Quirks and Quarks

Oct 26: The amazing, brilliant, fascinating world of spiders and more

Ringing the AMOC alarm, zombie star outburst, tiny dinosaur used its wings to run, and building a shark forecast.

AMOC alarm, zombie stars, tiny dinosaur, and shark forecasting

An aerial view of a shark
Scientists used drones to count and track shark activity along a beach in California to build a forecast of when and where Great White Sharks would show up. (Neil Nathan)

On this week's episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald:

A climate-change disaster scenario could be closer than we think

This week, a group of 44 researchers from 15 countries presented an open letter to the Nordic Council of Ministers, to shed light on the potential collapse of a key ocean current system. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, or AMOC, is a network of currents that brings warm water from equatorial regions North, and recirculates cool water South, and recent studies indicate it is slowing down because of climate change.

A new study, from a team at Oregon State University led by Christo Buizert, analyzed ice cores to look at what exactly happened when the AMOC had collapsed last, during the last ice age. Their results suggest that an ice sheet would have spread as far down as the South of France, or New York City, which would devastate ecosystems and plunge Europe into a deep freeze while disrupting rainfall distribution across Asia. The research was published in the journal PNAS.

Ocean currents are seen in a NOAA image
The global conveyor belt, shown in part here, circulates cool subsurface water and warm surface water throughout the world. The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation is part of this complex system of global ocean currents. This illustration is captured from a short video produced by NOAA Science on a Sphere. (NOAA)
A Zombie star's outburst could soon be appearing in the night sky

In 1946 a stellar explosion brightened the night sky as the result of a zombie star going nova 3,000 light-years away reached Earth. The nova soon dimmed, but scientists are expecting a repeat performance any day now. NASA astrophysicist Elizabeth Hayes, the project scientist of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, described it as a white dwarf star devouring so much of its companion star that it reaches a critical threshold resulting in a thermonuclear explosion on its surface. When that happens, they expect we'll be able to see it above the western horizon when it temporarily becomes as bright as any star in the Big Dipper. 

A glowing orange and yellow star with rings around it that give it a Saturn-like appearance where a ghostly white foggy-looking star is situated.
A red giant star and white dwarf orbit each other in this artistic depiction of the nova in the Corona Borealis constellation that's expected to brighten up the night sky any day now. (NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center)
A tiny dinosaur used wings to run fast, and possibly to fly

106 million years ago, in what is now South Korea, a bird-like dinosaur with wings ran across a muddy flat and left behind tiny footprints. By reconstructing its stride from these prints, paleontologists have found that it ran faster than could be explained if it weren't using its wings to push it along. Dr. Hans Larsson of McGill university says this discovery gives new insight into the evolution of flight in dinosaurs. This study was published in the journal PNAS.

Micro raptor
Illustration of a pre-avian dinosaur flapping its arms to help it run at high speed. (Julius T. Csotonyi)
Cloudy with a chance of great whites

A group of researchers in California is using drone footage along with artificial intelligence to develop a shark forecasting system. The team, led by Douglas McCauley from the University of California Santa Barbara, have been flying drones over the waters of Padaro beach in California to get daily shark counts, and compare that to oceanological details to determine what conditions make the water more or less "sharky."

While they spotted up to 15 sharks a day near unsuspecting surfers, this beach has very few interactions between humans and sharks in any given year. The results of the drone study have been published in the journal Marine Ecology Progress Series.

SharkEye shows Great Whites peacefully sharing a beach with surfers

1 month ago
Duration 0:30
To build a shark forecast service, researcher Douglas McCauley and his team have spent the past 5 years capturing drone videos of Padaro beach near their lab at the University of California Santa Barbara. Depending on water visibility, the drone can detect sharks cruising within a couple meters of the surface.
This biologist wants to change your mind about scary spiders

Spiders. For some they're just a bit creepy. For others they're nightmare fuel. But for a select few, they're one of the most fascinating and intriguing creatures on our planet. Behavioural Ecologist James O'Hanlon is one of those people and he thinks we should trade in our arachnophobia for arachnophilia. He pleads his case in a new book, Eight-Legged Wonders: The Surprising Lives of Spiders.

READ MORE: This spider scientist wants us to appreciate the world's 8-legged wonders 

A spider whose rear end looks like an ant. Its head looks like a green fluffball.
These Orsima Ichneumon jumping spiders are backwards-mimics of ants. (Caleb Nicholson)