Science – UW News /news Tue, 14 Apr 2026 17:52:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 A fossil of a new carnivoran species effectively doubles the evolutionary history of the weasel family /news/2026/04/13/a-fossil-of-a-new-carnivoran-species-effectively-doubles-the-evolutionary-history-of-the-weasel-family/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 00:06:37 +0000 /news/?p=91252
Researchers, including Chris Law, a UW principal research scientist in the biology department, have determined that a fossil that was discovered in Spain belongs to a new species dating back to around 6.5 million years ago. This new species was likely similar in size to the smallest living weasel species today, the least weasel, shown here. Photo:

Weasels are small carnivores with a long body and short legs. They also have a stout skull and sharp teeth. These creatures, along with ferrets and minks, make up the Mustelinae subfamily.

Until now, researchers believed that the oldest fossils from this family were from Poland and Germany, dating back to about 3.5 million years ago in the . But a fossil discovered in Teruel, Spain, has doubled that estimate, dating back to the late , around 6.5 million years ago.

The research team, including , a 天美影视传媒 principal research scientist in the biology department, has identified this fossil as belonging to a new species, named Galanthis baskini. The researchers estimate that this creature was about 5 ounces, comparable in size to the smallest living carnivoran today, the or Mustela nivalis. Much like the modern weasel, G. baskini was also likely a carnivore, based on its teeth.

The team in Palaeontology.

“This study begins to uncover the evolutionary history of modern weasels, specifically, why do they have unique small, elongated bodies compared to all other mammals?” said Law, who is also an affiliate curator at the UW Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture. “We had hypothesized that events during the mid- to late-Miocene 鈥 both the expansion of open habitats, such as grasslands, and the diversification of rodents 鈥 would have allowed weasels to evolve bodies that were small and flexible enough to chase rodent prey in small crevices underground. G. baskini is exciting because it confirms that weasels were present in the Late Miocene. And it’s pretty cool that G. baskini was the size of the least weasel 鈥 that means small weasels were already around more than 6 million years ago.”

To compare this fossil to other weasel family members, the researchers used a combination of classical comparative anatomy with advanced analytical techniques, such as micro-computed tomography, or micro-CT. Micro-CT allowed the team to three-dimensionally reconstruct the internal structure of teeth and jaws as well as observe anatomical features that were not externally visible.

“The new genus, Galanthis, is named after a figure from Greek mythology who was transformed into a weasel, symbolizing the fossil鈥檚 significance as representing the origin of the weasel family and the lineage leading to modern species,” said senior author , assistant professor of paleontology at Complutense University of Madrid.

A jaw fragment sits above a full lower jaw. Next to both is a European cent.
The researchers compared a jaw fragment from Galanthis baskini (top) to a complete mandible of the least weasel (bottom). A European cent is shown for scale. Photo: Alberto Valenciano

The fossils come from excavations carried out in the 1990s in the Teruel area of Arag贸n, Spain.

“This research is a clear example of the remarkable richness of Arag贸n鈥檚 fossil record of mammals, recognized worldwide,” said co-author , professor at the University of Zaragoza. “Our team has been contributing for decades to excavations and the study of fossil mammals.”

The study also revises the classification of another fossil of a similar age discovered in China. This fossil has now been assigned to the genus Zdanskyictis.

The next step, the researchers said, will be to find new fossils that help reconstruct in greater detail the early evolution of weasels and their relatives.

“Ideally, we will find an entire skeleton of a fossil weasel,” Law said. “That way we can actually quantify just how elongate these ancient weasels were and when body elongation actually evolved.”

A full list of co-authors and funding .

For more information, contact Law at cjlaw@uw.edu.

Adapted from a release from Complutense University of Madrid.

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At quantum testbed lab, researchers across the UW probe 鈥榮pooky鈥 mysteries of quantum phenomena /news/2026/04/13/qt3-quantum-computing-testbed-lab-dilution-fridge/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 23:09:13 +0000 /news/?p=91294 Three people stand next to a complex metal tube-shaped machine
Max Parsons (left), assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, works with undergraduate staff members Reynel Cariaga (center) and Jesus Garcia (right) at the QT3 lab. The device in the foreground is a scanning tunneling microscope that can image individual atoms within a material by scanning an extremely fine needle 鈥 just one atom thick at the tip 鈥 across the sample. Photo: Erhong Gao/天美影视传媒

Even on a campus like the 天美影视传媒鈥檚 鈥 home to particle accelerators, wave tanks and countless other bespoke pieces of equipment 鈥 the machinery in the stands out. Take the dilution fridge, a large, white, cylindrical device that can cool a small chamber to one hundredth of a kelvin above absolute zero 鈥 the coldest possible temperature in the universe.听

鈥淭his is the coldest fridge money can buy,鈥 said , a UW assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and the former director of the lab, which goes by the nickname QT3. 鈥淲hen it鈥檚 running, the chamber inside this device is about 100 times colder than outer space. At that temperature, it鈥檚 much easier to study and manipulate a material鈥檚 quantum properties.鈥

The lab also houses a photon qubit tabletop lab: a nondescript set of boxes, lasers and lenses that can demonstrate the 鈥渟pooky鈥 鈥 a term scientists actually use 鈥 phenomenon known as quantum entanglement, where two particles appear to communicate instantaneously with each other despite being physically apart.

Or there鈥檚 the lab鈥檚 latest acquisition, the scanning tunneling microscope, which can image individual atoms within a solid material, allowing researchers to study the structure of materials at the smallest scales.

