Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Seahorses' body shape explained

 

A seahorse's shape enables it to suck in more distant prey

The strange and beautiful seahorse has fascinated people for centuries.

And scientists now say they understand why this unusual fish evolved its equine-like head and S-shape.

A study published in the journal Nature Communications has shown that, compared to straight-bodied pipefish from which they evolved, seahorses are able to strike at more distant prey.

The team concludes that the seahorses' delicate curves evolved to help it hunt and feed.

They attach to seagrass and wait for food to pass by within striking distance

Both seahorse and pipefish feed on tiny marine creatures, striking at them and sucking them into their snouts.

But unlike most pipefish, which swim towards their prey, seahorses sit and wait for their little victims to pass by.

Using high-speed footage and mathematical models, Sam Van Wassenbergh from the University of Antwerp in Belgium showed that the curve in a seahorse's "neck" allows it to strike at more distant prey.

"They rotate their heads upward to bring their mouth close to the prey [passing above]," explained Dr Wassenbergh.

The creatures' curved bodies mean that when they do this, their mouths also moved forward, helping to bring passing small crustaceans within sucking distance of their snouts.

"My theory is that you have this ancestral pipefish-like fish and they evolved a more cryptic lifestyle," said Dr Wassenbergh.

Ghost pipefish and long-snouted seahorse (Image: Science Photo Library)

Seahorses evolved from straight-bodied pipefish (left)

This shift in the behaviour to become a more "sit and wait feeder" meant that they needed to capture prey that was further away, he explains.

So these new fish then became S-shaped seahorses, which could use their bodies to strike out.

Bats in Borneo roost in carnivorous pitcher plants

Bats in Borneo roost in carnivorous pitcher plants

 

Kerivoula hardwickii and Nepenthes rafflesiana elongata (c) Holger Bohn

Bats in Borneo have been found roosting in carnivorous pitcher plants.

A new study reveals that the plants benefit from nutrients in the bats' droppings.

This unusual living arrangement is apparently beneficial for the bats too as they can shelter unseen inside the plants' pitchers.

Although tree shrews have also been observed using pitcher plants as toilets, this is the first time mammals have been found living inside them.

Nepenthes carnivorous pitcher plants grow in nutrient-poor soil and rely on trapping insects to acquire enough nitrogen for growth.

Found in the peat swamps and heath forest of Borneo, N. rafflesiana elongata are remarkable for their long aerial pitchers.

However, research has previously suggested that N. r. elongatacatch up to seven times less insects than other pitcher plants in Borneo.

The pitcher plant benefits from attracting the bat because the bats defecate into the pitcher, using it as a toilet

Dr Ulmar Grafe

In a new study, published in the journal Biology Letters, scientists found that the unique subspecies had a extraordinary relationship with mammals.

Dr Ulmar Grafe and his team investigated how the plants supplemented their nitrogen intake and were surprised to find woolly bats inside the pitchers.

"It was totally unexpected to find bats roosting in the pitchers consistently," says Dr Grafe.

The small Hardwicke's woolly bats (Kerivoula hardwickii) were found roosting above the digestive fluids in the plants' pitchers.

Rather than consuming the whole bat for extra nitrogen, Dr Grafe found that the plants gained from the bats' waste.

Kerivoula hardwickii and Nepenthes rafflesiana elongata (c) Ulmar Grafe

The darker shadow in this pitcher is a roosting bat

"The pitcher plant benefits from attracting the bat because the bats defecate into the pitcher, using it as a toilet if you will," he explains.

This unusual arrangement also has advantages for the bat according to Dr Grafe.

"The bat benefits from having a secure roosting place that is also free of blood-sucking ectoparasites that often accumulate in bat roosts," he tells the BBC.

Last year, researchers observed tree shrews using another type of pitcher plant (Nepenthes rajah) as a toilet and likewise found that the plant benefited from nitrogen in the deposits.

