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  • Vitol and Breakwall Capital LP announce the formation of Valor Mining Credit Partners, L.P.

    Vitol, a leader in energy and commodities, and Breakwall Capital (“Breakwall”), a credit investment firm that services the energy industry, announced today the formation of Valor Mining Credit Partners, L.P. (“VMP” or the “Partnership”).

    VMP will seek to make structured credit investments in mining companies in the Americas. It will primarily target event-driven financing opportunities focused on debt refinancing, acquisition funding, and development capital, providing companies with flexible solutions to accelerate growth and drive shareholder value.

    VMP will be managed by Breakwall, which has an established track record of successfully investing credit capital across all aspects of energy and energy-adjacent value chains and of facilitating the growth and improvement of conventional, renewable, and “next generation” energy companies. This is the second energy credit focused partnership between Vitol and Breakwall. Valor Upstream Credit Partners, L.P. (“VCP”), which is focused on North American upstream oil and gas credit investments, has made over $1 billion in commitments since its launch in June 2023.

    Christopher Abbate, Jamie Brodsky, and Daniel Flannery, the Managing Partners of Breakwall, stated: “We are thrilled to partner with Vitol on this new investment strategy. The mining of natural resource deposits and raw materials is a critical, capital-intensive business, and a funding gap exists as the lending landscape is challenged by a lack of capital availability from banks and other direct lenders. We see a tremendous opportunity to bridge an unmet need in the marketplace by providing well-structured credit solutions, as we look to deploy innovative capital solutions across all facets of the energy value chain.”

    Ben Marshall, Head of the Americas, Vitol, added: “With the launch of VMP we look forward to expanding our investments in the energy and mining sectors, in partnership with Breakwall. Vitol has long been committed to investing in solutions across the energy spectrum, from traditional solutions to renewables, and we are keen to deploy our capital across a range of opportunities.”

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  • Emotional Response to Music May Enhance Memory Specificity

    Emotional Response to Music May Enhance Memory Specificity

    Music that evokes an emotional response may influence the specificity of memory recall, new research suggests.

    Investigators found that participants who were shown a series of images of everyday items before listening to music were more likely to remember only general details of the photos if they experienced a more emotional response to the music, while those who had a moderate emotional response were more likely to recall specific details.

    Stephanie L. Leal, PhD

    “Most people think that emotional things are better remembered, but they actually aren’t. It’s just parts of the memory that are affected, not the whole memory,” co-investigator Stephanie L. Leal, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Integrative Biology & Physiology at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), told Medscape Medical News. “One size doesn’t fit all when it comes to music and memory.”

    Interestingly, familiarity with a song was not associated with either general or detailed memory.

    “We played the same songs for everybody, but importantly, everyone responded differently. So I think personalization and taking individual preferences into account is going to be important for interventions,” said Leal, who is also director of the Neuroscience of Memory, Mood, and Aging Laboratory at UCLA.

    The findings were published online on July 23 in The Journal of Neuroscience.

    Memory Complexities

    As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, previous research has shown that both music appreciation and participations are tied to improvement in executive function and memory.

    For this study, researchers wanted to dive into the complexities of memory, including the possible connection between music and differing aspects of memory.

    “We tend to remember more of the gist of something emotional that happened and not as much of the details. So we wanted to see if music could boost certain parts of memory but not all of the parts,” she said.

    Many previous music studies have included older individuals, especially those with dementia. For this project, investigators chose instead to assess a younger population because they wanted to use their data as a “baseline” before moving on to further research in groups that are older and/or have impaired conditions such as depression or Alzheimer’s disease, Leal said.

    “We wanted to see what happens in healthy people first and then apply it to other populations,” she said.

    The study included 130 healthy undergraduate students between the ages of 18 and 35 years from Rice University, Houston.

    During the initial phase of memory formation — called the “encoding” phase — each participant was shown 128 images of common household objects and asked to choose whether the object should be considered as an indoor or outdoor item.

    Participants then donned headphones and listened to 10 minutes of classical music pieces, ambient soundscapes, or silence while they filled out questionnaires about their medical history.

    After the music ended, participants spent about 20 minutes filling out additional questionnaires, including a rating of the music or sounds they heard on the basis of emotional arousal, positive or negative reaction, or familiarity.

