John 1:3
All things were made by Him;
and without Him
was not any thing made that was made.

29 February 2008

Greek authorities probe death of 800 tonnes of farmed fish

Dead fish floating in the sea in 2006. Authorities in western Greece are investigating the death of around 800 tonnes of farmed fish in a protected wetlands from an apparent lack of oxygen, an official has sadi.(AFP/File/Rodger Bosch)

ATHENS (AFP) - Authorities in western Greece are investigating the death of around 800 tonnes of farmed fish in a protected wetlands from an apparent lack of oxygen, an official said Friday.

"This is an unprecedented incident in Greece and probably in the whole Mediterranean basin," said Sotiris Saxamis, deputy prefect of Aetoloakarnania province.

"We're still looking into what happened," he told AFP. "The tests showed the fish died from lack of oxygen but there was no sign of toxic contamination."

The fish died on February 18 at three fish farms in the Gulf of Amvrakikos during a period of heavy snowfall around the country.

Fisheries on the other side of the gulf were unaffected.

A statement from the prefecture said that between 600 and 900 tonnes of fish had died, possibly from a disturbance in the water's temperature and salinity levels.

"There was an influx of sweet water from one of the gulf's tributary rivers," Saxamis said. "This may have been caused by melting snow or perhaps too much water was released from the Arachthos dam four kilometres upstream." Continue

Austria's brown bears face extinction

A brown bear shakes the water from his fur while exiting a stream. Austria's brown bear population is facing extinction as only two of the animals -- both males -- are still alive out of a population that had numbered at least 35, the World Wildlife Fund said Friday.(AFP/Valentina Petrova)

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VIENNA (AFP) - Austria's brown bear population is facing extinction as only two of the animals -- both males -- are still alive out of a population that had numbered at least 35, the World Wildlife Fund said Friday.

Only 19-year-old Djuro and his seven-year-old son Moritz are definitely still living in the Limestone Alps in central Austria, said the WWF, which had taken DNA traces taken from the hair and excrement from

A complete study of the Austrian brown bear population, carried out by the WWF in collaboration with the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology (FIWI), is set to be published in the next few days.

The study shows that out of the total population of 35, nine bears have died and the fate of another 24 is not known.

The last tracks of Elsa, Moritz's eight-year-old half-sister, were seen in a riverbed in northern Styria at the beginning of 2007, said the FIWI's bear expert Georg Rauer.

"We hope very much that she'll have given birth to cubs again this year and that they'll soon turn up somewhere," Rauer said.

But since mother bears with cubs are particularly shy, the experts estimate they will not know her fate until May at the earliest.

"It appears that with Elsa we may have lost the last female bear able to reproduce," said WWF project leader, Christoph Walder.

Given the recent mild weather, Moritz is expected to come out of hibernation fairly soon, but he has been searching for a mate for more than two years without any success, WWF said.

His mother, Rosemarie, has not been seen since 2002.

Djuro is the only surviving bear of three brown bears imported from Slovenia in 1993. He has fathered 22 cubs with a number of different females, including his daughters, Elsa and Rosemarie.

"But he, too, has been looking for a mate for three years without any luck," WWF said.

Wild animals snowbound in China's Pamir region face starvation

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URUMQI, Feb. 29 (Xinhua) -- China's wild animal guardians said that much needs to be done to save wild animals trapped in the snowbound Pamir Plateau in northwest China from starvation.

"We estimate that some 100,000 wild animals have been trapped in the mountains to the southwest of Xinjiang," said Dai Zhigang, head of the endangered animal protection station under the Forestry Bureau of Kashi Prefecture, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, in western China.

Dai said that new sightings of dead animals, mainly grazing species and wild birds, have been reported by wardens every day since Feb. 7, when the blizzard waned. The station could not provide an exact death toll because it lacked personnel to do a full survey.

"We have raised small sums for hay at 20 locations, but we lack the money and manpower to do more," said Dai.

The plateau's eastern slope is the prime breeding area for 300 wild bird species and more than 100 mammal species including argali (Marco Polo) wild sheep and black stork, China's most endangered species.

The worst winter weather in 50 years has blocked animals' feeding paths. The latest remote-sensing figures from the Xinjiang Observatory suggested that snow covers 750,000 square kilometers in southern Xinjiang, of which 440,000 square km had snow cover of more than 10 centimeters deep.

Dai said that there used to be some 4,000 argali wild sheep roaming the area. The rare species, unique to the Pamirs, may face extinction due to lack of food in early spring, when mountain vegetation is hard to find, especially after the snowstorm. Many feeble members of the species have fallen prey to wild carnivores.

The situation of the snow leopard, wild yak and Tibetan mustang is more optimistic, since they can better tolerate arctic temperature, said Dai.

In villages in Shule County, Kashi Prefecture, thousands of wild geese were found starved in a cornfield covered with snow. Villagers said that they often saw wild birds fall from the sky due to hunger. Herdsmen and farmers also complained that starving wild animals often intruded into fields and barns in search of food.

The weather also struck Xinjiang's agricultural and animal-husbandry sectors hard, causing losses estimated at 4.7 billion yuan (653 million U.S. dollars), said the regional government earlier this month. The figures showed that 54 percent of fruit tree plantations had been affected by the disaster and more than 100,000 livestock had died.

28 February 2008

Peru declares emergency in areas hit by flooding

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Torrential rains and floods have killed 16 people, left 24 missing and destroyed highways and homes since January, Peru's civil defense agency said on Thursday as the government declared a state of emergency in four districts.

The La Nina weather phenomenon, characterized by cooler than normal sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, has been blamed for exacerbating rainy seasons in the Andes region this year.

Nearly half a million people have been affected by the rains, which started two months ago and have fallen hardest in the interior and on Peru's northern coast. Emergencies were declared in the districts of Tumbes, Piura, Lambayeque and Ucayali.

"The magnitude of the situation demands the adoption of immediate measures that allow Indeci (Peru's civil defense agency), regional and local governments to take action to deal with the emergency and the rehabilitation of affected areas," the government said.

The floods have wrecked some 300 homes, destroyed 39 miles

of highways and washed away 650 acres of crops, the civil defense group said.

In neighboring Bolivia, at least 52 people have been killed since November when floods started there, while heavy rains in Ecuador have caused more than $161 million in crop damage.

(Reporting by Maria Luisa Palomino; Writing by Dana Ford; Editing by Terry Wade and Cynthia Osterman)

Earth's Clouds Alive With Bacteria

  • Pseudomonas syringae cells trapped within an ice crystal lattice that was formed in the laboratory from a diluted culture. The ice-nucleating protein of P. syringae appears to result in cells ending up inside the crystal rather than being excluded during freezing, the way other impurities are. Credit: Shawn Doyle and Brent Christner, Louisiana State University

Pseudomonas syringae cells trapped within an ice crystal lattice that was formed in the laboratory from a diluted culture. The ice-nucleating protein of P. syringae appears to result in cells ending up inside the crystal rather than being excluded during freezing, the way other impurities are. Credit: Shawn Doyle and Brent Christner, Louisiana State University.
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NASA plans to smash spacecraft into the moon

Image: Shepherding Spacecraft
NASA/Ames
An artist's depiction shows the LCROSS moon-smashing mission as the Shepherding Spacecraft, left, pulls free of the Centaur upper-stage impactor.

Scientists are priming two spacecraft to slam into the moon's South Pole to see if the lunar double whammy reveals hidden water ice.

The Earth-on-moon violence may raise eyebrows, but NASA's history shows that such missions can yield extremely useful scientific observations.

"I think that people are apprehensive about it because it seems violent or crude, but it's very economical," said Tony Colaprete, the principal investigator for the mission at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.

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Cashmere Goats in India Face Starvation

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An elderly man belonging to the Chang-pa mountain tribe holds his Himalayan goat as his son cuts its horn that was hurting the animal's eye in Kharnak, some 185 kilometers (116 miles) from Leh, India, in this July 21, 2007 photo. More than 100,000 Himalayan goats famed for their pashmina wool or cashmere face starvation after their desert habitat was blanketed with snow, while three people died during the region's worst storms in three decades, officials said Thursday, Feb. 7, 2008. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)

SRINAGAR, India (AP) — More than 100,000 Himalayan goats — famed for their pashmina wool — or cashmere — face starvation after their desert habitat was blanketed with snow, while three people died during the region's worst storms in three decades, officials said Thursday.

The government was trying to get emergency supplies to the area as winter stocks of fodder ran out after rare snows covered pastures in the remote Ladakh region near the border with China, said Dr. Tsering Phuntsog, chief animal husbandry officer in the region.

"There is a strong possibility that many goats might perish if supplies don't reach them immediately," he said.

Nomads and Tibetan refugees herd the goats in the remote and barren area. Despite being high in the Himalayas, Ladakh usually gets almost no rain or snow.

"This is the heaviest snowfall in the last three decades in the region. Being a cold desert, Ladakh usually receives about 10 centimeters (4 inches) of precipitation in a year, but this year about 2 feet of snow has accumulated," said M.K. Bhandari, a local government official.

Phuntsog said some 10 truck loads of fodder had reached the area, while the air force was planning to airlift supplies by helicopter to the worst-hit Tegazong area, where nearly 60,000 goats were starving and pregnant goats had started aborting.

Ladakh is part of India's Jammu-Kashmir state. The highly prized wool is used to make famed pashmina shawls and cashmere, which takes its name from the region, and is a major source of revenue in the area.

The storms were not expected to seriously affect the global cashmere industry because much of the wool is now produced in China and Mongolia.

Meanwhile, the rest of Indian-controlled Kashmir reeled under heavy snowfall — 10 feet in some areas — and the main road liking Kashmir to the rest of India remained closed for a fifth day.

A soldier and two civilians working for the army were killed in an avalanche near the de facto border with Pakistan, said Amir Ali, a local disaster management official.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan and both claim the area in its entirety.

Hundreds of Goats Die in China Snow Storms

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SRINAGAR, India (Reuters) - Hundreds of goats that provide wool for Kashmir's famous Pashmina shawls have died and thousands more face starvation because of heavy snow in Ladakh region where they live, officials said.

About 150,000 goats graze on pastures near the border with China where temperatures plunge to as low as minus 20 degrees Celsius.

Pashmina goats, which grow a thick warm fleece, survive on grass but fodder becomes scarce in the harsh winter.

A Ladakh government official saw "heaps" of carcasses after visiting some of the frozen winter pastures.

"The death toll could increase as the pregnant goats have been having miscarriages," Tsering Dorjay told Reuters late on Wednesday, adding the goats faced death from starvation.

"The young ones have been dying because of the cold."

After a ban on shahtoosh, the world's finest wool derived from the hair of an endangered Tibetan antelope, shawls made from Pashmina wool are considered some of the world's finest and they are exported worldwide.

Ladakh authorities said they are trying to get emergency supplies to Pashmina grazing grounds as winter stocks of fodder had run out.

"The fodder has reached to some areas but 30,000 to 40,000 goats still face starvation in snow-bound areas," said Dorjay. Story Here

Cattails Targeted for Sunflower Farmers

Federal wildlife officials will target entire parcels of cattail-choked wetlands in North Dakota this year to kill the preferred habitat of sunflower-scarfing blackbirds.

Some 60,000 acres of cattail marshes in North Dakota have been destroyed since 1991 to try to keep blackbirds at bay, said Phil Mastrangelo, state director for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Wildlife Services agency.

Last year in North Dakota, about 4,500 acres of wetlands in 16 counties were treated, Mastrangelo said. This year there will be enough money to treat about 8,000 acres, he said.

A herbicide is applied from a helicopter, at a cost to the government of about $23 an acre, Mastrangelo said. The program targets only cattails on private land and is free to sunflower farmers. Last year, 43 of them got treatment.

