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Shi Zhengli wearing protective clothing in a biosafety lab.
Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli has presented evidence that her lab has not worked with close relatives of SARS-CoV-2.Credit: Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty
Wuhan lab virus sequences released
Shi Zhengli, the virologist at the centre of claims that the virus that causes COVID-19 escaped from a laboratory in Wuhan, has presented data on 56 whole genomes of bat coronaviruses, as well as some partial sequences, stored in her lab’s freezers. Her analysis, presented at a conference in Japan this week, reports that none of those viruses are the most recent ancestors of the virus SARS-CoV-2. “This just validates what she was saying: that she did not have anything extremely closely related, as we’ve seen in the years since,” says evolutionary biologist Jonathan Pekar.
Nature | 4 min read
World's oldest-known wild bird lays egg
A 74-year-old Laysan albatross with as many as 30 offspring is trying for another. ThePhoebastriaimmutabilis, dubbed ‘Wisdom’, nests on the Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, alongside nearly 70% of all Laysan albatrosses. She was first ringed as an adult in 1956 by legendary ornithologist Chandler Robbins and is now the world’s oldest known banded bird in the wild.
Associated Press | 2 min read
Features & opinion
Could ISS reentry pollute Earth?
It will be no mean feat to bring the International Space Station (ISS) — the biggest orbiting object made by people — back down to Earth in 2031. Last year, NASA announced that SpaceX will design a vehicle to ‘deorbit’ the whole station at once — probably into an area known as the South Pacific Oceanic Uninhabited Area. Even seven years in advance, activists and researchers are concerned that the potential air and water pollution associated with the station’s reentry are being ignored.
Space.com | 9 min read
Futures: Science fiction fromNature
A Human Support Intelligence learns to tell its own story in Exis memoria and a time-traveller cracks a mystery that’s haunted him for decades in Loose ends.
Nature | 6 min read & Nature | 6 min read
Podcast: Menstrual phase boosts chemo
Breast cancer cells in mice are more susceptible to chemotherapy at certain points in the menstrual cycle, when progesterone levels are low. The same effect was shown in people in a small retrospective study. “It may not be so much a direct impact of the hormones on the cancer cells,” cancer biologist Colinda Scheele tells the Nature Podcast. “It more impacts the tumour microenvironment, which then in turn impacts on the cancer cells.”
Nature Podcast | 30 min listen
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The behaviour of goats is pretty good at predicting large volcanic eruptions.”
Animal behaviour researcher Martin Wikelski is leading a team to track thousands of animals from space, in part to understand how they react to phenomena such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, their migrations and how disease spreads. (The Guardian | 5 min read)