However, this is the first time mammals have been found living inside carnivorous plants.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Production of iPad 2 will Begin in February and iPhone 5 in May [Report]

 

Are you waiting for iPhone 5 or iPad 2? Here is a good news for you. We came to know that the production of iPad 2 will begin in February and iPhone 5 in May. According to Apple Insider, the production of next generation iPhone i.e iPhone 5 will begin in May and the production of iPad 2 will begin in February. According to Commercial Times, the production run of second generation iPad in February will be a ‘small pilot’ along with production to ramp up towards the 2nd half of the year. The shipments of 2nd generation iPad will be larger than the original iPad. According to the report, In this process Pegatron and Foxconn will continue to be key players.

iPad
China sources reports that the production partners of next generation iPhone i.e iPhone 5 will begin raising the new handset in May which indicates the release of iPhone 5 in June

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

iPad 2 and iPhone 5 will Feature Dual Core GPU [Report]




We have posted earlier about iPad 2, and iPhone 5 that will feature Dual Core Processor. Now we came to know that the 2nd generation iPad, iPhone 5 will feature Dual Core GPU. According to AppleInsider, the 2nd generation iPad and iPhone 5 will feature Dual Core SGX543 GPU from Imagination Technologies. Earlier we have posted iPad 2, and iPhone 5 will come with 1080p support and SD Card Slot. Rumors are also coming that the 2nd generation iPad will feature 2048×1536 high resolution display.
iPad-2-and-iPhone-5
Apple’s next generation iPad and iPhone, both due the first half of this year, will pack a new version of the company’s custom A4 chip, with dual, faster graphics cores capable of supporting a Retina Display iPad and potentially bringing 1080p HD support to iOS devices, including Apple TV.
As we know a dual core GPU will need a comparable CPU so it shouldn’t be surprising. Well, We have to wait until the release of iPad 2, and iPhone 5. Share your views about this news in the comment section below. As usual stay tuned with us we will update you as soon as we get any information regarding iPad 2, and iPhone 5.

Monday, January 17, 2011

iPad 2 will Feature 2048×1536 High Resolution Display

 

According to MacRumors, Apple is going to double the screen resolution for the 2nd generation iPad. As we know the current screen resolution of iPad is 1024×768. The next generation iPad i.e iPad 2 will feature 2048×1536 screen resolution display. This is based on the findings by @StroughtonSmith and @Xuzz on Twitter. For your kind information the higher resolution images those were left behind by Apple developers accidently in iBooks version 1.1 and version 1.2 for iPad were founded by StroughtonSmith. In the last year Apple has doubled the screen resolution of iPhone 4 to 960×640.

ipad 2

Version 1.1 of Apple’s iBooks application seems to have accidentally included some artwork for this hypothetical pixel-doubled iPad. As shown above, the App’s bookmark icon included versions for the iPad, the iPhone and the iPhone Retina Display (iPhonex2). It, however, also included one additional version labeled “iPadx2″. Sure enough, this is exactly double the resolution version of the iPad icon and is distinct from the other versions. The most likely explanation for this added graphic is plans for a double-resolution iPad. Apple has since removed this extra artwork in subsequent versions of iBooks.

Based on this information, and persistent rumors of a higher resolution iPad 2, we believe the next iPad will have a 2048×1536 screen resolution. It would also explain why Apple would have to upgrade the GPU on the new devices to drive this higher resolution.

Well, We are expecting Apple will increase the screen resolution for the 2nd generation iPad to 2048×1536 screen resolution display. Don’t forget to share your views about this news in the comment section below. As usual stay tuned with us for more updates. [Via]

Apple TV with 1080p Support, iPad 2, iPhone 5 with SD Card Slot Detailed

 

We came to know that the next generation iPad i.e iPad 2 and iPhone 5 will include SD Card Slot and the next generation Apple TV will come with support for 1080p video. Lots of rumors are coming about 2nd generation iPad and iPhone 5. According to Engadget, 2nd generation iPad will launch around April as they have got some information from reliable sources. Also they reports that the 2nd generation iPad may look different from iPad mock-ups that we have seen.

iPad 2 Mock-up

iPad 2 will be sleeker, thinner and it will include a new technology and a new screen resolution. Though there is no specific dimensions of iPad screen were given but it is expected to be “super high resolution” and it will use the Retina Display technolohy of iPhone 4.

According to the source, iPad 2 will not include any traditional USB slot, but there will be a built in SD slot. The 2nd generation iPad will include dual camera. Front camera for Face time video calling and back camera for taking pictures and shooting videos. Without producing 2 separate models iPad 2 will include dual CDMA or GSM chipset produced by Qualcomm using which you can use your iPad on both Verizon and AT&T.

Engadget also reports that the iPhone 5 will come with completely new design. Currently some senior staff is testing iPhone 5 at Apple. The next generation iPhone will feature Apple’s new A5 CPU. The next generation iPhone i.e iPhone 5 also feature dual CDMA or GSM chipset produced by Qualcomm just like 2nd generation iPad. It allows you to use your iPhone 5 on both Verizon and AT&T. According to the source there is no LTE.

