Erin Stone
is a reporter who covers climate and environmental issues in Southern California.
Published November 25, 2024 5:00 AM
Workers plant mint plants in a field where various crops are tested as part of a dynamic agrivoltaic project involving mobile solar panels and designed to optimise agricultural production in Haut-Mauco, south-western France, on May 28, 2024.
(
CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT
/
AFP via Getty Images
)
Topline:
Can solar panels over farm fields help us adapt to and fight climate change? That’s what a new study led by the Robert Redford Conservancy at Pitzer College aims to explore.
Why it matters: The concept is called “agrivoltaics”... basically elevated solar panels that are installed over crops or livestock. The shade from the panels can help reduce water use, improve soil health and cool workers, crops and livestock amid worsening extreme heat.
Keep reading...to learn more about what role agrivoltaics could play as the climate changes.
Can solar panels over farm fields help us adapt to and fight climate change at the same time? That’s what a new study breaking ground next month will explore.
“This study is about agriculture and climate change and how we can create kind of a win-win,” said Susan Phillips, director of the Robert Redford Conservancy at Pitzer College, which is leading the study.
The concept is called “agrivoltaics,” a combination of the words “agriculture” and “photovoltaics” — the process of converting light into electricity.
There are multiple ways to do agrivoltaics, but the basic idea is that instead of stopping farming to make way for solar, elevated solar panels are installed over crops or livestock operations so electricity generation and farming can happen at the same time, and possibly benefit each other.
Different types of agrivoltaics
(
Courtesy National Renewable Energy Lab
)
While agrivoltaics have been studied in other parts of California, this will be the first study to see how it could work in Southern California. Agrivoltaics have been successful in parts of Europe, China, as well as the U.S., but it’s not happening much here in California…at least not yet.
How the study will work
The study will take place on a quarter-acre of land at Spadra Farm at Cal Poly Pomona. Researchers will study how a plot of romaine lettuce grown under the panels fares compared to a plot that is not, over a period of three years. They’ll also have a mobile battery to store the solar energy.
They’ll measure things like soil fungus and bacteria, plant nutrients, crop yield, water use, temperature and more.
“This is all going to be very relevant to the production of a crop in Southern California, primarily romaine lettuce, which is something that is in demand all year round,” said Rose Olivas, one of the project’s leads.
A key question they aim to answer is how much shade from the panels can lessen water use and improve plant and soil health amid hotter summers driven by climate change.
“We're living in a time of climate crisis, and our seasons for growing are becoming increasingly limited, especially for cold weather crops like romaine lettuce,” said Emily Kuhn, who will be managing the farm during the study. “So part of the goal of this project is to be able to produce crops like romaine lettuce for longer periods of time in the summertime as that stretches longer.”
They’ll start installing the solar panels in December and expect to start planting in January.
What’s the benefit?
Agrivoltaics is happening already, primarily in Europe and China. Research across the world and parts of the U.S. has already found that the strategy can help reduce water use, improve soil health and boost crop yields. It can work with livestock grazing, a variety of crops as well as cover crops that provide habitat for native pollinators. Most agrivoltaics in the U.S. are currently on the east coast and upper Midwest.
The benefits are largely a result of the shade the panels provide. Amid increasingly extreme heat, the shade from the panels can cool plants and livestock, helping with soil health, water retention, and crop yield. The shade can also help alleviate heat illness among farmworkers. And the plants underneath the panels can cool the solar panels themselves, making them more productive.
At the same time, as water supplies diminish due to climate change and overuse, farmers are already, and will need to continue, to take a lot of land out of production. The American Farmland Trust, which is a partner on this study, estimates 83% of new solar development built in the next few decades will likely be on farmland.
So adding solar production to the mix can keep more land in production while potentially boosting yields with less water to go around. Farms can benefit financially by saving on their energy bills or selling the power they generate back to the grid, if the transmission infrastructure is there and their solar array is large enough for that to be economical.
Phillips said she also sees agrivoltaics as a way to improve local economies.