An interdisciplinary group of researchers has been marshalling resources and expertise to create QT3 for three years, and now, the lab is opening its doors as a unique one-stop shop resource for quantum researchers and educators at the UW.

鈥淭he idea of this lab is to improve access to quantum hardware,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚t’s rather hard to acquire equipment like this. And there are a lot of researchers that may have good ideas that they want to test, but don鈥檛 have the resources yet for their own equipment. So we鈥檙e inviting researchers, initially from across campus, but also from other universities and from industry, to come in and test their ideas. This can be a hub for quantum experts to share their ideas and collaborate.鈥

The lab also boasts hardware that can demonstrate known quantum principles and techniques, making it useful for students in quantum fields. In addition to the entanglement device, Parsons鈥 students developed a machine that can suspend charged particles 鈥 in this case, tiny grains of pollen 鈥 in midair using electric fields. Researchers use the same technique to trap single atoms and manipulate their quantum properties, making the lab鈥檚 ion-trapping machine good practice for more complex work.

Two tiny dots hover back and forth in a tube
The QT3 facility鈥檚 ion trapping lab gives students a chance to practice techniques used in quantum computing research. Here, students have suspended two tiny grains of pollen 鈥 the red dots hovering back and forth 鈥 in midair using electric fields. Photo: Robert Thomas

Some students even work at the lab through an undergraduate staffing program, and have helped install instrumentation, write code to power equipment and build parts for custom microscopes. The program provides yet another avenue for students to get hands-on experience with unusual machinery and techniques.听

鈥淨uantum mechanics is inherently counterintuitive, and that makes it a powerful teaching tool,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚n the QT3 lab, students will encounter systems where their everyday intuition breaks down, and they must rely on careful reasoning and experimentation instead. They learn how to debug when results don鈥檛 match expectations, how to test simple cases and how to build understanding about hardware step by step.鈥

The cosmically cold dilution fridge remains something of a centerpiece, even as the lab fills up with specialized equipment. The extreme environment within the device strips heat, light and other stray energy away from materials, allowing researchers to observe the peculiar quantum properties that remain. One such property is superposition, or the ability of a particle like an electron to maintain multiple mutually exclusive properties at the same time. Scientists use superposition to create a powerful, tiny piece of technology: a quantum bit, or qubit.听

鈥淭raditional computers use bits, which can only be one or zero. A qubit, on the other hand, we can make one plus zero,鈥 Parsons said. 鈥淚t’s both at the same time, and only when we measure it do we find out which one it is. We can use this unusual property to build a new class of computers that excel at tasks like communications and encryption.鈥

QT3 is part of a collaborative effort to solidify UW as a leader in quantum research and applications. Most of the lab hardware was funded by a congressional earmark championed by Senator Maria Cantwell鈥檚 office. Departmental funding from across the College of Engineering and the College of Arts and Sciences helped rehab the lab space. The National Science Foundation provided seed funding for the instructional lab equipment.

a repeating hexagonal pattern of small golden blobs
An image captured by the QT3 lab鈥檚 scanning tunneling microscope reveals a lattice of individual atoms in a sample of silicon. Photo: Rajiv Giridharagopal

The UW has also spent the past decade investing heavily in faculty with quantum expertise.

鈥淰ery few places have expertise across the full quantum stack, from materials up to algorithms,鈥 said , a UW professor of physics and founder of QT3. 鈥淭he UW has quantum faculty in electrical and mechanical engineering, physics, computer science, materials science and chemistry. Our faculty work on superconducting qubits, spin defects, photons, trapped ions, neutral atoms and topological qubits. Our advantage is the breadth of our investment.鈥

The lab is now available to researchers and students across the UW, and private companies are encouraged to reach out about partnering. Parsons has already used the lab to teach a graduate-level class in electrical and computer engineering for students who included employees from Boeing, Microsoft and quantum computing company IonQ. The lab is hiring for a full-time manager to maintain the equipment and help users make the most of the facility.听

鈥淗ere in academia, we can improve the building blocks for applied technologies like quantum computing, and then transfer those learnings to industry for further scaling,鈥 Parsons said.

For more information, contact Parsons at mfpars@uw.edu.

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Parasitic tapeworm 鈥 a risk to domestic dogs and humans 鈥 found in Washington coyotes /news/2026/04/06/parasitic-tapeworm-a-risk-to-domestic-dogs-and-humans-found-in-washington-coyotes/ Mon, 06 Apr 2026 15:05:55 +0000 /news/?p=91188
A new 天美影视传媒 study detected a parasitic tapeworm that can infect domestic dogs and humans in the intestines of one-third of coyotes surveyed in Washington. This coyote (not part of the study) was spotted in Seattle鈥檚 Discovery Park last fall. Photo: Samantha Kreling

New evidence suggests that a disease-causing tapeworm that has been spreading across the United States and Canada has arrived in the Pacific Northwest. The tapeworm, called Echinococcus multilocularis, lives as a parasite in coyotes, foxes and other canid species and can cause severe disease if passed to domestic dogs or humans.

E. multilocularis has long been recognized as a public health threat in parts of the Northern hemisphere, including Europe and Asia, but was considered extremely rare in North America until approximately 15 years ago, when cases in humans and dogs began cropping up in Canada and the midwestern U.S., indicating that the parasite was spreading.

This study, led by 天美影视传媒 researchers, is the first to detect E. multilocularis in a wild host on the west coast of the contiguous U.S. Researchers surveyed 100 coyotes in the Puget Sound region, and found E. multilocularis in 37 of them. The results were .