According to Engadget, currently Apple is working on the next generation of the Apple TV. The next generation of the Apple TV will include the new A5 processor, the CPU will be very fast and it will support full 1080p video. Share your views about this news in the comment section below. As usual stay tuned with us for more updates.

iPad 2′s Camera.app Screenshots

 

We have already posted about the availability of camera in the 2nd generation iPad. The 2nd generation iPad will include dual cameras. Front camera for Facetime video calling and Back camera for taking pictures or shooting videos. Now 9to5mac has posted some screenshots of iPad 2′s Camera.app. You can see these screenshots posted below.

Below are the Screenshots of iPad 2′s Camera.app

iPad2-Camera.app

iPad2-Camera.app-2

iPad2-Camera.app-3

According to 9to5mac:

These screenshots are 1024 x 768 which indicate the same screen resolution as the current iPad. That might upset those hoping for more a retina-ish display in iPad 2. This may only be because the current simulator only simulates 1024 x 768 so those hoping for more pixels shouldn’t lose hope.

From the above screenshots it is confirmed that 2nd generation iPad will come with dual cameras, one in the front for Facetime video calling and one in the back for taking pictures. What are you thinking after looking these screenshots? Share your views in the comment section below. Stay tuned with us for more updates. [Via]

iPad 2 will Launch in U.S. First on 2nd or 9th April 2011

 

According to MacNotes.de, the German blog, Apple 2nd generation iPad is going to be launched on 2nd April or 9th April 2011 in US. iPad 2 will arrive international markets in July 2011. According to the report iPad 2 will have Retina Display support, and dual cameras, back camera will be used for recording video and taking pictures, the front camera will be used for FaceTime video calling.

iPad 2

Higher pixel density is required to support Retina Display on the iPad 2, so more processing power is required to handle as a result it will be more expensive to manufacture. So we are not confirmed about this Retina Display support on iPad 2. As we have posted earlier According to Digg founder Kevin Rose, 2nd generation iPad will be announced on 1st February 2011.

Well, We have to wait until the release of 2nd generation iPad. Don’t forget to share your views in the comment section below. Stay tuned with us we will update you as soon as we get any information regarding iPad 2.

Friday, January 14, 2011

iOS 4.3 Beta Released for iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and Apple TV 2G

 

Apple has announced the release of iOS 4.3 Beta for iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV 2G. If you are enrolled in the Enterprise Program or iPhone Developer Standard then simply signin into Apple Developer Connection in order to access these bits as this is only for developers. You can download iOS 4.3 Beta for your iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV 2G from the download link given below.

iOS-4.3-Beta

Click here to download iOS 4.3 Beta for your iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, Apple TV 2G and SDK. Stay tuned with us we will inform you as soon as we get any information regarding iOS 4.3 Beta

Apple will Remove Home Button on iPhone 5 and iPad 2 [Report]

 

According to BGR, Apple will remove the home button on iPhone 5 and 2nd generation iPad. As we know in iOS 4.3 beta multitouch gestures feature is added for iPad 2 and iPhone 5, so you can control your 2nd generation iPad and iPhone 5 using multi-touch gestures. Using this multitouch gestures feature you can launch the app switcher or you can navigate to the home screen.

iPhone-iPad-home-button

According to BGR:

We have exclusively been told that the reason Apple just added multitouch gestures for the iPad in the latest iOS 4.3 beta is because the iPad will be losing the home button. Yes, we are told that Apple, at some point in time, will remove the home button from the iPad’s design. Instead of button taps, you will use new multitouch gestures to navigate to the home screen and also to launch the app switcher.

That’s not all, however. In addition to the home button disappearing from the iPad, we’re told that this change will make its way over to the iPhone as well. Our source said Apple employees are already testing iPads and iPhones with no home buttons on the Apple campus, and it’s possible we will see this new change materialize with the next-generation iPad and iPhone devices set to launch this year.

It has been said that Steve Jobs didn’t want any physical buttons on the original iPhone at first, and it looks like he may soon get his wish.

Also Apple will bring popular iLife apps to iOS and the popular photo-taking application, Photo Booth to iPad 2 in the same time when the 2nd generation iPad will release.

Additionally, we’re told Apple’s popular photo-taking application, Photo Booth, will be appearing on the next iPad. It’s also very possible that we’ll see iLife apps for iOS unveiled around the iPad 2 release as well.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

5 easy steps to pump up your heart

 

Washington, Jan 12 (ANI): Want to keep your heart healthy? Then you need to know the following.

