Qatar-4b and Qatar-5b, are hot Jupiters: they are similar in size to Jupiter (11 times the size of Earth) and orbit very closely to their respective suns. They are located some 1400 to 1800 light years away from Earth and can be seen in the same part of the sky as the Andromeda Constellation, best observed in autumn in the northern hemisphere.

Year in review: Under pressure

Conflict and wars have continued to bend the region out of shape in 2016, with health infrastructure in Syria and Yemen continuing to crumble and fall, and the exodus of people out of dangerous zones affecting neighboring populations. The following are some of the most critical situations borne out of the flow of people as a result of infighting in 2016.

Water

Besides the human cost of the war in Syria, the ecological and environmental impact has, no doubt, been huge. For example, earlier this month, researchers based in the US and Canada have shown how mass migrations are changing the country’s hydrological landscape.

The flight of Syrian refugees since 2013 has dramatically changed water-use patterns and led to an increased water flow into Jordan through the Yarmouk River. In the absence of direct measurement data from Syria, the scientists had turned to remote sensing techniques, combining spatial and statistical analyses of satellite imagery with water balance calculations to estimate the changes in irrigation patterns and reservoir usage in southwest Syria. While the end of a regional drought is partly responsible for the increased flow of the Yarmouk, the analysis showed that decreased water use in the Syrian part of the river basin accounts for roughly half of the 340% increase in transboundary flow.

In a way, the war in Syria carried some good for Jordan – at least in terms of water supply.

Health

War and migration had once led to outbreaks of infectious diseases, such as visceral leishmaniasis, across the region, originating from Sudan and South Sudan. And new research is warning that this could happen again. Visceral leishmaniasis is endemic in Sudan and South Sudan, where the climate allows sandflies to thrive, and poor health systems compound the problem.

Researchers from the US and Saudi Arabia have presented new evidence suggesting that conflict, and the chronic malnutrition and displacement that follow, interrupt the cycle of immunity and allow a disease like visceral leishmaniasis to flourish. Gloomily, the scientists say they expect another outbreak.

Not far off, in Aleppo, the scene of much violence and suffering, an outbreak of another form of leishmaniasis has taken place. The Aleppo boil, which is caused by a parasite in the bloodstream and transmitted through the bites of sandflies, has been reported to have infected hundreds of thousands across the Middle East, especially across refugee camps. The disease causes disfiguring lesions on the body and the numbers are bad, according to scientists.

Until recently, the disease was contained to areas around Aleppo and Damascus, but this changed with the continuous disruption of insecticide control, poor water and sanitation services in conflict zones.

Hepatitis C: The case of Egypt

In the Arab world, and worldwide, one of the most affected countries when it comes to hepatitis C virus (HCV) is Egypt – in fact, it’s estimated that 14.7% of the North African country’s population is carrying the virus and up to 100,000 new infections occur each year.

Seven months before the world celebrates World Hepatitis Day today, Tuesday, a new study revealed that between 3,000 an 5,000 Egyptian children could be infected by the virus through mother-to-child transmission, probably during pregnancy, childbirth or somewhere in the postpartum period. The transmission could contribute to up to 50% of new cases in children under five.

A feature story published by Nature Middle East in October last year explored the possible causes of one of the most widely spread epidemics in Egypt, and it turns out, medical care – or the lack thereof – is responsible, with most transmissions happening due to healthcare hygiene breaches. Hospitals and clinics are by far the largest suppliers of the virus. Wahid Doss, the head of the Egyptian National Committee for the Control of Viral Hepatitis and dean of the Ministry of Health’s affiliated Liver Institute, told our writer Louise Sarant that “[around] 60% of patients who undergo kidney dialysis will have contracted HCV within the year, because the machines are not sterilized properly. Same goes for blood transfusions, which are very risky.”

In 2011, Nature Middle East’s chief editor Mohammed Yahia wrote that “not only is the Egyptian HCV problem one of size, but the genotype of the virus in circulation is one that is not commonly found in the rest of the world. If it is not controlled, there’s no guarantee that it will be confined to Egypt.”

Egypt — and the Middle East more generally — is a stronghold for genotype 4. The prolonged 72-weeks treatment available for hepatitis C – which involves a weekly injection and a daily capsule dose – only has a 60-65% success rate for this genotype. While the preferred treatment regimen – a costly 48-week course of interferon and the antiviral drug ribavirin – is usually only effective in 30-50% of cases.