    They then viewed a set of 192 images that included some they hadn’t seen before (foils) and others that were identical (targets) or similar (lures) to the photos viewed earlier. Participants were asked to classify an image as old or new, allowing the researchers to measure target recognition — a measure of general memory — or lure discrimination — a measure of detailed memory.

    Big-Picture Recall

    General recall of the images was greater among those who experienced either low or high emotional response to music than among those who experienced moderate changes in emotional arousal (P for both < .001).

    More detailed memories were reported by those who reported only a moderate emotional response to music than those who reported a low or high emotional response (P for both < .001).

    There were no significant associations between memory of the images and song familiarity or whether a song was happy or sad.

    “Overall, music modulated both general and detailed memory, but individual differences in emotional response were crucial — participants listened to the same music yet responded differently,” the investigators wrote.

    “These findings suggest that music interventions may not uniformly enhance memory, emphasizing the need for personalized approaches in treating memory and mood impairments,” they added.

    The research suggests that a high emotional response may cloud details more than a moderate response.

    “Yes, the idea is that if something is very emotionally arousing, maybe we don’t want to remember the details associated with it. Maybe we just want to remember that general feeling or the bigger impact of that event, whether it’s positive or negative,” Leal said. “Maybe we just want to take the ‘big picture’ from that.”

    Early Days

    Commenting on the findings for Medscape Medical News, Daniel L. Bowling, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Stanford School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, noted that the study “follows the general trend” of research that breaks down large concepts, such as memory, into specific features.

    photo of  Daniel Bowling
    Daniel L. Bowling, PhD

    Bowling, who is also director of the Music and Brain Health Lab at Stanford, was not involved with the current study.

    “This showed different levels of responses to music that were differentially related to varying types of memory that you might want to target,” Bowling said.

    For example, if a clinician’s purpose is cognitive training, with more of an emphasis on details, “you might want more moderate levels of [emotional] arousal. But if you want more big-picture stuff, which could be critical when asking people about their life, then higher levels of arousal may be better,” he added.

    He noted that because the researchers used almost a “pretreatment,” with music used before the recall task, it would be interesting to know if using such a pretreatment before taking a test could possibly improve performance.

    There are interventions, some of which Bowling is involved with, that are looking at supporting arousal and attention during studying. 

    A controlled study comparing these things and looking systematically into effects on different types of memory would be helpful, “but we’re really at the beginning of figuring all of this stuff out,” he said.

    Although the current study has some limitations and needs to be replicated, “any kind of talk toward systematic effects of different musical parameters or emotional modeling starts to help us bring this into the scientific-medical realm. And that’s a real strength here,” Bowling concluded.

    The investigators reported having no relevant financial relationships. Bowling reported consulting for and owning stock in Spiritune, an app that develops playlists for different purposes, including improved workflow.

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  • What tyres will the teams and drivers have for the 2025 British Grand Prix?

    What tyres will the teams and drivers have for the 2025 British Grand Prix?

    Formula 1 returns to Silverstone this weekend for the British Grand Prix – and tyre suppliers Pirelli have confirmed the compounds that will be in play.

    This year Pirelli have gone one step softer in their range, bringing the C2 as the hard tyre, the C3 as the medium and the C4 as the soft.

    Drivers will get two sets of the hard tyre (marked white), three sets of the medium tyre (marked yellow), and eight sets of the soft tyre (marked red), as well as access to the green intermediate tyre and the blue full wets, should they be required.

    An extra set of softs is reserved for those who reach Q3 in Qualifying, while all drivers must use at least two different slick compounds during the race, providing the track is dry.

    On the decision to bring a range that is one step softer than at last year’s British Grand Prix, Pirelli’s weekend preview says: “The aim, shared with the FIA, F1 and the teams, is to create a wider range of strategy options for the race.

    “In 2024, when the C3 was the soft, it was used by just a few drivers in the closing stages of the race following the rain. This year, as the medium, it is bound to play an important role, probably in several phases of the race.

    “For those aiming for a one-stop race, the stints will have to be managed very carefully, while accepting a longer total race time. Also a consideration in this equation is the fact that the time taken for a tyre change is not very long (around 20.5 seconds) and while challenging, overtaking is possible.”

    In terms of the conditions that can be expected at Silverstone, the tyre manufacturer adds: “The circuit is in almost year-round use with four and two-wheeled racing categories and so it provides good grip right from Friday’s first free practice session, aided by the fact the surface is rated medium-low in terms of abrasiveness.

