Temperate regions lead in local extinctions as heat accelerates

The studies highlight how surrounding conditions reshape justice, health, and ecological outcomes.

Jamie Sullivan

Key Highlights

  • A global dataset of 5,100 species reports higher local extinction rates in temperate zones than in the tropics.
  • Evidence syntheses indicate decriminalization shows no increase in cannabis use, while profit-driven legalization correlates with higher consumption.
  • Analyses describe intensifying Arctic marine heatwaves driven by sea ice loss and freshwater stratification that traps surface warmth.

Today’s r/science conversations clustered around a shared thread: how context—from courtroom optics to policy design to shifting climates—reshapes outcomes. The community spotlighted studies that question our assumptions about perception, behavior, and ecological risk, tying human bias, biology, and planetary heat into a single, revealing day of discourse.

Across topics, researchers and commenters kept returning to the same takeaway: the environment around a system—social, neural, or ecological—often matters as much as what’s inside it.

When perception becomes reality

New work on how facial appearance can sway parole and recidivism judgments shows how quickly our sense of “objectivity” can be nudged by looks. The study highlights contrast effects and the pull of perceived remorse, raising tough questions for a justice system built on impartiality.

"I've wondered before because of all the biases in the justice system if all suspects/convicts in court should be sat in a curtained box with a voice distorter or something..." - u/RoadsideCampion (354 points)

Cognitive reframing surfaced again in evidence that voters rewrite their memories after national elections, protecting identities and hardening divides. A clinical parallel emerged in findings that Parkinson’s patients with visual hallucinations tend to see life in the inanimate, suggesting that our brains’ expectation engines can tilt judgments in both civic life and sensory experience.

Biology under pressure, behavior in context

On the mind-body front, researchers linked physiology to lived experience: the physical signs of lucid dreaming in people with trauma symptoms point to measurable sleep markers that could guide care, while a separate analysis tied occupational hazards to behavior, with routine blast exposure in the military associated with long-term anger and violence even after accounting for other mental health factors.

"So the finding is that marketing increases sales..." - u/SP1570 (652 points)

That wry summary captured a policy-through-science theme: a synthesis indicating decriminalization does not increase cannabis use, while profit-driven legalization does, underscoring how market design shapes public health. In parallel, neuroimaging added nuance, as a longitudinal fMRI study found reduced ventral striatum activity during reward anticipation in adolescent users, suggesting a brain-level signature of use without clear evidence of heightened adolescent vulnerability relative to adults.

Zooming out to intimate behavior, the community also engaged with the largest study of women’s orgasms to date, which emphasizes that relational factors—communication, emotional connection, and partner skills—often outweigh anatomy in predicting satisfaction. Together, these threads argue that biology sets the stage, but context and design—whether in markets, relationships, or workplaces—frequently direct the performance.

Heat where we didn’t expect it

Assumptions fell in ecology, too. A global dataset showed more local extinctions in temperate zones than in the tropics, a reversal of long-held expectations tied to sensitivity and warming rates. With temperate regions heating quickly—and species there proving just as sensitive—the risk map is redrawn.

At higher latitudes, a broad synthesis detailed intensifying Arctic marine heatwaves, fueled by sea ice loss, subsurface heat, and freshwater layers that lock warmth near the surface. The combined picture—from temperate hillsides to polar seas—suggests that climate’s fastest-moving edges are now steering biological futures, with monitoring and methods racing to keep up.

Every subreddit has human stories worth sharing. - Jamie Sullivan

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Sources

TitleUser
Largest study of womens orgasms to date collected data from 27,931 women. Nearly half (47%) reported reaching orgasm more frequently when alone vs. when with a partner. Barriers to womens orgasms are relational, not anatomical. Partnered orgasms were associated with overall sexual satisfaction.
06/21/2026
u/mvea
9,228 pts
Removing criminal penalties for possessing cannabis for personal use, or introducing tightly controlled legalisation of cannabis, doesnt appear to increase levels of cannabis use. But profit-driven legalisation increases use and harms
06/21/2026
u/sr_local
2,521 pts
Facial appearance can shape parole and recidivism judgments. "Criminal"-looking faces were judged less deserving of parole and more likely to reoffend. "Remorseful" facial features often led to more favorable legal judgments and outcomes.
06/21/2026
u/mvea
1,663 pts
Scientists uncover the physical signs of lucid dreaming in people with trauma symptoms. The physical characteristics of a persons sleep cycle are intimately connected to their conscious awareness during dreaming. Tracking physical rest metrics might aid in treating trauma-related nightmares.
06/21/2026
u/Tracheid
1,469 pts
Following national elections, voters rewrite their memories of the political event and distort their initial expectations to align closely with the eventual outcome. These self-serving cognitive biases protect individual self-esteem and group identity, helping to maintain profound partisan divides.
06/22/2026
u/mvea
828 pts
Adolescent cannabis users have reduced ventral striatum activity during reward anticipation
06/21/2026
u/AppropriateBook7193
496 pts
Patients with Parkinsons disease and visual hallucinations are more likely to interpret ambiguous images as living things (faces or animals) rather than objects, suggesting altered visual processing biases.
06/21/2026
u/EvoSapiens
242 pts
A global study of 5,100 species reveals climate change is driving more local extinctions in temperate zones than the tropics (49% vs 33%). This upends long-held theories, as researchers find temperate regions are warming twice as fast and species there are just as sensitive to heat.
06/21/2026
u/DrPharmakon
234 pts
Shockwaves from routine military duties associated with long-term anger and violence. This association remains visible even when accounting for other mental health factors like post-traumatic stress disorder.
06/22/2026
u/Tracheid
96 pts
Arctic marine heatwaves are intensifying, with marginal seas warming 0.6Cdecadetwice the global rateand lasting 10-40 days, a new study reveals. Driven by sea ice loss and deep Atlantic currents, freshwater layers from melting ice amplify and prolong these surface heatwaves by 20%.
06/22/2026
u/DrPharmakon
72 pts