In past years, about 70 percent of a cattail marsh was treated with a herbicide, but blackbirds were still able to nest, loaf and roost in the remaining fuzzy-topped weeds with reedlike leaves. "That 30 percent still gave some heartburn from the blackbirds," Mastrangelo said.

The USDA estimates blackbirds eat more than $10 million worth of sunflowers each year in North Dakota, which accounts for about half of the nation's sunflower production.
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Tajikistan weather crisis could worsen, aid workers warn

A quarter of a million citizens need immediate food assistance after a record-cold winter left most of the Central Asian country without electricity.


Strained by the coldest winter in 30 years, Tajikistan's Soviet-era infrastructure has buckled, leaving millions of its citizens without water and electricity. Aid groups have been quick to step in, but the mountainous Central Asian republic is facing a serious humanitarian crisis which could spark unrest in this volatile region, experts warn.

Russia, Kazakhstan, and US aid groups have responded to a $25 million appeal from the United Nations for emergency assistance last week, after water and sewage pipes burst – even in the capital city of Dushanbe, where temperatures reached minus 13 degrees F.

During the bitter cold snap that began in late January, rivers froze solid, virtually shutting down the giant Nurek hydroelectric station that is the only source of power for the isolated republic of 7 million. Emergency services were swamped.

About 260,000 Tajiks are in need of immediate food assistance, and up to 2 million face starvation by winter's end if they don't receive swift help, according to the UN. The country urgently needs supplies of portable generators, kerosene stoves, food, blankets and warm clothes.

"Everything is paralyzed, our water systems are wrecked, and we need a lot of emergency supplies right away," says Mekhtodji Makhmadi, an official of the Tajik ministry of emergency services in Dushanbe. "The consequences of [this crisis] are very hard, and our people will be suffering from it for a long time to come." Continue.

Rock studies help crack questions of glacier thinning in West Antarctica

Boulders the size of footballs could help scientists predict the West Antarctic Ice Sheet's (WAIS) contribution to sea-level rise according to new research published this week in the journal Geology

Scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Durham University and Germany’s Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) collected boulders deposited by three glaciers in the Amundsen Sea Embayment – a region currently the focus of intense international scientific attention because it is changing faster than anywhere else on the WAIS and it has the potential to raise sea-level by around 1.5 metres.

Analysis of the boulders has enabled the scientists to start constructing a long-term picture of glacier behaviour in the region. An urgent task is to put recent ice sheet changes into a historical context, and determine if these are part of a natural retreat since the end of the last glacial period (about 20 thousands years ago), or if they are a result of recent human-induced climate change.

Lead author Dr Joanne Johnson of BAS says,
“Until now we didn’t know much about the long-term history of this part of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet because the region is incredibly remote and inaccessible. Our geological findings add a new piece to the jigsaw and will be used for improving computer models – the most important tools we have for predicting future change.” Continue

Global Cooling vs. Global Warming at Issue

The global warming and global cooling debate has been in the news recently for various reasons, including the 2008 International Conference on Climate Change scheduled for March 2-4 in New York City. For those who don't know the term, global cooling is a hypothesis that has never had any scientific support, but has had plenty of attention. According to an article on USA Today.com, shows that during the 1970s some scientists believed that the earth would experience global cooling, but they were outnumbered by the scientists who believed that global warming was going to occur. The reason why there was less support at that time and today for global cooling is due to the fact that there was no scientific consensus to support global cooling.

According to the Washington Times, the global temperature of the earth has increased a total of 0.7 degrees since the mid 19th century. The affects of global warming are seen on a daily basis around the world. Many scientist are afraid that soon runaway global warming will take affect but some still hold on to the idea that the earth will go through a cooling off period. According to a news article on the website "Union of Concerned Scientists" there was a report that Exxon Mobil had funneled $16 million from 1998 to 2005 to advocacy organizations in order to cause confusion on the topic of global warming science. Many think this is how the global cooling debate was started up again and the idea that this is a naturally occurring event.

Currently in the news, there has been even more people affected by global warming. In Anchorage Alaska, there is a village that is suffering the effects of global warming and they have decided to take action. According to an article on www.cnn.com, this Alaskan village is eroding into the Artic Ocean. The village of Kivalina has about 390 people in it, and the village has been protected in the past by sea ice. Due to the loss of sea ice the erosion rate has increased. The lawsuit is aimed as some of the largest oil companies, such as Exxon Mobil, BP PLC, BP American, Chevron, Chevron USA, and Royal Dutch Shell PLC to name a few.

27 February 2008

NASA: Radar Images of the Moon's South Pole

NASA

This map shows the steepness of the terrain in the south polar region of the moon.

In the craggy terrain around the Moon’s south pole, the deepest craters dip 2.5 miles beneath the surface while the peaks reach as high as the highest mountain in North America — a 37,000-foot change of elevation. That’s a bigger swing of topography than exists on the entire surface of Earth.

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Food Riots Sparked in several countries

People push to receive food distributed by the Kenyan Red Cross in the Mathare slum, in Nairobi, food shortage
People push to receive food distributed by the Kenyan Red Cross in the Mathare slum in Nairobi.

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Soaring prices of staples — which have risen about 75% since 2005, driven by growing demand, rising oil prices and the effects of global warming — have sparked riots in several countries, as people reel from sticker shock and governments scramble to feed their people. Crowds tore through three cities in the West African nation of Burkina Faso late last week, burning government buildings and looting stores; when officials tried to talk peace with one group of protesters, the enraged crowd hurled stones at them. The riots followed similar violent protests over food prices in Senegal and Mauritania earlier this year. And, last October, protesters in Pakistan burned hundreds of food-ration stores in West Bengal after stockpiles emptied, leaving thousands of people unfed.

Governments might succeed in quashing the protests, but lowering food prices could be far tougher and will likely take years, according to analysts who track global food consumption. The Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute, or IFPRI, said last December that high prices are unlikely to fall soon, partly because world food stocks are being squeezed by soaring demand. The wild ride in agricultural markets has attracted intense speculation among investors, with billions of dollars being poured into commodities markets. On Monday, the price of wheat shot up about 25% on the Chicago Board of Trade, after officials in Khazakstan announced plans to restrict exports of their giant wheat crop in order to ensure the food supply to their own citizens. Russian officials have also said they are planning to restrict grain exports.

For the world's poorest people, the price rises are already proving devastating, since the speed at which prices have risen has wrought havoc on government relief programs. Earlier this month, a top official at the U.S. Agency for International Development admitted that in order to meet current targets, it had been forced to skim off funds from future food-aid programs, worth about $120 million.

The problem is exacerbated by the fact that millions more people who were previously earning enough to feed their families can now no longer afford the food in their local stores, and are now swelling the ranks of those expecting relief from aid organizations. "We are seeing a new face of hunger," the executive director of U.N.'s World Food Program, Josette Sheeran, told TIME on Tuesday. "People who were not in the urgent category are now moving into that category." The organization currently feeds about 73 million people, including millions who get by on just 50 cents a day. After hosting a series of emergency meetings with international organizations and food experts this month at WFP's Rome headquarters, Sheeran said the organization has concluded that food prices will remain high for years. She announced on Monday that the organization might have to cut its relief programs unless it raises an extra $500 million this year. "There is no way we can absorb a 25% price rise in one day and the volatility of the markets," Sheeran said.

One factor driving up the cost of food is the rocketing price of oil, which raises agricultural costs of everything from fertilizer to transport and shipping. Like the oil price, the cost of food is responding, in part, to the burgeoning demand in China and India, where rising incomes allow people to eat bigger meals, and to buy meat far more frequently. That, in turn, has helped to squeeze the world's supply of grain, since it takes about six pounds of animal feed to produce a pound of meat.

Then there is climate change: Harvests have been seriously disrupted by freak weather, including prolonged droughts in Australia and southern Africa, floods in West Africa, and deep frost in China and Europe. And the push to produce biofuels to replace hydrocarbons is also adding to the pressure on food supplies — generous U.S. subsidies for ethanol has gobbled up needed food acreage, as farmers switch from producing food. "The area used for biofuels is increasing each year," says Nik Bienkowski, head of research at ETF Securities, a commodities trading firm in London.

The food price rises are not bad news for everyone, says Bienkowski, who estimates that his company took in about $2 billion worth of investments last year. And millions of farmers whose income has languished through years of cheap food are now earning well.

"U.S. and British farmers are laughing all the way to the bank," says Simon Maxwell, director of the London-based Overseas Development Institute, an independent think tank. "And some poor people will get jobs on farms or in local communities." Yet those people will need to buy food, whose prices are rising far faster than wages. With relief agencies struggling to feed the hungry and the shelves in Pakistan, Burkina Faso, Senegal and many other countries in the developing world stocked with food many locals can no longer afford, the prospects for chaos are steadily growing.

Record snow smothers New England

David Fitch shovels the snow off the roof of his sugar house in Calais, Vt., Monday, Feb. 25, 2008.
By Toby Talbot, AP
David Fitch shovels the snow off the roof of his sugar house in Calais, Vt., Monday, Feb. 25, 2008.

CONCORD, N.H. — Another snowstorm swept across New England on Wednesday, toppling seasonal snowfall records and dumping so much heavy snow on buildings that some collapsed under the weight.

An unoccupied summer pizza shop collapsed at Weirs Beach in Laconia, after the roof sagged about halfway into the two-story building and bowed the walls out, officials said.

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Pollution turns river red in central China


A resident collecting water from the partially dried Dongjing River in Hubei Province. Pollution caused part of the river to turn red and foamy, forcing officials to close schools and shut off water to up to 200,000 residents. (Reuters)

Thousands of people are forced to rely on bottled water or underground sources.

BEIJING:
Pollution turned part of a major river system in central China red and foamy, forcing authorities to cut water supplies to as many as 200,000 people, the provincial government and a state news agency said Wednesday.

Some communities along tributaries of the Han River - a branch of the Yangtze - in Hubei Province were using emergency water supplies, while at least 60,000 people were relying on bottled water and underground sources, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Residents in some towns were getting water from fire trucks, the Hubei provincial government said on its Web site.

Five schools were closed in the township of Xingou, while others could not provide food to students, the Xinhua report said without elaborating.

The pollution was discovered Sunday when water plant workers from the county of Jianli found that the Dongjing River, a tributary of the Han, had turned red and foamy, the Hubei Web site said. Continue

People and cranes are seen working at an acacia plantation belonging to a pulp and paper factory in Pangkalan Kerinci, Sumatra, in November 2007. Deforestation in just one province on Indonesia's Sumatra island is producing enough greenhouse gases to rival key industrial nations, a report by environmental group WWF said Wednesday.(AFP/File/Ahmad Zamroni)
People and cranes are seen working at an acacia plantation belonging to a pulp and.

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JAKARTA (AFP) - Deforestation in just one province on Indonesia's Sumatra island is producing enough greenhouse gases to rival key industrial nations, a report by environmental group WWF said Wednesday.

The clearing of forests for pulp, paper and palm oil and the degradation of carbon-rich peatlands in Riau over the last 25 years means the province now emits more carbon than the Netherlands, according to the report.

The once-green equatorial province has lost 4.2 million hectares (10.4 million acres) or 65 percent of its forests in that time, it said.

"Forest loss and degradation and peat decomposition and fires are behind average annual carbon emissions equivalent to 122 percent of the Netherlands' total annual emissions, 58 percent of Australia's annual emissions, 39 per cent of annual UK emissions and 26 per cent of annual German emissions," WWF said in a statement.

The rapid destruction of Riau's forests was also helping to kill off Riau's endangered tigers and elephants, the group said.

The number of elephants had plummeted 84 percent to an estimated 210 while tiger numbers had dropped 70 percent to around 192 in the last 25 years, it said.

"We found that Sumatra's elephants and tigers are disappearing even faster than their forests are in Riau," WWF Species Programme Director Susan Lieberman said in the statement.