By contrast, about 75% of HCV infections in Europe and the United States are of genotype 1. Naturally, most prominent research in the West targeted the latter, and not the former.

But perhaps things are changing; already scientists in the region are starting to pay some attention to the virus and its possible new treatments.

Last year, two Egyptian scientists sent sample crystals of two proteins of the hepatitis C virus to space for analysis, in their search for possible cure. The proteins are HCV genome 4, and the researchers, working at the German Aerospace Center (DLR), said they were hoping to understand the behavior of this specific type located heavily in Egypt.

Separately, researchers in Qatar collaborated with Harvard Medical School to develop a therapeutic cocktail that combines antiviral agents and cholestrol-lowering drugs, commonly known as statin, to ease the burden of hepatitis C complications. This statin therapy, announced in April, can complement treatment by slowing the progress of liver fibrosis and reducing the risks of liver cancer in virus-infected patients.

Research aside, in a chronic case like Egypt, prevention remains the saving factor in this affair. And it’s not an easy feat; it involves an overhaul of hospital practices, measures like proper sterilization across health facilities, more investment in awareness and educational programmes aimed at curbing the virus’ spread, in addition to easing access to treatments, especially in rural areas.

2014 Year in Review: Nature Middle East highlights

In retrospect, 2014 was a mixed bag for the region – with some significant research produced on one hand, but on the other, in some countries, education, health and sectors in academia received some hard blows as a result of conflict and war.

In Syria for instance, the risk of infectious diseases is at its highest, warned a study published in PLOS Pathogens. The crisis was branded “a public health emergency of global concern” – with vaccine-preventable diseases not only reappearing in Syria but spreading to other countries with the outpouring of refugees, such as Lebanon and Iraq, which itself is reeling from years of damage to infrastructure and a myriad of health disasters.

Outbreaks of polio were reported – years after the Middle East was deemed “clean” – with WHO, UNICEF and ministries of health rushing to contain it. But even the largest vaccination campaign in the region’s history couldn’t reach its target as hundreds of thousands of children remain vaccinated, especially with access to hot zones barred.

Measles and rubella continue to be a burden in Syria, and in one instance, the vaccine killed instead of saved. At least 15 children died last September after being administered vaccines that were wrongly formulated, probably turning families away from seeking it and leaving many children unprotected.

Also in Syria, the lack of medical personnel is forcing untrained volunteers to tend to the injured and sick in hospitals.

Adding insult to injury, a study in The Lancet this year says that civilians aren’t even a priority for hospitals in a country like Syria, torn by civil wars. Fighters take up the majority of the available spots. In other hospitals, doctors risk their lives when they treat patients from the “opposite camps.”

In Iraq, the Islamic State (IS) is spreading its own brand of terror – taking over big universities and closing them down, including the historic University of Mosul. The education hubs are now used as makeshift camps for the militants. An independent Baghdad-based research tells Nature Middle East that soon conducting quality research in Iraq will be impossible. Skilled professors are already migrating in droves, in fear for their lives. “Many won’t come back even if the conflict ends,” says the researcher.

The International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) conservation agriculture project that helps local farmers increase food production has been in jeopardy in Iraq since IS takeover. Insecurity, fuel shortages and lack of necessary equipment is breaking them, they decry.

Nearby, an estimated 3,900 schools in Syria had been destroyed or closed down during the first two years of the war. By April 2013, “22% of the country’s 22,000 schools [were] rendered unusable,” according to UNICEF.

The year 2014 also saw a comeback by Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), which killed and inflected hundreds worldwide across 19 countries, with most of the infections concentrated in Saudi Arabia, where the virus was first discovered.

Nature Middle East was lucky to exclusively speak to the Egyptian virologist who first identified the virus, telling us the story of “patient zero” who died from an acute respiratory condition which was later revealed to be MERS itself. The mystery of MERS’ transmission was not lifted in 2014, but at least some countries are speeding up research into antiviral drugs that could contain it, or hinder its spread. Still, the fact remains, there are no anti-MERS drugs on the market so far.