“We need to diversify our economy in places like the Inland Empire, and we need to think about what it means to try to maintain the agricultural land that we have,” Phillips said. “Marrying that with the production of energy is a really interesting solution.”
Not a silver bullet
Agrivoltaics are a promising piece of the puzzle when it comes to addressing our energy needs, climate pollution and the many challenges farmers are facing, but it’s no silver bullet.
These projects are generally more expensive than traditional solar arrays, technically challenging to design and difficult to permit, and they’re not easily scaled up, said Jon Reiter, a farmer and solar developer in the San Joaquin Valley. He believes that agrivoltaics is limited in California.
The current state of agrivoltaics in the U.S. Most systems are over pollinator and other native habitat.
(
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
/
LAist
)
“We don't have a shortage of land, we have a shortage of water,” Reiter said. “If you raise the panels, that's going to have an increased cost for the additional steel…the net result is that the power costs are going to be higher.”
He said he can see agrivoltaics being most realistic over cover crops that serve pollinators, as well as in more urban areas or areas that don’t have as much space for solar and farming (such as in Massachusetts, which is leading efforts in agrivoltaics in the U.S.). University of California researchers, as well as the Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Lab, are working on the challenge of cost and scalability.
Reiter said going the agrivoltaics route will depend on the specifics of each farm. He farms almonds, pistachios, raisins, and blueberries. He said even with crops like blueberries where he could theoretically use agrivoltaics, it doesn’t make sense because he now mostly harvests by machine.
“Labor costs in California are so high that hand harvest crops are under threat because it becomes unaffordable,” Reiter said. “I farm blueberries and we used to handpick, but now we're 100% machine harvest.”
Spacing the panels to make room for those machines wouldn't be cost-effective, he said.
When it comes to meeting clean energy needs, Reiter said California has the space to do it and developing more utility-scale solar on already-disturbed agricultural lands can help lessen development of solar on sensitive desert habitats.
Bottom line — solar and farming don’t have to be at odds, Reiter said, but like any climate solution, there’s no one-size-fits-all approach.
President Donald Trump said his administration will, for now, halt its efforts to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland, Ore., after his deployments to the Democratic-led cities suffered a series of legal setbacks.
The context: The deployments in Chicago and Portland were blocked by the courts and Guard members left California after a sharp rebuke from a U.S. District Court judge earlier this month. More recently, the Supreme Court last week ruled against the administration's emergency appeal to deploy troops to Chicago. It was the first time the high court waded into the matter. While not precedent-setting, the ruling brought some clarity to Trump's presidential powers.
How we got here: Trump had argued that the Guard was needed in the Democratically led cities to quell crime and protect federal immigration officers and facilities. Democratic governors in those states staunchly opposed the deployments and federal judges were also wary of allowing the military to intervene in civilian matters.
Read on ... for more on the deployments and legal wrangling.
President Donald Trump said his administration will, for now, halt its efforts to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago, Los Angeles and Portland, Ore., after his deployments to the Democratic-led cities suffered a series of legal setbacks.
In a Truth Social post on Wednesday, Trump praised the deployments and claimed they have helped curtail crime.
"Portland, Los Angeles, and Chicago were GONE if it weren't for the Federal Government stepping in," he said.
More recently, the Supreme Court last week ruled against the administration's emergency appeal to deploy troops to Chicago. It was the first time the high court waded into the matter. While not precedent-setting, the ruling brought some clarity to Trump's presidential powers.
Trump had argued that the Guard was needed in the Democratically led cities to quell crime and protect federal immigration officers and facilities. Democratic governors in those states staunchly opposed the deployments and federal judges were also wary of allowing the military to intervene in civilian matters.
"This principle has been foundational to the safeguarding of our fundamental liberties under the Constitution," U.S. District Court Judge Karin Immergut wrote in her November ruling freezing Trump's deployment of troops to Portland.
Trump has also deployed National Guard troops to other U.S. cities, including Washington, D.C., where more than 2,000 members of the Guard have been patrolling since August.
Those deployments have also faced legal challenges — earlier this month a federal appeals court ruled that troops can remain in the capital city while a panel of judges examines whether the deployment is legal.