    “Despite taking place at the height of summer, the English weather can often be unpredictable with very changeable temperatures and wind and rain suddenly putting in an appearance, turning the tables during the race, as was the case last year.”

    For more information about Pirelli’s F1 tyres, visit pirelli.com.

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  • Deadly attack in Pakistan: Top officer among 5 killed as roadside bomb explodes; police blame Taliban

    Deadly attack in Pakistan: Top officer among 5 killed as roadside bomb explodes; police blame Taliban

    Five people, including a senior local administrator, were killed when a roadside bomb struck a government vehicle in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, injuring 11 others, according to local police, cited by news agency AP.The attack occurred in Bajaur, a tribal district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, long seen as a haven for militant groups. Among the dead was Assistant Commissioner Faisal Sultan, a senior government officer. District police chief Waqas Rafique said the wounded had been rushed to hospital, with several in critical condition.

    Terrorists Bleed Pakistan Army; Over A Dozen Soldiers Killed In Suicide Attack | Shehbaz Sharif

    Although no group has claimed responsibility, officials suspect the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), to be behind the attack. The group has been responsible for a string of recent assaults targeting security personnel and civil servants in the region. TTP is closely linked to the Afghan Taliban and has gained renewed momentum since the fall of Kabul in 2021.

    Poll

    Do you think community engagement can help reduce militant activities in tribal areas?

    This bombing follows a deadly suicide attack last Saturday in North Waziristan, another restive district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where 16 soldiers were killed when a militant rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into a military convoy. That attack was claimed by the Hafiz Gul Bahadur group, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban.Pakistan has seen a surge in militant violence along its western border, with over 290 people mostly security personnel killed in attacks this year alone.


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  • Pakistan records 14th polio case so far in 2025

    ISLAMABAD, July 2 (Xinhua) — As Pakistan continued to battle a crippling disease, the country recorded another polio case, increasing the overall tally to 14 so far in 2025, the Health Ministry said.

    The new case was reported from the northwest North Waziristan district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province as health officials confirmed the detection of type 1 wild poliovirus in a 19-month-old girl.

    So far, eight cases have been reported from the province, four from the southern Sindh province and one from the eastern Punjab province and the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region each.

    Special polio vaccination campaigns will soon kick off in 11 union councils of North Waziristan district, health officials said. Enditem

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  • Parasite-Specific Organelle Proteins as Antimalarial Targets

    Parasite-Specific Organelle Proteins as Antimalarial Targets


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    University of California, Riverside-led team has made an advance in the basic understanding of Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite responsible for the deadliest form of human malaria, that could make novel, highly targeted anti-malarial therapies possible.

    Led by Karine Le Roch, a professor of molecular, cell and systems biology, the team identified two key proteins inside the “apicoplast” — a unique, parasite-specific organelle found in P. falciparum — that control gene expression. These proteins belong to the RAP (RNA-binding domain Abundant in Apicomplexans) family of proteins. Far more numerous in parasites than in humans, RAP proteins play critical roles in regulating RNA molecules and translating them into proteins inside parasite organelles.

    Using advanced genetic tools, the team created knockdown strains of P. falciparum to selectively deactivate the two RAP proteins, PfRAP03 and PfRAP08. The team found the loss of either protein led to parasite death, confirming their essential roles.

    The researchers also discovered that PfRAP03 and PfRAP08 specifically bind to ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and transfer RNA (tRNA) molecules, respectively. These non-coding RNAs are fundamental to protein synthesis within the apicoplast.

    “This is the first time anyone has shown how RAP proteins in the apicoplast directly interact with rRNA and tRNA,” said Le Roch, who directs the UCR Center for Infectious Disease Vector Research. “We’ve now shown mechanistically how these proteins regulate translation in an organelle that’s completely foreign to the human body.”

    Le Roch explained that humans have six RAP proteins, but parasites like Plasmodium have more than 20.

    “This evolutionary expansion suggests that RAP proteins may perform parasite-specific functions, making them exciting drug targets,” she said.

    The study, published in Cell Reports, builds on the team’s previous research on RAP proteins in parasite mitochondria and represents the first detailed mechanistic analysis of their function in the apicoplast.