In fact, overall things have been going south – health wise – for many in the region; not counting conflict victims and health complications due to war. A silent yet lethal predator, diabetes, has been preying upon the masses – with 35 million diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in the region.

Essentially, we have the  highest prevalence level of  in the world – with 1 in every 10 people living with it. Type 2 is tied to lifestyle, while type 1 has to do with genetics, autoimmune and environmental factors – and the incidence of the latter is rising sharply.

The highest rate of type 1 diabetes is in Saudi Arabia, with a shocking incidence of 14,900 children living with the disease, approximately a quarter of those in the Middle East and North Africa.

But in slightly better news, the region has managed (so far) to evade Ebola, which transmits through direct contact with bodily fluids and gains access to the body through skin abrasions and mucous membranes. The virus, however, has culled many in the central parts of Africa, and has fatality rates of up to 90%.

In terms of research, the region has been more prolific. Nature Middle East‘s chief editor Mohammed Yahia writes about the freshly released Nature Index, which was released in November and tracks where high impact research is being conducted around the world, and it shows many positive trends in the region – with Saudi Arabia leading with 358 papers, followed by Egypt.

Examples of prominent regional research includes one showing how Neolithic North Africans began exploiting cereal crops at least 500 years earlier than previously thought, published in PLOS ONE. The earliest evidence of cereal crop domestication in North Africa comes from the Fayum area of middle Egypt, and dates back to around 4350 BC.

In Lebanon, researchers from the American University of Beirut identified an algae species that can be a possible source of superfood and cheap renewable energy. In neighboring Syria, it turns out, two areas have the world’s highest concentration of wild-growing crops. The potential for these crops, distantly related to today’s agriculturally produced crops, lies in their gene pool, and adaptability – something that can provide breeders with genes that could enhance crop resistance to stresses such as climate change, pests, and disease.

Other breakthroughs include: In Sudan, a stunning discovery of a 3,000-year-old skeleton with metastatic carcinoma challenges the notion that cancer is a modern disease, opening new horizons for specialists to research cancer’s etiology and evolution. The ancient Nubian is probably the first cancer victim in archaeological record. As well, dinosaurs lived in Saudi Arabia, it seems. Fossilized remains identify specific dinosaur species from millions of years ago in the Arabian Peninsula when the area was covered by lush vegetation.

That being said, this year was not easy on the region, and infrastructures that provide the backbone of scientific endeavors have bore the brunt of political upheavals. In terms of progress – if we choose to compare notes with developed countries – we’re only barely inching forward.

Independent or university-backed research in the Arab world, collaborations with world-class institutions notwithstanding, is not enough to help Arab-affiliated researchers catch up with an incredibly prolific West. Governments must step in, opines Nobel laureate Ahmed Zewail and the academic president of Zewail City of Science and Technology Sherif Sedky.

“Renaissance in the Arab world will not be possible without genuine government recognition of the critical role of science in development and policies providing commensurate funding for basic research and reform of rigid bureaucracy which thwarts progress,” the experts say.

And considering it’s politics that seems to be setting the region back, Zewail and Sedky’s words ring true.

It is essentially a tug of war – between competent scientists and experts who’re aspiring to propel this region into the future, and governments staggering to make ends meet for their people, giving science a cold shoulder in the process. The next year may not tell us who wins, but it may very well give us indications – through statistics above all – of who is tugging harder.

2013: Nature Middle East’s Special Editions

For Nature Middle East, 2013 has been an exciting year — with wider coverage of the latest in science and research from across the region, and the beta-launch of our monthly special editions earlier in the year, and regularly starting October.

Our specials section decided to go nuclear, in its experimental edition in April 2013, highlighting the four major players in the region on the this front. We explored the potential and ambitions of Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE in nuclear energy development. The overarching question was: What kind of progress these countries can generate as they muddle through complex politics and logistics?

Our debut in October produced multiple features and news pieces on one of the most feared diseases of the century: cancer, whose incidence is expected to increase in the Middle East more than any other part of the world. From cancer screening in Algeria, which sadly occurs too late for many patients, to a prevalence of advanced breast cancer in Jordan, Syria, Egypt and Sudan, and the presence of a uniquely vicious type of the malignant disease in the Arab world, our cancer special balanced statistics from the ground with eye-opening lab findings in this area.

