Detecting disease with only a single molecule
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 1-Jul-2025 09:10 ET (1-Jul-2025 13:10 GMT/UTC)
Birds are the undisputed champions of epic travel—but they are not the only long-haul fliers. A handful of bats are known to travel thousands of kilometers in continental migrations across North America, Europe, and Africa. The behavior is rare and difficult to observe, which is why long-distance bat migration has remained an enigma. Now, scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior (MPI-AB) have studied 71 common noctule bats on their spring migration across the European continent, providing a leap in understanding this mysterious behavior. Ultra-lightweight, intelligent sensors attached to bats uncovered a strategy used by the tiny mammals for travel: they surf the warm fronts of storms to fly further with less energy. The study is published in Science.
The authors collected a total of 2,430 inbred lines derived from elite commercial hybrids and 503 inbred lines from natural populations. Such a panel holds a broadly sourced and genetically diverse inbred population. Combining resequencing technology, population genetics analysis, and deep learning algorithms, they conducted a genetic diversity analysis and predicted key breeding traits for 2,933 maize inbred lines. This work offers novel insights into maize genetic improvement and lays a foundation for intelligent breeding design.