鈥淭his parasite is concerning because it has been spreading across North America. There have been numerous cases of dogs getting sick, and a handful of people have also picked up the tapeworm,” said lead author , who recently graduated from the UW with a doctorate in environmental and forest science. “The fact that we found it here in one-third of our coyotes was surprising, because it wasn鈥檛 found anywhere in the Pacific Northwest until earlier this year.鈥

When E. multilocularis infects an animal or person, it causes cancer-like cysts to form in the liver and sometimes other organs. If untreated, infection can be fatal.

The typical life cycle of E. multilocularis, showing canid, rodent and human hosts. Photo: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases/Hentati et al.

However, not all carriers become sick. E. multilocularis has a complex life cycle that involves multiple hosts. Canids, which host adult parasites, can support thousands of worms in their intestines without becoming sick. The worms shed eggs that are then passed in their feces.

Rodents 鈥 another host 鈥 become infected by eating food contaminated with coyote feces. Once consumed, the parasite eggs migrate to the liver and form cysts, ultimately weakening or killing the rodents. The parasite鈥檚 life cycle begins again when coyotes prey upon infected rodents.

Humans and domestic dogs are categorized as accidental hosts. Humans may pick up the parasite by consuming tapeworm eggs 鈥 in food that is contaminated with coyote or dog feces, for example 鈥 and can develop a disease called , characterized by slow-growing metastatic cysts. Symptoms may not appear for five to 15 years after exposure, which complicates diagnosis and treatment.

Alveolar echinococcosis is considered the third most important food-borne illness globally, and one of the top 20 neglected tropical diseases by the World Health Organization. Many countries have developed robust protocols for tracking it.

Domestic dogs that are exposed to E. multilocularis may or may not become sick, depending on where the parasite is in its life cycle at exposure. It is more common for dogs to carry the parasite and shed eggs without developing disease, but dogs that are exposed to parasite eggs may develop the same cancer-like cysts as other infected animals.

鈥淭o minimize the risk of dogs getting infected with E. multilocularis, owners should not let them prey on rodents or scavenge their carcasses,鈥 said co-author , an associate professor and director of the Parasitology Diagnostic Laboratory at the Texas A&M University College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

Owners can also give dogs preventative medication for worms and ticks and ensure routine veterinary care, which should include diagnostic tests for parasites, Verocai said.

This map depicts expansion of E. multilocularis across the U.S. and Canada over multiple decades. Photo: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases/Hentati et al.

Although the researchers found E. multilocularis in more than one-third of local coyotes tested, there is little evidence of the infection spreading to other hosts. One study in Washington, Oregon and Idaho since 2023, five of which were in Washington. Few human cases have been reported in the U.S., and none on the West Coast.

鈥淭he reason that it’s so high in coyotes is because they are regularly eating raw rodents, and that is the primary way for them to get infected. Most domestic dogs are not eating the raw livers of wild rodents,鈥 Hentati said.

Before the uptick in the 2010s, there were several reports of E. multilocularis on remote islands in northwestern Alaska. Those cases were caused by a parasite with different origins than the current outbreak. Genetic analysis pins the earlier cases to a tundra variant while these recent cases are driven by a more infectious variant with European origins. The coyotes in this study carried the newer variant, now thought to be the predominant variant in the U.S. and Canada.

Neither Canada nor the U.S. require dogs to undergo deworming upon arrival, which may explain the spread. Previous studies also proposed that E. multilocularis could have come over in red foxes imported for hunting 100 years ago, but no one knows for sure.

The main takeaway is that Echinococcus multilocularis is here, it’s pretty prevalent in the local coyote population and people should be aware of potential risks,鈥 Hentati said.

Co-authors include , lab manager at UW; , UW doctoral graduate in environmental and forest science; , a UW professor of environmental and forest science; , a UW associate professor of aquatic and fishery science; of the College of William and Mary; Erika Miller of Sound Data Management; of DePaul University; and of UC Berkeley. This study was funded by The National Science Foundation and the 天美影视传媒 Hall Conservation Genetics Fund.

For more information, contact Hentati at yhentati26@gmail.com.

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Early data from Rubin Observatory reveals over 11,000 new asteroids /news/2026/04/02/rubin-observatory-11000-new-asteroids/ Thu, 02 Apr 2026 17:21:26 +0000 /news/?p=91126 A diagram of the solar system against a black starfield. Countless teal and dark blue dots are arranged in a ring around the sun.
A rendering of the inner solar system shows the asteroids discovered by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in light teal. Known asteroids are dark blue. Photo: NSF鈥揇OE Vera C. Rubin Observatory/NOIRLab/SLAC/AURA/R. Proctor. Star map: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio. Gaia DR2: ESA/Gaia/DPAC. Image Processing: M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)

Using preliminary data from the Simonyi Survey Telescope at the NSF鈥揇OE Vera C. Rubin Observatory, scientists have discovered over 11,000 new asteroids in our solar system. The findings were confirmed by the International Astronomical Union鈥檚 Minor Planet Center (), and include hundreds of distant worlds beyond Neptune as well as 33 previously unknown near-Earth objects.

The discoveries 鈥 Rubin Observatory鈥檚 largest asteroid haul yet 鈥 were made using data from the observatory鈥檚 early optimization surveys and processed with software developed at the 天美影视传媒鈥檚 . The new findings are a powerful preview of the observatory鈥檚 transformative impact on solar system science.