In November, the spotlight has shone on stem cell research in the region — one that experienced a head-start when Muslim scholars green-lighted basic research using embryonic stem cells. Promising research, such as that carried out by a team of scientists in Egypt using stem cells to find a cure for diabetes, is juxtaposed against opinions by experts from the field on regional policies, and how to move forward, logistical problems and financing shortages notwithstanding.

Finally, in December, Nature Middle East decided to get closure by talking about the elephant in the room: the rising prevalence rate of the HIV and AIDS in the region, which remains to be one of the most pressing issues thus far considering how little information we have regarding its spread.

You can’t talk about HIV without tackling stigma, which, as it turns out, is a solid force in the region; thwarting proper assessment of the incidence of the virus in 10 countries, affecting the reach of treatment (and in turn its effectiveness), and putting up proverbial walls between risk groups and health workers trying to help.

It’s a mixed bag. Worrying trends persist in some countries; for example around 80% of people living with HIV/AIDS in the region are not aware they’re carriers of the virus. While in others, there’s a measure of progress, with countries like Lebanon, Morocco, Jordan, Syria and Tunisia, adopting a hard reduction approach to curb the virus.

2013 Year In Review: News highlights

Looking back, 2013 carried as much good news as it did bad news for the Middle East, especially so in the fields of science, technology and health.

Perhaps the biggest story so far—political turbulence aside—is Syria’s polio problem.

The outbreak of polio virus in Syria put the entire region at risk of infection of the once-thwarted virus, especially that refugee traffic in and out of the war-torn country continued unabated regardless of health risks. There are still question marks over how the vaccination campaigns were handled in war time, whether some areas were deliberately overlooked during vital health campaigns, and currently, how international organizations working in the region are planning to face up to the challenges of mobility and access, walking a thin line between attending to a public health emergency of international concern and maneuvering delicate politics.

The region had already plunged into 2013 heavyhearted with fears of the spread of another pandemic in the wake of the outbreak of the coronavirus, known as MERS-COV in September 2012. However, despite reported infections, some fatal, mostly in Saudi Arabia, in addition to Jordan, Qatar, UAE, and Tunisia among others, the outbreak did not warrant an international emergency status. In fact, research in 2013, has brought some significant revelations about the virus to light — including how complicated its transmission chain is, and how Omani camels may have been the elusive intermediate host that carried this virus to humans.

On the water front, both literal and figurative, 2013 saw the birth of a new partnership between Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority. The countries will start feeding water from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea, in the belief that this grand project — which involves installing a 180-kilometre connection between the two sees — will save the latter from shrinking. And the World Bank is backing their game, releasing a new study that considers connecting the two seas via a channel as one of the feasible scenarios that could breathe life into the Dead Sea.

But the region’s water predicament, as revealed in 2013, is much more serious than the shrinking of the heavily saline lake. The Middle East, it turns out, has lost a drastic amount of fresh water—a Dead Sea’s worth of that.

A team of scientists released satellite images of water stores in the north-central Middle East, taken between 2003 and 2009, showing that, during this period, there was approximately 143.6 km3 less fresh water in the region between Tigris and Euphrates, which includes Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran.

Now on the geeky front, things have been looking up, with scientists at Saudi Arabia’s King Abdulaziz’s City of Science and Technology and Texas A&M University in the US, publishing a new “mind-bogging” study that shows that communication can occur over vast distances without a physical medium—well, at least in principle.

The scientists challenged the long-held belief that for information to travel in empty space, physical particles have to be transferred — they use a complex assortment of beam splitters, mirrors and detectors to illustrate their point.

Now, on the health front, the region’s women have some work to do. Like exercise, and counting calories. A new study reveals that a dramatic increase in obesity among Arab women is threatening to become a health crisis with almost half of adult females overweight in some countries – double the rate of men.

But as some women are getting fatter, on this side at least, some are actually getting smarter. Like Iqbal El-Assad, who graduated medical school in May at the age of 20—possibly becoming the youngest Arab doctor ever.

Perhaps hers is the most inspiring story yet, out of the Middle East in 2013.

El Assad, a Weill Cornel Medical College graduate, a Palestinian by birth and Lebanese by nationality, considers herself luckier than many men and women from her generation; at least she didn’t grow up on a run-down refugee camp as many of her Palestinian brethren who were forced to leave their homes did.  That said, she says she was always close to the suffering of her people; her parents took her on multiple visits to the camps, and she saw first-hand how dire and desperate the situation can get.

