January 1, 2022 | Issue 22-01
Science Spotlight
Researchers Have Unlocked The Secret To Pearls’ Incredible Symmetry
For centuries, researchers have puzzled over how oysters grow stunningly symmetrical; perfectly round pearls around irregularly shaped grains of sand or bits of debris. Now a team has shown that oysters, mussels, and other mollusks use a complex process to grow the gems that follow mathematical rules seen throughout nature.

Pearls are formed when an irritant gets trapped inside a mollusk, and the animal protects itself by building smooth layers of mineral and protein — together called nacre — around it.
A pearl’s symmetrical growth lays down layers of nacre that rely on the mollusk balancing two basic capabilities. It corrects growth aberrations that appear as the pearl forms, preventing those variations from propagating over the pearl’s many layers. Otherwise, the resulting gem would be lopsided.

Read more about this research here.
Some Wasps’ Nests Glow Green Under Ultraviolet Light
Beam a black light into some Vietnamese forests at night, and brilliant green bulbs may glow in the trees. These eerie lanterns are the nests of several species of Asian paper wasps, and the gleam comes from silk fibers in the nests that fluoresce when struck by ultraviolet light, researchers report.

Bernd Schöllhorn and colleagues discovered the nests while searching forests in Vietnam for fluorescent insects using powerful UV torches.

After analyzing the fluorescence of the nests of some Asian paper wasps in the lab, the researchers found that silk threads in the nests glow more brilliantly than other documented fluorescent biomaterials.

One hypothesis is that the nests protect larvae inside from UV radiation by absorbing some of the harmful energy and dissipating it as visible light.

Read more about this research here.