"This is happening because as wildlife search for new habitat and food sources, they increasingly come into conflict with people and are killed."

Indonesia has one of the highest rates of deforestation in the world, driven by voracious demand for commodities and weak law enforcement.

Emissions from deforestation, and in particular peatland -- which is made up of deep layers of semi-decomposed vegetation -- have made Indonesia the world's third-largest carbon emitter, behind the United States and China.

Fossil sea monster big enough to "bite a car"

OSLO (Reuters) - The fossil of a 15 meter (50 ft) long "sea monster" found in Arctic Norway was the biggest of its kind known to science with dagger-like teeth in a mouth large enough to bite a small car, researchers said on Wednesday.

The 150-million year old dinosaur-era pliosaur, a fierce marine reptile, was about five meters (16 ft 5 in) longer than the previous pliosaur record holder found in Australia.

"It's a new species and the biggest proven pliosaur," Joern Hurum, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum in Oslo who led the expedition to dig up the fossil on the archipelago of Svalbard 1,300 km (800 miles) from the North Pole.

"A small car could fit inside its mouth," he told Reuters, adding the lower jaw was about three meters (10 ft) long.

"Something like a Morris Minor would fit perfectly."

The Museum said that pliosaurs were the top marine predators of the Jurassic era, preying upon squid-like animals, fish, and other marine reptiles.

Another type of fossil marine reptile, the ichthyosaur, was bigger at up to 23 meters (75 ft). "The pliosaur is not the biggest sea monster but it's probably the most fierce," Hurum said, adding the fossil has jagged teeth the size of cucumbers.

"The front flipper of our pliosaur alone is three meters long. We've laid it out downstairs in the basement," he said. Continued...

26 February 2008

Lorne Gunter: Welcome to the new ice age

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Snow cover over North America and much of Siberia, Mongolia and China is greater than at any time since 1966.

The U.S. National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) reported that many American cities and towns suffered record cold temperatures in January and early February. According to the NCDC, the average temperature in January "was -0.3 F cooler than the 1901-2000 (20th century) average."

China is surviving its most brutal winter in a century. Temperatures in the normally balmy south were so low for so long that some middle-sized cities went days and even weeks without electricity because once power lines had toppled it was too cold or too icy to repair them.

There have been so many snow and ice storms in Ontario and Quebec in the past two months that the real estate market has felt the pinch as home buyers have stayed home rather than venturing out looking for new houses.

In just the first two weeks of February, Toronto received 70 cm of snow, smashing the record of 66.6 cm for the entire month set back in the pre-SUV, pre-Kyoto, pre-carbon footprint days of 1950.

And remember the Arctic Sea ice? The ice we were told so hysterically last fall had melted to its "lowest levels on record? Never mind that those records only date back as far as 1972 and that there is anthropological and geological evidence of much greater melts in the past.

The ice is back.

Gilles Langis, a senior forecaster with the Canadian Ice Service in Ottawa, says the Arctic winter has been so severe the ice has not only recovered, it is actually 10 to 20 cm thicker in many places than at this time last year.

OK, so one winter does not a climate make. It would be premature to claim an Ice Age is looming just because we have had one of our most brutal winters in decades.

But if environmentalists and environment reporters can run around shrieking about the manmade destruction of the natural order every time a robin shows up on Georgian Bay two weeks early, then it is at least fair game to use this winter's weather stories to wonder whether the alarmist are being a tad premature.

And it's not just anecdotal evidence that is piling up against the climate-change dogma.

According to Robert Toggweiler of the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory at Princeton University and Joellen Russell, assistant professor of biogeochemical dynamics at the University of Arizona -- two prominent climate modellers -- the computer models that show polar ice-melt cooling the oceans, stopping the circulation of warm equatorial water to northern latitudes and triggering another Ice Age (a la the movie The Day After Tomorrow) are all wrong.

"We missed what was right in front of our eyes," says Prof. Russell. It's not ice melt but rather wind circulation that drives ocean currents northward from the tropics. Climate models until now have not properly accounted for the wind's effects on ocean circulation, so researchers have compensated by over-emphasizing the role of manmade warming on polar ice melt.

But when Profs. Toggweiler and Russell rejigged their model to include the 40-year cycle of winds away from the equator (then back towards it again), the role of ocean currents bringing warm southern waters to the north was obvious in the current Arctic warming.

Last month, Oleg Sorokhtin, a fellow of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, shrugged off manmade climate change as "a drop in the bucket." Showing that solar activity has entered an inactive phase, Prof. Sorokhtin advised people to "stock up on fur coats."

He is not alone. Kenneth Tapping of our own National Research Council, who oversees a giant radio telescope focused on the sun, is convinced we are in for a long period of severely cold weather if sunspot activity does not pick up soon.

The last time the sun was this inactive, Earth suffered the Little Ice Age that lasted about five centuries and ended in 1850. Crops failed through killer frosts and drought. Famine, plague and war were widespread. Harbours froze, so did rivers, and trade ceased.

It's way too early to claim the same is about to happen again, but then it's way too early for the hysteria of the global warmers, too.

River filth cuts normal water supplies for 200,000 in China

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BEIJING, Feb 26, 2008 (AFP) — Normal water supplies to more than 200,000 people in central China have been cut due to pollution in a local river, state media reported Tuesday.

The water supply to more than 60,000 residents of Jianli county in Hubei province was cut Sunday after water in a branch of Hanjiang River turned red and foamy, the Chutian Metropolis Daily said.

Authorities in nearby Qianjiang county also ordered the suspension of water supplies from the river to local water processing plants, forcing nearly 200,000 residents to opt for underground and bottled water, it said.

The cause of the pollution was being investigated.

An environment agency official surnamed Peng said the problem could have been the result of a combination of rotting garbage in the water and a sudden rise temperatures in recent days.

China's rapidly growing economy has combined with lax environmental regulation to create severe water pollution.

More than 70 percent of the country's waterways and 90 percent of its underground water are polluted, according to previously released government figures.

Collapse of US honeybee colonies set to devastate America's agriculture and food industries.

Ice cream crisis as bees buzz off

Story HERE
Bee movie

Cinema goers watching Bee move are being signed up to save the bee

The collapse of US honeybee colonies this year is set to devastate America's multibillion dollar agriculture and food industries.

Last year about 750,000 of the 2.5m hives in the US were wiped out in mysterious circumstances, and already this year the American Beekeeping Federation says there is evidence from its members that losses will be even greater this year.

For the first time individual businesses have stepped forward to give money to try to speed up the process of finding out, first of all, what causes colony collapse disease (CCD) and then eradicating it.

Häagen-Dazs, the ice cream making subsidiary of General Mills, gave a total of $250,000 (£127,000) to two university research teams and Burt's Bees, the personal care products maker, made a undisclosed grant to create the Honeybee Health Improvement Project, a research task force.

Burt's Bees also launched a public service announcement to run in cinemas showing Bee Movie. In the announcement co-founder Burt Shavitz talked about the important role bees play in agriculture.

He then urged audiences to visit the company's website (www.burtsbees.com ) to sign up to receive a free packet of wildflower seeds to help create a bee-friendly environment.

Honeybees are said to be critical to the production of $15bn worth of crops in the US and Häagen-Dazs says around 25 of its 60 flavours depend on fruits and nuts pollinated by bees.

The ice cream maker is also aiming to raise consumer awareness about CCD by launching a new flavour this spring called Vanilla Honey Bee.

Flying off

Diana Cox-Foster, professor of entomology at Pennsylvania State University College of Agricultural Sciences, which received $150,000 from Häagen-Dazs, believes researchers have identified a major cause of CCD.

Her team has recently given the mite-transmitted Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV) to healthy bee colonies and has seen rapid die-off??. As it is winter those tests took place in greenhouses so the researchers are waiting for the weather to improve to verify the results with bees in their normal environments.

The mysterious and unique aspect of CCD is that the bees are not being found dead near their colonies. They are flying off; just abandoning their life's work, leaving behind the queen and a few younger bees.

Professor Cox-Foster believes that there are other factors together with IAPV are the cause of CCD, such as other viruses, the use of chemicals near colonies and whether the bees are receiving enough nutrition.

To beekeepers pesticides are definitely part of the problem, says Troy Fore, executive director of the American Beekeeping Federation. "A lot of beekeepers blame neonicotinoid insecticides. These are safer for humans and other mammals but they affect the neurological systems of bees. They don't kill the bees outright but they cause to act in ways different to the norm."

The beekeepers believe these insecticides, which in fact have been partially banned in France, weaken the immune system of the bees thereby allowing viruses such as IAPV to strike.

Beekeepers that have their hives in the forest or grasslands and not near cultivated crops are doing well, so there is anecdotal evidence that the pesticides and insecticides are part of the problem, said Fore.

Australia on the attack

But not everyone agrees that IAPV is a cause of CCD. Australian government scientists miffed that the Penn State team suggested in a paper published in Science that IAPV arrived in the US in imports of live bees from Australia pointed out in a follow-up letter that there were several CCD colonies free of IAPV and the "shivering phenotype", and the death of bees close to the hive associated with IAPV in Israel.

The assertion that IAPV came from Australian bees was also refuted by the US Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service, which said that IAPV was found in the country back in 2002, two years before the importation of Australian bees was instituted to replenish colonies.

The Australians, which see their $5m a year live bee exporting industry endangered by such allegations, have demanded that Penn State withdraw its conclusions. They also point out that neither CCD nor large-scale, unexplained mortality events have occurred in the Australian bee industry.

The first description of IAPV came from Israel in 2002 and since then there have been die-outs of bees across the globe, some definitely attributable to the virus.

British beekeepers too are worried that CCD may come to these shores and they have called on the government to back a five-year, £8m research programme designed to save the insect.

Back in America all eyes are nowadays on California's almond trees, which represent a $2.5bn industry. The pink and white blossoms have started to appear and the concern is whether there are the tens of thousands bees needed to pollinate the crop.

"The almonds are in bloom right now in California and we are hearing there are some significant die-offs. It's worrisome," said professor Cox-Foster.

Astronomers Find One of the Brightest Galaxies in Early Universe


Images taken by ACS, above and top right; NICMOS, center right; and Spitzer IRAC, bottom right. The distant galaxy A1689-zD1 is circled in red.
Photo courtesy NASA/ ESA/ Reserchers L. Bradley, R. Bouwens, H. Ford and G. Illingworth

NASA's Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes, with a boost from a natural "zoom lens," have uncovered what may be one of the youngest and brightest galaxies ever seen in the middle of the cosmic "dark ages," just 700 million years after the beginning of our universe.

The detailed images from Hubble's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer, known as NICMOS, reveal an infant galaxy, dubbed A1689-zD1, undergoing a firestorm of star birth during the dark ages, a time shortly after the Big Bang but before the first stars reheated the cold, dark universe. Images from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope's Infrared Array Camera provided strong additional evidence that it was a young star-forming galaxy in the dark ages.

The team conducting the study was led by Larry Bradley, an associate research scientist in the Henry A. Rowland Department of Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins.

The new images should offer insights into the formative years of galaxy birth and evolution and yield information on the types of objects that may have contributed to ending the dark ages. The faraway galaxy also is an ideal target for Hubble's successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, or JWST, scheduled to launch in 2013. Continue

Life Forms Ejected on Asteroid Impact Could Survive to Reseed Earth

image


In the event that an asteroid or comet would impact Earth and send rock fragments containing embedded microorganisms into space, at least some of those organisms might survive and reseed on Earth or another planetary surface able to support life, according to a study published in the Spring 2008 (Volume 8, Number 1) issue of Astrobiology, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. The paper is available free online.