The young achiever says she learnt algebra as a toddler, and she spends her free time solving mathematical problems. She made the decision to be a medical doctor at 12.

Now if this is not a beam of light in all this darkness, this editor doesn’t know what is.

NME’s weekly science dose (Oct 25 – Oct 31)

If there is one thing that the Middle East has an abundance of (besides oil), it would be conflicts. We start our weekly update with a visit to two of these conflict zones: Iraq and Syria.

A recent the survey on the number of people killed in Iraq, the first since 2006, has found that nearly half a million people have died due to the war, though not all deaths are a direct result of violence. Around 40% of those deaths were due to poor healthcare and sanitation, as well as infrastructure failures, which have increased since the US-led invasion of Iraq. Baghdad was the worst hit with violence, but even though the news tend to report most about explosive cars and suicide bombs, gunshots were responsible for 63% of the war-related violent deaths – more than three times those killed by bombs and explosives actually.

In neighbouring Syria, the ongoing civil war is creating a healthcare crisis across the country. Many doctors have fled in fear for their lives, leaving inexperienced doctors – and often veterinarians – to handle the influx of injured people due to the fighting. Experienced doctors outside the country are trying to ease these doctors into these daunting situations using modern technology to help them. Webcams and Skype are being set up in operation rooms to allow doctors thousands of kilometres away to guide local doctors on tricky operations. They are also offering video tutorials to teach them about other conditions they are likely to meet as they try to fill the healthcare void in their country.

On a non-conflict related threat (but still a very real one), researchers found that the increasing aridity of global drylands due to climate change may alter the nutrients cycle in the soil, leading to a decrease in carbon and nitrogen but an increase in inorganic phosphorous in the soil. This could negatively affect the people who depend on drylands for living, since it could lead to a decrease in the plant productivity. It will also decrease the capacity of these ecosystems to act as CO2 sinks and capture the greenhouse gas from the atmosphere.

Beyond the hood

The Kepler telescope has found an interesting new exoplanet, reported in yesterday’s Nature. It has a similar size to Earth, a similar density to Earth and probably has a similar core to Earth. But that’s where the similarities end. The exoplanet which is dubbed Kepler-78b, is a lava planet, with temperatures on the surface usually reaching 2000-2800°C. It’s year is only 8.5 hours long, orbiting its star about 100 times closer than our planet orbits the Sun.

In fact, it is so close to its star that scientists are confused it could form where it did. While it may not the habitable planet we are all waiting for, it’s an important step in the search for Earth-like planets, now that scientists can measure planets this small.

On a more earthly note, two new treatments for Hepatitis C are nearing approval, with scientists saying these can make a cure for the viral epidemic, for the first time, a real option. This is the first HCV treatment since interfeuron came into use, and and when taken with ribavirin, eliminates hepatitis C in around 80% of people. The main hurdle for these drugs would be the cost, since most of the people who carry the hepatitis C virus worldwide may not be able to afford the treatment. However, for countries such as Egypt where nearly one in every five carries the virus, the new treatment may be the most important break the healthcare system ever got to fight the spread of the epidemic.

NME’s weekly science dose (Oct 11 – Oct 18)

Cancer – this is our focus this week. In a special report (the first of several) at Nature Middle East, this week we are putting cancer in the Arab World under the spotlight. Our editorial will set you off on where the problem lies: we have a serious problem, but there’s little we actually know about it. Doctors are basically stumbling in the dark trying to fend off an unseen enemy. For example, some researchers suspect that Arab women may be getting a more aggressive form of breast cancer than their Western counterparts. But without proper registries in Arab states, we cannot really be sure. Genetic studies are already showing links between cancer and common diseases in the region, such as diabetes.

That’s why several states are taking a more research-focused look at the region now. Some countries, such as Egypt, have started setting up registries to monitor cases. The disease burden varies across the region too, as well as how the states deal with it. Gulf states have been more successful than most states in the region with monitoring, where nearly everyone gets screened. Other states, mostly those in Northern Africa, have poorly managed to the disease, which has led to fast growth that the healthcare systems are unable to deal with.

