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Human overexploitation contributed strongly to the loss of hundreds of bird species across Oceania, including nine giant, flightless birds called moa. The inevitability of anthropogenic moa extinctions in New Zealand has been fiercely debated. However, we can now rigorously evaluate their extinction drivers using spatially explicit demographic models capturing species-specific interactions between moa, natural climates and landscapes, and human colonists. By modelling the spatial abundance and extinction dynamics of six species of moa, validated against demographic and distributional inferences from the fossil record, we test whether their extinctions could have been avoided if human colonists moderated their hunting behaviours. We show that harvest rates of both moa birds (adults and subadults) and eggs are likely to have been low, varying between 4.0-6.0 % for birds and 2.5-12.0 % for eggs, annually. Our modelling, however, indicates that extinctions of moa could only have been avoided if Polynesian colonists maintained unrealistically expansive no-take zones (covering at least half of New Zealand's land area) and held their annual harvest rates to implausible levels (just 1 % of bird populations per annum). Although too late for moa, these insights provide valuable lessons and new computational approaches for conserving today's endangered megafauna.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.178471 | DOI Listing |
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
July 2025
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Republic of Panamá.
The Pacific coast of the Southern Central American Isthmus is a highly productive and biodiverse region with a rich human history. Although the interaction of the oceans, climate, biodiversity and early human systems has shaped the region's ecology, research has remained largely disconnected, arising independently from discrete disciplines. To unite this disparate research, we reviewed and synthesized the historical ecology of the Isthmus from the Last Glacial Maximum to the rise of industrial fishing in the 1950s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Oral microbiota are increasingly implicated in chronic inflammatory diseases beyond the mouth, including bronchiectasis, a condition marked by persistent airway inflammation, mucus accumulation, and limited therapeutic options. Among these microbes, commensal , typically considered health-associated in the upper airway, are emerging as opportunistic colonists of the inflamed lower airway. However, mechanisms supporting their persistence in this hostile environment, characterized by antibiotic pressure, nutrient limitation, and interspecies competition, remain poorly defined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
August 2025
University of Louisiana, Lafayette, LA, USA.
The role of rapid adaptation during species invasions has historically been minimized with the assumption that introductions consist of few colonists and limited genetic diversity. While overwhelming evidence suggests that rapid adaptation is more prevalent than originally assumed, the demographic and adaptive processes underlying successful invasions remain unresolved. Here we leverage a large whole-genome sequence dataset to investigate the relative roles of colonization history and adaptation during the worldwide invasion of the forage crop, Trifolium repens (Fabaceae).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
April 2025
Department of Medical Microbiology, College of Science, Knowledge University, Erbil, Iraq.
Although evolutionary medicine has produced several novel insights for explaining prevalent health issues, it has yet to sufficiently address possible adverse mental health effects of humans during long-term space missions While evolutionary applications to medicine have increased over the past 20 years, there is scope for the integration of evolutionary applications in the new branch of space medicine called bioastronautics, which analyses the effects on human bodies when in outer space. Evolutionary principles may explain what kinds of space environments increase mental health risks to astronauts, both in the short and long term; secondly, evolutionary principles may provide a more informed understanding of the evolutionary mismatch between terrestrial and space environments in which astronauts exist. This information may assist in developing frameworks for improving mental health of astronauts and future space colonists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Solut
August 2025
Virginia House of Burgesses.
One cannot publish this speech without acknowledging that the speaker, who condemned the British Crown for reducing Britain's white colonists to metaphorical slavery, held human beings of color in literal slavery. They had even more reason to make such a speech against him than he did against the Crown. That said, the speech itself summons its audience not to flinch or hesitate in the face of tyranny but to resist with courage.
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