鈥淭his first large submission after is just the tip of the iceberg and shows that the observatory is ready,鈥 said , a UW professor of astronomy and leader of Rubin鈥檚 solar system team, which is located at the UW. 鈥淲hat used to take years or decades to discover, Rubin will unearth in months. We are beginning to deliver on Rubin鈥檚 promise to fundamentally reshape our inventory of the solar system and open the door to discoveries we haven鈥檛 yet imagined.鈥

The submission to MPC comprises approximately 1 million observations, taken over the span of a month and a half, of over 11,000 new asteroids and more than 80,000 already known asteroids, including some that had previously been observed but were later 鈥渓ost鈥 because their orbits were too uncertain to predict their future locations. The new batch adds to roughly 1,500 asteroids previously discovered by Rubin as part of its First Look project.

The newly discovered near-Earth objects, or NEOs, are small asteroids and comets whose closest approach to the sun is less than 1.3 times the distance between Earth and the sun. None of the new NEOs pose a threat to Earth. Once in full operation, Rubin is expected to reveal an additional nearly 90,000 new NEOs, some of which may be potentially hazardous. By enabling early detection and continuous monitoring of these objects, Rubin will be a powerful tool for planetary defense.

The dataset also contains roughly 380 trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) 鈥 icy bodies orbiting beyond Neptune. Two of the newly discovered TNOs 鈥 provisionally named and 鈥 have been found to be on extremely large and elongated orbits. At their most distant points, these two objects reach roughly 1,000 times farther away from the sun than the Earth is, placing them among the 30 most distant known asteroids.

A total of 12,700 asteroids discovered with Rubin are shown here during the 1.6 years of observation. The discoveries come in three bursts: 73 were discovered during the first early test observations using Rubin鈥檚 Commissioning Camera in late 2024; 1,514 were discovered during First Look observations in April and May 2025; and the recent 11,000 asteroids were discovered in Rubin鈥檚 early optimization surveys in Summer 2025.

The discoveries were enabled by Rubin Observatory鈥檚 unique combination of a large mirror, the world鈥檚 most powerful astronomical digital camera, and highly sophisticated, software-driven pipelines developed at the UW that can detect faint, fast-moving objects against a crowded sky. These capabilities will allow Rubin to build the most detailed census of our solar system ever, and the resulting discoveries will help scientists work out the story of the solar system鈥檚 history.

鈥淩ubin鈥檚 unique observing cadence required a whole new software architecture for asteroid discovery,鈥 said , a UW research scientist of astronomy who, together with UW astronomy graduate student , built the software that detected them. 鈥淲e built it, and it works. It seems pretty clear this observatory will revolutionize our knowledge of the asteroid belt.鈥

Particularly striking is the rapid growth of the TNO population. The 380 candidates discovered by Rubin in less than two months adds to the 5,000 discovered over the past three decades. As with less distant asteroids, finding the TNOs depended critically on developing new sophisticated algorithms.

A diagram of the solar system against a black starfield. Small teal dots are sprinkled throughout.
A rendering of the wider solar system shows the roughly 380 trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs), in light teal, discovered using observations taken during Rubin鈥檚 early optimization surveys in Summer 2025. TNOs are icy bodies that orbit beyond Neptune. Photo: NSF鈥揇OE Vera C. Rubin Observatory/NOIRLab/SLAC/AURA/R. Proctor. Star map: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio. Gaia DR2: ESA/Gaia/DPAC. Image Processing: M. Zamani (NSF NOIRLab)

鈥淪earching for a TNO is like searching for a needle in a field of haystacks 鈥 out of millions of flickering sources in the sky, teaching a computer to sift through billions of combinations and identify those that are likely to be distant worlds in our solar system required novel algorithmic approaches,鈥 said , a senior astrophysicist at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and former director of the Minor Planet Center, who spearheaded the work on the TNO discovery pipeline.

鈥淥bjects like these offer a tantalizing probe of the solar system鈥檚 outermost reaches, from telling us how the planets moved early on in the solar system鈥檚 history, to whether a hitherto undiscovered ninth large planet may still be out there,鈥 said , a research scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who, with Holman, developed the algorithms to detect distant solar system objects with Rubin data.

The verification of this large group of discoveries enables the entire global community to access the data, refine orbits and begin analysis immediately. And these 11,000-some asteroids are just the start. Once the decade-long Legacy Survey of Space and Time () begins later this year, scientists expect Rubin to discover this many asteroids every two to three nights during the early years of the survey. This will ultimately triple the number of known asteroids and increase the number of known TNOs by nearly an order of magnitude.

Rubin Observatory is jointly operated by NSF NOIRLab and SLAC.

For more information, contact Juri膰 at mjuric@uw.edu.听

This story was adapted from a .

Operations of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory are funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Office of Science.

Other team members include , a former DiRAC postdoctoral fellow at the UW, now at the Institute for Astronomy, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences of the University of S茫o Paulo; , a UW research software engineer and B612 Asteroid Institute team member who earned his doctorate in astronomy at the UW; , a former UW postdoctoral researcher in astronomy, now at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champagne; and at Princeton University.