In the report entitled, "Microbial Rock Inhabitants Survive Hypervelocity Impacts on Mars-like Host Planets: First Phase of Lithopanspermia Experimentally Tested," Gerda Horneck and colleagues describe systematic shock recovery experiments designed to simulate a scenario called lithopanspermia, in which microorganisms are transported between planets via meteorites. The first step of lithopanspermia would involve ejection of the microorganism-containing rock from the host planet as a result of an impact event. The researchers sandwiched dry layers of three kinds of biological test systems, including bacterial endospores, endolithic cyanobacteria, and epilithic lichens, between gabbro discs, which are analogous to martian rocks. They then simulated the shock pressures martian meteorites experienced when they were ejected from Mars and determined the ability of the organisms to survive the harsh conditions.

The organisms selected represent "potential 'hitchhikers' within impact-ejected rocks," explain the authors, and are hardy examples of microbes that can withstand extreme environmental stress conditions, write the authors.

Continue

Rising sea levels due to global warming could change the map of the Gulf forever

GLOBAL WARMING: Countries in the Gulf must reduce greenhouse gas emissions, scientists warned.

Rising sea levels due to global warming could change the map of the Gulf forever, scientists warned on Monday, calling on countries in the region to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

New research to be presented at The British University in Dubai (BUiD) on Tuesday reveals that global temperatures are at risk of rising between 1.8 and 4 degrees Celsius due to global warming, which could see ice caps to melt and coastal areas submerged.

“Human impact on the planet has accelerated over the last hundred years, with the composition of the Earth’s atmosphere being radically altered by burning fossil fuels. Understanding that impact and agreeing steps forward is a critical imperative for the future,” said Professor Geoffrey Boulton of the University of Edinburgh, responsible for the research.

The Gulf is home to some of the world's biggest polluters of greenhouse gas per capita.

Continue

Deforestation a greater threat to the Amazon than global warming

Some researchers doubt the Amazon is on the brink of a major die-off due to climate change. Human disturbance is a greater threat, they say.




WORLDCLIM bioclimatic variables (Hijmans et al. 2005) of (a) annual precipitation and (b) precipitation of the driest quarter (driest three months) characterize present-day climatic variability across the Amazon. From Francis E. Mayle and Mitchell J. Power (2008)
If past conditions are any indication of future conditions, the Amazon rainforest may survive considerable drying and warming caused by global warming, argue researchers in a paper published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

Examining charcoal and fossil records from across the Amazon basin, Francis E. Mayle and Mitchell J. Power of the University of Edinburgh report that Amazon forests appear to have been "remarkably resilient to climatic conditions significantly drier than those of today, despite widespread evidence of forest burning" during the Early-Mid- Holocene, a period 4000 to 8000 years ago. The conclusion challenges other research suggesting that the Amazon is on the brink of a dramatic die-back due to the interaction of accelerating deforestation, increasing incidence and severity of forest fires, and the effects of climate change.

Mayle and Power say the impact of drier conditions 4000 to 8000 years ago was variable across Amazonia but that the area that was most affected was that where the dry season is longest and most severe: the southern and eastern Amazon. Mayle and Power write that pollen records from the areas suggest a change from closed-canopy forest to a open forest and savanna during dry periods. Meanwhile in the western Amazon, along Andean flank of the basin, dry conditions triggered the replacement of cloud forest plants by lowland rainforest vegetation. In other words, rainforest species migrated to higher elevations as rainfall declined. However other sites showed little change in species composition. These may have served as "refugia" for future recolonization when wetter conditions returned.
CONTINUE


Nature's in bloomin' chaos as global warming turns the seasons on their head

Mother Nature is like a beloved aunt who occasionally gets slightly tipsy and does something outrageous to catch us off guard. She enjoys testing our nerves with her teasing games.

We've had snow on Derby Day in June, hailstones in August and shirtsleeve days in March.

British weather has always thrown up the unexpected - and that is why it is our national obsession. Our weather is anything but boring. But instead of behaving oddly every now and then, Nature is being erratic all the time.

Conventional seasons are being ignored; weather patterns are in turmoil.

February's gone mad. Instead of being our gloomiest month, it's been a joy. Bright clear days, barely a drop of rain and, best of all, an incredibly early spring - the earliest on record.

Scroll down for more...

Riot of colour: As spring comes earlier and earlier each year, such species as hawthorn and hornbeam will cut off more and more light to the bluebell which will cause it to decline disastrously

Shakespeare wrote of February being "so full of frost, of storm and cloudiness". Not any more. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.

Officially, spring does not start until March 21, after the vernal equinox. But this glorious February has followed a mild winter and a January that saw the warmest night for the month ever recorded in Britain.

Already, bumble bees and brimstone butterflies are busy in our flowerbeds and hedgerows; daffodils, snowdrops, primroses and celandines vie for our attention.

Normally, they flower in an orderly queue: spring should arrive like a set of oddly coloured traffic lights - first the white snowdrops, then the yellow flowers and finally the azure bluebells.

But not this year. Everything is blooming at once in a riot of colour. Continue

UN Admits They CANNOT Feed The World

Feed the world?

We are fighting a losing battle, UN admits


Huge budget deficit means millions more face starvation

Ears of wheat growing in a field

Ears of wheat growing in a field. Photograph: Steve Satushek/Getty images

The United Nations warned yesterday that it no longer has enough money to keep global malnutrition at bay this year in the face of a dramatic upward surge in world commodity prices, which have created a "new face of hunger".

"We will have a problem in coming months," said Josette Sheeran, the head of the UN's World Food Programme (WFP). "We will have a significant gap if commodity prices remain this high, and we will need an extra half billion dollars just to meet existing assessed needs."

With voluntary contributions from the world's wealthy nations, the WFP feeds 73 million people in 78 countries, less than a 10th of the total number of the world's undernourished. Its agreed budget for 2008 was $2.9bn (£1.5bn). But with annual food price increases around the world of up to 40% and dramatic hikes in fuel costs, that budget is no longer enough even to maintain current food deliveries.

The shortfall is all the more worrying as it comes at a time when populations, many in urban areas, who had thought themselves secure in their food supply are now unable to afford basic foodstuffs. Afghanistan has recently added an extra 2.5 million people to the number it says are at risk of malnutrition

"This is the new face of hunger," Sheeran said. "There is food on shelves but people are priced out of the market. There is vulnerability in urban areas we have not seen before. There are food riots in countries where we have not seen them before."

WFP officials say the extraordinary increases in the global price of basic foods were caused by a "perfect storm" of factors: a rise in demand for animal feed from increasingly prosperous populations in India and China, the use of more land and agricultural produce for biofuels, and climate change.

The impact has been felt around the world. Food riots have broken out in Morocco, Yemen, Mexico, Guinea, Mauritania, Senegal and Uzbekistan. Pakistan has reintroduced rationing for the first time in two decades. Russia has frozen the price of milk, bread, eggs and cooking oil for six months. Thailand is also planning a freeze on food staples. After protests around Indonesia, Jakarta has increased public food subsidies. India has banned the export of rice except the high-quality basmati variety.

"For us, the main concern is for the poorest countries and the net food buyers," said Frederic Mousseau, a humanitarian policy adviser at Oxfam. "For the poorest populations, 50%-80% of income goes on food purchases. We are concerned now about an immediate increase in malnutrition in these countries, and the landless, the farmworkers there, all those who are living on the edge."

Much of the blame has been put on the transfer of land and grains to the production of biofuel. But its impact has been outweighed by the sharp growth in demand from a new middle class in China and India for meat and other foods, which were previously viewed as luxuries.

"The fundamental cause is high income growth," said Joachim von Braun, the head of the International Food Policy Research Institute. "I estimate this is half the story. The biofuels is another 30%. Then there are weather-induced erratic changes which caused irritation in world food markets. These things have eaten into world levels of grain storage.

"The lower the reserves, the more nervous the markets become, and the increased volatility is particularly detrimental to the poor who have small assets."

The impact of climate change will amplify that already dangerous volatility. Record flooding in west Africa, a prolonged drought in Australia and unusually severe snowstorms in China have all had an impact on food production.

"The climate change factor is so far small but it is bound to get bigger," Von Braun said. "That is the long-term worry and the markets are trying to internalise it."

The WFP is holding an emergency meeting in Rome on Friday, at which its senior managers will meet board members to brief them on the scale of the problem. There will then be a case-by-case assessment of the seriousness of the situation in the affected countries, before the WFP formally asks for an increased budget at its executive board meeting in June.

But the donor countries are also facing higher fuel and transport costs. For the biggest US food aid programme, non-food costs now account for 65% of total programme expenditure.

Global impact: Where inflation bites deepest

1 United States The last time America's grain silos were so empty was in the early seventies, when the Soviet Union bought much of the harvest. Washington is telling the World Food Programme it is facing a 40% increase in food commodity prices compared with last year, and higher fuel bills to transport it, so the US, the biggest single food aid contributor, will radically cut the amount it gives away.

2 Morocco 34 people jailed this month for taking part in riots over food prices.

3 Egypt The world's largest importer of wheat has been hard hit by the global price rises, and most of the increase will be absorbed in increased subsidies. The government has also had to relax the rules on who is eligible for food aid, adding an extra 10.5 million people.

4 Eritrea It could be one of the states hardest hit in Africa because of its reliance on imports. The price rises will hit urban populations not previously thought vulnerable to a lack of food.

5 Zimbabwe With annual inflation of 100,000% and unemployment at 80%, price increases on staples can only worsen the severe food shortages.

6 Yemen Prices of bread and other staples have nearly doubled in the past four months, sparking riots in which at least a dozen people were killed.

7 Russia The government struck a deal with producers last year to freeze the price of milk, eggs, vegetable oil, bread and kefir (a fermented milk drink). The freeze was due to last until the end of January but was extended for another three months.

8 Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai has asked the WFP to feed an extra 2.5 million people, who are now in danger of malnutrition as a result of a harsh winter and the effect of high world prices in a country that is heavily dependent on imports.

9 Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf announced this month that Pakistan would be going back to ration cards for the first time since the 1980s, after the sharp increase in the price of staples. These will help the poor (nearly half the population) buy subsidised flour, wheat, sugar, pulses and cooking fat from state-owned outlets.

10 India The government will spend 250bn rupees on food security. India is the world's second biggest wheat producer but bought 5.5m tonnes in 2006, and 1.8m tonnes last year, driving up world prices. It has banned the export of all forms of rice other than luxury basmati.

11 China Unusually severe blizzards have dramatically cut agricultural production and sent prices for food staples soaring. The overall food inflation rate is 18.2%. The cost of pork has increased by more than half. The cost of food was rising fast even before the bad weather moved in, as an increasingly prosperous population began to demand as staples agricultural products previously seen as luxuries. The government has increased taxes and imposed quotas on food exports, while removing duties on food imports.

12 Thailand The government is planning to freeze prices of rice, cooking oil and noodles.

13 Malaysia and the Philippines Malaysia is planning strategic stockpiles of the country's staples. Meanwhile the Philippines has made an unusual plea to Vietnam to guarantee its rice supplies. Imports were previously left to the global market.

14 Indonesia Food price rises have triggered protests and the government has had to increase its food subsidies by over a third to contain public anger.

FAQ: Food prices

Few winners and many losers

What is the problem?

In the three decades to 2005, world food prices fell by about three-quarters in inflation-adjusted terms, according to the Economist food prices index. Since then they have risen by 75%, with much of that coming in the past year. Wheat prices have doubled, while maize, soya and oilseeds are at record highs.

Why are food prices rising?

The booming world economy has driven up prices for all commodities. Changes in diets have also played a big part. Meat consumption in many countries has soared, pushing up demand for the grain needed by cattle. Demand for biofuels has also risen strongly. This year, for example, one third of the US maize crop will go to make biofuels. Moreover, the gradual reform and liberalisation of agricultural subsidy programmes in the US and Europe have reduced the butter and grain mountains of yesteryear by eliminating overproduction.

Who are the winners and losers?

Farmers are the obvious winners, as are poor countries that rely extensively on food exports. But consumers are having to pay more, and the urban poor in many developing states will be hardest hit, as they often spend more than a third of their income on food.