On a different note, researchers studying the fossils of ancient insects that lived hundreds of millions of years ago found that they show an unexpected level of diversity. In the past, these insects were overlooked due to their tiny sizes, which pit them as miniature versions of their current ancestors. They do offer a unique look at that period of time, however, showing there was already wide diversity of insects some 300 million years ago.

Beyond the hood

You might think that monkey communities are noisy, with all the monkeys calling out at the same time, but seems you would be mistaken. Unlike some humans, other primates may actually be used to taking turns in conversations. Researchers decided to study how marmosets communicate and found that they never repeat the same line. Instead, after one marmoset has finished its call, the other monkey waits roughly five seconds before replying. Like humans, they also reacted to the speed of the call. So when one marmoset increased the speed of its call, the other responded in the same manner.

Finally, for our last piece in the highlight this week we go out to the stars, where NASA has discovered the first “tilted” solar system. our solar system is flat, with all the planets orbiting around the Sun’s equator. But Kepler-56, a star that is roughly some 2,800 light years away is different. It’s two stars rotate around the star at a skewed angle of 45 degrees to the star’s equator. By measuring the velocity of Kepler-56, the researchers found that there was a huge body that pulled the star and shifted the angle of its equator. the planets keep its other in track by their gravitational forces, keeping their orbits co-planar.

 

NME’s weekly science dose (Oct 4 – Oct 10)

This week’s roundup is brought to you by guest blogger and writer Rayna Stamboliyska.

Have you heard of reptiles that had fins that allowed them to swim like fish? Such animals used to exist back in the Late Cretaceous period (that is, 98–66 million years ago). Mosasaurs were discovered back in 1764 and it became clear quite quickly that they were actually marine predators, but the debate still continues on how exactly they swam. A part of the scientific community argues they moved like snakes. Bringing robust analysis and proofs, a recent study demonstrates that Mosasaurs were actually skilled swimmers, achieving swim speed comparable to sharks.

On a different and more to-the-ground note, researchers have identified a better curative approach for acute leukaemia, the blood cancer that claims hundreds of lives every year. A comparison between more than 1,000 samples revealed that a drug treatment gives much better remission results and improves survival rates than total body irradiation.

Saudi Arabia has drawn quite some attention this last week. First because of a rare syndrome that has left physicians confused: why are some babies born with decreased brain size, visual impairment, and kidneys dysfunctions? A first hint was that such symptoms actually appear in closely related parents. Researchers studied the genetic makeup of patients affected by this syndrome, and identified a mutation in the ARNT2 gene, which produces a transcription factor that controls neural differentiation. The mutation resulted in an almost complete absence of the ARNT2 protein, which highlights its crucial role in brain and urinary tract development.

The Kingdom has also been in the spotlight as the annual pilgrimage to Mecca (Hajj) is to begin on 13 October and the coronavirus MERS continues to threaten the region. Counting the highest number of deaths caused by MERS infection, Saudi Arabia is currently on high alert as at least two million pilgrims are expected to flock to Mecca. Such beefed-up security does not, however, help dwell worries as the Kingdom’s Minister of Public Health continued to deflect questions about what his country is doing to determine the source and transmission patterns of the virus.

Last but not least, Saudi Arabia is aiming at becoming an important player in the international research scene. Dr. Mohammed ibn Ibrahim Al-Suwaiyel, president of the King Abdulaziz City for Science And Technology (KACST), spoke to NatureJobs about his vision of science in the Kingdom and the aspirations Saudi Arabia has when it boils down to developing public policies on science and research.

Saudi Arabia is not the only country in the region to have high hopes about achieving scientific excellence. Qatar has been quite successful attracting renowned institutions. Indeed, a stroke centre supported by a US$2 million grant and in partnership with the Imperial College is to open doors in the coming months in the small Gulf country.

Beyond the hood

This week is an exciting one as Nobel Prizes has been awarded for ground-breaking discoveries in science and medicine. The first one to be awarded was the Nobel Prize in medicine which went to Americans James Rothman and Randy Schekman and German-born researcher Thomas Suedhof for their work on vesicle transport or how key substances are transported within cells. The Nobel Prize in Physics went to Belgian Francois Englert and British Peter W. Higgs for their seminal work on the Higgs boson particle, regularly nicknamed the “God particle”. Lastly, the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2013 went to Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt and Arieh Warshel for bringing chemistry to the cyberspace. These researchers’ work indeed took chemistry out of the lab and brought it to the world of computing as they developed computerized methods for the study of complex molecules.