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March research highlights: Nautilus habitat, eco-friendly tennis courts, more /news/2026/03/27/march-research-highlights-nautilus-habitat-eco-friendly-tennis-courts-more/ Fri, 27 Mar 2026 15:42:25 +0000 /news/?p=91111 The habits and habitats of ‘living fossils’ Nautilus and Allonautilus

Peter Ward, UW professor of both biology and Earth and space sciences, has spent his career studying the “living fossils” of Nautilus and Allonautilus species. Shown here is Ward holding Nautilus pompilius (white) and Allonautilus scrobiculatus (yellow) while scuba diving off the coast of Manus Island in 2015. Photo: Peter Ward/天美影视传媒

Nautilus and Allonautilus cephalopods and their extinct ancestors have been drifting through of the ocean for more than 500 million years. Researchers have spent the last 40 years trying to understand how these mysterious “living fossils” thrive in areas with limited nutrients. published in Scientific Reports, a UW-led team documented new habits and habitats for current Nautilus and Allonautilus species. These creatures appear to live in deeper water than their extinct cousins did, and the younger ones live twice as deep as the fully mature adults. Nautilus and Allonautilus species scavenge their food and never stop moving. While a few species migrate hundreds of meters down at dawn and then back up at dusk every day, the team found that most species aren’t quite as intrepid. The researchers also describe a new population of Allonautilus in waters off the island , one of several populations thriving due to hunting restrictions inspired in part by research efforts from this team.

For more information, contact senior author , UW professor of both biology and Earth and space sciences, at argo@uw.edu.

Other UW co-authors are , and . A full list of co-authors and funding is included


Green clay tennis courts become carbon negative after 10 years

The United States has around a quarter of a million tennis courts, 40,000 of which are helping mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Green clay tennis courts, an alternative to traditional hard courts and the red clay courts popular in Europe, are constructed with a type of rock that reacts with carbon dioxide and water to sequester carbon as a stable dissolved salt. In , UW researchers show that in the U.S., green clay courts remove 25,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere each year and 80% of green clay courts make up for construction emissions within 10 years. Moving forward, the researchers hope to experiment with other materials that also remove carbon dioxide without compromising performance for players.

For more information contact lead author , UW assistant professor of oceanography, at fjpavia@uw.edu.

A full list of co-authors and funding is available .


Temperature dynamics, not just extremes, impact heat tolerance in mussels

Mussels from Washington state waters. This common coastal species often consumed by humans can also be used to study the impacts of environmental variability. Photo: Andrew Dale

Intertidal mussels, forming bumpy layers on shoreline rocks, withstand significant temperature swings as the tide ebbs and flows. These creatures live in one of the most thermally variable environments on Earth, but a new study shows that the rate, timing and duration of heating and cooling impact their metabolic rate, a proxy for overall health. At the UW鈥檚 , researchers exposed mussels to temperature regimens with equal highs and lows but different patterns of change. Even when the average temperature for a set period was the same, the mussels鈥 response was distinct. These results, , show that predicting how marine organisms respond to climate change means considering how temperature changes over time, not just how warm it gets.

For more information, contact lead author , assistant professor of biology at the College of the Holy Cross and a mentor for the UW Friday Harbor Laboratories , at mnishizaki@holycross.edu.

The other UW co-author is . A full list of co-authors and funding is available .


When algae stop growing, bacteria start swarming

Tiny geometric algae, called , produce nearly a quarter of the world鈥檚 organic matter by photosynthesis. In the microscopic marine universe, diatoms coexist with both harmful and helpful bacteria. A new study, , describes how a recently identified species of marine bacteria targets diatoms based on growth phase and nutrient availability. Growing diatoms can resist bacterial attacks, but when growth ceases, the bacteria modulate their gene expression patterns to become aggressive 鈥 first swimming and releasing compounds that damage the diatom and then clustering around them to feed. Bacteria can also overcome the diatom鈥檚 defenses in nutrient-rich environments. These findings highlight the dynamic relationship between bacteria and algae in the lab. Moving forward, researchers will explore what, if anything, changes in a more complex environment.

For more information, contact lead author , UW postdoctoral fellow in oceanography, at dawiener5@gmail.com.

Other UW co-authors are and . A full list of co-authors and funding is available .

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Assessment of nature in the US now available for public comment /news/2026/03/26/assessment-of-nature-in-the-us-now-available-for-public-comment/ Thu, 26 Mar 2026 15:46:16 +0000 /news/?p=91091
The Nature Record, a sweeping assessment of the state of nature in the U.S., was published in draft form for public comment and review in March. The report explores the impact of human development, including biodiversity loss, as well as the resilience of nature. Photo: 天美影视传媒

Humans look to nature for sustenance and nourishment 鈥 food, water, energy, transportation, culture, tradition, adventure and so on. With the population of the United States now exceeding 340 million, humans are demanding more of the natural world than ever before. To understand the consequences, researchers set an ambitious goal: a wellness check on nature.

Nature is a sweeping category that includes everything from massive mountains to tiny urban gardens. Its health can鈥檛 be summarized in just a few words. In fact, it took researchers 868 pages, split into 13 chapters, to report the condition of lands, waters, wildlife, and biodiversity and describe links to human health and safety, culture, economy, and national security.

鈥淲e built this to be useful, and the only way it becomes truly useful is if people engage with it 鈥 question it, add to it, and help shape what comes next.鈥

Phil LevinDirector, The Nature Record

The new report, , is available for public comment and scientific review until May 30.

鈥淭he Nature Record tells an honest story,鈥澨 said , director of The Nature Record and interim executive director of the UW鈥檚 EarthLab. 鈥淚t does not shy away from the scale of change we are seeing in nature 鈥 but it also shows that our choices matter, and that there are real, tangible ways to restore and sustain the systems we depend on.鈥

The preliminary findings are a mixed bag. On one hand, the report details a long history of resource extraction and habitat loss that will be difficult to reverse. At the same time, it shows how restoration and Indigenous stewardship approaches can help turn things around.