How long are prices likely to be high?

The US department for agriculture says the country's wheat stocks are at their lowest for 50 years and demand will continue to exceed supply this year. There is potential to bring more land into production in countries such as Ukraine, but that could take time. And as all foodstuffs have risen sharply in price there is little incentive for farmers to switch from one crop to another.

What about the EU's common agricultural policy?

High food prices certainly remove the need to subsidise farmers and so there is a chance, say experts, that badly needed reductions in CAP subsidies, which cost European taxpayers dearly, could now be within reach.

Are other commodity prices also rising?

Oil, metals and coal have seen their prices rise strongly as the global economy has expanded rapidly, driving up demand for almost everything,

particularly from emerging economies such as China and India. Some economists think speculation may also play a part. Disappointed by the sub-prime collapse and falling property values in many countries, investors have piled money into commodities.
Ashley Seager


New round of damaging snow kills livestock in China

Fresh snow in parts of China has again disrupted transport and killed livestock.
·Snow started to blanket the eastern province of Shandong on Sunday.
·About 12,000 cattle were killed, losses of 18 million yuan ($2.52 mln).

JINAN, Feb. 25 (Xinhua) -- Fresh snow in parts of China has again disrupted transport and killed livestock, as the country struggles to recover from the worst winter in half a century.

A citizen clears up street that covered with snow in Jinan, capital of east China's Shandong Province, Feb. 25, 2008. The snowfall in most parts of Shandong Province recently is said in favor of spring farming. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

Snow started to blanket the eastern province of Shandong on Sunday and from 10:00 a.m. Monday, 15 flights had been delayed at the airport in Jinan, the provincial capital. Some freeways were closed and thousands of vehicles were stranded.

In the Ili River Valley in the far western Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, blizzards raged from Thursday to Saturday. About 12,000 cattle were killed, causing losses of 18 million yuan (2.52 million U.S. dollars).

"The continuous heavy snow and wintry weather last week have sharply increased fatalities among ewes and lambs, as it is the breeding season," said Ma Cheng, director of the husbandry bureau of Ili Kazak Autonomous Prefecture.

Cars covered with snow move in the street of Mengcheng county, east China's Anhui Province, Feb. 25, 2008. A snowfall hit some parts of Anhui Sunday night. Medium to heavy snow has been forecast in the eastern, western and central regions over the next three days even as the nation struggles to recover from its worst winter in 50 years.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

By Sunday night at least 10,830 sheep, 848 oxen, 240 horses and 90 pigs had been killed.

The region experienced prolonged icy weather in the middle of December. Since then, 69,700 cattle had died in Ili. In the past few weeks, the river valley was stricken by ice flows.

Alxa Right Banner (county), in northern Inner Mongolia, also suffered the worst snowy weather in 50 years. The local government said 519 people were affected, 89 others were evacuated and 40 herdsmen households had difficulty in finding drinking water.

In Ehen Hudag, seat of the Banner government, water supply was suspended to 2,169 families because water pipelines burst under extremely cold weather. Water supply was not expected to resume until May.

The snows and freezing weather also deprived 80,000 livestock of food. Another 3,200 livestock were either dead, injured or lost. The local government said the snow disasters had brought them a direct economic loss of at least 1.2 million yuan.

Prolonged snow in Xinjiang forced the closure of five airports in Kax, Hotan, Aksu, Kuqa and Altay in the past three days. The Aksu Airport was closed from 9:00 a.m. Saturday till 1:00 p.m. Monday.

Twenty-five domestic flights from Urumqi to Beijing, Chengdu, Yinchuan, Shanghai, Chongqing and other places were delayed.

From Tuesday to Wednesday, heavy snows are expected in southeast Tibet and northwest Yunnan Province. Tibet would see a temperature drop of up to four degrees centigrade throughout the region and winds up to force nine in the south, according to the region's weather bureau.

The regional meteorological authorities also warned the snow would affect transport and animal husbandry, and urged people to make preparations.

Heavy snow and blizzards have been forecast for China's central, eastern and northern and northwestern regions, including Xinjiang, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Hubei, Henan, Anhui and Jiangsu, the National Meteorological Centre said on its website (www.nmc.gov.cn) on Monday.

In Jiangsu Province, widespread snow began on Sunday night. The provincial meteorological authorities on Monday morning issued a yellow alert warning of icy road and suggested that residents should avoid traveling by bicycles.

Blizzards were also expected in the northwest of central Hubei Province, which was plagued by winter storms earlier this month.

The winter storms that struck much of central and southern China left 129 people dead and losses have reached 151.65 billion yuan (21.11 billion U.S. dollars, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

Medium, heavy snow to hit east, west, central China

Worker repair a power line on a steel tower in Guiyang, capital of southwest China's Guizhou Province, Feb. 17, 2008. Over 80 percent of the power lines and transformer substations damaged during the recent severe snow disaster in Guiyang have been recovered.

Worker repair a power line on a steel tower in Guiyang, capital of southwest China's Guizhou Province, Feb. 17, 2008. Over 80 percent of the power lines and transformer substations damaged during the recent severe snow disaster in Guiyang have been recovered. (Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

BEIJING, Feb. 24 (Xinhua) -- The National Meteorological Center(NMC) forecast here Sunday that medium and heavy snow will hit east, west and central China in the next three days.

Anhui and Jiangsu in east China, Hubei and Henan in central China and Shanxi and Shaanxi in mid-west China will experience snow or sleet, while blizzards could hit the northwest part of Hubei, said the NMC.



THE world is only ten weeks away from running out of wheat supplies

Food shortages loom as wheat crop shrinks and prices rise

Story Here

THE world is only ten weeks away from running out of wheat supplies after stocks fell to their lowest levels for 50 years.

The crisis has pushed prices to an all-time high and could lead to further hikes in the price of bread, beer, biscuits and other basic foods.

It could also exacerbate serious food shortages in developing countries especially in Africa.

The crisis comes after two successive years of disastrous wheat harvests, which saw production fall from 624m to 600m tonnes, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

Experts blame climate change as heatwaves caused a slump in harvests last year in eastern Europe, Canada, Morocco and Australia, all big wheat producers.

Booming populations and a switch to a meat-rich diet in the developing world also mean that about 110m tons of the world’s annual wheat crop is being diverted to feed livestock.

Short term pressures have compounded the problem. Speculative buying by investors gambling on further price rises has further pushed up prices.

Though shortages are often blamed on the use of land for biofuel crops, the main biofuel cereal crop is maize, not wheat. Farmers have brought millions of acres of fallow land into production and the FAO predicts that the shortages could be eliminated within 12 months.

Warning of World Food Inflation

Story Here

When William Lapp, of US-based consultancy Advanced Economic Solutions, took the podium at the annual US Department of Agriculture conference, the sentiment was already bullish for agricultural commodities boosted by demand from the biofuels industry and emerging countries.

He added a twist – that rising agricultural raw material prices would translate this year into sharply higher food inflation.

His warning that a strong wave of food inflation is heading towards the world economy was met by nods from agriculture traders, food industry executives and western’s government officials at the USDA’s annual Agricultural Outlook Forum.

Larry Pope, chief executive of Smithfield Foods, the largest US pork processor, warned delegates of a wave of “real food inflation” just at the time central banks were under pressure to cut interest rates.

“I think we need to tell the American consumer that [prices] are going up,” he said. “We’re seeing cost increases that we’ve never seen in our business.”

The comments highlighted one of the conference’s main concerns – that rising agricultural prices have reached a stage at which the impact will be felt not only on fresh food but will also filter through the supply chain and raise the cost of processed food.

Tom Knutzen, chief executive of Danisco, one of the world’s largest ingredients companies, said rising vegetable oil costs made it more expensive to produce preservatives, colourings and flavourings.

“Our products are based on vegetable oil. “Our input cost has gone up so we are increasing prices,” he said in an interview in Brussels. He added that preservatives, colourings and flavourings made up only 1-2 per cent of the cost of food but there would be a ripple effect as they were present in almost all the food sold worldwide.

US agriculture officials forecast that food inflation will rise this year at an annual rate of 3-4 per cent, warning that the risks were skewed to the upside. Last year, food inflation rose 4 per cent, the highest annual rate since 1990.

Joseph Glauber, the USDA’s chief economist, said in an interview that until now some companies had absorbed the rise in commodities prices, but that trend was about to change.

He said that wheat prices had previously moved from $3 to $5 a bushel without significant pain for consumers. “But now the wheat price has jumped to nearly $20 a bushel. These large increases will show up [in consumer prices].”

Some people hope a slowdown in the US or global economy would push down agricultural commodities prices. But Mr Glauber said that would have a limited impact on agriculture commodities prices. “I am more concerned about higher prices than lower prices.”

However, Simon Johnson, chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, said in an interview that for most agricultural commodities and metal markets the global slowdown would push prices down.

“The commodities market believes in the decoupling of developing countries’ growth,” Mr Johnson said. “The IMF does not believe in decoupling to that extent.”

But even if commodities prices do slow down, other forces could still push consumer prices higher, food industry executives said.

Companies until now have moderated consumer price increases thanks to large inventories and financial hedges in the commodities market futures. But during the course of this year those mitigating factors would vanish, executives said.

“The final result will be higher prices,” Mr Lapp said. The global economy is “at the beginning of a period in which consumer will face higher food prices”.

Additional reporting by Andy Bounds in Brussels

25 February 2008

Butterflyfish facing the risk of extinction

Butterflyfish facing the risk of extinctionWashington, February 25: Scientists have warned that the chevron butterflyfish are facing the risk of extinction.

Dr Morgan Pratchett, an expert at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University, feels that the case of the colourful, triangular butterflyfish indicates how human pressure on the world’s coral reefs is confronting certain species with ‘blind alleys’ from which they may be unable to escape.

Working with Dr Michael Berumen of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (USA), Dr Pratchett has found that the highly specialized nature of the feeding habits of this particular butterflyfish make it an extinction risk as the world’s coral reefs continue to degrade due to human over-exploitation, pollution and climate change. CONTINUE

UN warns over food aid rationing

WFP aid arrives in Gaza City (archive)
The WFP's budget requirements are rising by millions of dollars a week
Story HERE

The director of the UN's World Food Programme has said it is considering plans to ration food aid because of rising prices and a shortage of funds.

Josette Sheeran told the BBC that the WFP needed increased contributions from donors to make sure it could meet the needs of those who already rely on it.

She said it also faced growing demands from countries like Afghanistan, where people were now unable to afford food.

Food prices rose 40% last year because of rising demand and other factors.

Earlier this month, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said the rising price of cereals such as wheat and maize had become a "major global concern".

The FAO estimated poor countries would see their cereal import bill rise by more than a third this year. Africa as a whole is expected to see a 49% increase.

The organisation has called for urgent action to provide farmers in poor countries with improved access to seeds and fertiliser to increase crop production.

'Growing needs'

In an interview with the BBC on Monday, Ms Sheeran said the WFP was holding talks with experts to decide whether food aid would need to be stopped or rationed if new donations did not arrive at the agency in the short term.

In some of these developing countries, prices have gone up 80% for staple food
Josette Sheeran,
WFP executive director

The former US undersecretary of state said she hoped the cuts could be avoided, but warned that the agency's budget requirements were rising by several millions of dollars a week because of the higher food prices.

"If food is twice as expensive, we can bring half as much in for the same price and the same contribution," she said.

"It will take increased contributions to make sure we can meet those already assessed needs."

Ms Sheeran said there was an urgent need for the funding shortage to be addressed because "in many places, we are the only source of food for some people".

"We're also seeing some new growing needs in some places like Afghanistan, where people are being thrown into food insecurity just simply due to the higher food prices."

She said those who had been hardest hit so far were people in developing countries who were living on 50 US cents (£0.25) a day, 80-90% of which was already being spent on food.

