In Kyrgyzstan, World's Largest Natural Walnut Forest Thins Away

A woman picks walnuts in walnut forests in Arslanbap in Kyrgyzstan's Jalal-Abad region, some 700kms from the capital Bishkek, on October 21, 2025. (Photo by VYACHESLAV OSELEDKO / AFP)
A woman picks walnuts in walnut forests in Arslanbap in Kyrgyzstan's Jalal-Abad region, some 700kms from the capital Bishkek, on October 21, 2025. (Photo by VYACHESLAV OSELEDKO / AFP)
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In Kyrgyzstan, World's Largest Natural Walnut Forest Thins Away

A woman picks walnuts in walnut forests in Arslanbap in Kyrgyzstan's Jalal-Abad region, some 700kms from the capital Bishkek, on October 21, 2025. (Photo by VYACHESLAV OSELEDKO / AFP)
A woman picks walnuts in walnut forests in Arslanbap in Kyrgyzstan's Jalal-Abad region, some 700kms from the capital Bishkek, on October 21, 2025. (Photo by VYACHESLAV OSELEDKO / AFP)

Rustling through fallen golden leaves, locals in a forest outside Arslanbob in the Kyrgyz mountains were scurrying for walnuts -- an ancient pastime and economic lifeline for the region.

But the forest, the world's largest wild walnut grove, has for years been slowly fading -- hit by the overgrazing of livestock, illegal logging and rising temperatures, AFP reported.

"The forest used to be so dense but it has thinned out," said Asel Alisheva, a pensioner from the village, officially known as Arslanbap, who has been foraging there for decades.

She was once afraid to venture too far into the wood.

"It used to be impossible to walk through. Now there are so many people," she told AFP.

"The difference is striking," the 70-year-old added as she cracked walnuts in a roadside tent.

Locals have gathered the earthy tough-shelled nuts here for generations.

They are both an economic staple and a symbol of the Jalal-Abad region.

"Nowhere else in the world is there such a large concentration of natural walnut forests," said regional forestry expert Zakir Sarymsakov.

He also highlighted the "vast variety" of walnut species that can be found in the region.

For locals, walnuts are a bread-and-butter issue.

"This is how we make a living. There are no other ways, only walnuts. This is how we feed our children," said Arno Narynbaeva, 53, who has been picking them since childhood.

At the bustling village bazaar, men stack bulging walnut sacks, while women do the trade.

But business has seen better days -- the harvests have been poor lately.

"In the 2000s, we used to receive large quantities, up to 15 tons per day. These days, we get three to four, and it decreases year by year," seller Zhazgul Omurzakova said.

"The climate is getting hotter and drier every year, and the nuts are losing their quality, turning red inside," the 47-year-old said.

Whiter kernels are worth more as the nuts' visual appeal is important for pastry-makers.

"Hot weather harms the walnuts. They fall, burn, and turn black," said picker Narynbaeva.

"We have never seen this happen before."

Average temperatures in Central Asia have risen by about 1.5C since 1991, twice the global average, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), a UN climate agency.

More frequent droughts that accompany the hotter weather have also hit the walnut groves.

Locals are trying to address the problem, including by seeding millions of trees in the Arslanbob forest nursery.

But water shortages, chronic across Central Asia, have hit those efforts.

"Over the past two to three years, there has been no rain, and it has become hot," said Temir Emirov, who works in the tree nursery.

"The ground has dried out, and the grass has withered," he added.

"The seedlings haven't received water for a month and are using their own moisture to survive."

Other human activity is also taking a toll on the forest.

"Since we don't have pastures, livestock is a problem," said chief forest ranger Ibragim Turgunbekov.

Cattle herds, expanding in size and number, have trampled the soil and eaten young shoots.

Illegal logging -- with locals preferring trees over more expensive coal for firewood -- has also thinned out the forest.

Ranger Turgunbekov issues fines and tries to convince farmers to reduce the size of their herds.

Local imams have even called on their followers to help preserve the walnut trees.

Some want stricter measures, such as taxing surplus livestock or a government ban on grazing near settlements.

Turgunbekov said a solution could be better utilizing the walnuts' economic potential.

"If we make perfumes or oils out of walnuts and ship them to Europe, their value will increase," he said.

"By selling at higher prices, locals will be more motivated and will take better care of the forest."

Abdulaziz Khalmuradov, 16, is one of the region's young people trying to do just that.

After school, he makes walnut oil using a traditional press.

"I want to increase the number of machines and produce not only walnut oil but also many other types, such as apricot oil," the aspiring entrepreneur told AFP.

He also wants to push sustainable tourism to the region.

"Tourism in Arslanbob is underdeveloped. If the number of tourists increases, volumes will increase," he told AFP.

"When I grow up, I have big plans."