Holly Andersen, director of education and outreach at the Ronald O. Perelman Heart Institute of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital has offered some easy steps to improve heart health and overall well-being throughout the year.tep 1: Know your numbers. Your blood pressure, cholesterol and triglyceride levels are the most important numbers you will need to know before you begin on the path to good heart health.

Step 2: Start walking. Exercise is the fountain of youth. A simple 20- to 30-minute walk a few days a week can actually reduce the risk of premature death by more than 50 percent.

Step 3: Laugh out loud. Laughter really is the best medicine. Just 15 minutes of laughter is about equivalent to 30 minutes of aerobic exercise with respect to our cardiovascular health. Laughter has also been linked to the healthy function of blood vessels, an increase of the brain hormones that improve mood, and reduction of pain and anxiety.

Step 4: Focus on your waistline, not your weight. Your waistline is a better measurement of your overall health than your weight because the amount of fat around your waistline is directly linked to high blood pressure and high cholesterol and can place you at increased risk for diabetes.

Step 5: Get a good night's sleep. Sleep is one of the most undervalued elements of our daily routines, but it is absolutely vital to good health. Lack of sleep increases your blood pressure, induces stress, increases your appetite and slows down your metabolism, dampens your mood and decreases your cognition. (ANI)

Single peat moss plant 'conquered America' By Matt Walker Editor, Earth News

 

Peat moss Sphagnum subnitens (image: E. Karlin)

The plant that conquered: the peat moss Sphagnum subnitens

It is the most extreme example yet known of a single plant's ability to colonise sites spanning a huge region.

Across northwestern North America, every example of a common peat moss called Sphagnum subnitens is genetically identical, researchers have discovered.

That means every specimen can be traced back to a single parent, which likely conquered North America in less than 300 years, and shows how a single 'general purpose' genome can allow a plant to grow in a range of climates.

As part of the same research, scientists also discovered that just two parent peat moss plants of the same species have also produced all those now living in New Zealand.

It can be argued that this is the most genetically uniform widespread group of plants known

Plant ecologist Eric Karlin, Ramapo College in New Jersey, US

Both results are "extremely surprising", say the plant ecologists who did the research.

One reason is because the same is not true in Europe, where a wide variety of S. subnitens mosses live.

Details of the discovery are published in the journal Molecular Ecology.

Professor Eric Karlin of Ramapo College in New Jersey, US and colleagues at Binghamton University in New York state, US and Duke University, in Durham, North Carolina, US were initially studying the global distribution of S. subnitens.

"Like other peat mosses, the plant grows in bogs and fens," Prof Karlin told BBC News.

Standing just a few centimetres tall, the plant forms carpets and can vary in colour from green to red to brown.

"It is not uncommon," says Prof Karlin, but it does have an odd distribution, occurring widely in Europe and across coastal northwestern North America, and again in New Zealand, where it is limited to the west coast of the South Island.

"Prior to this study there had been no analysis to assess the genetic relationships of the plants in these remarkably disjunct populations," he adds.

Peat moss Sphagnum subnitens

A red form of the moss species

So he and colleagues did just that, also measuring the amount of genetic variety within populations of the peat moss growing on each continent.

"All of the plants of S. subnitens in northwestern North America appear to have descended from just one parent," says Prof Karlin.

"100% of the gene pool was contributed by one individual."

Genetically identical plants of S. subnitens range from coastal Oregon to the western Aleutian Islands, a distance of some 4115km.

In New Zealand, the populations there were founded by two different parents. But interestingly, these do not appear to have interbred.

"Thus all plants of S. subnitens in New Zealand are genetic copies of either one or the other founding parent."

The peat moss appears able to colonise many sites across extensive geographic regions due to its complicated way of reproducing.

Mosses can reproduce in a number of ways.

Either a moss plant clones itself, by passing on exactly the same DNA to new individuals via vegetative reproduction.

Some plants may be able to defy the effects of aging, suggest scientists

Find out about different ways animals and plants reproduce at BBC Wildlife Finder

Learn more about bogs, and the wildlife living within

Or it can reproduce by sexual reproduction.

In humans and most animals, this usually occurs with a male parent providing the sperm and the female parent the egg, each supplying half their offspring's genetic material.

Peat mosses can do this, but they can also sexually reproduce another way, with the same parent producing both the sperm and egg.

