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Ancient mammoth teeth, pictured here, contained DNA from 310 different species of bacteria.Credit: Love Dalén
An analysis of the bones and teeth of ancient mammoths (Mammuthus) has revealed some of the microorganisms that called the animals home over one million years ago. Researchers examined ancient microbial DNA from samples of teeth, skulls and skin from 483 mammoths and identified six microbial groups that lived in the mammoths’ mouths and bodies, some of which might have caused disease. DNA from one such group, a family of bacteria called Erysipelothrix, is the oldest host-associated microbial DNA yet discovered at more than one million years old.
A man with partial paralysis was able to operate a robotic arm when he used a non-invasive brain device with a built-in artificial intelligence (AI) ‘co-pilot’. The AI-enabled brain–computer interface (BCI) also allowed the man to perform screen-based tasks four times better than when he used the device on its own. AI co-pilots can make non-invasive BCIs more accurate by shouldering some of the heavy-lifting of decoding brain signals, says AI researcher and study co-author Jonathan Kao.
Reference: Nature Machine Intelligence paper
So far, Oceania is the only region in the world to evade H5N1 avian influenza. But researchers say the virus’s arrival is only a matter of time. Particularly vulnerable are New Zealand’s critically endangered bird species, five of which number fewer than 500 individuals. A recent effort using a H5N3 vaccine showed that vaccination can induce a six-month-long immunity in four of these species, which has researchers rushing to develop a strategy to vaccinate greater numbers of animals. But time is ticking; travelling seabirds will begin to arrive in the spring, each with the potential to unleash bird flu on the untouched continent.
A study of the last migratory herd of buffalo (Bison bison), which roams the iconic Yellowstone National Park in the United States, reveals how they supercharge the nitrogen cycle, benefiting other plant eaters. As policymakers consider whether to reintroduce bison more widely, the research suggests that land can support more grazing than allowed by current recommendations, as long as the animals are allowed to range in a large-enough area. “Buffalo helped shape this continent,” says bison-management specialist Troy Heinert. “The more buffalo that are out there, the ecosystems are improved for all other animals as well.”
The New York Times | 5 min read
Image of the week

The Wolbito do Brasil factory is breeding Wolbachia-modified mosquitoes, and the eggs will be shipped to Brazilian cities to help reduce disease rates.Credit: Wolbito do Brasil
This is the world’s largest ‘mosquito factory’. Located in Brazil, it is breeding mosquitoes that carry a harmless Wolbachia bacterium, which prevents them from widely transmitting diseases such as dengue and Zika. By releasing the mozzies into cities, the factory hopes to, in particular, curb the spread of dengue, which has been surging in the country. But breeding insects-to-order is not easy: the factory has learnt how to create their perfect conditions, wean the mozzies onto a diet of animal blood, and toughen them up against the insecticides they might encounter in the outside world. (Nature | 7 min read & 5 min video) (Wolbito do Brasil)
Features & opinion
Since the term ‘ultra-processed foods’ (UPFs) was coined in 2009, dozens of studies have linked the group with a range of health problems. Such research has been influential — the governments of countries such as Brazil, France and Israel all advise people to avoid UPFs — and the evidence does suggest that diets high in UPFs are associated with conditions from obesity to depression. But some scientists are sceptical — they argue that the term is too loose to be useful for research or to guide people’s decisions about how to eat.
Agriculture is on the brink of a revolution: grain crops that produce seeds asexually. The technology — trials of which could start sprouting as early as next month — exploits a quirk of nature called apomixis, in which plants create seeds that produce clones of the parent. Apomixis could slash the time needed to create new varieties of crops, and give smallholder farmers access to affordable high-yielding sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata). But before self-cloning crops can be commercialized, the technology must run the regulatory gauntlet.
Today I’m queuing up some happy songs for my next road trip — to avoid getting carsick. In a small study, scientists used what sounds like a deeply upsetting version of the Forza Horizon 5 driving game to induce motion sickness and then monitored volunteers as they listened to different types of tunes. ‘Joyful’ and ‘soft’ music alleviated carsickness the most, while ‘sad’ music was worse than just taking a quiet break.
No news on what the actual songs were, but my inner-ear-challenged family has been using this technique on our outings for years, and I can confirm that the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack is just what the doctor ordered. Or just take the train!
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Flora Graham, senior editor, Nature Briefing
With contributions by Jacob Smith
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