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Alas Poor Erinaceus

@ zdhzm2pgp @lemmy.ml

Posts
306
Comments
357
Joined
1 yr. ago

(Not as scary as I look, I promise)

. . . but sometimes I just trail off . . .

[er-uh-ney-shuhs]

  • Note that some apps will say that they won't work without GPS, but actually will if you give it a try.

  • How many points of identification are needed to positively ID you? Something like 35 IIRC according to Cover Your Tracks/EFF? Might be remembering wrong 🤔

  • Maybe the orcas will eat it for him.

  • Yeah, my system doesn't seem to like either the newest linux firmware update or kernel. I've told the update manager to skip them; maybe the next versions won't be so troublesome.

    I actually didn't know this, but I was able (in fact the only way I was able) to Timeshift back was using my mintstick of long ago. I didn't realize that the USB could detect and load the snapshots from my laptop. Good thing I figured it out, because I don't know how else I would've gotten back in!

  • The Chernobyl exclusion zone may be off-limits to humans, but not to every form of life.

    Ever since the Unit Four reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant exploded nearly 40 years ago, other kinds of life-forms have not only moved in but survived, adapted, and appeared to thrive.

    Part of that may be the lack of humans… but for one organism, at least, the ionizing radiation lingering inside the reactor's surrounding structures may be an advantage.

    There, clinging to the interior walls of one of the most radioactive buildings on Earth, scientists have found a strange black fungus curiously living its best life.

    That fungus is called Cladosporium sphaerospermum, and some scientists think its dark pigment – melanin – may allow it to harness ionizing radiation through a process similar to the way plants harness light for photosynthesis. This proposed mechanism is even referred to as radiosynthesis.

    But here's the really funky thing about C. sphaerospermum: Although scientists have shown that the fungus flourishes in the presence of ionizing radiation, no one has been able to pin down how or why. Radiosynthesis is a theory, one that's difficult to prove.

    The mystery began back in the late 1990s, when a team led by microbiologist Nelli Zhdanova of the Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences embarked on a field survey in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone to find out what life, if any, could be found in the shelter surrounding the ruined reactor.

    There, they were stunned to find a whole community of fungi, documenting an astonishing 37 species. Notably, these organisms tended to be dark-hued to black, rich with the pigment melanin.

    C. sphaerospermum dominated the samples, while also demonstrating some of the highest levels of radioactive contamination.

    As surprising as the discovery was, what happened next deepened the intrigue.

    Radiopharmacologist Ekaterina Dadachova and immunologist Arturo Casadevall – both with posts at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the US – led a team of scientists that found exposing C. sphaerospermum to ionizing radiation doesn't harm the fungus the way it would other organisms.

    Ionizing radiation describes emissions of particles powerful enough to knock electrons from their atoms, turning them into their ionic forms.

    That sounds pretty benign on paper, but in practice, ionization can break apart molecules, interfering with biochemical reactions and even shredding DNA. None of that is a good time for a human, although it can be exploited to destroy cancer cells, which are particularly vulnerable to its effects.

    However, C. sphaerospermum seemed strangely resistant and even grew better when bathed in ionizing radiation. Other experiments showed ionizing radiation changed the behavior of fungal melanin – an intriguing observation that warranted further investigation.

    The follow-up paper by Dadachova and Casadevall in 2008 is where they first proposed a biological pathway similar to photosynthesis.

    The fungus – and others like it – appeared to be harvesting ionizing radiation and converting it into energy, with melanin performing a similar function to the light-absorbing pigment chlorophyll.

    At the same time, the melanin behaves as a protective shield against the more harmful effects of that radiation.

    This appears to be supported by the findings of a 2022 paper, in which scientists describe the results of taking C. sphaerospermum into space and strapping it to the exterior of the ISS, exposing it to the full brunt of cosmic radiation.

    There, sensors placed beneath the petri dish showed that a smaller amount of radiation penetrated through the fungi than through an agar-only control.

    The aim of that paper was not to demonstrate or investigate radiosynthesis, but to explore the fungus's potential as a radiation shield for space missions, which is a cool idea. But, as of that paper, we still don't know what the fungus is actually doing.

    Scientists have been unable to demonstrate carbon fixation dependent on ionizing radiation, metabolic gain from ionizing radiation, or a defined energy-harvesting pathway.

    "Actual radiosynthesis, however, remains to be shown, let alone the reduction of carbon compounds into forms with higher energy content or fixation of inorganic carbon driven by ionizing radiation," wrote a team led by engineer Nils Averesch of Stanford University.

    The idea of radiosynthesis is so cool – like something out of science fiction. But it's maybe even cooler that this weird fungus is doing something we don't understand to neutralize something so dangerous to humans.

    It's not the only one, either. A black yeast, Wangiella dermatitidis, demonstrates enhanced growth under ionizing radiation. Meanwhile, another fungus species, Cladosporium cladosporioides, exhibits enhanced melanin production but not growth under gamma or UV radiation.

    So the behavior observed in C. sphaerospermum is not universal to melanized fungi.

    Does that suggest that it's an adaptation allowing the fungus to feast on powerful light that can kill other organisms? Or is it a stress response that enhances survival under extenuating, but not ideal, conditions?