This sperm and egg are also genetically different to each other, due to the way genetic material gets shifted around when they are created.

S. subnitens also has a fourth way of reproducing, however.

One parent can produce egg and sperm that are genetically identical.

When these sperm and eggs come together, they produce offspring containing two copies of identical DNA.

That means the offspring are genetically the same as their parent, without technically being clones.

This special type of sexual reproduction only occurs in some mosses and some other seedless plants such as ferns.

That is what Prof Karlin's team believes has happened in North America and New Zealand.

SOURCES

Visit the journal Molecular Ecology to read more about the peat moss that conquered America

A single founder plant arrived in North America from Europe, probably sometime between the turn of the 18th and 20th Centuries.

It then reproduced, spreading genetically identical copies of itself along the northwestern coast.

"It can be argued that this is the most genetically uniform widespread group of plants known," says Prof Karlin.

Two different plants of this species must have arrived in New Zealand, and individually spread in the same way.

In neither North America, nor New Zealand, do any of the plants of S. subnitens show signs of genetic variation from the founding parents.

The apparent health of the peat moss populations indicates that the plant has not suffered from having no diversity in its genetic make up.

Prof Karlin explains: "This is in sharp contrast to many animals and plants." For them, inbreeding often leads to a concentration of unwanted genetic mutations, compromising their evolutionary fitness, he says.

But this peat moss shows how many ecological niches can be filled by just a single genome, albeit one copied many times.

"It appears that the species has a 'general purpose' genotype that can thrive without specialisation to each location where it occurs," says Prof Karlin.

iOS 4.3 will Bring Personal Hotspot Feature to GSM iPhone 4?

 

As we know the Verizon iPhone 4 has been announced. Verizon iPhone 4 will include Personal Hotspot feature using which you will be able to turn your mobile into mobile hotspot. Personal Hotspot feature allows up to five devices onto the personal network and share the cellular data connection of iPhone. The personal hotspot will need a password in order to join the network and to be able to share the data usage on the device those are connected to it. Simply go to the Settings page on Verizon’s iPhone 4 in order to found the menu for the “Personal Hotspot”.

iOS-4.3

This personal Hotspot feature will be available in the Verizon iPhone 4 running iOS 4.2.5. According to AT&T, they are evaluating the Personal Hotspot feature and currently they are not going to announce this feature. As we know several mobile hotspot apps like MyWi are available for jailbroken iPhone, iPod touch or iPad users. Rumours are coming that Personal Hotspot feature will be added in the GSM iPhones as part of iOS 4.3 update which is going to be announced by Apple on 10th February 2011.

Well, We have to wait till 10th February 2011 in order to see whether Apple will add this feature in GSM iPhones or not. Don’t forget to share your views about this news in the comment section below

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Brilliant feathers of white snowy owls dazzle rivals

 

 

Snowy owl (Image: Gary Bortolotti)

The owls rotate their bodies to face the sun

Snowy owls use their white feathers to reflect sunlight, warning rivals of their presence, scientists say.

The reflective feathers create a blindingly bright warning beacon that can be seen over long distances.

Owls with the whitest plumage showed the brightest signals, often signalling from perches on the ground where they use the light reflected from snow to enhance the glare.

The findings are published in the International Journal of Avian Science.

The birds were looking directly into the sun across a flat snow covered landscape

Gary Bortolotti
University of Saskatchewan

Researchers from the University of Saskatchewan, Canada, and the Museum of Natural Sciences (CSIC) in Spain, observed the colour and behaviour of snowy owls (Bubo scandiacus) over ten winters.

Despite their evocative name, the colour of the owls' feathers can vary from brown to pure white, depending on their age and sex.

When fully mature, the birds are predominantly white - a colour perfectly suited to their snow covered habitat.

The team found that the brightest areas of plumage were always found on a bird's face, throat and breast.

The owls orientated these birght white areas to face the sun.

"Their lack of spots and the high reflectance of the face are indicative of enhancement for signalling," explained lead researcher Gary Bortolotti.

"And [we think] plumage colour variation influences the size of the signal."

Three snowy owls of varying plumage colour (Image: Gary Bortolotti)

The owls' plumage can vary from pure white to brown

White is an ideal signalling colour because, since it reflects light so effectively, it can be seen from long distances.

Researchers believe that many birds use their plumage as a visible signal to defend their territory.

And this study suggests that a snowy owl's bright white feathers are a very effective signal, allowing it to make its presence known over large areas of its very open habitat.