A handful of Republican-led states have welcomed the Guard. In Tennessee, troops began patrolling in October. And moments after the Supreme Court ruling, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said 350 troops would deploy to New Orleans. National Guard members arrived in the city Tuesday, member station WWNO reported.
In his Truth Social post on Wednesday, Trump promised, "We will come back, perhaps in a much different and stronger form, when crime begins to soar again - Only a question of time!"
By Chris Nichols, Laura Fitzgerald, Riley Palmer, Tony Rodriguez, Keyshawn Davis, and Chris Felts | Capital Public Radio
Published December 31, 2025 3:52 PM
The dome is photographed at the California State Capitol on Aug. 5, 2024, in Sacramento.
(
Juliana Yamada
/
AP
)
Topline:
Starting on Jan. 1, hundreds of new state laws will go into effect, some with the potential to shape the everyday lives of Californians.
Why now: They’re meant to tackle the state’s housing affordability crisis, establish guardrails on the use of artificial intelligence and protect the sharing of personal information for those who could face federal immigration enforcement.
Why it matters: Most new laws won’t all bring change overnight. But some could stoke continued controversy and legal challenges.
Read on ... for more about the new laws starting Jan. 1.
Starting on Jan. 1, hundreds of new state laws will go into effect, some with the potential to shape the everyday lives of Californians. They’re meant to tackle the state’s housing affordability crisis, establish guardrails on the use of artificial intelligence and protect the sharing of personal information for those who could face federal immigration enforcement.
Most new laws won’t all bring change overnight. But some could stoke continued controversy and legal challenges. For example, if you live near public transit, one new state law will give developers the freedom to build taller, denser housing, overriding local zoning rules and potentially transforming some single-family neighborhoods. Some cities and counties remain vehemently opposed and are considering legal action.
If you’re a renter, your landlord starting Jan. 1 will be required to provide a working stove and refrigerator and keep them in working order, a nod to efforts to ease the state’s severe affordability challenges. And if you work in law enforcement or the health care field, new state laws will regulate what you can and can’t do with AI on the job.
Here’s a small sample of the many new California laws that will go into effect Jan. 1:
More housing near transit
California lawmakers approved a significant and controversial new housing law this year, Senate Bill 79. It allows for building denser, taller housing near major transit stations even in areas where local rules ban that level of development. The law will pave the way for apartment buildings as tall as 75 feet close to metro, light rail, and some bus stations. Democratic lawmakers were divided over the measure. Some argued it was necessary to speed housing development and alleviate the state’s housing shortage while others warned it would change neighborhoods of single-family homes and impact property values. Developers will officially get the green light to break ground on projects that fall under the new law starting in 2026.
— Laura Fitzgerald
Requiring stoves and fridges in rentals
While it’s quite common for rental units to include a stove and a fridge, it hasn’t been the law. Beginning Jan. 1, Assembly Bill 628 adds refrigerators and stoves to the state’s definition of a “habitable” home. This means landlords must provide them, keep them in working order and handle repairs or replacement. The rule applies to new or renewed leases. Tenants may voluntarily bring their own fridge, but they aren’t required to. The law makes exceptions for supportive housing and shared living buildings with communal kitchens. Supporters say the change is designed to improve affordability for low-income renters.
Arturo Rodriguez of the California Democratic Renters Council says this protects many renters in larger cities, where stoves and refrigerators are not included in a unit, which is more common.
Several landlord and real-estate groups, such as the California Apartment Association and the California Association of Realtors, opposed the bill. They say new costs and installation could complicate expenses for property owners.
— Tony Rodriguez
Rideshare drivers can unionize and will have lower insurance requirements
In this Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016, file photo, a driver displaying Lyft and Uber stickers on his front windshield drops off a customer in downtown Los Angeles.
(
Richard Vogel
/
AP Images
)
California’s 800,000 rideshare drivers will get the right to unionize in 2026. In turn, rideshare companies will also have drastically lower insurance costs. That’s under two new laws Governor Gavin Newsom signed after brokering a deal between labor and major rideshare companies, including Uber and Lyft. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which sponsored Assembly Bill 1340 to expand collective bargaining rights to gig drivers, has already reached out to drivers ahead of the law’s implementation. Senate Bill 371 will slash insurance requirements for rideshare companies for underinsured drivers from $1 million to $300,000 per incident.
