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The month’s best science images
The world’s largest urban rooftop farm opened to the public on 1 July. Located on top of an exhibition centre in southwest Paris, the farm stretches over 15,000 square metres and aims to produce several hundred kilograms of fruit, vegetables and spices each day. It will use space-saving methods such as aeroponics, in which plants are grown in vertical columns without soil and are fed liquid nutrients.
See more of the month’s sharpest science shots, selected by Nature’s photo team.
Pig hosts can repair damaged human lungs
Some 80% of donated lungs have to be discarded because of damage. But after researchers connected rejected lungs to pigs, the lungs recovered and were fit for transplant. The method revived lungs that ex vivo lung perfusion, the normal method of maintaining and repairing lungs outside the body, had failed to fix. “All of a sudden, [the lungs are] attached to a functioning liver, a functioning gut,” says thoracic surgeon Matthew Bacchetta. “We used a fairly standard immunosuppressive regimen and took these rejected lungs and showed that we could actually sustain them and make them better.” Researchers say the effect could work just as well if the lungs were connected to a human — allowing a person in need of a lung transplant to heal the lungs they require, themselves.
Reference: Nature Medicine paper
Features & opinion
How ancient cities got through hard times
The coronavirus pandemic has shaken our faith in urban life, notes author Andrew Robinson in his review of a book by historian Greg Woolf. Starting from Uruk, in Mesopotamia — arguably the first city ever — Woolf offers a deeply researched and ambitious natural history of the origins and growth of urbanism. Though written before the coronavirus pandemic, the book offers insight into how disease nudged the courses of great cities as they rose — and inevitably, fell.
Help Koalas, help ourselves
Vaccine trials being run in Australia to protect koalas from chlamydia could help lead to a human vaccine, too. Chlamydia is ravaging the animals’ population (aided by habitat destruction and road kill). Animal- and human-health researchers are working together on projects that benefit both species. “You’re better off doing a bad experiment in koalas than a good experiment in mice,” says microbiologist Peter Timms. “We don’t need a vaccine for mice.”