'Power pole'

The team monitored the colouration, orientation and height of the perched birds at a number of wintering sites.

They saw that the snowy owls would rotate their bodies towards the sun, and follow it over the course of the day.

This "solar orientation" is believed to optimise the strength of their territorial signal.

"The birds constantly shift throughout the day, and even change the height of their perch depending on the sun," Dr Bortolotti told BBC News.

He explained that "heavily spotted" birds preferred to signal from high perches, such as electricty poles.

Snowy owl (Image: photolibrary.com)

"But the white birds, which are predominately male, and the older birds, actually signalled from the ground," he said.

The team suspect that the low-perching birds were taking advantage of the reflection of light off the snow, which is known as albedo.

"What surprised me was that the birds were looking directly into the sun across a flat snow covered landscape," said Dr Bortolotti.

"To be human and do this is literally painful on the eyes."

Snowy owls have adapted "eyelashes", which are made up of long bristles and other feathers which help to reduce glare.

The study supports previous research that colour and patterns of plumage play an important role in visual communication between birds.

Swine flu offers 'extraordinary super immunity'

 

H1N1 virusSwine flu infection boosted immunity to surprising degrees

People who recover from swine flu may be left with an extraordinary natural ability to fight off flu viruses, findings suggests.

In beating a bout of H1N1 the body makes antibodies that can kill many other flu strains, a study in the Journal of Experimental Medicine shows.

Doctors hope to harness this power to make a universal flu vaccine that would protect against any type of influenza.

Ultimately this could replace the "best guess" flu vaccines currently used.

Such a vaccine is the "holy grail" for flu researchers. Many scientists are already testing different prototypes to put an end to the yearly race to predict coming flu strains and quickly mass produce a new vaccine each flu season.

Dr Patrick Wilson who led the latest research said the H1N1 swine flu virus that reached pandemic levels infecting an estimated 60 million people last year, had provided a unique opportunity for researchers.

"It demonstrates how to make a single vaccine that could potentially provide immunity to all influenza.

"The surprise was that such a very different influenza strain, as opposed to the most common strains, could lead us to something so widely applicable."

Extraordinary immunity

In the nine patients they studied who had caught swine flu during the pandemic, they found the infection had triggered the production of a wide range of antibodies that are only very rarely seen after seasonal flu infections or flu vaccination.

Five antibodies isolated by the team could fight all the seasonal H1N1 flu strains from the last decade, the devastating "Spanish flu" strain from 1918 which killed up to 50m people, plus a potentially deadly bird flu H5N1 strain.

The researchers believe the "extraordinarily" powerful antibodies were created as the body learned how to fight the new infection with swine flu using its old memory of how to fight off other flu viruses.

Next they plan to examine the immune response of people who were vaccinated against last year's swine flu but did not get sick to see if they too have the same super immunity to flu.

Dr Sarah Gilbert is a expert in viruses at Oxford University and has been testing her own prototype universal flu vaccine.

She said: "Many scientists are working to develop a vaccine that would protect against the many strains of flu virus.

"This work gives us more confidence that it will be possible to generate a universal flu vaccine."

But she said it would take many years for a product to go through the necessary tests and trials.

"It will take at least five years before anything like this could be widely available."

The number of deaths this winter from flu verified by the Health Protection Agency currently is 50, with 45 of these due to swine flu.

'Unethical' flipper tags are damaging to penguins

 

Penguins - some bandedFlipper banding can be useful if you need to find one penguin in a big colony...

The standard way of tagging penguins for science - putting bands around their flippers - affects their survival and reproduction, a study has found.

French researchers, reporting their work in the journal Nature, found king penguins had 40% fewer chicks if they were banded, and lived shorter lives.

They say continuing to use the tags would in most situations be unethical.

Flipper bands have been used for decades to identify individual penguins so they can be tracked on land and sea.

They allow for easy visual identification of individual birds from a distance.

Some studies down the years had suggested they harmed the birds - for example, by creating extra drag when they swam, or by reflecting sunlight in a way that could attract predators.

But others had suggested there was no problem.

"There was a debate about whether bands have an effect or not - and you could find studies and some would say 'yes' and some would say 'no'," said Claire Saraux from the University of Strasbourg and the French Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS).

"So our idea was to try to make sure - instead of doing one-year studies, to try to find out what's going on over 10 years," she told BBC News.