— Laura Fitzgerald
Getting election results faster
Staffers at Los Angeles County Recorder/County Clerk's headquarters sort ballots in this file photo from 2008, for the California presidential primary.
(
Ric Francis
/
AP
)
Californians could see faster election results in 2026. That’s under a new law that will require election officials to count the vast majority of ballots by 13 days after election day, with exceptions for some ballots that require additional verification. There are no current requirements for counting benchmarks, just a deadline for officials to send final election results to the Secretary of State within 31 days after election day. That rule will still apply.
The new law comes as the state has seen a rise in close contests where results can take weeks. Proponents, including some election experts, say speeding up ballot counting will bolster trust in the state’s election process. “We're at the point where people are losing faith in the political process and the elections process because they hear these claims from some political leaders casting doubt on the reliability of our results, and that's a real problem,” said Kim Alexander, president of the California Voter Foundation.
— Laura Fitzgerald
Ban on AI Chatbots misrepresenting themselves as medical professionals
Starting Jan. 1, Assembly Bill 489 will make it illegal for AI Chatbots to misrepresent themselves as doctors, therapists or other licensed clinicians when people go to them for advice. This has been an emerging problem with the artificial intelligence technology available online.
The California Medical Association helped sponsor the bill. Lobbyist Stuart Thomspon told CapRadio that oftentimes vulnerable people seeking mental health advice are not aware the chatbot they are speaking to is not being monitored by a real person.
“ A lot of these chatbots will imply, or not even imply, directly state, that the patient who's interacting with them is actually interacting with a licensed mental health professional,” Thompson said. “When in fact all the content generated is purely AI.”
Assemblymember Mia Bonta is the law’s author. She said it provides safeguards for young people and elders who may have trouble discerning who they are speaking with.
”The world is our oyster when it comes to AI and the advancements that are being made with agentic AI,” she said, referring to artificial intelligence systems that act with autonomy. “It's very important that we are providing enough of the human in the loop to be able to ensure that those experiences end up being positive and ensure that consumers are protected.”
A spokesperson for Bonta said developers of these AI systems may be held to the same consequences as humans who impersonate medical professionals – up to a $10,000 fine and/or up to a year in prison.
— Riley Palmer
Renewed Cap-and-Trade
(
Thomas Hawk
/
Flickr
)
California lawmakers passed legislation to renew the state’s cap-and-trade program — now officially calling it “cap-and-invest” — through 2045, with some amendments. The California Air Resources Board will begin rulemaking in the new year to figure out how to integrate the changes.
One change to the program allows CARB the chance to limit the distribution of free allowances. These allowances are meant to help address leakage risk, which refers to the risk that a company may decide to take its operations outside of California to avoid certain state restrictions. But critics have long said the leakage risk associated with the program is overblown, and these allowances allow companies to continue polluting.
CARB will soon announce the results of a revised assessment of the program’s leakage risk, which could guide their decisions to possibly limit free allowances after 2031.
— Manola Secaira
Protecting street vendors' personal data
Senate Bill 635 aims to protect street vendors in California from having their sensitive personal data shared with the federal government as the Trump administration continues to crackdown on undocumented immigrants.
Beginning Jan. 1, state and local governments will be prohibited from voluntarily providing street vendors’ identifying information to federal immigration authorities. The law also bars local agencies from collecting information on immigration status or criminal history, or from requiring fingerprints or LiveScan background checks as part of the street vendor permitting process.
Under the new law, local authorities that collected this prohibited information prior to the law’s effective date must destroy those records by March 1.
“Street vendors are a cornerstone of our communities and contribute significantly to California’s vibrant culture and economy,” said Democratic Senator María Elena Durazo, the bill’s author. “SB 635 ensures that these hardworking entrepreneurs can operate their businesses without fear that their personal information will be turned over to immigration authorities.”