    Unlike any structure found in human cells, the apicoplast is unique to apicomplexan parasites — a large group of single-celled organisms that includes PlasmodiumToxoplasma gondii, and Babesia. This uniqueness makes it an ideal target for therapies that can eliminate the parasite without harming the human host.

    “While the focus of our paper is malaria, the implications extend to other apicomplexan diseases like toxoplasmosis — dangerous especially to pregnant women — and babesiosis, a growing tick-borne threat in the United States,” Le Roch said. “This work exposes vulnerabilities across an entire class of parasites, revealing the molecular machinery these parasites rely on. If we can take it apart, we can stop these diseases before they take hold.”

    Though no drugs currently target RAP proteins, Le Roch’s lab is working toward solving the 3D structure of these RNA-protein complexes, a crucial step toward structure-guided drug design.

    “Our research is a step toward future therapeutic strategies,” Le Roch said. “By targeting essential, parasite-specific proteins that have no human counterparts, we can develop drugs that are both effective and have minimal side effects.”

    Reference: Hollin T, Chahine Z, Abel S, et al. RAP proteins regulate apicoplast noncoding RNA processing in Plasmodium falciparum. Cell Rep. 2025;44(7):115928. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.115928

    This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source. Our press release publishing policy can be accessed here.

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  • JWST reveals how galaxies like the milky way built their stellar disk over time

    JWST reveals how galaxies like the milky way built their stellar disk over time

    image: ©alex-mit | iStock

    A new study using images from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has helped to answer a continuous question in astronomy.

    Astronomers have been able to identify both thin and thick stellar disks in galaxies, extending far beyond our local universe, with some dating back 10 billion years

    The research was led by an international team and recently published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. It analysed 111 edge-on galaxies captured by JWST. These galaxies were positioned in a way that allowed their vertical structure to be studied in detail, enabling scientists to see their internal layering like never before.

    Two stellar disks, two histories

    Many disk galaxies, including the Milky Way, are composed of two key components: a thick disk and a thin disk. The thick disk contains older, metal-poor stars, while the thin disk hosts younger, metal-rich stars. These distinct parts offer clues to the history of star formation and chemical enrichment in galaxies.

    Until the launch of JWST in 2021, only nearby galaxies could be studied in this level of detail. Older telescopes lacked the resolution to observe the thin edges of distant galaxies. But JWST’s sharp imaging capabilities have now made it possible to explore the vertical structure of galaxies billions of light-years away, essentially allowing astronomers to look back in time.

    Galactic evolution through times

    The analysis of the JWST images revealed a clear evolutionary pattern. In the earlier universe, galaxies appeared to have only a thick disk. As time went on, more galaxies developed a second, thinner disk nestled within the thick one. This sequence suggests a two-step formation process: galaxies initially formed a thick disk during their early, chaotic stages, and later developed a thin disk as they matured.

    The team found that the thin disks in galaxies similar in size to the Milky Way began forming about 8 billion years ago. This timeline matches with existing data on our galaxy, suggesting that the Milky Way’s formation history may be more typical than previously thought.

    Gas, turbulence, and the birth of stars

    To understand how these disks formed, the researchers also examined data from the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and other ground-based observatories. These observations focused on the motion of gas, the raw material from which stars are born.

    In the early universe, galaxies were gas-rich and highly turbulent. This chaotic environment fueled rapid star formation, resulting in the formation of thick stellar disks. Over time, the stars themselves helped stabilise the gas, calming the turbulence. This quieter environment allowed for the gradual buildup of a thin, more orderly disk within the thick one.

    Massive galaxies, with more gas and stronger gravitational pull, were able to form thin disks earlier than smaller galaxies. This suggests that galaxy mass plays a crucial role in shaping the development of disk structures.

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  • WHO-backed integrated testing model strengthens response to mpox, HIV, and syphilis

    WHO-backed integrated testing model strengthens response to mpox, HIV, and syphilis

    As mpox cases rise again in parts of Central Africa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo is pioneering an integrated public health response for HIV and syphilis testing within national mpox management.

    This integrated approach, led by the Ministry of Health with technical support from WHO, aims to provide comprehensive care, reduce missed opportunities for diagnosis and treatment and support community protection. Clinicians working at mpox testing sites have welcomed the initiative.