    At this point, it's impossible to tell.

    What we do know is that this humble, velvety black fungus is doing something clever with ionizing radiation to survive and maybe even proliferate in a place too dangerous for humans to safely tread; that life does, indeed, find a way.

  • Wait, isn't Sachs known for bringing shock therapy to Russia? 🤔

  • Science @lemmy.ml

    Chernobyl Fungus Seems to Have Evolved an Incredible Ability

    www.sciencealert.com /chernobyl-fungus-seems-to-have-evolved-an-incredible-ability
  • I see, apparently it doesn't like my VPN, never mind . . .

  • Technology @lemmy.ml

    Does anyone know what's up with the Internet Archive? Seems like it's been down for at least a couple days now . . .

  • Intentionally bad or unintentionally bad?

  • Green - An environmentalist community @lemmy.ml

    ‘Suicidal’ model of capitalism leading to war and fascism, climate summit told

    www.theguardian.com /environment/2026/apr/29/capitalism-colombia-climate-summit-gustavo-petro
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    ‘STAGED’: Conspiracy Theories Are Everywhere Following White House Correspondents' Dinner Shooting

    www.wired.com /story/staged-conspiracy-theories-are-everywhere-following-white-house-correspondents-dinner-shooting/
  • Space, the final frontier @lemmy.ml

    The tortoise and the hare: will China beat the US in the race back to the moon?

    www.theguardian.com /science/2026/apr/26/china-us-space-race-moon
  • Books @lemmy.ml

    Haruki Murakami has a new novel coming out—and for the first time, it features a female main character

    lithub.com /haruki-murakami-has-a-new-novel-coming-out-and-for-the-first-time-it-features-a-female-main-character/
  • World News @lemmy.ml

    Photos show China’s automakers unveiling the future of driving at Beijing auto show

    apnews.com /photo-gallery/china-autos-evs-beijing-show-photos-f5dad09ea479c7da5ed1679f616fbf10
  • Green - An environmentalist community @lemmy.ml

    ‘The damage is done’: global oil crisis has changed fossil fuel industry for ever, IEA chief says

    www.theguardian.com /environment/2026/apr/24/global-oil-crisis-changed-fossil-fuel-industry-for-ever-iea-chief-fatih-birol
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    🇨🇦Millions of Americans may now also be considered Canadian under a new law🇨🇦

    apnews.com /article/canadian-citizenship-americans-new-law-5b8f7da8ce6cfea759b85a3577150407
  • Agreed! I won't consider donating to them until they drop it.

  • This is incredibly important because regular container vessels pollute like you wouldn't believe.

  • And now also the Antichrist!

  • Green - An environmentalist community @lemmy.ml

    Who’d have thought a fossil-fuel shill like Trump would be the one to spark a green revolution?

    www.theguardian.com /commentisfree/2026/apr/18/fossil-fuel-trump-green-revolution-us-iran-renewable-energy
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    New York City’s super-rich complain about Mamdani’s tax on second homes

    www.ft.com /content/02ac0f4c-5c81-4f87-af3a-28b0a35a5046
  • Music @lemmy.ml

    A Newly Discovered Recording Lets You Hear Delta Blues Legend Robert Johnson in Stunning Clarity

    www.openculture.com /2026/04/recording-lets-you-hear-delta-blues-legend-robert-johnson-in-stunning-clarity.html
  • World News @lemmy.ml

    China shock 2.0: the flood of high-tech goods that will change the world

    www.ft.com /content/7d51a630-a3de-4cc7-9f5f-0f3e7f0d305a
  • Linux Mint @lemmy.ml

    Linux Mint's next release won't be until Christmas 2026

    www.omgubuntu.co.uk /2026/04/linux-mint-next-release-christmas-2026
  • Also, do they really need to expand their user base that badly? I thought they were doing relatively well . . .

  • Books @lemmy.ml

    The Death of Washington Post Book World and Why Criticism Still Matters

    www.currentaffairs.org /news/the-death-of-book-world-and-why-criticism-still-matters
  • It's true that some people really do have to be on Facebook/Xwitter for work, but in that case I've always suggested that they also make a Mastodon/Lemmy/Pixelfed account and let people know about it ("why not join me on ...") and try to use the two (or more) side by side. Hopefully that will make the people they interact with realize that there are in fact good alternatives, and perhaps get them to join as well, further increasing the size of the Fediverse🌈.

  • Proton @lemmy.world

    Reserve your child’s first private email with Proton Mail (is this a joke by any chance...?)

    proton.me /mail/born-private
  • United States | News & Politics @lemmy.ml

    The NY Times profiles another ordinary American (Lauren Sánchez Bezos) Apparently she's happy!

    www.nytimes.com /2026/04/11/business/lauren-sanchez-bezos-jeff-bezos.html
  • Space, the final frontier @lemmy.ml

    Jubilant return of Artemis II shadowed by ‘extinction-level’ cuts to NASA

    www.theguardian.com /science/2026/apr/11/artemis-ii-nasa-budget-cuts
  • Privacy @lemmy.ml

    If you could have your email provider based in any country, which one would you choose? Which one do you think has the best privacy protections?

  • Android @lemmy.ml

    Smaller Android tablet that has stylus support?