Opposition to the bill was limited during the legislative process, with critics primarily raising questions about language surrounding food safety enforcement and administrative costs rather than immigration policy.
— Chris Felts
Disclosing AI use in police reports
(
Scott Davidson
/
Wikimedia Commons
)
A new law going into effect Jan. 1 will require California law enforcement officers to disclose when they use AI to help write official reports.
Under the new law, agencies will need to provide a statement when the technology is used in a report as well as a signature from the officer involved in it.
Democratic State Senator Jesse Arreguín of Berkeley is the law’s author. Arreguín told a Senate committee earlier this year that its purpose is to promote transparency and safeguards for the new technology.
“Prosecutors, defense attorneys and courts rely heavily on police reports to determine criminal outcomes,” he said. “It's critically important that additional uses to generate a report is accurate to prevent someone’s livelihood from being wrongly impacted.”
The bill’s supporters included many criminal justice groups. Meanwhile, a few law enforcement agencies in Southern California opposed it.
Sgt. Amar Ghandi is a spokesperson for the Sacramento Sheriff's office. He said the agency does not use AI yet for helping with reports, but it isn’t out of the question in the future.
“The technology is evolving daily, at exponential, light speed,” Gandhi said. “It could come to us, but as of right now we don’t use it because again it is imperfect. There are still some things that need to be worked on and issues we have with it.”
— Riley Palmer
Establishing a framework for reparations
Senate Bill 518 is a new California law that would establish the Bureau for Descendants of American Slavery.
The law was created by a 2023 task force that issued an 1,100-page document with recommendations for reparations for the descendants of enslaved people.
The law requires the bureau to create a Genealogy Division and to verify an individual's status as a descendant of slaves.
Democratic Assemblymember Corey Jackson co-authored the bill and said in July that it’s the first step in a long effort to implement reparations.
“We are not only creating a place to certify eligibility and provide education, but also laying the groundwork for future programs that can deliver remedies and opportunities for descendants.”
— Keyshawn Davis
Legal counsel for immigrant youth
Starting Jan. 1, immigrant youth going through immigration court in California will have access to legal counsel when facing deportation. That’s because of a new law, Assembly Bill 1261, requiring the state to pay for youth legal counsel if the federal government fails to do so. The law could cost taxpayers as much as $77 million.
— Gerardo Zavala
Keep up with LAist.
If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.
Nereida Moreno
is our midday host on LAist 89.3 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Published December 31, 2025 3:46 PM
Curators Zach Cordner (front) and Ken Crawford (right) show drummer Travis Barker around the "60 Miles East" exhibition at the Riverside Art Museum.
(
Julian V. Jolliffe
)
Topline:
A new exhibition called “60 Miles East” at the Riverside Art Museum’s Art Alliance Gallery celebrates the local punk rock, hardcore and ska music scene in Riverside from the late 1980s to early 2000s. It was curated by journalist Ken Craword and photographer Zach Cordner who met as kids in Riverside and spent their weekends attending local shows together.
Why it matters: The pair says they created the exhibition, in part, to help educate people on how great the underground music scene in Riverside was in its heyday — and how great it can still be today.
“I really love it when I see younger generations in the exhibition, reading the walls and just soaking all of that in,” Cordner said. “Hopefully they see that and can do it, and restart it. That's my hope for it.” How to see it: The exhibition runs until April 12
From backyard parties to sweaty moshpits, music lovers of all ages flocked to Riverside in the late 1980s and early 2000s to experience bands like Voodoo Glow Skulls and The Skeletones at smaller, independent venues — a community of fans, artists and promoters that shaped the city’s underground music scene before the days of the internet.
Some of that history is now on display at the Riverside Art Museum in an exhibition called “60 Miles East.” Curators Zach Cordner and Ken Crawford compiled thousands of photographs, flyers and other materials to showcase the impact of local punk, ska and hardcore bands — an era that was separate and distinct from what was happening in Los Angeles and Orange County at the time.
“ We were definitely in the shadow,” Crawford told LAist. “We kinda had to make do with hodgepodge shows and backyard bands. And then these great venues ended up emerging.”
