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Vampire bats found to be drinking human blood

A hairy-legged vampire bat (Diphylla ecaudata), captured in Mexico.
© Gerry Carter
A hairy-legged vampire bat (Diphylla ecaudata), captured in Mexico.
Unlike mythical vampires, vampire bats do not prey on humans — or do they? Scientists have found the first evidence of vampire bats supping on human blood.

Diphylla ecaudata, also known as the hairy-legged vampire bat, inhabits forests in northeastern Brazil and is one of three species of vampire bats that feed only on blood. It was thought that birds were its sole prey, but dung analysis recently revealed that other types of two-legged animals — humans — were on the bat's bill of fare.

The bats' feeding preferences may have shifted because birds were hard to find, hinting that even highly specialized bats could have more flexibility in their diets than expected, the study authors wrote.

Bizarro Earth

Wet, green Sahara 5000 to 11,000 years ago

Multicorer device
© Peter deMenocal
The multicorer device being lowered into the ocean takes eight one-foot cores from the seafloor. Scientists analyze such cores for clues to the climate of the past several thousand years.
Rainfall patterns in the Sahara during the 6,000-year "Green Sahara" period have been pinpointed by analyzing marine sediments, according to new research.

What is now the Sahara Desert was the home to hunter-gatherers who made their living off the animals and plants that lived in the region's savannahs and wooded grasslands 5,000 to 11,000 years ago.

"It was 10 times as wet as today," said lead author Jessica Tierney of the University of Arizona. Annual rainfall in the Sahara now ranges from about 4 inches to less than 1 inch (100 to 35 mm).

Although other research had already identified the existence of the Green Sahara period, Tierney and her colleagues are the first to compile a continuous record of the region's rainfall going 25,000 years into the past.

The team's paper "Rainfall regimes of the Green Sahara," is scheduled for publication in the journal Science Advances on Jan. 18.

Archaeological evidence shows humans occupied much of the Sahara during the wet period, but left for about a thousand years around 8,000 years ago—the middle of the Green Sahara period.

Other investigators have suggested the Sahara became drier at the time people left, but the evidence was not conclusive, said Tierney, a UA associate professor of geosciences.

Her team's continuous rainfall record shows a thousand-year period about 8,000 years ago when the Sahara became drier. That drier period coincides with when people left, she said.

"It looks like this thousand-year dry period caused people to leave," Tierney said.

"What's interesting is the people who came back after the dry period were different—most raised cattle. That dry period separates two different cultures. Our record provides a climate context for this change in occupation and lifestyle in the western Sahara."

Satellite

'Much better than expected': Chinese 'hack-proof' quantum communication satellite put into service

Beijing Aerospace Control Center
© Ju Zhenhua / Xinhua / Global Look Press via ZUMA Press
Beijing Aerospace Control Center.
The world's first quantum communication satellite is now officially operational following months of in-orbit testing, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) announced, saying that performance of the device is "much better" than was initially expected.

The 600+kg Quantum Experiments at Space Scale (QUESS), nicknamed Micius after the ancient Chinese philosopher and scientist, was sent into orbit by China in August, in a bid to develop "hack-proof" communications in an age of ever-increasing cyber espionage.

Following the satellite's deployment into orbit in August for its two-year mission, Chinese scientists spent much time testing the satellite systems and its links back to Earth, CAS said.


Comment: China has been busy with quantum communications: China launches world's longest super-secure quantum communication line


Beaker

Controversial blog list of predatory publishers, journals disappears from the web

Jeffrey Beall
© Jeffrey Beall/Flickr
Jeffrey Beall
A popular blog that lists "potential, possible, or probable predatory" publishers and journals has disappeared, but it is not clear why.

The blog—started in 2010 by librarian Jeffrey Beall of the University of Colorado in Denver (CU Denver)—now states: "This service is no longer is available."