Wheat
Global wheat prices have risen 83% in the past year

"In some of these developing countries, prices have gone up 80% for staple food," she added. "When you see those kinds of increases, they are simply priced out of the food markets."

Even middle-class, urban people in countries such as Indonesia, Yemen and Mexico were increasingly being priced out of the food market or forced to sacrifice education and healthcare, she warned.

Ms Sheeran said Egypt had just widened its food rationing system after two decades and Pakistan had reintroduced ration cards after many years.

China and Russia were meanwhile imposing price controls, while Argentina and Vietnam were enforcing foreign sales taxes or export bans, she said.

The WFP's ability to mitigate the impact of rising food prices has also been hampered by a significant decrease in the past five years of supplies of "in-kind food aid" - food produced abroad and delivered to vulnerable people in emergencies.

In-kind food aid peaked in 2000, when there were large surpluses and low prices for cereals.

The US, the world's largest donor of food aid, has since reduced its surplus and instead chosen to provide funding to international agencies.

UN food aid scheme endangered by high agricultural costs

London -
The United Nation's agency responsible for relieving hunger in the world is drawing up plans to ration food aid in response to the spiralling cost of agricultural commodities, its director told the Financial Times newspaper Monday. Josette Sheeran, executive director of the World Food Programme (WFP), told the Financial Times that the agency would look at "cutting the food rations or even the number or people reached" if donors did not provide more money.

"Our ability to reach people is going down just as the needs go up," she said. WFP officials hope the cuts can be avoided, but warned that the agency's budget requirements were rising by several million dollars a week because of climbing food prices. Continue

Soaring prices may force U.N. to cut food aid; global inflation looms

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As the cost of basic commodities soars, the United Nations says it may have to cut food aid to the world's poor and warned that the middle class constitutes a "new area of hunger" in developing countries, the Financial Times reported earlier today.

"Our ability to reach people is going down just as the needs go up," said Josette Sheeran, executive director of the World Food Program.

Because prices for wheat, corn, rice, soybeans, cooking oil and other staples have risen dramatically, "We are seeing a new face of hunger in which people are being priced out of the food market," she added.

The U.N. estimates that poor countries will pay 35% more for cereal imports this year, even as they purchase less.

In a separate analysis the FT writes that a strong wave of food inflation is heading towards the world economy.

That's already true in China, according to new research cited by The Australian newspaper. With food prices soaring, China may start to export something other than cheap goods to the world — inflation.

The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water

Editor's Note: The following is an excerpt of Chapter 5 in Maude Barlow's latest book, Blue Covenant. She is touring with her book across the country; see Food and Water Watch for her full schedule.

The Future of Water

The three water crises – dwindling freshwater supplies, inequitable access to water and the corporate control of water – pose the greatest threat of our time to the planet and to our survival. Together with impending climate change from fossil fuel emissions, the water crises impose some life-or-death decisions on us all. Unless we collectively change our behavior, we are heading toward a world of deepening conflict and potential wars over the dwindling supplies of freshwater – between nations, between rich and poor, between the public and the private interest, between rural and urban populations, and between the competing needs of the natural world and industrialized humans.

Water Is Becoming a Growing Source of Conflict Between Countries

Around the world, more that 215 major rivers and 300 groundwater basins and aquifers are shared by two or more countries, creating tensions over ownership and use of the precious waters they contain. Growing shortages and unequal distribution of water are causing disagreements, sometimes violent, and becoming a security risk in many regions. Britain’s former defense secretary, John Reid, warns of coming “water wars.” In a public statement on the eve of a 2006 summit on climate change, Reid predicted that violence and political conflict would become more likely as watersheds turn to deserts, glaciers melt and water supplies are poisoned. He went so far as to say that the global water crisis was becoming a global security issue and that Britain’s armed forces should be prepared to tackle conflicts, including warfare, over dwindling water sources. “Such changes make the emergence of violent conflict more, rather than less, likely,” former British prime minister Tony Blair told The Independent. “The blunt truth is that the lack of water and agricultural land is a significant contributory factor to the tragic conflict we see unfolding in Darfur. We should see this as a warning sign.” Continue

Yellow fever scare causing a mass panic among the population in Paraguay

Recently, cases of Yellow Fever have been confirmed in Paraguay, which has caused at least 8 confirmed deaths. This situation is generating a mass panic among the population, long waiting lines are observed in front of health institutions, and people are waiting for long hours under the sun to get vaccinated. However, not everybody is so lucky to get vaccinated since there are not enough vaccines left. Neighboring countries have donated vaccines but those weren't enough for everybody, fortunately 2 million vaccines arrived from France recently and country officials are expecting 400,000 more vaccines from the United Nations next week.

Here is what some bloggers are saying about the Yellow Fever scare in Paraguay:

Muna Annahas says that Paraguay has declared an emergency situation due this epidemic:

They are investigating the origin of the disease in the patients, the ministry is very concerned about the situation so the whole population. A few people have recently died in Paraguay of Yellow Fever. Paraguay has even declared emergency situation due this epidemic attack.

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Bird flu spreads alarmingly as more fowls culled in Bangladesh

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A boy is looking to a chicken stall in Dacca, captital of Bangladesh.(Xinhua/Reuters File Photo)
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Bangladesh's health workers culled more than 58,000 fowls across the country in the past 24 hours as bird flu ravaged the country's poultry industry, officials said Sunday.

The new culling was conducted in districts of Jamalpur, Rajshahi, Gazipur, Bogra, Tjhakurgaon, Feni and Chandpur.

An official at the bird flu control room told Xinhua that with the fresh culling of chickens, ducks, pigeons and pet birds, the total number of culled birds shot up to 968,731 since the avian influenza broke out in March last year.

A similar number of eggs were destroyed at 315 farms in 92 sub-districts under 45 districts, the official said.

Bangladesh Poultry Industries Association (BPIA) has said the deadly virus has led to the closure of more than 50 percent of the farms and turned nearly five million people jobless.

The BPIA said about 100 billion taka (about 1.43 billion U.S. dollars) were invested in the poultry sector but the flu has incurred a loss of 41 billion taka (about 586 million U.S. dollars) to the industry so far.

"The losses we have faced are irreparable. Nearly five million men and women mostly in rural areas engaged in poultry business were turned jobless", BPLA president Kaiser Rahman said.

He said 50 percent of the poultry farms were already shut down and more on the verge of the closure.

The BPIA demanded immediate import of vaccine to combat the virus and to protect chickens.

It also demanded granting bank loans on easy term for affected traders and owners of the feed mills, exemption of VAT and taxes on poultry fodder, equipment and other materials required for the industry, and allowing breeders and big farm owners to import kits for quick detection of the virus.

Meanwhile, prices of chickens and eggs at markets dropped drastically as panicked people stopped eating chickens and eggs.

However, microbiologists and physicians said there is no reason for the people to panic as there is no human infection case in Bangladesh.

They stressed the need for raising awareness about the disease among the people, including the poultry workers, sellers, buyers and veterinarians, to contain the infection and spread of the disease.


Food shortage sparks Cuba-style rationing

Venezuela has adopted an unprecedented system of food rationing similar to the ration cards used in Cuba, after several months of food shortages that have caused popular discontent.

The Ministry of Nutrition announced last week that beneficiaries of the government's food distribution program would only be allowed one purchase a day. The amount of food allocated to each family would be based on a ''social study'' the government performed, it said.

QUEUING FOR FOOD

Earlier this year, the government created a distribution network known as Pdval -- financed by the state-run oil company Petróleos de Venezuela, or PDVSA -- to solve shortages of groceries like beef, eggs and milk that have sparked long lines in recent months.

According to Asdrubal Chávez, President Hugo Chávez's cousin and the coordinator for Pdval, the distribution centers will now keep a registry of families shopping at each center to ensure that no home receives a ''surplus'' of staple products. Continue

Wheat, corn, other grain commodities soar

Soybean and soybean oil futures in Chicago surged on speculation that global demand for food, animal feed and biofuels will exceed production this year. Corn also reached its highest ever, and wheat surged. Continue

U.S. Soy Futures Notch All-Tine High, Wheat Strong

Wheat Prices Jump After U.S. Spring Sets Record

China bird flu victim ate sick chickens

A vendor carries chickens at a poultry market in Guangzhou, Guangdong province February 25, 2008. A woman in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong has died of the H5N1 bird flu virus, which she probably contracted from sick poultry she kept in her backyard, Hong Kong government health officials said on Monday. REUTERS/Joe Tan
vendor carries chickens at a poultry market in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

A woman in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong has died of the H5N1 bird flu virus, which she probably contracted from sick poultry she kept in her backyard, Hong Kong government health officials said on Monday.

The 44-year-old migrant worker, who was employed in Haifeng county in the eastern part of Guangdong, tested positive for H5N1 in a test by Guangdong's Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, and the Health Ministry in Beijing has to confirm the result.

"This lady kept some chickens in her backyard and they became sick and died during the incubation period of her illness. She also ate some of the chickens herself," said Thomas Tsang, controller of Hong Kong's Centre for Health Protection.

"The most likely route of transmission was from the sick poultry she kept and she acquired avian influenza from this source." Continue

Whalers hit by foul Antarctic weather

A whale (front) and another (partly seen at right) are dragged on board a Japanese whaling ship in Antarctic waters, February 7. Militant animal rights activists chasing Japanese whalers said Monday they were battling raging seas and snow storms that had put the hunt on hold.(AFP/HO) A whale (front) and another (partly seen at right) are dragged on board a Japanese...Continue

Militant animal rights activists chasing Japanese whalers in Antarctic waters said Monday they were battling raging seas and snow storms that had put the hunt on hold.

"This is the roughest it's been for some time," captain Paul Watson of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society vessel, the Steve Irwin, told AFP by satellite phone.

Watson said his crew tried to board one of the whaling boats after catching up with them on Saturday but a snowstorm had obscured conditions, forcing him to abandon the attempt.

"But we're still ready to do that at the first available opportunity," he said.

"But right now we're just ploughing through these really rough seas and nobody can do anything in this kind of weather. We've got waves right over the bow, the visibility is almost next to nothing."

Inspector shortage lets sick cows into U.S. food supply

Former and current U.S. Department of Agriculture inspectors told The Associated Press they fear chronic staff shortages are allowing sick cows to get into the nation's food supply, leading to the biggest beef recall in history and endangering the public.

According to USDA's own figures, the inspector ranks nationwide had vacancy rates of 10 percent or more in 2006-07.

"They're not covering all their bases. There's a possibility that something could go through because you don't have the manpower to check everything," said Lester Friedlander, a former USDA veterinary inspector at a plant in Wyalusing, Pennsylvania. Continue

Gone From the Skies

Gone from the sky
John James Audubon / New York Historical Society
GONE FROM THE SKY: A portrait by John James Audubon, part of an ongoing exhibit at the New York Historical Society, depicts the Carolina parakeet, once found from the Ohio Valley to the Gulf of Mexico but now extinct.

In the extinction of the Carolina parakeet is a parable on the relationship of man and nature.

Once upon a time, there were parrots living in America. Not the escaped kind we know today that steal away from airports and apartments to find improbable refuge in Brooklyn or Chicago, but wild parrots that evolved here in their own slow, mysterious way.

They were large, colorful, noisy birds, found from the Ohio Valley to the Gulf of Mexico. John James Audubon noted the decline in the Carolina parakeet back in the mid-19th century, but the birds hung on in the wild until the turn of the 20th century. The last known Carolina parakeet died in the Cincinnati Zoo 90 years ago, on Feb. 21, 1918. His name was Incas. He had outlived Martha, the very last passenger pigeon -- which also died in the Cincinnati Zoo -- by four years. Once you get a celebrity cage and a human name, it is usually over for your species.

What is the right way to honor the memory of Incas and his species on the anniversary of their extinction? And what lessons are there to apply from his death?