That included places like The Barn at UC Riverside, as well as the Showcase Theatre and Spanky’s Cafe — both of which are now closed. Cordner and Crawford said they would learn about upcoming performances from friends, magazines and at record stores like the now-shuttered Mad Platter.
“As the mid nineties kind of progressed… bands were coming to Riverside finally, so we really didn't have to go too far,” Cordner said. “It was amazing.”
At the time, there was no social media to spread the word about shows, and very little internet access, which made it difficult to navigate the scene. Most people would draw maps and scribble directions to venues on the back of hand-copied flyers and posters.
“We had to actively seek it out, and hope that the map was accurate enough to actually get you there,” Cordner said. “It was definitely a more participatory thing.”
The title of the exhibition is a nod to the Inland Empire — sometimes the simplest way to describe where cities like Riverside and San Bernardino are located is to say they’re about “60 miles east” of L.A.
Ken Crawford and Zach Cordner met as kids in Riverside.
(
Gillian Moran Perez/LAist
)
Cordner and Crawford first met as kids in the I.E. and later bonded over their shared love of skateboarding and concerts during their teen years at Riverside Polytechnic High School.
“My parents had the hangout spot and I had the car with the most seats in it, so I got to be the host and chauffeur,” Crawford said.
During that time, Cordner got hooked on photography. He was about 14 or 15 when he shot his first-ever show featuring a hardcore band called Process. That experience helped him develop relationships with other artists who would then use his prints for their albums and other promotional materials.
“After that I was just smitten,” Cordner said. “I was like, ‘This is what I want to do.’”
The pair reconnected about three decades later. Cordner now serves as publisher of Riversider Magazine, and Crawford is editor-at-large.
In 2023, Crawford said he was covering a story at the opening of a Stater Bros. when he ran into an executive at Riverside Art Museum and later pitched her the idea for “60 Miles East.”
“And we ran with it. We started collecting not only from (Zach’s) stuff but from the community,” he said. “It became very evident very quickly that curating was going to be more of an issue than collecting.”
Cordner said it took almost half a year to sort through all the materials and narrow it down — and that’s “just the tip of the iceberg” of what they have.
The exhibition "60 Miles East" runs through April 12 at the Riverside Art Museum.
(
Julian V. Jolliffe
)
Today, the music scene in Riverside is still alive, Crawford said, but it’s smaller and lacks institutional support. But thanks to social media, it’s also easier to connect with bands and to learn about events in your area.
“I mean, it's Riverside. We still have a lot of these bands here…. it's just a matter of connecting and creating a community that really fosters the scene,” Cordner said.
Part of the reason they created “60 Miles East” was to educate people on how great the underground scene in Riverside was in its heyday — and how great it can still be today.
“I really love it when I see younger generations in the exhibition, reading the walls and just soaking all of that in,” Cordner said. “Hopefully they see that and can do it, and restart it. That's my hope for it.”
The exhibition“60 Miles East” runs through April 12 at the Riverside Art Museum.
This story was produced with help from Gillian Morán Pérez.
From high up in the mountains to the deep sea, take a tour across the world to meet five new species discovered in 2025.
Why it matters: Even as some scientists search for signs of life beyond Earth, other researchers have been discovering new species on our own humble planet faster than ever before.
An ancient sea cow in the Persian Gulf: Cows often get a bad rap for contributing to greenhouse gas emissions, but a newly discovered species of their ocean counterparts suggests that sea cows have been key contributors to a natural climate change solution for the past 21 million years.
Read on... for more species discovered this year.
Even as some scientists search for signs of life beyond Earth, other researchers have been discovering new species on our own humble planet faster than ever before.
From high up in the mountains to the deep sea, take a tour across the world to meet five new species discovered in 2025.
An ancient sea cow in the Persian Gulf
Qatar Museums staff and colleagues visit the excavation site of Salwasiren qatarensis, a 21-million-year-old sea cow species.
