Quirks and Quarks

Jan 11: How crocheted hats help scientists learn about cats, and more

On this week's episode, stories about how ancient Romans were full of mind-melting lead, how bats surf on storm clouds, why squirrels are switching to a carnivore diet, how EEG tattoos are making brain scans better, and when dog domestication happened in North America.

Romans were full of lead, surfing bats, carnivorous squirrels, EEG tattoos, and dog domestication

A short-haired tabby cat with a white muff and green eyes that's wearing a wine-coloured cat shirt has an adorable white crocheted hat on its head with holes for its ears that stick out.
Fée, an abandoned cat with chronic osteoarthritis, was one of 11 cats who wore specially knitted caps so researchers are the Université de Montréal's veterinary school could attach electrodes to it to study their brains. (Aliénor Delsart/Université de Montréal)

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

Was Rome's fall due to heavy metal poisoning making Romans dumber?

Ice cores that preserve traces of atmospheric pollutants through history have revealed that industrial activity by Romans – particularly the use and production of lead – meant the air the Romans breathed was heavily contaminated. The levels were high enough to cause neurological problems, including a drop in cognitive function across the population. Joe McConnell and his team at the Desert Research Institute published their findings in the journal PNAS.

ROME, ITALY - APRIL 21: Actors dressed as ancient Roman soldiers march in a commemorative parade during festivities marking the 2,766th anniversary of the founding of Rome on April 21, 2013 in Rome, Italy. The capital celebrates its founding annually based on the legendary foundation of the Birth of Rome. Actors dressed as the denizens of ancient Rome participate in parades and re-enactments of the ancient Roman Empire. According to legend, Rome had been founded by Romulus in 753 BC in an area surrounded by seven hills. (Photo by Giorgio Cosulich/Getty Images) 167133078
Actors dressed as ancient Roman soldiers march in a commemorative parade in Rome, Italy. (Giorgio Cosulich/Getty Images)
Bats are surfing storms to make migration easier

Migrating bats in Europe have to fly up to 2000km while pregnant, but they've figured out how to get a lift from the weather. The bats have been observed waiting for storm fronts, and then surfing the strong winds in front of the storm to save energy during their migration. Dina Dechmann from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour, and colleagues, were able to tag bats with tiny specialized sensors to track their nocturnal movements during migration. Their paper was published in the journal Science.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 20:  A Grey-Headed Flying Fox flies past a rising full-moon at the Royal Botanic Gardens March 20, 2008 in Sydney, Australia. Flying Foxes, or fruit bats, have taken up permanent roosts in the Botanic Gardens, causing major damage to heritage trees in the park. The Royal Botanic Gardens has begun a program to deter the flying foxes from roosting, as there are now some 11,000 bats roosting in the park. Deterents include noise to disturb sleep patterns, plastic bags attached to branches of trees, strobe lights, odours, and the playing of taped distress calls.  (Photo by Ian Waldie/Getty Images)
A bat flying in Australia. (Ian Waldie via Getty Images)
Squirrels have developed a taste for vole flesh

Squirrels in California have been taking advantage of a boom in the population of tiny rodents called voles – by hunting and eating them. This widespread carnivorous behaviour was captured for the first time on videos and photos by a team led by behavioural ecologist Jennifer Smith, as a part of a long-term study of the squirrels. The researchers found dozens of instances of the squirrels killing the voles, which they say changes our fundamental understanding of ground squirrels. Their paper was published in the Journal of Ethology.

An adorable squirrel tears at the flesh of a dead small grey rodent.
A California ground squirrel eats a vole it hunted in Briones Regional Park near San Francisco. (Sonja Wild, UC Davis)
EEG tattoos could outperform standard electrodes
 

EEG is a valuable technology that allows researchers to monitor the electrical activity of the brain, but standard EEG electrodes are cumbersome and are hampered by the difficulty of attaching them. A new temporary EEG tattoo, made by printing conductive ink on the scalp, could be a step ahead. Luize Vasconcelos, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas at Austin helped create this ink. The research is published in the Cell Press journal Cell Biomaterials.

EEG setup with e-tattoo electrodes
EEG setup with e-tattoo electrodes, a prototype developed by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin. (Nanshu Lu)
To monitor cat brain waves, researchers made them cute hats

Aude Castel, a veterinary neurologist from the Université de Montréal, and her team were  studying chronic pain in cats — and ways to alleviate it — when she realized that she could crochet hats for the cats and add EEG electrodes to them in order to study their brains. Their research was published in the Journal of Neuroscience Methods


When North America went to the dogs (or vice-versa)

Researchers examining canid bones from Alaska dating to the last ice age have been intrigued by the complex picture it shows of dog domestication at the time. Their findings were published in the journal Science Advances. Signs of the animals' diet are preserved in the bones, and shows that humans were clearly feeding their dogs, a clear sign of domestication. François Lanoë from the University of Arizona led the work.

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A wolf at the Wolf Science Center, Austria. (ALEX HALADA/AFP via Getty Images)