One lesson is the importance of zoos. It is big news, understandably, when a tiger escapes, but as a rule, it is the animals that need protection from us, not the other way around. Incas wasn't the only caged Carolina parakeet, and there were even pairs that hatched out young, but as Christopher Cokinos points out in his excellent history of extinct birds, no effort was made to coordinate among the zoos to create a diverse breeding flock. Or to rescue the eggs that Incas and his mate repeatedly tossed out of their nest. CONTINUE

Indonesia issues tsunami warning after powerful quake

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JAKARTA (AP): A powerful quake struck off the westerncoast of Sumatra Island on Monday, causing residents to panic,witnesses said. Agencies issued a tsunami warning, but no largewaves were generated.

The quake, which had a preliminary magnitude of 7.2, wascenteredin the Indian Ocean around 156 kilometers from thecoastal town of Bengkulu, Indonesia's geophysics agency said in astatement. It was a very shallow 10 kilometers below thesurface.

The U.S. Geological Survey put the quake at 7.3.

Residents in Bengkulu and the nearby town of Mukomuko saidtheyfelt the quake strongly, but that it did not appear to have causedmajor damage in the region, which late Sunday was also hit by astrong tremblor.

The geophysics agency issued a tsunami bulletin, but canceleditafter determining no large waves were generated.

Residents in Bengkulu and neighboring Mukomuko fled their homesas the quake struck, but few bothered to run inland or to higherground, witnesses said. The country only has few tsunami warningsirens on its beaches. Many people appeared to be unaware of thebulletins.

"Of course we are afraid, but I think we are safe since atsunami will not come anyway," said Mukomuko resident Edi, whoalong with around 50 others remained in his seaside community. Hegive only a single name.

Indonesia, which straddles a series of active fault lines, isprone to seismic and volcanic activity. A giant earthquake along thesame coast spawned the large tsunami that killed more than 230,000people in a number of countries in December 2004.

Indonesia does not have equipment to measure changes in sealevelthat would indicate an actual tsunami was on its way. Agenciesroutinely issue warnings when shallow offshore quakes with amagnitude of 6.5 or above strike.(**)

Massive Explosion Reported On Sun


The Earth to be Vaporized by the Sun


We all had such high hopes that our planet would survive the ultimate destruction of our Sun. Alas, thanks to new research it has been shown that when our Sun does go to wherever dead stars go to, the planet Earth will follow.

Dr Robert Smith, Emeritus Reader in Astronomy of the University of Sussex, and his team had previously calculated that our planet would escape ultimate destruction. Granted, that “escape” would consist of being burnt to a crisp, but escape nonetheless.

However those previous calculations failed to take in to account the drag effect that would be exerted over our planet by the expanding outer atmosphere of the dying Sun.

“We showed previously that, as the Sun expanded, it would lose mass in the form of a strong wind, much more powerful than the current solar wind,” said Smith. “This would reduce the gravitational pull of the Sun on the Earth, allowing the Earth’s orbit to move outwards, ahead of the expanding Sun.

“If that were the only effect the Earth would indeed escape final destruction. However, the tenuous outer atmosphere of the Sun extends a long way beyond its visible surface, and it turns out the Earth would actually be orbiting within these very low density outer layers. The drag caused by this low-density gas is enough to cause the Earth to drift inwards and finally to be captured and vaporized by the Sun.”

Continue

Melting ice raises alarm

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LONDON: UK scientists working in Antarctica have found evidence of instability in the ice of West Antarctica.

The new evidence comes from a group of glaciers covering an area the size of Texas, in a remote and seldom visited part of the continent.

The 'rivers of ice' have surged sharply in speed towards the ocean.

David Vaughan, of the British Antarctic Survey, said "there is good reason to be concerned".

Satellite measurements have shown that three huge glaciers had been speeding up for more than a decade, with the biggest of the glaciers, the Pine Island Glacier, causing the most concern.

Another BAS member, Julian Scott said, "This is an important glacier since it's putting more ice into the sea than any other glacier. It's a couple of kilometres thick, 30km wide and is moving at 3.5km per year."

Scott found that it had accelerated by 7pc, sending more ice into the ocean.

If the glacier does continue to surge and discharge most of it ice into the sea, say the researchers, the Pine Island Glacier alone could raise global sea level by 25cm.


Forget global warming: Welcome to the new Ice Age

Snow cover over North America and much of Siberia, Mongolia and China is greater than at any time since 1966.

The U.S. National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) reported that many American cities and towns suffered record cold temperatures in January and early February. According to the NCDC, the average temperature in January "was -0.3 F cooler than the 1901-2000 (20th century) average."

China is surviving its most brutal winter in a century. Temperatures in the normally balmy south were so low for so long that some middle-sized cities went days and even weeks without electricity because once power lines had toppled it was too cold or too icy to repair them.

There have been so many snow and ice storms in Ontario and Quebec in the past two months that the real estate market has felt the pinch as home buyers have stayed home rather than venturing out looking for new houses.

In just the first two weeks of February, Toronto received 70 cm of snow, smashing the record of 66.6 cm for the entire month set back in the pre-SUV, pre-Kyoto, pre-carbon footprint days of 1950. Continue

32 people die in floods, landslides in eastern and southern Philippines; 10 missing

MANILA, Philippines:

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Philippines in the eastern and southern Philippines, the government's disaster agency said Saturday.

Floods fed by heavy rains inundated entire towns and displaced more than 307,000 people in eight provinces, destroying roads and bridges, and triggering landslides, the National Disaster Coordinating Council reported.

Infrastructure and agricultural damage totaled more than 1 billion pesos (US$24.4 million; €16.43 million), mostly on Leyte and Samar islands, about 570 kilometers (350 miles) southeast of the capital, Manila, the agency said.

The unusually wet weather Feb. 12-17 was caused by a low pressure area that affected the central Visayas islands and the main southern island of Mindanao, the weather bureau said.

More snow, blizzards to hit central China

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BEIJING (Reuters) - China has forecast heavy snow and blizzards across its industrial and agricultural heartland over the next three days, even as the country struggles to recover from its worst winter weather in 50 years.

Unseasonably cold weather and ice storms across central and southern China in January and earlier this month killed at least 129 people, caused transport chaos and cut off power and water for millions.

Authorities are still battling to repair power lines and ensure food supplies after severe weather damaged millions of hectares of crops and killed more than 70 million animals.

Snow and sleet would hit six provinces spanning China's central, eastern and northern regions, including Shaanxi, Shanxi, Hubei, Henan, Anhui and Jiangsu, the National Meteorological Centre said on its Web site (www.nmc.gov.cn) on Sunday.

Blizzards were also expected in the northwestern part of central Hubei province, already plagued by winter storms earlier this month.

The Centre advised local governments and power, transport and communication authorities to prepare emergency relief work.

"Strengthen inspections and checks on roads, railway lines and power lines," the notice said.

The forecasts come as more than 1.66 million people displaced by the winter freeze remain in temporary shelters, Xinhua news agency reported.

The cold, which has driven up food prices and contributed further to a surge in annual inflation to an 11-year high of 7.1 percent in January, had caused 151 billion yuan ($21 billion) in economic losses, Xinhua said, citing China's Ministry of Civil Affairs. Continued...

Drought in China leaves millions thirsty

While parts of China have been rocked by record snowfalls, a drought in northern China has left more than two million people without sufficient drinking water, a state news agency says.

The drought has led to loss of arable land, livestock and drinking water, according to the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

China's south and central areas has been hit by China's worse snow storms in more than 50 years, but in the north 2.43 million people have been left without sufficient drinking water and 11.1 million hectares of arable land and 1.89 million livestock have been affected, Xinhua said.

"The north is suffering from a water shortage as the region's rain and snow declined by 70 percent this winter," Xinhua quoted Zhang Zhitong, vice director of the general office of the headquarters, as saying. CONTINUE

Levels of groundwater have dropped in the north China plain, with 120,000 wells in Hebei and Shanxi provinces unable to pump water, Xinhua said.

Drought, snow affect one sixth of China's arable land

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Drought and snow has affected about 22.9 million hectares of China's arable land, more than one sixth of the total.

A severe drought that began last winter had affected 11.1 million hectares in north China, said the State Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters on Sunday.

Meanwhile, in south and east China, freezing temperatures and heavy snow and sleet hit 11.8 million hectares, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

More than one sixth of China's arable land, which stood at 121.8 million hectares in mid-2006, has been affected either by winter weather or drought.

By Saturday, drought has affected 1.89 million heads of livestock and left 2.43 million people without sufficient drinking water in north China, said the headquarters.

"The north is suffering from water shortage as the region's rain and snow declined by 70 percent this winter," said Zhang Zhitong, vice director of the general office of the headquarters.

Towns and cities are also facing difficulties as ground water levels fall in the major north China plains, he added.

"For instance, the ground water level of Beijing and Tianjin has dropped half a meter while some areas dropped more than one meter," he said.

A total of 120,000 wells in Hebei and Shanxi provinces in north China are unable, or nearly unable, to pump water, he added without elaborating on the impact on food prices.

The consumer price index (CPI), a barometer of inflation, rose to an 11-year high of 7.1 percent last month as snowstorms cut transport links and power, and pushed up food and energy prices.

Analysts said although agriculture prices went up substantially last month, it normally takes one or two months for the pressure to pass through to manufactured and processed food items, which will add pressure to inflation in the following months.

Food price rises may in turn spill over to other sectors, pushing up prices of other products and labor costs.

CDC says flu is widespread in 49 states

Feb 22, 2008 (CIDRAP News) – Influenza activity was widespread in 49 US states by the end of last week, up from 44 states a week earlier, but the epidemic's growth was not as dramatic as it was the previous week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today.

Nancy Cox, MD, chief of the CDC's influenza division, told reporters at a media teleconference today that Florida is the only state reporting only regional activity. "Flu activity has continued to increase, but not quite as dramatically as the increases we've seen over the previous 2 weeks," she said.

"From a 10-year perspective, we are within the normal parameters of what we'd expect for an influenza season," she said.

Cox said the predominant influenza subtype in the United States is still A/H3N2, though H1N1 subtypes were more common at the beginning of the season. Most of the H3N2 isolates the CDC has analyzed so far involve the A/Brisbane/10/2007-like variant, which does not match this season's vaccine. According to the most recent surveillance information, for the week ending Feb 16, 79% (55) of the H3N2 samples the CDC analyzed were the Brisbane variant.

Among the 69 influenza B samples the CDC has analyzed, 94% (64) were in the Yamagata lineage, which also is not included in this year's vaccine. In contrast, 88% (124 of 141) of H1N1 isolates analyzed so far matched the Solomon Islands strain used in the vaccine.

The number of pediatric deaths related to the flu rose to 22 last week, up 12 from the previous week's total, Cox reported.

Although only one of the three flu subtypes circulating this year is well matched by the vaccine, CDC officials say they haven't noted any unusual patterns of clinical consequences. Cox said the CDC often receives anecdotal reports of influenza in patients who have received the vaccine, even in years when the circulating viruses and the vaccine are well matched.

She said the CDC is conducting studies of the effectiveness of this year's vaccine and will publish the results in an upcoming issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
Continue

24 February 2008

U.N. Conference Promotes Insect-Eating for Everyone From Famine Victims to Astronauts

Crickets, caterpillars and grubs are high in protein and minerals and could be an important food source during droughts and other emergencies, according to scientists.

Photos: Mmm! Bugs for Dinner

"I definitely think they can assist," said German biologist V.B. Meyer-Rochow, who regularly eats insects and wore a T-shirt with a Harlequin longhorn beetle to a U.N.-sponsored conference this month on promoting bugs as a food source.

Three dozen scientists from 15 countries gathered in this northern Thailand city, home to several dozen restaurants serving insects and other bugs. Some of their proposals were more down to earth than others.