(
Nicholas D. Pyenson
/
Smithsonian
)
Cows often get a bad rap for contributing to greenhouse gas emissions, but a newly discovered species of their ocean counterparts suggests that sea cows have been key contributors to a natural climate change solution for the past 21 million years.
This long-extinct sea cow's fossil remains were discovered in Al Maszhabiya, Qatar, which is now known to be the richest fossil sea cow deposit in the world. Like today's manatees and dugongs, it mainly grazed on seagrass and was considered an "ecosystem engineer" in the coastal waters of the Persian Gulf, where it primarily lived.
With their fleshy muzzles, these mammals would browse the seafloor, grab the plants, and use their tusks to snip the roots and eat them. In the process, they lift up nutrients from the seafloor that would otherwise be buried, which other animals in the ecosystem can use. These nutrients, in addition to the sea cow's excrement, help cultivate a healthier and more diverse ecosystem.
"Supporting seagrass communities through ecosystem engineering is a great natural climate solution, because seagrass communities store an incredible amount of carbon," says Nicholas Pyenson, curator of fossil marine mammals at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.
The name of the new species, Salwasiren qatarensis, honors the fossil's discovery site in Qatar, and the Bay of Salwa in the Persian Gulf, where the largest herd of dugongs can be found today. But Pyenson says Salwa, an Arabic word which roughly translates to "solace," is also a nod to the potential for the new species to "elevate the visibility and protection of natural heritage," adding that "natural heritage doesn't actually, in all cases, respect geopolitical boundaries."
Pyenson is referring to the fact that the seagrass meadow in the Bay of Salwa spans the coasts of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. His colleagues are currently in the process of applying for UNESCO World Heritage status to protect the region.
"This is a great example of science diplomacy," Pyenson says, "where data sharing, making data open access and available when you publish, has the potential to actually form a metaphorical bridge between countries that maybe have not historically seen eye to eye."
You can see a 3D model of the sea cow fossil here.
A mini marsupial in the Andes Mountains
This new species of mouse opossum, called Marmosa chachapoya, has bright reddish fur and a long and delicate snout which distinguishes it from its closest relatives.
(
Pedro Peloso
)
A beady-eyed mouse opossum living high up in the Peruvian Andes wasn't what Silvia Pavan initially set out to find during her expedition in Río Abiseo National Park, but the new species gives yet another reason why this special region is protected as a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Pavan, an assistant professor at Cal Poly Humboldt, was on the hunt for a specific squirrel species when she and her colleagues came across an animal they eventually named Marmosa chachapoya to honor the Chachapoya people who formerly occupied the area.
The tiny marsupial (which, despite its scientific name, is not a marmoset) was the first small mammal that the researchers collected on their trip. While the animal looked a lot like a mouse opossum, its long and delicate snout and home high in the mountains set it apart from other marmosa species. But once Pavan brought the samples back, DNA analysis — coupled with a close examination of its skull — proved that this was indeed a new species.
The high-altitude area of the mountains where the expedition took place is difficult to access, but Pavan says these underexplored areas are even more important to study: "We do not know yet completely what we have, and it highlights how much we still need to explore and study the area, and how unique and important [it] is for biodiversity."
With the threat of climate change and human impact, Pavan says, "the species are being lost before we know they exist."
On this trip alone, the team of researchers collected roughly 100 different specimens that they are continuing to identify.
An undercover spider in Northern California
Marshal Hedin discovered this brown spider, Siskiyu armilla, along the river near where he grew up.
(
Marshal Hedin
)
Marshal Hedin was walking along the river near where he grew up in Northern California when he came across a spider he hadn't seen before. Fifteen years later, the professor of biology at San Diego State University finally got to identify it as a new species of an entirely new genus, which he named after his home of Siskiyou County.
Brown spider species like Siskiyu armilla are very difficult to tell apart using only their physical characteristics. Many species look similar because they live in the same kind of habitat: under rocks or in other dark, humid places.
To make sure the spider Hedin found was genetically different from existing species, he and his colleagues decided to perform a DNA analysis. So he returned to the river to search for a new specimen of the rare spider (and brought his son along with him, too).