“Start Quote

This study... eclipses everything else”

Rory WilsonSwansea University

The French researchers followed a group of 100 king penguins in a colony on Possession Island off the Antarctic coast.

Half were tagged with flipper bands, while the other half had tiny transponders implanted under their skin.

After a decade of observation, 18 of the transponder group were alive - but only 10 of the banded birds.

They arrived at the island for breeding significantly later in the Antarctic spring, needed to make longer foraging trips for food, and overall reared far fewer chicks.

"This study is far and away the longest and most systematic that's been done - it eclipses everything else," said Rory Wilson from the UK's Swansea University.

"It's conclusive - it's going to be very hard for anyone to argue against it."

Professor Wilson, who was not involved in the current research project, tagged his first penguin more than 30 years ago.

Changing climate for research

In recent years, studying penguins around the Antarctic shores has been given a new impetus by concerns over impacts of climate change on the marine ecosytem.

King PenguinThe king penguin is the second largest species, and the deepest diving - in excess of 100m

In some parts of the region, krill - the tiny animals near the base of the food chain - are in decline, with potential effects on everything from birds to fish to marine mammals.

But in the light of this study, use of the principal penguin research tool may become unethical.

"I would say no [it is not ethical]," said Ms Saraux.

"The exception would be using them only on land, and that probably won't be a problem so long as you take them off the birds before they go to sea - and that could still be useful, because I can tell you that when you go into a colony of 50,000 penguins to find yours, it's not easy.

"But there are a lot of groups that are still banding [in sea-based research], and I'm pretty sure it's going to be controversial - some may want to continue with other species of penguin, but I'm pretty sure the effect is going to be the same for other species too."

The logic behind this conclusion is that if the bands increase drag in the water - which has been seen in captive Adelie penguins - that is something that should affect all species.

The Strasbourg group is one that has adopted implantable transponders as an alternative tool.

But unlike flipper bands, they cannot be read from a distance - the birds must come into close proximity with the antenna that "reads" the bird's identity.

In the meantime, scientists may have to go back to research performed using flipper bands and ask whether the results still stand, or whether they were distorted by the very tools used in the research.

"If you compared population trends in chinstrap penguins in different areas, say, and both groups were banded, and one does better under certain ice conditions, that wouldn't necessarily be invalidated," said Rory Wilson.

"But if you've tried to measure the mortality rate and say 'it's down to over-fishing' or something, and you haven't considered bands as contibuting to mortality, then you'd need to re-assess your data."

Verizon iPhone 4 vs AT&T iPhone 4 [Comparison]

 

Do you want to make a comparison between Verizon iPhone 4 and AT&T iPhone 4? Well, As we know Verizon has announced the release of most awaited CDMA iPhone 4. If we compare the features of Verizon iPhone 4 and AT&T iPhone 4 then we will find both of them have same features. But Apple has made some changes in iPhone 4 in order to make it work on a CDMA network.

ATT-vs-Verizon-iPhone
You can see these changes in the hands on video which is posted here. You can see the comparison between Verizon iPhone 4 and AT&T iPhone 4 in the image posted above. If currently you are using AT&T iPhone 4 and want to use Verizon iPhone 4 then this comparison will definitely help you.

Well, This comparison is made by Engadget. Don’t forget to share your views in the comment section below. As usual stay tuned with us for more updates. (Via)

iOS 4.2.5 on Verizon iPhone 4 Comes with Mobile “Personal Hotspot” Feature [Video]

 

As we know Apple iPhone 4 Lands on Verizon which is announced by the Verzion President & COO Lowell McAdam in the New York City event. You will be able to buy it from 10th February 2011. On Engadget some bloggers have already got this Verizon iPhone 4. We came to know that Verizon iPhone 4 is running iOS 4.2.5.

iOS-4.2.5

The “Personal Hotspot” feature in iOS 4.2.5 is running on Verizon iPhone 4 and it is spotted by Engadget. The “Personal Hotspot” feature is built in the Settings app. You can see the above image. You can watch the hands on video embedded below.

Still it is not confirmed whether the iOS version and the “Personal Hotspot” feature will remain exclusive to Verizon customers or also it will be available for GSM iPhone 4 customers. Well, We have to wait to know more about this

iPhone 4 Finally Lands on Verizon

 

Finally the Apple iPhone 4 Lands on Verizon and this is announced by the Verzion President & COO Lowell McAdam in an event which is held in the New York City. Both Verzion President & COO Lowell McAdam and Apple’s COO Tim Cook has announced the partnership between Apple Inc and Verizon Wireless. The Verizon iPhone 4 features A4 processor, Retina Display, FaceTime, HD video recording, App Store, 5 megapixel camera etc.

verizon-iphone

As we showed at CES last week, we’re building on these partnerships with LTE — it will make broadband even richer for customers. That’s including a whole new range of smartphones and tablets. One analyst said ‘we displayed an armada of new devices.