Beall declined to comment. But a CU Denver spokesperson told Science Insider that Beall made a "personal decision" to take down his list of low-quality journals that charge authors a fee to publish, often with little or no review or editing. The spokesperson says the blog was not hacked, nor was it taken down as a result of legal threats, and Beall will remain on the school's faculty. The spokesperson could not confirm whether the blog's removal is permanent.

"I'm surprised and concerned," says pseudonymous science blogger Neuroskeptic. "Beall's list is (was?) extremely valuable because predatory journals are a huge problem."

Some are circulating a cached version of Beall's list on Twitter. Others speculated on social media that the shutdown may have something to do with the transfer of its lists to the company Cabell's International in Beaumont, Texas. But the firm has publicly said it is in "no way involved" with the blog's closure. Nevertheless, Cabell's noted that it has been developing its own blacklist, working with Beall as a consultant, since 2015, and plans to launch it later this year.

Lacey Earle, vice president of business development at Cabell's International, tweeted that Beall "was forced to shut down blog due to threats & politics."

Comment: To read more on Jeffrey Beall and the corrupt publishers he exposed, see: Corruption in Science: Who's afraid of peer review?


R2-D2

Artificial intelligence headset composes tailor-made music

AI headphones
© Flickr/Jonathan Gross
An artificial intelligence headset that records brain waves, links them to the individual's moods, and then composes original music to uplift its user's feelings has been invented.

The device, developed by a team of Japanese scientists from Osaka University and Tokyo City University and a research institute in Belgium, was unveiled on January 16, Japanese newspaper Asahi reported.

To design the headset the scientists recorded the brain waves of volunteers while they listened to different music samples ranging from J-Pop to nursery rhymes. Based on this data, they create a personalized "emotional music model" for each individual. The AI first studied the relations between the music and the emotions of a particular person and then writes the ideal musical composition.

The story reminds of the famous quotation from the movie "I, Robot" and makes us think again in what unexpected way computers might become better than us.

Fish

Who needs men? Female shark reproduces without males after years alone

Shark
© Joel Sartore, National Geographic Photo Ark/Getty
Who needs men? A female shark separated from her long-term mate has developed the ability to have babies on her own.

Leonie the zebra shark (Stegostoma fasciatum) met her male partner at an aquarium in Townsville, Australia, in 1999. They had more than two dozen offspring together before he was moved to another tank in 2012.

From then on, Leonie did not have any male contact. But in early 2016, she had three baby sharks.

Intrigued, Christine Dudgeon at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and her colleagues began fishing for answers.

Comment: See also: Female termites found to clone themselves via asexual reproduction


Brain

Researchers find rare lymphocytes in meninges surrounding brain

Type 2 innate lymphocytes
© Sachin Gadani, UVA School of Medicine
Researchers found “type 2 innate lymphocytes” – already known to occur in the gut, lungs and skin – in membranes surrounding the brain, near where previously unknown vessels connect the brain and immune system.
The University of Virginia School of Medicine researchers have discovered a rare and powerful type of immune cell in the meninges around the brain, suggesting the cells may play a critical but previously unappreciated role in battling Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, meningitis and other neurological diseases, in addition to supporting our healthy mental functioning. By harnessing the cells' power, doctors may be able to develop new treatments for neurological diseases, traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injuries - even migraines.

Further, the researchers suspect the cells may be the missing link connecting the brain and the microbiota in our guts, a relationship already shown important in the development of Parkinson's disease.

Unexpected Presence

The cells, known as "type 2 innate lymphocytes," previously have been found in the gut, lungs and skin - the body's barriers to disease. Their discovery in the meninges, the membranes surrounding the brain, comes as a surprise.

They were found as UVA researcher Jonathan Kipnis explored the implications of his lab's game-changing discovery last year that the brain and the immune system are directly connected via vessels long thought not to exist.