Coauthor Rodrigo Monjaraz Ruedas, an assistant curator of entomology at the Natural History Museum in Los Angeles who focused on the DNA analysis, was surprised to find that there was such a huge diversity of spider species in the area.
He says that if we simply assume that spiders that look similar are the same species without actually examining their DNA, "we're going to be missing a lot of the actual diversity these spiders have."
California plays an especially important role in this diversity, according to Monjaraz Ruedas. As part of a project from the California Institute of Biodiversity, which hasn't yet been published, he has found that close to 40% of the total number of described species of spiders in the U.S. can be found in the state.
Hedin, who was once oblivious to the diversity of species his home boasts, says that this journey has brought him full circle: "Now I know that it's a very unique place." He hopes that this discovery shows the other folks living along the river how special their home is.
And "this is just the tip of the iceberg," Monjaraz Ruedas says, because they're still examining 40 to 50 other spiders that might also be new species.
A smiley snailfish from the deep sea
The bumpy snailfish, Careproctus colliculi, was officially described by MBARI researchers this year.
(
MBARI
)
Nearly 11,000 feet into the deep sea, scientists discovered a new species that caught the attention — and affection — of viewers from around the world. The bumpy snailfish was captured on video by researchers at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute during their expedition off the shores of Central California — and with its big eyes, feathery fins and a mouth bearing the suggestion of a smile, it was an instant hit.
To help determine if the floppy pink sea creature was new or one of the 400 existing species of snailfish, they assembled a team of scientists, including Mackenzie Gerringer, an associate professor of biology at the State University of New York at Geneseo.
Even though Gerringer has "never met a snailfish [she] didn't love," she knows that the deep sea, where some of the species live, is seen as a bit of an alien environment by many people, which can come with a negative connotation.
She says the new species can help people question their assumptions about the deep sea because "you're left with these fishes that are, in my opinion, quite cute, and they really look quite fragile in an environment that we think of as being very harsh."
The research team also identified two other species of snailfish, which Gerringer says highlights just how much there still is to learn about the deep sea.
While discovering a new species can be very exciting, Gerringer believes the importance of the practice goes beyond that.
"It's critical to know who is in these ecosystems, so that we can understand how they're working, so that we can protect habitats like the deep sea that we know play hugely important roles," she says. Some of those roles, including the deep sea's ability to store enormous amounts of carbon, are especially important given the threat of climate change.
Live-birthing toads in Tanzania
Scientists have described three toad species in Tanzania, including the Luhomero Glandular Tree Toad (Nectophrynoides luhomeroensis), that give birth to live young — a rare phenomenon among frogs and toads.
(
John Lyakurwa
)
Many people remember learning about the typical life cycle of frogs and toads in elementary school: Eggs turn into tadpoles, which eventually become adults. But scientists have found three new species of toads in Tanzania that do something very unusual: they give birth to live young.
Another striking thing about these new species, which are all part of the genus Nectophrynoides: The journey to discover them took over 100 years. The first toad in this genus was described in the early 1900s, and because all the specimens collected looked so similar, they were all thought to belong to a singular species.
But Christoph Liedtke, an academic researcher from the Spanish National Research Council who has spent the last decade studying these toads, wondered whether there was more biodiversity in the highlands of the Eastern Arc mountains of Tanzania than previously thought. So he and his colleagues tried to see if there was more than one species in the Nectophrynoides genus.
This was no easy task because many of the specimens they needed to examine and compare to modern-day samples were collected before the time of DNA sequencing. Coauthor John Lyakurwa, an assistant lecturer at the University of Dar es Salaam, says that the process was like a "big puzzle that we had to solve."
So they teamed up with researchers from Denmark and Belgium to extract DNA from over 200 museum specimens. From there, they used next-generation sequencing to identify three new species in the genus, which was more than previously thought.
It's not clear how these toads will fare in the future. Like many species, their populations are in decline, with one species already extinct and others not being spotted for the past 20 years. For his PhD thesis, Lyakurwa has been focusing on understanding why these toad populations have been shrinking. Especially because of their unusual method of reproduction, he stresses that "if we lose them, we lose a very big evolutionary history."