    Growing evidence shows people with undiagnosed HIV and those living with HIV who are not virally suppressed are at increased risk of severe mpox illness and death. Co-infection with syphilis has also been documented among individuals affected by mpox, especially among key populations. Despite the availability of affordable and effective treatment, syphilis continues to be widely underdiagnosed and untreated, particularly in low-resource settings. It is now the second leading cause of stillbirth globally. Integrating syphilis screening into the mpox response not only addresses a major gap in maternal and newborn health but also reinforces broader efforts in surveillance, diagnosis and care of sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

    “We now know people with HIV, particularly those with a CD4 count under 200 cells/mm³, are at risk for severe disease and death from mpox,” said Dr Meg Doherty, Director of WHO’s Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Programmes. “Ensuring early access to HIV and syphilis testing and treatment to all people with confirmed or suspected mpox, as well as timely access to mpox vaccines and antivirals, will save lives”.

    Implementation in Kinshasa

    In April 2025, the Democratic Republic of the Congo became the first country to implement WHO’s Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for integrating HIV and syphilis testing services as part of the mpox response. With support from WHO, health workers were trained and began rolling out dual HIV/syphilis rapid diagnostic tests to improve detection among those with suspected mpox at designated treatment centres. 

    The approach was first launched in 5 mpox treatment centres and now covers 11 health zones. Between April 2025 and 7 June 2025:

    • 697 individuals with suspected mpox were tested for HIV and syphilis;
    • 36 (5%) tested positive for HIV, including 27 confirmed mpox co-infections;
    • 6 individuals (1%) tested positive for syphilis and were treated on-site; and
    • weekly testing volumes increased steadily, reaching over 120 tests per week.

    National coordination and scale-up

    This approach is now going national. On 3 June 2025, the National HIV/AIDS Control Programme, together with WHO, the Ministry of Health, the Centre d’opérations d’urgence de santé publique (COUSP), and the Divisions provinciales de la santé (DPS) reviewed progress and set priorities for expanding this integrated approach. Together, they have also: 

    • drafted a therapeutic protocol for managing HIV/mpox co-infection;
    • strengthened capacity at the Kinoise Mpox Treatment Centre;
    • integrated mpox services into 6 HIV care and treatment centres;
    • strengthened inter-programme coordination to address delays and optimize limited resources; and
    • prepared for geographic expansion to provinces with high mpox transmission and/or high HIV prevalence.

    Addressing real world challenges 

    Despite strong progress, the rollout has faced logistical and operational challenges, including stock-outs, expiration of HIV test kits and delays in mpox PCR test results, which affect timely treatment. There has also been limited capacity to manage severe mpox/HIV co-infection, with only one advanced care site (MSF Kabinda in Kinshasa) in operation.

    Looking ahead

    As the country continues to confront multiple health threats, including mpox, HIV, and syphilis, its integrated testing model offers a blueprint for action in resource-limited settings. Lessons learned can be applied in other neighbouring countries as part of emergency and outbreak response, as well as for future preparedness and planning. 

    WHO and the Democratic Republic of the Congo are now planning to continue to provide joint supervision and mentoring visits, in order to strengthen data reporting and monitoring and improving stock management so as to avoid future commodity shortages. Both remain committed to protecting and saving lives by linking outbreak response with essential HIV and STI services, ensuring that no one is left behind.

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  • 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opens in Beijing-Xinhua

    2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opens in Beijing-Xinhua

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows a sign of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows the inaugural ceremony of the Global Digital Economy Cities Alliance during the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows an exhibition area of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    Jean Tirole, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Economics, speaks during the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China, July 2, 2025. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    Beate Trankmann, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) resident representative for China, speaks during the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China, July 2, 2025. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    A visitor tries an MR device at an exhibition area of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China, July 2, 2025. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows an exhibition area of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    This photo taken on July 2, 2025 shows an exhibition area of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

    Guests attend the opening ceremony of the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference in Beijing, capital of China, July 2, 2025. With the theme “Building a Digital-Friendly City”, the 2025 Global Digital Economy Conference opened here on Wednesday. (Xinhua/Zhang Chenlin)

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  • Fossils reveal how humans completely changed Caribbean reefs

    Fossils reveal how humans completely changed Caribbean reefs

    When thinking about fossils, we often picture dinosaurs. But reefs can also hold an ancient history. Tiny fish bones and shark scales also become fossils in these habitats, quietly preserving the story of ancient oceans.