Keeping up this celebration mood is the International Octopus Day. Held on 8 October, the Day also kicks off International Cephalopod Awareness Days that span 9 to 11 October. Other than eight arms, octopuses have a number of specific features and have been around for 300 million years, which makes them ancestors even to impressive T. rex. Such incredible longevity pushes many to consider octopuses as resilient to external pressures. Yet scientists still ignore how many octopuses exist in the oceans while thousands of tons of the eight-armed are being caught every year. Some countries have taken measures to limit cephalopod fishing but the biggest octopus exporters continue unabated. The Awareness Days are thus aimed at drawing back attention to these incredible animals and the threats they face.

NME’s weekly science dose (Sep 27 – Oct 3)

Lebanon steals the limelight this week on our science roundup, and with good reason too. Archaeologists excavating a site in the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon looking for an archaeological mound got more than they bargained for when they hit an ancient Phonetician temple built somewhere between the 6th and 6th centuries BCE. The temple, however, had already been excavated and then well-hidden. Some four decades ago, Emir Maurice Chehab , Lebanon’s director of antiques, made the discovery but hid the temple when civil war erupted in the country to protect it.

For some reason, however, no one has ever found any documentation of the temple on his writings, even though Chehab was a prolific writer. All the artefacts inside had been removed and not found since then. The excavators are studying the well-conserved temple now for any clues to the exact time it was built, but without any trace of the artefacts that were hidden it is proving to be tricky.

On a different note, agricultural researchers from the American University in Lebanon are urging farmers to abandon their old habits of heavy ploughing of the soil and switch over to conservation agriculture by adopting a technique “no-tilling farming”.

They found that it yields the same – and sometimes better – results than ploughing the earth, and saves the extra costs associated with it. The only drawback is that conventional seeders do not work with unploughed soil. The farmers need to switch to zero till (ZT) seeders, which are specially designed machines that are able to deliver the seeds and fertilizers deep into the soil with minimum disturbance. These machines are rather expensive, however, and while Syria and Iraq have been able to convert their old seeders into ZT seeders at a fraction of the cost, these have performed poorly in Lebanon’s soil which is rich in clay.

Finally, we have two pieces highlighting interesting research on cancer this week. Researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar have found that breast cancer is on the rise among Arab women, and they are getting it on average 10 years earlier than women in the West. The researchers found that a more aggressive form of breast cancer was more widespread in the region compared to other areas in the world.

In the other paper we highlight, scientists from KAUST in Saudi Arabia and from France came up with a new computer model that can detect variations in histones, which are proteins that DNA wraps around, that can cause cancers. The new model can accurately identify these modifications which can silent the production of proteins that suppress tumour formation. This can help designing anticancer drugs that can undo these changes, protecting from one of the epigenetic sources of cancer.

Beyond the hood

Volcanoes have played an important part in the history of Mars, with around 70% of the Red Planet’s crust formed from their activity. But a series of craters that were assumed to be the result of meteorites crashing into the planet may actually be long extinct supervolcanoes that were so huge they could have buried the whole planet in ashes. The craters are found in the Arabia Terra region of northern Mars — an area with many deposits of layered rocks of unknown origins that has not previously been considered a volcanic terrain.

If the researchers are right, these supervolcanoes would have been active during the first billion years of Mars’ life only. They would have played a pivotal role however in the formation of environments in Mars – maybe even ones that could support life.

Finally, how many times have you found yourself wet and drenched, caught in an expected storm and a downpour? Apparently, insects never have that problem. They can detect changes in air pressure before a storm hits, and can change their mating behaviour accordingly. Researchers put pairs of cucurbit beetles in a pressure chamber and dropped air pressure, which mimics what happens before rain. If the beetles were already close to each other, they quickly mated, ignoring normal courtship rituals, as if trying to mate quickly before rainfall. When they were further apart, the male beetle did not follow the phermones of the female, possibly since it would be too dangerous to search for a mate when a storm is just around the corner – quite a handy trick too!