For example, the report states that approximately 50% of U.S. land is used for agriculture. This means farmers and ranchers must be involved in efforts to protect ecosystems and preserve biodiversity, Levin said.

The U.S. has millions of miles of rivers, which are fragmented by tens of thousands of large dams and as many as 2 million small dams and culverts.

Damming rivers disrupts fish migration and degrades ecosystem health. Ecological concerns have spurred hundreds of dam removals in the past decade, after which rivers quickly rebounded. In some places, fish have returned to spawning grounds that were inaccessible for generations.

鈥淭he assessment documents many examples where ecosystems and communities are recovering together,鈥 Levin said. 鈥淭hese success stories show that change is possible when science, policy and communities align.鈥

The project began in 2022 following an executive order calling for an assessment of nature. Levin, selected to lead the effort, assembled a national team of experts to work on what was then called the National Nature Assessment.

Then, in January 2025, just weeks before the team was due to deliver a first draft, the effort came to a screeching halt when the federal government canceled the effort.

Undeterred, the team, including more than 170 scientists and experts, decided to continue working independently. They published a draft of The Nature Record in March.

鈥淲e built this to be useful,鈥 Levin said. 鈥淎nd the only way it becomes truly useful is if people engage with it 鈥 question it, add to it, and help shape what comes next.鈥

He encourages people of all backgrounds to engage with the report and share feedback on the clarity, relevance and thoroughness, including representation of diverse perspectives.

In addition to documenting how humans are changing nature, the record provides important insights into how nature influences quality of life. Access to nature varies widely across the U.S. 鈥 the benefits of nature are not equally shared, nor is the burden of going without. Social and historical factors often determine whether communities enjoy greenspaces and clean drinking water, among other essentials.

鈥淭his assessment reflects not just the state of nature, but the relationships people have with it,鈥 said deputy director , principal research scientist at the UW鈥檚 EarthLab. 鈥淲e want people to see themselves in this work 鈥 whether through their communities, their values, or the places they care about 鈥 and to help shape how it evolves.鈥

For more information, contact Levin at pslevin@uw.edu.

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Climate change may complicate avalanche risk across the Pacific Northwest /news/2026/03/23/climate-change-avalanche-risk/ Mon, 23 Mar 2026 17:07:56 +0000 /news/?p=91066 Snowy mountains with two signs in foreground. A yellow sign reads 鈥淎VALANCHE AREA鈥; a red and white sign reads 鈥淣O STOPPING OR STANDING NEXT 戮 MILE鈥.
Warming temperatures throughout the Pacific Northwest are likely to complicate avalanche forecasting in the coming years, according to a new UW study. Cooler inland regions such as Idaho and Western Montana may see increased risk from avalanches caused by layers of icy crusts that form when rain falls on snow and freezes. Photo: iStock

This winter was ; as a result, many snowy, alpine areas have seen bouts of winter rainfall where there would ordinarily only be snow. These unusual weather patterns have contributed to an abysmal ski season, but they can also set the stage for dangerous avalanches. At temperatures close to freezing, precipitation can fall as rain but freeze when it hits the snow, forming an icy crust. Snow that accumulates on top of that crust is unstable and prone to abrupt slides, causing an avalanche that can close down a major highway in moments, endanger backcountry skiers and more.

Avalanche experts in Western Washington know how to manage the risks associated with rain-on-snow events, but many of their counterparts in colder regions like Eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana are less familiar with these dynamics. New research from the 天美影视传媒 shows that as winters in these regions warm, their snowpacks may come to resemble those of maritime areas, with more rain-on-snow events, icy crusts and complex avalanche forecasting.听

The findings in ARC Geophysical Research.

鈥淭his winter鈥檚 warmth is a harbinger,鈥 said lead author , a UW graduate student of civil and environmental engineering. 鈥淲e know that temperatures will keep rising, and our work is a red flag for cooler regions of the greater Pacific Northwest, such as Idaho and Western Montana, that aren鈥檛 used to dealing with ice crusts and their resulting avalanche problems.鈥

A cross-section of a snow drift with a shovel in the foreground. A horizontal line is visible running through the drift about halfway up.
A cross-section of snowpack reveals a thin, darker ice layer running horizontally through the snow. Ice layers like this one form when rain falls onto snow and freezes, forming a crust. This creates a boundary within the snowpack that can cause snow to slip and trigger an avalanche. Photo: Clinton Alden

The study is part of a larger effort to understand the structure of snow as it accumulates, which has implications for weather and avalanche forecasting, wildlife dynamics and more.听

鈥淪now scientists are pretty good at measuring snow depth and volume,鈥 said senior author , a UW professor of civil and environmental engineering. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also pretty good at figuring out how much water you get if all that snow melts. But our models aren鈥檛 as good at representing snow structure, such as layers of different densities and crystal types that increase avalanche risks. And we really want to know how the structure of snow changes as the climate changes. That鈥檚 a tricky question that no one has tackled, particularly for rain-on-snow conditions.鈥

To dig into that question, the researchers studied how warming influences ice layer formation in seasonal snowpacks. First, they collected temperature and precipitation data captured by 53 monitoring stations across the Pacific Northwest for the past 25 years. They used a computer model to identify days when ice layers likely formed at each location. They then checked the model against real-world measurements at one of the locations 鈥 a station at Snoqualmie Pass 鈥 and found that the model matched the measurements with 74% accuracy.