    A striking study from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) has now revealed how humans disrupted Caribbean reefs in the past.


    Scientists analyzed fossilized coral reefs from Panama’s Bocas del Toro and the Dominican Republic. These reefs, exposed and well-preserved, date back 7,000 years.

    Humans changed reef fish communities

    The researchers compared the fossilized reefs with nearby living reefs to reveal how overfishing changed fish communities.

    In the ancient reef sediments, the team found thousands of fossilized otoliths (fish ear bones) and dermal denticles (shark scales).

    These fossils gave clues to species composition and size. The results show a massive shift in predator-prey dynamics, unlike anything seen before.

    One of the most alarming findings was a 75% drop in shark numbers. These top predators once played a key role in maintaining reef balance. As their numbers fell, populations of prey fish surged. They doubled in abundance and increased 17% in size.

    The predator release effect

    The study offers hard evidence for the “predator release effect.” Scientists had long predicted this outcome, but they lacked solid prehistoric data to prove it.

    Now, the fossils confirm what models once assumed: removing predators lets prey populations explode.

    Meanwhile, fish targeted by humans, like larger groupers and snappers, became 22% smaller. This shrinking trend matches what we observe today.

    Overfishing seems to have pushed these species toward early maturity and smaller size.

    Some fish stay the same

    Remains from tiny cryptobenthic reef fishes, which live in coral crevices, told a different story. Their size and abundance remained unchanged over thousands of years.

    Despite fishing and upheaval above them, these reef dwellers stayed stable. Their resilience surprised the researchers.

    “The stability of these fish shows remarkable resistance to external pressures,” noted the researchers. Even as top predators vanished and fishing intensified, these hidden species kept going, unchanged.

    To measure these shifts, the scientists examined 807 shark denticles and 5,724 otoliths. They also studied coral branches for bite marks left by damselfish.

    Fossil and modern samples showed that damselfish now bite more often – likely because they face fewer predators.

    Fish bones reveal big reef changes

    Otoliths grow in layers like tree rings. This allows scientists to estimate the age and size of fish at time of death. By comparing fossil otoliths with modern ones, researchers could track size changes across millennia.

    Dermal denticles, the scale-like structures on shark skin, helped identify shark presence. These tiny features tell a big story: as shark numbers decreased, populations of prey species expanded.

    Fish otoliths — the calcium carbonate structures found in fishes' inner ears — from human harvested fish, prey fish (those eaten by predatory fish) and reef-sheltered fish (also known as cryptobentic fish) found in 7000 year-old fossilized Caribbean reefs from Panama and the Dominican Republic. Credit: Erin Dillon
    Fish otoliths – the calcium carbonate structures found in fishes’ inner ears – from human harvested fish, prey fish (those eaten by predatory fish) and reef-sheltered fish (also known as cryptobentic fish) found in 7000 year-old fossilized Caribbean reefs from Panama and the Dominican Republic. Click image to enlarge. Credit: Erin Dillon

    Bite marks from damselfish also gave insights. These aggressive little fish defend territories and leave distinct marks. More bites today means more damselfish – again pointing to the effects of predator loss.

    Tracing reef fish history with fossils

    This fossil evidence gives scientists a rare and valuable baseline. It shows how Caribbean reef fish communities looked before human fishing began to alter their structure.

    Without such deep-time context, conservation efforts often rely on incomplete or recent data that miss the full picture of ecological change.

    Now, researchers and reef managers can clearly see which parts of the reef ecosystem shifted due to human influence – and which components, like tiny reef-sheltered fish, remained stable across millennia.

    “This study demonstrates the power of the fossil record for future conservation,” the researchers stated.

    Long-term impacts of human activity

    These 7,000-year-old fossils give us a clearer view of the long-term impacts of human activity on reef food webs, fish sizes, and predator-prey dynamics.

    They also help identify which reef species and relationships are most at risk from continued pressure.

    By looking back in time through the fossil record, scientists gain crucial insight to guide better decisions in reef conservation, fishing policies, and biodiversity management today.

    Discovering and studying prehistoric coral reefs on dry land.

    The research was a collaboration among top institutions including the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), the Marine Science Institute at the University of Texas, Austin, and the Center for Biodiversity Outcomes at Arizona State University.

    The study is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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