Rover Discovers More Building Blocks of Life on Mars

NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took this selfie at a location nicknamed “Mary Anning” after a 19th-century English palaeontologist in this image released by the US space agency on Nov 12, 2020. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Handout via Reuters)
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took this selfie at a location nicknamed “Mary Anning” after a 19th-century English palaeontologist in this image released by the US space agency on Nov 12, 2020. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Handout via Reuters)
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Rover Discovers More Building Blocks of Life on Mars

NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took this selfie at a location nicknamed “Mary Anning” after a 19th-century English palaeontologist in this image released by the US space agency on Nov 12, 2020. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Handout via Reuters)
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took this selfie at a location nicknamed “Mary Anning” after a 19th-century English palaeontologist in this image released by the US space agency on Nov 12, 2020. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/Handout via Reuters)

A NASA rover has discovered more building blocks of life on Mars after carrying out a chemistry experiment never before conducted on another planet, scientists said Tuesday.

The organic molecules are not definitive evidence of past life, the NASA-led team emphasized, because they could also have formed on the red planet or crash-landed on meteorites.

But it proves that these important clues to Martian history have been preserved on the surface for more than three billion years, they added.

Back then, the surface of Mars was thought to have been dotted with huge lakes and rivers full of liquid water, a key ingredient for life as we know it.

NASA's Curiosity rover landed in a former lakebed called the Gale crater in 2012, and has been searching for signs of possible past life since.

The car-sized rover carried two tubes of a chemical called TMAH, which can break apart organic matter to see what it is made out of.

"This experiment's never been run before on another world," Amy Williams, an astrobiologist working on the Curiosity mission told AFP.

The team were under pressure because they only had "two shots to get it right", added Williams, the lead author of a new study describing the results.

The experiment, conducted in 2020, detected more than 20 organic molecules, including several that had never before been confirmed on Mars.

These included a molecule called benzothiophene, which has also been found in meteorites and asteroids.

"The same stuff that rained down on Mars from meteorites is what rained down on Earth, and it probably provided the building blocks for life as we know it on our planet," Williams said.

Another molecule containing nitrogen "is a precursor to how DNA is eventually built," she added.

"We're seeing the building blocks for life -- prebiotic chemistry on Mars -- preserved in these rocks for billions of years."

- Future missions -

But none of this can prove that life -- even tiny, microbial organisms -- once flourished on Mars.

One way to potentially make such an "extraordinary claim" would be to bring some Martian rocks back to Earth so scientists can study them more closely, Williams said.

NASA's Perseverance rover has already collected a bunch of rocks for such a mission, called Mars Sample Return.

However, the mission has effectively been cancelled by the administration of President Donald Trump following a US Congress vote in January.

Future missions could still benefit from Curiosity's demonstration that experiments using the TMAH chemical work on other worlds, the new study in Nature Communications said.

The European Space Agency's Rosalind Franklin rover, which has a much longer drill than Curiosity, will take the chemical to Mars.

After years of delays, NASA announced last week that the ESA's rover is now scheduled to blast off towards the red planet in late 2028.

The chemical will also be on board the Dragon rotorcraft, which is planned to launch in 2028 on a mission to explore Saturn's moon Titan.


Hot Air Balloon with 13 Aboard Makes Emergency Landing in California Backyard

This photo provided by Hunter Perrin shows people riding a hot air balloon posing for a photo after making an emergency landing in Perrin's backyard on Saturday, April 18, 2026, in Temecula, Calif. (Hunter Perrin via AP)
This photo provided by Hunter Perrin shows people riding a hot air balloon posing for a photo after making an emergency landing in Perrin's backyard on Saturday, April 18, 2026, in Temecula, Calif. (Hunter Perrin via AP)
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Hot Air Balloon with 13 Aboard Makes Emergency Landing in California Backyard

This photo provided by Hunter Perrin shows people riding a hot air balloon posing for a photo after making an emergency landing in Perrin's backyard on Saturday, April 18, 2026, in Temecula, Calif. (Hunter Perrin via AP)
This photo provided by Hunter Perrin shows people riding a hot air balloon posing for a photo after making an emergency landing in Perrin's backyard on Saturday, April 18, 2026, in Temecula, Calif. (Hunter Perrin via AP)

A balloon landed in a Southern California backyard — a balloon with 13 people.

The enormous hot air balloon, with a pilot and passengers in the basket, descended perfectly Saturday on a small plot of grass at a home in Temecula. Hunter Perrin said he had no idea that he had visitors until a neighbor alerted him.

“I was watching TV and my wife was doing yoga,” Perrin told The Associated Press. “There was a man standing in front of my door saying, ‘They just landed.’ What? I was very confused.”

But there they were, a group of anxious people suddenly relieved to be on solid ground. Perrin's grassy backyard patch is only about 10 feet (3 meters) wide.

“It was unbelievable, like something out of a Disney fairy tale,” Jenna Perrin said. “The balloon didn't hit our house or our trees. It was kissing the fence.”

Brianna Avalos and her husband were riding in the balloon to celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary. She said the pilot informed passengers that he needed to make an emergency landing because of low fuel and a shift in winds.

“At first I was like, ‘Oh my God! We’re in a backyard! This is crazy!’” Avalos told KABC-TV.