Finally, they used the same model to simulate those same 25 winters at 2 C and 4 C warmer than they were, and looked for changes to the number of ice crusts across the region. , the Pacific Northwest is expected to warm by 2 C to 5 C by 2050 as compared to pre-2000 temperatures.

A map of the Pacific Northwest with red and blue triangles scattered across it. The red triangles point down and the blue triangles point up.
This map shows the change in number of 鈥渋ce crust days鈥 across the 53 monitoring sites during the simulated winter with 2 C warming. The Cascade sites overwhelmingly saw fewer theoretical ice crust days, whereas cooler inland regions overwhelmingly saw more. Photo: Alden et. al/ARC Geophysical Research

The results were split regionally by the Cascade mountains. In colder, inland parts of the Pacific Northwest 鈥 places like Eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana 鈥 higher temperatures created more rain-on-snow days and more avalanche-prone ice layers. Locations in the warmer, maritime Cascades saw the opposite effect: Higher temperatures created slush instead of ice, potentially reducing the avalanche risk associated with ice crusts.听

The predicted snowpack changes may also impact wildlife behavior. Some foraging mammals, such as reindeer, dig down into the snow in search of food and may have a hard time breaking through an icy crust. Conversely, firm ice might provide a better running surface for animals fleeing predators. Specific regional effects will require additional study.

What鈥檚 clear now is that those who work or play in avalanche terrain in broad swaths of the Pacific Northwest 鈥 and even beyond 鈥 may need to adjust to a new set of risk factors.

鈥淚 get calls from avalanche forecasters in places like Colorado, Wyoming and Montana. They tell me they鈥檙e getting rain at 10,000 feet, which they鈥檝e never seen before,鈥 said co-author , the avalanche forecaster supervisor at Washington State Department of Transportation at Snoqualmie Pass, who earned his master鈥檚 in transportation and highway engineering at the UW. 鈥淭hey want to know when to expect the onset of avalanches and when to expect the return to stability.鈥澨

Alden hopes that this research will encourage further collaboration within the avalanche forecasting community.

鈥淚鈥檇 love to see this shared with avalanche forecasters widely, both as a call to action and as a way to help them understand what their snowpack might look like in the future,鈥 Alden said.

, the director of geospatial science at Audubon Alaska and former doctoral student of environmental and forest sciences at the UW, is a co-author.

This research was funded by the NASA Interdisciplinary Research in Earth Science program and the UW Program on Climate Change鈥檚 Graubard Fellowship.

For more information, contact Alden at cdalden@uw.edu.

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Earthquake scientists reveal how overplowing weakens soil at experimental farm /news/2026/03/19/earthquake-scientists-reveal-how-overplowing-weakens-soil-at-experimental-farm/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 18:01:09 +0000 /news/?p=90968 a tent set up on a farming field.
three people put something down in a dirt field
a woman holds a baby in the rain in a field
a man hunches over a computer under a tent in a field

Plowing, or tilling, is an age-old agricultural practice that readies the soil for planting by turning over the top layer to expose fresh earth. The method 鈥 intended to improve water and nutrient circulation 鈥 remains popular today, but concerns about soil degradation have prompted some to return to regenerative methods that disturb the soil less.

In a new study, a team led by 天美影视传媒 researchers examined the impact of tilling on soil moisture and water retention using methods originally designed for monitoring earthquakes. Researchers placed fiber optic cables alongside fields at an experimental farm in the United Kingdom and recorded ground motion from plots receiving different amounts of tillage and compaction from tractor tires pulling farm equipment.

The study, , shows that tilling and compaction disrupt intricate capillary networks within the soil that give it a natural sponge-like quality.

鈥淭his study offers a clear explanation for why the process of tillage, one of humanity鈥檚 oldest agricultural activities, changes the structure of soil in ways that affect how it soaks up water,鈥 said co-author , a UW professor of Earth and space sciences.

The link between tilling and soil degradation has been established for quite some time, but the rationale is less robust.

鈥淚t’s counterintuitive,鈥 Montgomery said.

Tilling is supposed to create holes for water to reach the roots of plants, but it breaks these small channels in the soil instead, causing rain to pool on the surface and form a muddy crust. Over time, this can increase erosion and flood risk. The researchers observed this phenomenon in detail using seismological methods.

For the past decade or so, physical scientists have been exploring ways to harness the fiber optic cable network to make remote observations. They use a technique called distributed acoustic sensing, or DAS, that records ground motion based on cable strain. Because the technology is so sensitive, it can also capture the speed at which sound waves pass through a substance, which is called seismic velocity.

When soil gets wet, seismic velocity changes. Sound moves slower through mud than dry dirt.

鈥淲e wanted to find out whether seismic tools could be used to understand how soil 鈥 under different treatment regimens 鈥斕齱ould respond to environmental variability,鈥 said senior author , a UW associate professor of Earth and space sciences.

An experimental farm near Newport in the United Kingdom, affiliated with Harper Adams University, turned out to be an ideal testing ground for their experiment.

The farm is split into rows that have received consistent cultivation for more than two decades.

There are no-till rows, rows tilled 10 centimeters deep and rows tilled 25 centimeters. Compaction is a byproduct of tilling caused by tractors. Different levels of compaction were tested by modulating tractor tire pressure.

鈥淲e took advantage of a natural experiment that had already been done, but just not yet measured,鈥 Montgomery said.

The researchers lined their experimental plots with a fiber optic cable. They collected continuous ground motion data for 40 hours and combined it with weather data over the same period, which featured light to moderate rainfall and mild temperatures.