Today we’re partnering with a giant of the industry, and that’s Apple.

The 16GB version of Verizon iPhone 4 will be available at a price of $199 USD. The 32GB version of Verizon iPhone 4 will be available at a price of $299 USD on contract. Mobile hotspot will be available which will help you in connecting up to five devices. You will be able to Pre-order Verizon iPhone 4 from 3rd February 2011.

I am incredibly happy to be with you all today. We’ve been looking forward to today for a long time. Since 2007 the iPhone has been a phenomenal success.

Tens of millions of customers have purchased the iPhone around the world. Customers have downloaded billions of apps. I am incredibly happy, and I can tell you all of Apple, is very very excited to bring the iPhone to Verizon’s customers.

The Verizon iPhone 4 will go on sale on 10th February 2011. Well, You have to wait until 3rd February 2011 in order to Pre-order Verizon iPhone 4

Frogs survive on Haiti's bare hillsides

Frog on coinThe Macaya breast-spot frog is one of the world's smallest amphibian species - especially the young

 

An conservation expedition to the deforested hills of Haiti, struck by a major earthquake a year ago, has found frog species unseen for 20 years.

In just eight days of searching in the few forest fragments left, researchers found 25 of Haiti's 49 known species.

They hope this will focus attention on conserving the few percent that remain of the nation's once abundant forest.

The 12 January 2010 earthquake killed an estimated 230,000 people and left about 1.2 million homeless.

Haiti is one of the poorest countries in the world, with much of its population eking out a subsistence living on farming and charcoal-making.

Poverty was one of the reasons cited in the quake's aftermath for why it had such a huge impact.

Even before the upheaval, conservation was in a dire state with so much of the country's natural habitat having been cleared away.

There were concerns that people moving away from the stricken coastal zone would increase pressure on the few remaining pieces of forest.

 

“Start Quote

Ultimately it's the forest we're interested in preserving, because if they don't save that, they've got nothing to grow from”

Robin MooreCI

But this appears not have been the case - at least in the forests of the Massif de la Hotte and Massif de la Selle.

"Within Haiti, very few people have been to this area, which is one of the reasons we wanted to do this - to highlight what is still there," said Robin Moore of Conservation International, who led the expedition.

"If we talk to people in [the capital] Port-au-Prince about conservation, they shake their heads and ask 'what are we going to conserve?' - but we showed that there is good forest still, and it contains some unique species."

The expedition was not a complete success, with no sightings of the principal target - the La Selle grass frog, which was last seen 25 years ago and is listed as possibly extinct.

But among the species that were seen were five that were last recorded in 1991.

They include the Hispaniolan ventriloquial frog, named because of its call.

Consisting of a rapid seven-note sequence of chirps, the animal appears to project its voice into the forest.

FrogThe Macaya burrowing frog is one of several clinging on in the Massif de la Hotte

Mozart's frog also aquired its name from its call, a whistling sound that emerges at dawn and dusk.

And the Macaya breast-spotted frog is one of the world's smallest, with adults about the size of a grape.

However, the intent of the conservationists involved is not merely to protect the amphibians.

"Haiti's problems didn't start with the earthquake - it was pretty desperate before, and a lot of the country's problems stem from environmental degradation," Dr Moore told BBC News.

"So I think we need to get that on the agenda and do things better; and I think we can offer a better quality of life through investing in sustainable practices such as shade-grown coffee and things that conserve the environment.

"Right now, a lot of people are growing cash crops and the soil degrades, and they have to eat into the few remaining bits of forest - and that can only go on for some time before you cut down the last tree.

"So we're using the frogs to highlight what they still have; but ultimately it's the forest we're interested in preserving, because if they don't save that, they've got nothing to grow from."

The expedition to Haiti in October was run by Conservation International and the Amphibian Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

It was an adjunct to a larger project aiming to rediscover amphibian species thought to be extinct - a project that has already turned up a Mexican salamander not seen since its discovery in 1941, a frog from the Ivory Coast last observed in 1967, and another frog from Democratic Republic of Congo not seen since 1979.