The blue balloon with gold stars and a crescent moon image was a spectacle as it came to rest in the backyard, towering over Perrin's home. The pilot disembarked the passengers, returned aloft and then landed the balloon nearby in the street, where it was dismantled.

“He was an amazing pilot,” Avalos said.

Denni Barrett, the owner of Magical Adventure, which provides the balloon rides, declined to identify the pilot but said he had “exercised great judgment” and “done the right thing.”

“Most of our landings are in wine country,” Barrett said, referring to vineyards in California's Riverside County. “Usually they're bigger backyards.”


How a Paris-Area Wildlife Hospital Keeps Rescued Animals Wild

A baby fox is treated at the Wildlife Veterinary Hospital in Maisons-Alfort, outside Paris, April 17, 2026. (AP)
A baby fox is treated at the Wildlife Veterinary Hospital in Maisons-Alfort, outside Paris, April 17, 2026. (AP)
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How a Paris-Area Wildlife Hospital Keeps Rescued Animals Wild

A baby fox is treated at the Wildlife Veterinary Hospital in Maisons-Alfort, outside Paris, April 17, 2026. (AP)
A baby fox is treated at the Wildlife Veterinary Hospital in Maisons-Alfort, outside Paris, April 17, 2026. (AP)

A wildlife hospital in a southeastern Paris suburb is a place of no cuddles but lots of care. It helps injured, sick and orphaned animals — often victims of human activity and increasing urbanization — heal so they can return to their natural habitat.

Last week, a female fox cub was found alone in a garden on the city's outskirts, with no sign of her mother nearby. Now a team of volunteers takes care of her around the clock.

“We’ll make sure she’s eating well,” animal caretaker Valentin Delon said. “If that’s not the case, we might provide supplemental bottles to ensure she gains enough weight.”

Over the past year, the Wildlife Veterinary Hospital in Maisons-Alfort has taken in more than 10,400 wild animals, including a wide variety of birds and European mammals such as foxes, deer and hedgehogs.

Like the little brown-furred cub, the animals can easily capture a caretaker's heart, but bonding with humans is not an option when the goal is to eventually return them to the wild.

The baby fox was found by residents who own hunting dogs. Estimated to be about 2 weeks old, she was far too young to survive on her own.

At the Maisons-Alfort hospital, veterinarian Julie Piazza carefully examined her and aside from a minor injury, possibly caused by a wild animal or a dog’s bite, she was found to be in good health.

The cub was fed artificial milk — a product matching the composition of animal-produced milk — and because of that, her abdomen was swollen, Piazza said.

"That’s common in a young one that has had a disruption in its diet,” she added.

Once healed, the animals are transferred to outdoor enclosures and aviaries to prepare for a reintroduction into their natural environment.

Delon, the caretaker, says that “any kind of imprinting” — measures that attach the animals to their caregiver long-term — must be avoided.

“So we don’t cuddle them, we don’t talk to them,” she said. “There’s really a distance to maintain for their own good in the end, so they can be released later.”

Because she is just a cub, once she grows sufficiently, the baby fox will first be transferred to a rehabilitation center and placed with other foxes in an enclosure.

“We can’t just release her into the wild like that,” Delon said. “She really needs to go into an enclosure first, and then gradually we’ll open the door so she can come and go while still being fed. Then we’ll gradually reduce the food, and that’s how we achieve a truly gradual release.”

Juveniles are especially vulnerable

The hospital ran by the Faune Alfort group is the only facility in the greater Paris area that treats a wide range of wild species. Some 86% of its patients are birds.

Last week, there was a swan with a broken wing, injured hedgehogs, dozens of ducklings often found on balconies and elsewhere without parents, and lots of pigeons that are treated just as carefully as rarer birds.

Elisa Mora, head of communications for Faune Alfort, a nonprofit group running the Maisons-Alfort hospital, said a record 200 admissions were reported in a single day last summer. The hospital is mostly financed by donations from individuals and charities, and relies on volunteers to help feed and care for the animals.

April to September is the “juvenile period when wild animals reproduce” and the admissions peak, Mora said.

“Wild animals are already vulnerable, but juveniles even more so,” she said. Those too badly injured or unable to return to the wild have to be euthanized.

Veterinarian Jean-François Courreau launched Faune Alfort in 1987, inspired by students willing to better treat wild animals. Six years later, the idea turned into a proper hospital, hosted by the National Veterinary School of Alfort, established in the 18th century.

“It’s hard to stand by helplessly in front of an animal in distress without being able to do anything,” Courreau said, adding that it's his duty to help as a vet.

When people find a wild animal in distress, they think “I can’t do anything, and the animal is going to die,” he said. “So when they know a care center exists and that they can bring the animal there, it’s a huge relief.”

The vast majority of animals brought to the hospital — as many as 60% to 80% of admissions — are victims of road collisions, animals caught in barbed wire or injured by people using gardening tools or agricultural machinery, among other causes.