Posts

Antimicrobial Resistance: Evolutionary Inevitability or a Human-Made Crisis?

Image
“Where are the drugs? The drugs are where the disease is not. Where is the disease? The disease is where the drugs are not.” -  Peter Mugyenyi, Ugandan physician, HIV/AIDS researcher, medical administrator and author. Few statements capture the global paradox of antimicrobial resistance more clearly than this observation from Ugandan physician Peter Mugyenyi. His words do not describe microbial genetics. They describe distribution, access and systems in healthcare and medication. The distinction matters. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is often framed as a biological inevitability, where microbes evolve, antibiotics lose effectiveness, and the cycle continues. This is true, but it is incomplete. Resistance is not only an evolutionary phenomenon. It has become a crisis because human systems, medical, economic, agricultural, and political avenues, amplify and mismanage evolutionary pressure. The question, then, is not whether resistance evolves. It does. The question is why it...

The Self-Selecting Species: Cities, Screens, and the Evolutionary Arena We Built

Image
  It could be on the subway, walk down the road to a kiosk or local shop and maybe on the table at a restaurant. At almost every turn, everyone or most people are using their phones, form one person to the other. When the news flips on, they are alarming calls about the digital age, causing all types of trouble to humans to turn back to the forest. Contrastingly, animals are seemingly adapting to our increasingly digital cities with some ease, noted by the way we encounter various animals in the city or have lived with some for years. In parts of India, rhesus macaques leap across electric lines and temple roofs, exploiting food offerings and traffic rhythms with remarkable agility. On the edges of cities in South Africa, baboons and warthogs test the porous boundary between savanna and suburb. In United States, raccoons open trash bins with near-primate dexterity while coyotes navigate freeway underpasses like seasoned commuters. Cities, it turns out, do not eliminate nature. Th...

The extended nervous systems of the city and forest: Biomimicry, Niche Construction, and the Tension Between Digital and Forest Life

Image
  The Desire to Unplug Across industrial societies, a quiet migration is underway. People speak of “disconnecting,” and leaving screens behind, escaping algorithmic feeds and returning to nature where they are surrounded by forests, mountains and rivers. The digital world feels overwhelming, while nature feels restorative. Beneath this cultural impulse lies a deeper biological question, that could be circling this “unplugging” hype, where we ask, whether, humans are actually adapted to forest life or are we only adapted to technological environments? To approach this, we must step away from romantic imagery and examine how organisms truly relate to their environments. In particular, we must examine how they sense them, because adaptation begins with perception, just as our senses are all in flux, from the digital input, let us look at it all. Nature as Sensor: Embodied Environmental Intelligence Crocodiles and Mechanoreception The Crocodile possesses specialized integumen...

City Pulse. Forest Breath: What our biology is doing in both worlds

Image
  There’s a particular sound that cities make just before you fully wake up to them. It’s not one noise, but layers of it. A bus braking. Someone dragging a bin to the curb. A notification buzzing on your nightstand. Footsteps above you. Light leaking around the curtains before your alarm goes off. Now imagine a different morning. No engines. No alerts. Just air moving. Maybe birds. Maybe insects. Maybe nothing at all, the kind of quiet that feels so complete you notice your own breathing. Many of us move between these worlds, or at least fantasize about doing so. We scroll past “cabin in the woods” aesthetics, after a long day online. We talk about digital detoxes. We joke about disappearing into nature. Beneath the memes and the mood boards, something deeper is happening. Our biology is negotiating. This isn’t a story about cities being bad and forests being pure. It’s not a call to abandon modern life. It’s a look at how one species. The human species that is, adap...