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Quirks and Quarks

Nov 16: An environmental historian looks at our symbiosis with trees and more

Bird flu raising pandemic concerns, echolocation in humans, elephants using tools, and bumblebee queens.

Bird flu, echolocation in humans, elephants using tools, and bumblebee queens.

An elephant in an enclosure holds a yellow hose in its trunk and uses it to pour water down its back. It's mouth is open and its head is titled back.
Mary the elephant uses a hose to give herself a shower at the Berlin Zoo. (Urban et al./Current Biology)

On this week's episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald:

Canadian bird flu case raises potential pandemic concerns

A teen in BCis critically ill with H5N1 bird flu, which has raised concerns about a potential pandemic, since it's not clear how they acquired the virus. Researchers are closely monitoring the virus as it spreads, primarily among animals for changes that could indicate it is spreading more easily in humans. Matthew Miller, the Canada Research Chair of Viral Pandemics from McMaster University, says the timing of this case is particularly concerning given the potential for influenza viruses to mix now that we're heading into flu season and wild birds are migrating.

Two images are side by side. On the left, we see a microscopic images of the influenza virus colourized in green and gold. On the right, we see a whole bunch of chickens in a chicken farm.
A British Columbian teen is the first person in Canada to have contracted the H5N1 virus (left) and diagnosed with avian flu. The virus' genetic sequence is most closely related to ongoing avian influenza outbreaks in poultry farms in Canada. (CDC/Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)
Sighted and blind people can learn to echolocate equally well

Echolocation using sound reflections to sense surroundings is best known among animals like bats and dolphins. But many blind people have also learned to echolocate, and a new study has shown that sighted people can learn to do it just as effectively as those without sight. Lore Thaler, a professor in psychology and director of the human echolocation lab at Durham University in England, has been training both sighted and non-sighted people to echolocate since 2011. She and her team published their most recent findings in the journal Cerebral Cortex.

blind person walking with cane
Some blind people can use the reflections of sounds in their environment sometimes the sounds they produce themselves to sense the space around them and the objects in it. A new study shows that sighted people can also do this just as well. (Shutterstock / Tracy Spohn)
An elephant's shower shows sophisticated tool use

An elephant at the Berlin Zoo has learned to manipulate hoses to wash herself, which is fascinating researchers, including Humboldt University PhD student Lena Kaufmann, who is investigating tool use in non-human animals. In a recent study, published in the journal Current Biology, Kaufmann and colleagues gave Mary the elephant different hoses to test her abilities, and she quickly either adapted to use the hoses to meet her end goal, or got frustrated when the hoses didn't work and bit the hose in anger. What's also interesting is a companion pachyderm that has apparently learned to sabotage these showers by kinking the hose.

Elephant uses a hose to shower - and another one uses it to prank her

10 days ago
Duration 1:29

Pesticides used on farms attract bumblebee queens, not to their benefit

Researchers were surprised and disturbed to discover that in tests, young queen bumblebees hibernated in pesticide-contaminated soils. During her PhD studies at the University of Guelph, Sabrina Rondeau found that bumblebee (Bombus impatiens) queens seemed to prefer soil samples containing pesticides, even when presented with a pesticide-free soil option. They're not clear on why the bees would prefer soils with pesticides, but are concerned with the impact this might have on their reproduction and survival. The study is published in the journal Science of the Total Environment.

A fuzzy bee sits on a purple flower.
A bee on a thistle. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
A writer speaks for the trees, and says we have much in common with them

There are about three trillion trees on our planet about four hundred for each of us. And we literally couldn't live without them. They take in millions of tons of carbon dioxide each year, and provide us with oxygen. Saving our forests is a big step toward saving our planet from the challenges from climate change. Daniel Lewis, an environmental historian at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California writes abouta dozen of the most exotic, important and interesting species, in his book The Twelve Trees: The Deep Roots of our Future.

Twelve Trees by Daniel Lewis
Twelve Trees: The Deep Roots of our Future by Daniel Lewis (Dana Barsuhn, Huntington)