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The Big Impact Small Creatures Can Make

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Plus: humid heat can kill us much faster than we thought; a window on the mind, through the ear; and

Plus: humid heat can kill us much faster than we thought; a window on the mind, through the ear; and more. [View in browser](| [Join Nautilus]( Did a friend forward this? [Subscribe here.]( This Tuesday, your FREE member newsletter includes the week’s top science news, plus one full story, below, from The Porthole, our section for short sharp looks at science. Enjoy! DISCOVERIES The Top Science News This Week [Can AI Help Make College Admissions More Holistic?]( Researchers trained language models to spot certain “personal qualities” in student applicants. [Science Advances→]( [How Lasers Can Turn Moon Dust Into Lunar Roads]( Focused sunlight could melt lunar dust into slabs of rock, leaving the moon a safer place to traverse. [Scientific Reports→]( [New Evidence That Our Universe Is a Simulation]( What the second law of “infodynamics” tells us about the nature of reality. [AIP Advances→]( [Ancient French Tree Rings Hint at the Largest Solar Storm on Record]( Radiocarbon dating suggests the event occurred around 14,000 years ago. [Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A→]( [Coin Tosses Are Slightly Biased]( Coins are more likely to land showing the same face that was face up before the flip. [arXiv→]( [Scrolls That Survived Vesuvius Divulge Their First Word]( Digitally “unrolling” ancient documents could reveal information about the past that was thought to be forever lost. [The New York Times→]( [This “Missing Law” of Nature Explains Evolution Beyond Life]( Everything that evolves involves these three ingredients. [PNAS→]( [Mars’ Beautiful Rift Valleys]( Take a flight over Noctis Labyrinthus—a vast Martian system of deep and steep valleys that stretches out for roughly the length of Italy. [ESA→]( Experience the endless possibilities and deep human connections that science offers [JOIN TODAY]( From The Porthole—short sharp looks at science ZOOLOGY [The Big Impact Small Creatures Can Make]( Bats, rats, fish, bivalves, and butterflies are just as important for ecosystems as apex predators. BY LINA ZELDOVICH Many have heard the famous story of the Yellowstone wolves. Hunted nearly to extinction in the early 20th century, the wolves were no longer numerous enough to keep populations of deer and elk in check. The deer and elk multiplied, sending major ripples through the park’s ecosystems. They overgrazed the land and trees, including iconic willow and aspen. Without leafy branches in which to build their nests, the songbirds left. The beavers disappeared, too, because they no longer had materials to build their dams, which eroded streams. This made it tough for willows to grow on stream banks, and without the shade the trees once provided, water temperatures became too hot for cold-water fish. When wolves were [reintroduced to the Yellowstone Park]( in 1995, scientists watched in awe how all those changes rolled back over a few years, rebalancing the ecosystem. Animals that play such a key role in shaping their environments are called “keystone species.” Apex predators—including [wolves](, lions, and jaguars—are among the most identifiable of keystone species, because, like the wolves, they can cause a cascade of effects down the food chain. (The concept of keystone species originated with research into the ecosystem impacts of [starfish](, an apex predator in some intertidal environments, conducted by ecologist Robert Treat Paine in the 1960s.) And yet, many smaller, quieter species who are not at the top of the food chain also play leading roles in keeping an ecosystem running on track and should attract more attention from conservationists, says Ishana Shukla, a community ecologist at the University of Victoria and Raincoast Conservation, in Canada. Eliminate all rodents, and your crops may grow poorly. She and her team recently conducted a systematic analysis of the scientific literature to compile a list of species identified as keystones. After reviewing 1,800 papers, they composed a list of 230 such animals, publishing [their findings]( in Ecology and Evolution. In addition to large carnivores, the list included quite a few surprising creatures, including squirrels, bats, rats, fish, and even butterflies. Shukla’s team broke down the 230 species list into five clusters, based on combinations of their biological classification, body size, position in the food chain, and role in the ecosystem. The first cluster was composed of the large-bodied “vertebrate consumers”—wolves, pumas, sharks, and the like. The second tier contained a more diverse list of invertebrates, primarily herbivores, a few steps down in the food chain, including the freshwater pearl mussels Margaritifera margaritifera, and the cabbage butterfly Diadema africanum. The pearl mussels filter water, so they act as ecosystem sanitizers—without this filtration, many species in their ecosystem would not survive. For their part, when cabbage butterflies deposit their eggs into plants, it changes how the plants grow and what other animals will eat them. Some animals don’t like grazing on vegetation covered in eggs, for example. “After that, only specialist herbivores would consume the butterfly-influenced plants,” Shukla says. [Like the story? Join Nautilus today]( Fish constitute about two-thirds of cluster three. These fish eat plants or other fish, helping to prevent population overgrowth in any one species and to maintain a diversity of other species in their respective ecosystems. Cluster four contained the types of creatures that scientists called “modifiers” because their activity modifies an ecosystem not through consumption of neighboring species but through other means. For example, the western honey bee, Apis mellifera, can increase the genetic diversity of many plants by spreading their pollen. Rodents dominate cluster five, which is also composed of modifiers. Rodents burrow into the ground, which stimulates soil-nutrient cycles. As they dig their tunnels, they churn up the soil, releasing carbon and nitrogen, making these nutrients available to plant roots. Many of them also eat seeds, which they help disperse. Squirrels, for example, bury acorns in the ground, which allows new trees to grow. “Unfortunately, a lot of [rodents] are seen as agricultural pests so they are targeted with either pesticide or rodenticide,” Shukla says. “But they’re quite important for ecosystems.” Eliminate all rodents, and your crops may grow poorly because they can’t access the soil nutrients anymore. The scientists were surprised by many of the species that made their list, Shukla notes, which prompted them to suggest a shift in both conservation practices and public perception related to keystones. “We really need to [support] not just these wonderfully charismatic apex predators,” Shukla says, but also other smaller, enigmatic players without which ecosystems would suffer greatly. Lead image: Kurit afshen / Shutterstock More from The Porthole: •[Humid heat can kill us much faster than we thought]( • [A window on the mind, through the ear]( Today’s newsletter was written by Brian Gallagher BECOME A MEMBER [Support Independent Science Journalism]( [Join a community of curious minds]( and get more of Nautilus’ award-winning writing every month. As a member, you’ll receive unlimited, ad-free access to Nautilus’ unique brand of independent science journalism. Available both online and in print. [JOIN NOW]( Thanks for reading. [Tell us](mailto:brian.gallagher@nautil.us?subject=&body=) your thoughts on today’s note. Plus,[browse our archive]( of past print issues, and inspire a friend to sign up for [the Nautilus newsletter](. [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [Instagram]( Copyright © 2023 NautilusNext, All rights reserved.You were subscribed to the newsletter from [nautil.us](. Our mailing address is: NautilusNext360 W 36th Street, 7S,New York, NY 10018 Don't want to hear from us anymore? [Unsubscribe](

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