鈥淲e observed the natural vibration of the ground and found that it is really sensitive to environmental factors, including precipitation,鈥 said , lead author and former UW postdoctoral researcher of Earth and space sciences, now at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

They determined how each cultivation strategy impacted the soil鈥檚 response to rainfall by comparing trends in seismic velocity across study sites. Shi developed various models to process the data and help the researchers understand seismic velocity in terms of soil moisture.

The method is straightforward, inexpensive and offers far better spatial and temporal resolution than previous monitoring tools.

The researchers believe it could help farmers understand how to manage their land, provide real time flooding alerts, improve earth systems models by refining estimates of atmospheric water content and better inform seismic hazard maps with data on liquefaction risk.

Additional co-authors include , a UW professor of atmospheric and climate science, , a UW research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering, from the University of California Santa Cruz, formerly at Purdue University, , , and from Harper Adams University, from the University of Exeter听

This study was funded by The Pan Family Fund, the Murdock Charitable Trust, the UW College of the Environment Seed Fund, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, and a National Environmental Research Council cross-disciplinary research capability grant.听

For more information, contact Denolle at mdenolle@uw.edu.听

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Video: How do plants know when to bloom? Spring flowering explained by UW chronobiologist /news/2026/03/17/how-do-plants-know-when-to-bloom-spring-flowering-explained-by-uw-chronobiologist/ Tue, 17 Mar 2026 22:49:56 +0000 /news/?p=90958

Plants, like people, have a circadian clock and they sense seasonal changes to light and temperature. Plants that bloom in the spring use the longer days and warmer temperatures as seasonal cues that it鈥檚 time to bloom.

There are a few ways that plants can sense these cues. Plants with leaves are more sensitive to sunlight and use increasing daylight as a cue to bloom. Plants where the flower comes straight out of the ground or a branch, such as cherry trees and tulips, use temperature as their main cue to bloom.

, UW professor of biology, studies the genes that plants use to monitor seasonal changes. In this video, he shares more details about how plants sense seasonal changes.

For more information, contact Imaizumi at takato@uw.edu.

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A built-in warning system: How mosquitoes detect a common compound in plant-based mosquito repellent /news/2026/03/16/warning-system-how-mosquitoes-detect-a-common-compound-in-plant-based-mosquito-repellent/ Mon, 16 Mar 2026 16:21:48 +0000 /news/?p=90933
New research by an international team, including researchers at the 天美影视传媒, reveals that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes (such as the one pictured above) use a specific sensory receptor to detect and avoid borneol, an organic compound found in several aromatic plants, including camphor trees, rosemary and other aromatic herbs. Photo: James Gathany/CDC

Mosquito-borne diseases, such as dengue, malaria and Zika, . Mosquitoes are increasingly becoming resistant to current insecticides, leading to a pressing need for new methods to prevent mosquito bites 鈥 and the potential transmission of disease.

New research by an international team, including researchers at the 天美影视传媒, provides insight into how an organic compound common in plant-based mosquito repellents affects mosquitoes. The study, , reveals that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes use a specific sensory receptor to detect and avoid borneol (pronounced “bor-nee-ohl”), an organic compound found in several aromatic plants, including camphor trees, rosemary and other aromatic herbs.

“We were surprised by how sensitive the mosquitoes were to this repellent,” said co-author , a UW professor of biology. “By identifying the odorant receptor, we can now develop and test repellents that are even more effective than borneol, in that they last longer and are more repellent.”

The researchers discovered that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, which are the major carrier of dengue and yellow fever viruses, have a single odor receptor, called OR49, that is highly tuned to detect borneol.

When a mosquito encounters this compound, OR49 activates a specific nerve cell in a mosquito’s maxillary palp, one of its primary organs for detecting odors and locating human hosts. That signal then travels from the nerve cell to a distinct region of the mosquito鈥檚 brain, triggering avoidance behavior.

To test how critical this receptor is, the researchers disabled the Or49 gene. Without OR49, the repellent signal essentially disappeared. The mosquitoes鈥 neurons no longer responded to borneol and the insects were far less likely to avoid it.

Researchers at the UW were instrumental in collecting neural recordings from the mosquito brains to identify how the mosquito olfactory system processes borneol and other similar compounds and repellents.

“Because the repellency through the OR49 receptor is so strong, we might be able to identify other volatile odors that activate the same receptor to ‘push’ mosquitoes away from people,鈥 said co-senior author , associate professor of biology at Baylor University. 鈥淭he new compounds might be easier and cheaper to produce, or safer and more acceptable to the human nose than existing repellent formulations.”

This research bridges basic neuroscience and public health, offering fresh insight into how tiny sensory signals can have life-saving implications. That is central to the premise of the team’s larger research goal: understanding the genetic basis for how Aedes aegypti is attracted to sources of nectar. The team hopes to create a new generation of mosquito attractants that can be used in traps for enhancing mosquito surveillance and control.

鈥淭he knowledge gained in these studies will inform similar studies in mosquitoes that transmit malaria, plus other biting insects that continue to exert negative impacts on human flourishing on a global scale,鈥 Pitts said.

, a UW postdoctoral scholar in the biology department, is a co-author on this paper. A full list of co-authors is included . This research was funded by the Israel Science Foundation; the National Institutes of Health; the National Science Foundation; the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; the Science and Technology Development Plan Project of Jilin Province, China; and the Ministry of Science & Technology, Israel.

For more information, contact Riffell at jriffell@uw.edu.

Adapted from .

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