The FWP weekly digest of wondrous wildlife happenings
and other interesting items from the natural world

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Lisa S. French
Who’s Giving Up on Corals? Nobody, that’s Who!

2-minute read

When it comes to providing big planetary benefits, of all the amazing creatures under the sea, corals are at the top of the dynamic doer list. Over half a billion people globally depend on the income-providing, food-provisioning, coastline-protecting sculptural animals for their daily existence. Maintaining the healthy functioning of corals is critical to people, wildlife, and the planet, but the underwater inhabitants are literally in hot water. Since the 1950s, global coral cover has halved, and on the current trajectory, by 2035, 75% of corals could be at risk.

As a case in point, according to NOAA scientists, right now, corals in every major ocean basin in the northern and southern hemispheres are experiencing a heat-stress-driven major bleaching event. Marine heat waves like the extreme event in Florida in 2023 are starting earlier, lasting longer, and occurring more frequently.

Helping Corals Take the Heat
As the world races against the clock to lower emissions and combat climate change impacts, dedicated marine scientists and conservationists are developing what they hope will be life-saving strategies that will enable corals to survive rapidly warming waters. Because corals propagated in nurseries and transplanted into reefs can also fall victim to bleaching due to record-setting heat waves, the innovative scientists at the Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program in Australia are training corals to tolerate the heat through a process known as assisted evolution.

When corals are exposed to high water temperatures, they expel the symbiotic algae known as zooxanthellae that they need to survive, turning a dreaded ghostly white. To give corals a fighting chance, the Australian scientists are training lab-grown algae to adapt to the heat and stay put inside stressed corals as waters warm.

And how do they do it? For the past decade, researchers have been growing coral symbionts in a lab and slowly turning up water temperatures, increasing the algae’s resilience to rapid environmental change. The lab-grown algae can now tolerate constant water temperatures of almost 90 ℉, far higher than what is typical for the Great Barrier Reef. The newly evolved zooxanthellae will soon be transplanted into the reef to see how they fare during fluctuating warming cycles in the wild.

With emissions continuing to rise and millions of humans and marine species globally depending on the survival of reefs, repairing ecosystems by helping corals adjust to planetary warming is urgent. By training coral symbionts to remain where nature intended as water temperatures rise, leading-edge researchers are increasing the odds that the undersea world will continue to thrive in living color.

ICYMI Nature News

Spiny Lobsters Aren’t Giving Up Either
Scientists at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission have discovered that spiny lobsters deter snails and worms from snacking on already distressed corals through—wait for it—frequent urination. Snails and worms love to eat coral, but they hate to be eaten by spiny lobsters. Where there is plentiful lobster urine, there are hungry lobsters. Apparently, the presence of the crustaceans’ body fluid in the water helps to protect corals from predators.

The Complexity of Ele-Chat
Biologists studying elephants’ communications in Zimbabwe have discovered that much like humans, the iconic African animals change their communication style depending on how well they know the elephant they are greeting.

Wildlife Walk This Way Please
There is long-awaited good news for California wildlife! The world’s largest wildlife crossing is currently under construction and expected to open in Los Angeles in early 2026. The Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing will span 10-lane Highway 101, reconnecting the Santa Monica Mountains with the Simi Hills to provide all manner of native creatures, including bobcats, coyotes, and mule deer, with unobstructed access to a larger natural ecosystem. Read all about the lifesaving project here.

Clever Counting Crows
According to University of Washington researchers, not only can crows count, but they can also count out loud, cawing to signify numbers in response to visual and auditory clues. “One caw, two caw, three caw, four caw…”.

The Secret Language of Sperm Whales
If you need further proof of creature cleverness, scientists working on deciphering the communication of sperm whales believe the marine mammals’ vocal clicks aren’t just random signals but represent a complicated call-and-respond alphabet. Can you hear me now?

How Sea Otters Avoid the Dentist
Ask any sea otter: crunching on mollusk shells every day can wreak havoc on the pearly whites. According to marine scientists studying foraging behavior in sea mammals, otters that rely more often on tools to access prey not only expand their menu options but protect their teeth from damage, which increases their longevity. But do they floss?

