Quirks and Quarks

Feb 8: The rapidly changing Arctic, and more

On this week's show: bears vs drones, don't scratch that itch, and ants hold grudges.

Bears vs drones, don't scratch that itch, and ants hold grudges.

The back of a man's head fills the frame where both of his hands are scratching his scalp in this close-up shot against a white backdrop.
Scratching promotes inflammation that, in moderation, can kill bacterial pathogens, according to a new study. (Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

On this episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald

A little bit of scratching can do some good, but too much can hurt

Scratching an itch can feel great, so scientists decided to dig into why that is the case since we know too much scratching isn't good for us. Dr. Dan Kaplan, a professor of dermatology and immunology at the University of Pittsburgh, said they found that scratching drives inflammation to the skin, which, in light moderation, helps to fight bacterial skin infections. But he warns that continual or excessive scratching can prolong an itch and potentially damage the skin. Their study is in the journal Science

Bear hazing goes high-tech with drones

A wildlife manager in the US has found that drones can be a safe and effective way to discourage problem bears from troubling human habitation and livestock. Wesley Sarmento started working in the prairies of Montana to prevent bear-human conflicts, but found the usual tricks of the trade were not as effective as he wanted them to be. Previously he tried to use noisemakers, dogs, trucks, and firearms, but buzzing bears with flying robots turned out to work much better. Now a PhD student at the University of Montana, he published an article about his hazing research in Frontiers in Conservation Science.

WATCH: Drone footage shows bears being chased away from a family home in Montana 

Wildlife manager says drones are 'magic tools' to help reduce bear-human conflicts

16 hours ago
Duration 0:42
Research biologist and former wildlife manager Wesley Sarmento started using drones to chase bears away from people, and found that it was much safer and more precise than traditional methods.

Ants can remember and hold grudges against those who trouble them

When ants fight with those from another nearby colony, it makes an impression. A new study has found the insects can remember the chemical signature of the aggressors, and will respond more vigorously and violently the next time they cross paths. Volker Nehring, a researcher at the University of Freiburg, Germany, describes the phenomenon as "the nasty neighbour" where ants are most aggressive to ant colonies closest to them, and says this is due to resource protection. Nehring and his team's research was published in the journal Current Biology.

Two European red wood ants (Formica polyctena) are pictured in a forest near Birkenwerder, northeastern Germany, on July 4, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / dpa / Patrick Pleul / Germany OUT        (Photo credit should read PATRICK PLEUL/DPA/AFP via Getty Images)
European red wood ants. (Patrick Pleul /DPA/AFP via Getty Images)

Scientists on the front line of permafrost thaw describe changes in the Arctic

The acceleration of change in the Arctic due to global warming is transforming the landscape on a year-to-year basis, often in surprising ways. That's according to scientists who've been studying the effects of climate change in the North. 

One study found that lakes in Western Greenland shifted from pristine blue to dirty brown from one year to the next due to increased permafrost melting and runoff. Jasmine Saros, a lake ecologist from the University of Maine, said they were astonished by the magnitude of change they saw in all 10 lakes they studied and how quickly it happened. That study was published in the journal PNAS

We also speak with William Quinton, a permafrost hydrologist from Wilfrid Laurier University and the director of the Scotty Creek Research Station in southern Northwest Territories, an area he describes as "the frontline of permafrost thaw." Quinton was part of a research team, led by Anna Virkkala from the Woodwell Climate Research Centre, that found that 34 per cent of the Arctic Boreal Zone — a region where carbon was safely locked up in the permafrost for thousands of years — has now become a carbon source. That study is in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Three people in a canoe are padelling toward the camera in a swampy brown lake.
The field team sampling a lake near Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, that browned — from the crystal clear blue it used to be — after extreme weather events in the fall of 2022. (Adam Heathcote)