Comment: See also: Missing link found between brain, immune system -- with major disease implications


HAL9000

High-tech military lasers could heat the Earth's atmosphere and create a giant surveillance lens in the sky

atmospheric lens
© BAE
One thing that can safely be said about the military-industrial complex is that they are never short of ideas. Often outlandish and costly ideas, but they do offer up a continuous stream of mind-melting possibilities. Case in point: heating the Earth's atmosphere with lasers to create a "giant magnifying glass" for enhanced surveillance.

One of the more recent military trends is the development (and imminent implementation) of lasers and electronic warfare. The concept has appeared in new proposals for drones and anti-drones that utilize the electromagnetic spectrum for "death ray" weapons like the Falcon Shield and the High Energy Laser system.

Now, scientists at BAE Systems, one of the largest defense contractors in the world, is looking to combine the use of lasers and advanced optics to literally manipulate the atmosphere into becoming both a surveillance device and a "deflector shield" to protect against the laser weapons of the future. The system is called Laser Developed Atmospheric Lens (LDAL).

Mars

Giant 'wave' traversed Venus in December 2015 - Largest-ever observed in solar system

Gravity Wave on Venus
© Planet-C
The Japanese probe Akatsuki has observed a massive gravity wave in the atmosphere of Venus. This is not the first time such a wave was observed on the Solar System's second planet, but it is the largest ever recorded, stretching just over 6,000 miles from end to end. Its features also suggest that the dynamics of Venus' atmosphere are more complex than previously thought.

An atmospheric gravity wave is a ripple in the density of a planet's atmosphere, according to the European Space Agency. (This isn't a gravitational wave, which is a ripple in space-time.) We have these waves in Earth's atmosphere, too; they interfere with weather and cause turbulence. Scientists have observed atmospheric gravity waves on Venus before: the European Space Agency's Venus Express spotted several before the end of its mission in 2014. Since its initial observations, Akatsuki has spotted several smaller structures with its infrared cameras in April and May 2016.

Akatsuki spotted this particular gravity wave, described in a paper published today in Nature Geoscience, when the probe arrived at the planet on December 7th, 2015. The spacecraft then lost sight of it on December 12th, 2015, because of a change in Akatsuki's orbit. When the probe returned to a position to observe the bow-shaped structure on January 15th, 2016, the bright wave had vanished.

Comment: They don't actually know that it's a gravity wave, contrary to the certitude in the above article. From the New York Times:
In a paper published Monday by the journal Nature Geoscience, scientists working on the mission describe their observations in detail and suggest it was a "gravity wave" — a disturbance in the winds caused by the underlying topography that propagated upward.

The bow-shape arc appeared above Aphrodite Terra, a highland region about the size of Africa that rises up to three miles from the surface. Scientists working on data from the European Space Agency's Venus Express reported finding a similar disturbance in the atmosphere.

The authors of the new paper said that numerical simulations provided preliminary support for the idea, but that they still could not explain how the gravity wave forms and propagates in the lower atmosphere. Or why the prominent smile was seen in December 2015 and not since.

In October 2014, Comet Siding-Spring passed so close to Mars that it caused that planet's atmosphere to glow.

Also, sometime between 2012 and 2014, Mars acquired 400+ fresh meteor craters.

Back in March/April 2012, 'clouds' were spotted on Mars for the first time (in what 'should have been' an 'impossibility').

We don't know how this all connects, but we suggest that these events (and more besides) all indicate significant changes taking place at a solar system-wide level.


Magnify

Military spy laser concept aims to transform Earth's atmosphere into a giant magnifying glass to snoop on enemies

directed energy laser
© BAE Systems
BAE Systems is working on a new type of directed energy laser and lens system, which could allow the military to spy on enemy activity, as well as form a 'deflector shield' to protect aircraft from enemy attacks
The idea of a laser that can turn Earth's atmosphere into a giant magnifying glass may sound like science fiction.

But engineers say that this could be a reality within the next 50 years.

BAE Systems has come up with a concept for a laser that creates structures in the Earth's atmosphere with similar properties to lenses.

This could help it spy on enemies as well as act as form a 'deflector shield' to protect aircraft from enemy attacks.