Diversity in Nature is Better for You
We’ve written often about nature being good for you. According to a new study, the more diverse the nature, the better it is for you. In addition to biological diversity, keeping the natural world in good working order, the greater the variety of trees, plants, and wildlife in your environment, the greater the improvement in mental well-being. Another good reason to go wild.

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Sky Poems

Trees are poems
the Earth writes
upon the sky…

Kahlil Gibran

When you buy a book,
we plant a sky poem.

Thank you for reading with us!

xo Favorite World Press

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Lights Out for the Birds, Please

2-minute read

With feelings of awe and maybe a little envy, we marvel at our avian friends’ ability to take to the skies without a plane ticket. For one hundred years, scientists have studied the origins of bird flight to determine how feathered creatures evolved to achieve the capacity for lift-off. We now have a pretty good idea that the reptilian animals that ultimately developed into what we recognize as birds started on Earth 160 million years ago as ground-up, running flappers rather than tree-down gliders. What the aerial wonders didn’t anticipate when they successfully tested their wings was the eventual addition of flight path impediments otherwise known as buildings.

According to the Smithsonian Institution and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, every year, between 365 and 988 million birds are killed because of building collisions. It seems only fair, now that birds have done the evolutionary heavy lifting of learning to fly, we do what we can to keep them in the air. While we can’t eliminate built structures, we can make them safer for our favorite fliers thanks to innovative solutions pioneered by conservationists at the Audubon.

Creating Bird-Friendly Skies
To help the billions of birds that migrate every spring and fall steer clear of the artificial light and skyglow from buildings that lead to collisions, Audubon has initiated Lights Out, a national effort to turn off unnecessary lights during hours they are likely to attract night travelers. Working with building owners, managers, and residents—people like you—the Lights Out program aims to reduce avian mortality rates by preventing birds from becoming confused by artificial light sources and colliding with windows and walls in the path of flyways.

Keeping it dark by implementing Audubon’s simple, inexpensive solutions can enable migrating and nocturnal species to safely make their way to wintering and breeding grounds, with the cost-cutting, planet-cooling bonus of reducing energy use. Find out what you can do to help create bird-friendly skies right here.

ICYMI Nature News

Awe-Inspiring Avian Beauty
If you need a striking visual reminder of avian beauty, wildlife photographer Rachel Bigsby captures the beautiful essence of bird life in her award-winning photographs. See her work here.

Blue Whales Are Back
Good news for the recovery of the world’s largest animal—the blue whale. According to Antarctic researchers, after two decades of monitoring the Southern Ocean for the majestic mammals’ distinctive songs, there are encouraging signs that blue whales are making a comeback after centuries of industrial whaling. Where does one apply to get a job as a whale listener?

What’s a Kowari, Anyway?
Odds are you’ve never seen a kowari, but Australian conservationists are hoping to save the endangered, brush-tailed cousin of the Tasmanian Devil from extinction, so you’ll get your chance. Meet the mini marsupial.

Orangutan Heal Thyself
For the first time in the wild, an oh-so-clever orangutan has been observed treating a facial wound with a medicinal plant after a dust-up with another male. No urgi-care for this smart fellow.

Just How Noisy Are Cicadas?
You might imagine that millions of cicadas would be pretty darn noisy. But how noisy? Noisy enough to report them to the police apparently. Officer, what in the heckin’ heck is that racket?

Blue Rock Thrush Makes an Unprecedented Pit Stop in the U.S.
In what may be the first-ever sighting in the U.S., a very rare, very pretty, little blue rock thrush has been captured on film by an amateur photographer in Oregon—peak birdwatcher’s envy.

Aquatic Bumblebees
Scientists have learned that the queens of a common species of North American bumblebee can survive up to a week underwater during hibernation. Super adaptable scuba bees!

Natural Magic
And finally, if you love poetry and you love science, have we got a book for you. Natural Magic—Emily Dickinson, Charles Darwin, and the Dawn of Modern Science by Renée Bergland, illuminates the parallels in the thinking of two keenly original observers of the natural world.

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