Short Wave

Hot galaxies alert!

8 min
Jan 9, 20265 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode explores three major scientific discoveries: an unexpectedly hot galaxy cluster formed just 1 billion years after the Big Bang, how elephants use their highly sensitive noses to locate food sources, and how painted lady butterflies have developed opposite migration patterns in different hemispheres.

Insights
  • Current cosmological models may need revision as early universe structures appear more developed than theory predicts
  • Animal sensory capabilities can be quantified and tested in controlled environments to understand wild behavior
  • Geographic isolation can drive genetic divergence within a single species, offering insights into speciation mechanisms
  • Small organisms with massive population biomass have outsized ecological and agricultural significance
  • Migration barriers create distinct evolutionary pressures that can be detected at the genetic level
Trends
Astrophysics discovering anomalies in early universe structure formation requiring theoretical updatesBehavioral ecology using controlled experiments to understand sensory-driven decision making in wildlifeGenetic research revealing speciation in progress through population-level DNA divergenceConservation biology linking animal migration patterns to ecosystem and agricultural health impactsInsect biomass and migration patterns emerging as critical factors in climate and agricultural systems
Topics
Galaxy cluster formation and early universe evolutionSupermassive black holes in young galaxy clustersElephant olfactory capabilities and food detectionElephant-human conflict in agricultural settingsPainted lady butterfly migration patternsGenetic divergence and speciation mechanismsMigration barriers in insect populationsInsect biomass and ecological impactAnimal sensory discrimination thresholdsCosmological theory and observational anomalies
People
Jorge Moreno
Astrophysicist who provided analogy explaining why hot galaxy clusters at young universe ages are unexpected
Daji Zhou
Study author who identified the first detection of such a hot galaxy cluster at this early universe age
Adrian Schrader
University of Pretoria researcher who designed maze experiments to test elephant olfactory food discrimination
Alvaro Lopez Quecoya
Researcher who commented on elephant sensory discrimination abilities and limitations of captive studies
Aurora Garcia Berro
Botanical Institute of Barcelona researcher who discovered DNA inversion in southern hemisphere painted lady butterflies
Scott Detro
Host of All Things Considered who participated in the science news roundup discussion
Quotes
"if you go back a few centuries, you expect to see little buildings and horses and carriages, not a modern metropolis. Like it's the late 1700s and a city looks like Las Vegas."
Jorge MorenoEarly in episode
"This galaxy cluster is popping. It's far hotter than scientists expected to find at this early point in the universe."
Berly McCoyGalaxy cluster discussion
"Animals don't just randomly walk across the landscape and hope to find food, and so our question really was an idea of, well, do they use the amount of food as a cue?"
Adrian SchraderElephant research section
"I actually thought it was an artifact, but then I showed it to my colleague, and they were like completely surprised. Like, you don't know, this is so exciting."
Aurora Garcia BerroButterfly DNA discovery
"identifying how animals migrate is important to understanding the health of that species, yes, but also the health of all the places that species travels."
Aurora Garcia BerroButterfly migration significance
Full Transcript
Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Hey Shortwavers, Berly McCoy here and Emily Kwong with our biweekly science news roundup featuring the hosts of All Things Considered and today we have Scott Detro. I'm only here because I heard we were talking about a hot galaxy cluster. That's how we get you in the door. Yeah. But how we're going to keep you is talking about also how elephants trunks lead them to food and we'll share a big discovery in butterfly migration. I'm here for all three. Well, we thank you. All that on this episode of Shortwave, the science podcast from NPR. This message comes from WISE, the app for international people using money around the globe. You can send, spend, and receive an up to 40 currencies with only a few simple taps. Be smart. Get WISE. Download the WISE app today or visit WISE.com. Tease and seize, apply. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. Investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org. Okay Scott, I know your favorite thing is space, so let's start there. Let's start there. Wow. Let's start off. What would you say a galaxy cluster is though? Let's start there. It is exactly what it sounds like. It is a collection of galaxies, but kind of like a city where each galaxy is a different building. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is part of a cluster called the local group, for example. But the galaxy cluster we want to talk about, which is the subject of a new paper in nature, was formed about 12 billion years ago. And the universe itself is only about 13.8 billion years old. So that's just a fast billion years, like a snap of the fingers in galaxy terms. Like we were talking about this was a baby in galactic here. Exactly. And current theories say that younger galaxy clusters should be relatively cool, but this one is very hot, like hotter than the surface of the sun. We talked to Jorge Moreno, an astrophysicist who didn't work on the paper, and he made an analogy to US history. He said, if you go back a few centuries, you expect to see little buildings and horses and carriages, not a modern metropolis. Like it's the late 1700s and a city looks like Las Vegas. This galaxy cluster is popping. It's far hotter than scientists expected to find at this early point in the universe. Do researchers have any idea why it's so hot? We don't know why yet. But one of the study authors, Daji Zhou, says it is the first time a galaxy cluster this hot has been detected at such a young age. And this cluster also contains active galaxies. Three of them have supermassive black holes at the center, which is also surprising given the cluster's age. So this forces us to rethink our current understanding of how these large structures form and evolve in the universe. Although, Scott, it is possible that this cluster is an extreme case, so we need more data. I have a lot of other questions that I will keep googling, but for now we are going to move forward to another topic, though, because we want to talk about, and we got to talk about elephants. That was really good. Thank you. Listeners don't see that I flared my hand like a trunk, but the trunks are what we're talking about, right? Yes, big time. At the very tip of an elephant trunk are two nostrils powered by nearly 2,000 olfactory genes, which is five times more than a human has, and over twice as many as dogs. Which makes me think if you need to sniff something out, hire an elephant, not a dog. True. Yeah, and if you do, pay them fairly in what they love, grass, leaves, because elephants eat hundreds of pounds of plants a day. They are constantly making food decisions about whether to stay foraging in a patch or travel in search of a better one. Adrian Schrader at the University of Pretoria wanted to know how their noses guide them in the wild. Animals don't just randomly walk across the landscape and hope to find food, and so our question really was an idea of, well, do they use the amount of food as a cube? Yeah, and to test this, Adrian's team built a giant maze for elephants shaped like a Y, with walls over seven feet tall. So picture one entrance, two paths with different quantities of food at either end. So it's like choosing almost between like two different Las Vegas buffets, not being able to see which one was bigger. Exactly. Four captive elephants took on this challenge. From the maze entrance, the food was about 30 feet away, so way beyond the reach of their trunks, they couldn't see because the walls were so tall, and every time they chose the path with more food. Unless the quantity difference was less than 600 grams, which is about six to 10 trunk loads of grass, and then they tended to pick either route, which suggests they couldn't smell the difference or they just didn't care. These results were published in the journal Biology Letters. And Alvaro Lopez Quecoya, who was not part of the study, found the elephant's ability to discriminate food quantities remarkable, though he points out there are a lot more smells in the wild than in the preserve where these captive elephants lived. This is really interesting, what is useful about this research? Well, elephants, while adorable, can damage their environments. They stomp on farmers' crops, they can knock down endangered trees. But if researchers understand elephants' use of smell, maybe they can cover plants with bad odors to protect them from hungry elephants. All right, so let's go from a very large animal to a very small one. Let's talk butterflies, specifically butterfly migration. What's surprising about it? Yeah, so this is a migration in painted lady butterflies. They have similar coloring to monarchs, but they're smaller. They're super widespread, and they have the longest migration of any butterfly. And scientists found something striking in that migration that depending on if they live in the northern or southern hemisphere, they follow completely opposite migration paths. Essentially, the equator is acting as a migration barrier for these two isolated populations. Okay, I'm gonna be honest here. This doesn't particularly surprise me, right? The seasons are opposite. This makes sense. Why is it a big deal? Fair, but this is the first time a migration barrier has been described for any insect. And to study this, researchers collected more than 300 butterflies from 38 countries across the northern and southern hemispheres. We talked to Aurora Garcia Berro from the Botanical Institute of Barcelona, and she says their team looked at the butterflies' genes for months, searching for clues about what made these two populations distinct. And then one day, she found something really weird. And I actually thought it was an artifact, but then I showed it to my colleague, and they were like completely surprised. Like, you don't know, this is so exciting. And this is dramatic. What was it? Yeah, they found that a large chunk of DNA in the southern hemisphere butterflies was completely flipped. It was oriented the other way than the same DNA chunk in the northern hemisphere butterflies. And this chunk contains genes involved in migration. So what they think they're seeing is one species that separated into two populations, and now their genetics are diverging too because of these different migration pathways. And this is sort of a lens into how a single species might split into two across a migration barrier. And it might explain why we see closely related species in different hemispheres. They published the results in the journal Nature Communications. That is really interesting. What is the thinking on the larger significance of this? Well, painted lady butterflies while small make up a huge biomass. In 2017, a 70-mile stretch of these butterflies blocked weather radar in Colorado. They can affect agriculture, pollination, and the health of other species. So Aurora says identifying how animals migrate is important to understanding the health of that species, yes, but also the health of all the places that species travels. That is so interesting. I started off thinking like, oh, yeah, everybody knows that to like having my mind kind of blown. That was a really interesting story. Great. That's why you come here. Thank you, Scott. Thank you. You can hear more of Scott on Consider This, NPR's afternoon podcast about what the news means for you. And for more science stories just like this one, follow Shortwave on whatever app you're listening to. This episode was produced by Rachel Carlson and Jordan Marie Smith. It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez and Christopher Intelyata. Tyler Jones, check the facts. Robert Rodriguez and Jay Sizz were the audio engineers. I'm Emily Kwong. And I'm Berly McCoy. Thanks for listening to Shortwave, the science podcast from NPR. Support for NPR and the following message come from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, investing in creative thinkers and problem solvers who help people, communities, and the planet flourish. More information is available at Hewlett.org.