A Japanese scientist proposed bug farms on spacecraft to feed astronauts, noting that it would be more practical than raising cows or pigs. Australian, Dutch and American researchers said more restaurants are serving the critters in their countries.
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6 Million Koreans Face Food Shortages: UN

Nearly six million North Koreans are in chronic need of foreign food aid this year with children, nursing and expectant mothers and the poor most at risk, the World Food Programme said Sunday.

The UN agency said the nation would be short of an estimated 1.4 million tonnes of food this year, nearly a quarter of its total needs, following severe floods last August which wiped out more than 10 per cent of the grain harvest.

"Young children, pregnant and breast-feeding women and poor families in both urban and rural areas will be most at risk of hunger," the WFP said in a statement. "Many already struggle to feed themselves on a diet critically deficient in protein, fats and micronutrients."

The hard-line communist state was hit by famine in the mid- to late-1990s which killed hundreds of thousands. Since then, the country has relied on international food aid to help feed its people.

The agency said malnutrition rates had fallen since the late 1990s. But it said 37 per cent of young children are still chronically malnourished, and one third of mothers are malnourished and anaemic, citing a 2004 survey.
Continue

Worldwide shortage of rice shoots prices soaring

As the price of rice climbs across South Asia, farmers and millers in Thailand are sitting on stocks and waiting for it to rise even further, said a top rice exporter in Bangkok.

The exporter, who requested anonymity, told The Straits Times: 'In my 25 years of trading, I have never seen such a bad position.' There is a rice shortage in Bangladesh and China too, among other countries, while there is a wheat shortage in Afghanistan.

In local markets in Pakistan, the price of rice has gone up over the past month by more than 60 per cent year on year. India recently contributed to soaring world prices when it imposed a ban on rice exports — relaxed only partially to allow some supplies to Madagascar, Mauritius, the Comoros Islands and cyclone-hit Bangladesh. China has banned rice exports to ensure enough is available for domestic demand.

From Kansas to Kabul, high rice and wheat prices are worrying officials and economists, and beginning to hit consumers — especially tens of millions of poor people — harder than many can remember. In Singapore, while rice importers and supermarkets have no problems getting the staple grain, prices have escalated. Continue

23 February 2008

Juggle a few of these numbers, and it makes economic sense to kill people

Britain official's approach to climate change puts a price on human lives. And the richer you are, the more yours is worth.

This is a column about how good intentions can run amok. It tells the story of how an honourable, intelligent man set out to avert environmental disaster and ended up accidentally promoting the economics of the slave trade. It shows how human lives can be priced and exchanged for goods and services. The story begins in a village a few miles to the west of London. The government proposes to flatten Sipson in order to build a third runway for Heathrow airport. The public consultation is about to end, but no one doubts that the government has made up its mind.

Its central case is that the economic benefits of building a third runway outweigh the economic costs. The extra capacity, the government says, will deliver a net benefit to the UK economy of £5bn. The climate change the runway will cause costs £4.8bn, but this is dwarfed by the profits to be made.
Continue

A HEATWAVE in Queensland has put 21 people in hospital.

Ambulances were called to homes across the state's southeast as temperatures rose to 40C yesterday, an Emergency Management Queensland spokesman said.

Queensland sizzles

Heatwave: In pictures

Twelve Brisbane residents and eight from other parts of the region were taken to hospital, none in a serious condition.

Most of those affected were elderly, the spokesman said.

Among those was a 70-year-old Brisbane man who succumbed to the heat while building a fence.

Another elderly man from Woodridge, south of Brisbane, went outside his building when a fire alarm went off, the spokesman said.

He said Queensland Fire and Rescue officers noticed the man was suffering with the heat and took the man back in before calling an ambulance.

The bureau of meteorology said the temperature reached 40C about 2.40pm (AEST) yesterday before a cold front moved in.

A much milder maximum of 29C was forecast for today.

Kenyan wildlife park bush fire rages for second day

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NAKURU, Kenya (Reuters) - Using branches to beat back flames, Kenyan rangers and residents struggled for a second day on Saturday to control bush fires that have engulfed a third of one of the nation's best-known wildlife parks.

At least 100 local citizens joined wildlife officials to help put out the fire, which was accidentally started in a nearby village and has already destroyed large patches of the 188 square km Lake Nakuru National Park.

"We just heard people screaming from afar and we knew it was about the fire, so we came immediately to put it out," said Dorcas Kafiri, running towards the fire with a branch in hand.

She, like other villagers near to the park, jumped through a fence to come and help.

Hundreds of workers, soldiers and policemen battled the main blaze for 12 hours on Friday, largely containing it. But fresh fires broke out on Saturday morning.

The blaze at one of Kenya's most popular destinations is another hit to the ailing tourism industry, which has seen declining numbers and profits since a post-election crisis that killed more than 1,000 people.

Lake Nakuru park, normally teeming with U.S., European and other tourists driving around in four-wheel-drive vehicles, has been virtually devoid of visitors since the December 27 vote.

When the fire began, grass parched from a recent lack of rain made fertile fuel. A Reuters reporter saw blackened hills with plumes of smoke behind and fringes of flames moving forward. Continued...


Crow deaths trigger panic

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Kolkata, February 23
Panic gripped city residents on Saturday morning after they found a large number of crows dead in their locality leading to fears that bird flu has resurfaced again. A total of 60 crows were found dead in Chetla while around a dozen died in the Park Circus area.

“It was around 8 am that I spotted the dead birds during my visit to the market. I saw crows falling from the trees, shivering and then dying. I spotted at least six of them. Later, some of them were taken away by sweepers. We were shocked to see them die. None of us touched it,” said Muhammed Samsuddin, a resident of Chawlpatti market in Karaya.

“There are rumours that it is bird flu. But how do we know? No KMC official visited us here,” he added.

Officials of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation and the state animal resources development department rushed in vets to these areas to collect samples.

The sample have been sent to the Regional Disease Diagnostics Laboratory in Belgachia for preliminary tests.

“I have heard about the unusual death of crows. We have sent the samples to Belgachia. If there is cause for concern we will send them to Bhopal. But as of now, there is no confirmation that they had bird flu, and there is absolutely no need to panic. Other factors may have been responsible for their death,” said state ARD minister Anisur Rahaman.

The city’s civic department said they were not taking any chance and are waiting for the final results from the Belgachia laboratory.

“Preliminary investigation, however, showed no indications of bird flu,” said the chief medical officer of health, Debdaipayan Chattopadhyay.

Seed bank securing plants for future

MANKIND is pillaging the earth at such a ferocious rate that scientists have come up with an insurance policy for something the planet can't do without - plants.

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It's called a seed bank, and it works in similar fashion to the bank you put your money in.

"We are putting away seeds for a rainy day," British-based Millennium Seed Bank project leader Paul Smith said, after taking delivery of his 1000th seed sample from Australia.

His most immediate goal is to collect and conserve seeds from 10 per cent of the world's flowering plants by 2010.

Australia's contribution is so significant because it is home to over 20,000 species, about 10 per cent of the world's total, and contains one in seven globally-threatened species.

The 1000th Australian sample was the rare Acacia Pubescens, known as downy or hairy-stemmed wattle, a plant native to western Sydney which has been threatened by the city's expansion since World War II.

The scientists do not take just one seed from the Acacia Pubescens and other plants like it.
The average is 32,000 seeds per collection.

They are dried and frozen and stored in a nuclear-proof vault bigger than a football pitch 200m beneath the Sussex countryside, 50 km south of London.

The acacia samples will join seeds from 23,000 other species collected so far from 126 countries in the project administered by the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew.

"We don't just lock the door and forget about them," Dr Smith said.

"We test them regularly for viability. Some seeds could last for thousands of years, but others aren't so fortunate."

Among the less robust are many of Australia's rainforest plants.

"Nearly 2000 of our rainforest species have seeds that are sensitive to drying out," said Dr Tim Entwistle, executive director of Sydney's Botanic Gardens Trust, which now has one-third of NSW flora in its seed bank.

"We will have to examine other ways of preserving them, such as cryo-storage."

Like other banks, investors in the Millennium Seed Bank might sometimes make withdrawals.

The Sussex vault, for example, contains six extinct species from Africa which can be reintroduced.
Dr Smith said land use remained the biggest threat to the diversity of plants.

"Clearing of natural vegetation accounts for 20 per cent of carbon emissions - more than the world's transport emissions - yet we still do it," he said.

"It's a political problem - it's something we could stop tomorrow.

"I think a moratorium on deforestation is something the next climate change convention may well look for."

Dr Entwistle said plants affected every aspect of life.

"The air we breathe, the clothes we wear, the food we eat, the furniture we sit on, there's no part of your life unaffected by plants," he said.

"Each one is a Mona Lisa, a unique product of evolution that has taken effectively 3.8 billion years to produce, and if you lose it you may not get it back again.

"Human beings have been here such a short time, and it's very courageous tinkering we are involved in.

"We don't yet understand what uses we may have for many plants.

"Why cut off our options?

Dr Smith is also on a drive for funding to resource the next decade of his seed project to 2020.
He is, in effect, looking for seed money, with long term growth assured.

Pythons could squeeze lower third of USA

No small problem: Burmese pythons can grow to 20 feet and weigh 250 pounds.

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As climate change warms the nation, giant Burmese pythons could colonize one-third of the USA, from San Francisco across the Southwest, Texas and the South and up north along the Virginia coast, according to U.S. Geological Survey maps released Wednesday.

The pythons can be 20 feet long and 250 pounds. They are highly adaptable to new environments.

Two federal agencies — the USGS and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service — are investigating the range of nine invasive snakes in Florida, concerned about the danger they now pose to endangered species. The agencies are collecting data to aid in the control of these populations.

They examined Burmese pythons first and, based on where they live in Asia, estimated where they might live here. One map shows where the pythons could live today, an area that expands when scientists use global warming models for 2100.

"We were surprised by the map. It was bigger than we thought it was going to be," says Gordon Rodda, zoologist and lead project researcher. "They are moving northward, there's no question."

22 February 2008

Fish Perish as Climate Change Disrupts Ocean Systems

MONACO, February 22, 2008 (ENS) - Climate change is threatening the world's fish populations, already stressed by pollution, alien infestations and over-exploitation, warns a new report by the United Nations Environment Programme, UNEP.

The worst impacts are concentrated in 10 to 15 percent of the oceans, a far greater area than previously believed. These locations are "concurrent with today's most important fishing grounds," the report documents, including the 7.5 percent of the oceans that are the most economically valuable fishing areas of the world.

The findings come in a rapid response report entitled "In Dead Water," which for the first time maps the multiple impacts of these stressors on the seas and oceans.

Tuna encircled in a net (Photo courtesy NOAA)

The work of UNEP scientists in collaboration with universities and institutes in Europe and the United States, the report was presented today during the final day of UNEP's Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum in Monaco. At least 100 environment ministers and other officials from 138 countries attended the three day meeting.

Dr. Christian Nellemann, head of the rapid response team that compiled the report, said, "We are already seeing evidence from a number of studies that increasing sea temperatures are causing changes in the distribution of marine life." Continue Story Here



Yellow Fever Outbreak in Paraguay

Yellow Fever Outbreak in Paraguay

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Paraguay is currently put face to face to the country’s first outbreak of yellow fever in 30 years. The first cases of yellow fever were reported last month and since then seven people have already died. Because of the outbreak Paraguay has been gripped by panic, as thousands of people blocked highways two days ago and tried to hammer down the health centers’ doors asking for vaccines.

Protesters have been also claiming that health workers were vaccinating politicians in their homes. "I categorically reject these kinds of irresponsible allegations," said the country’s Health Minister, Oscar Martinez Doldan.

In trying to control the disease, the country declared state of emergency last week.

Hopefully for Paraguay’s people, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced on Wednesday that it would send vaccines against the disease to the country. The 2 million vaccines are set to reach the country on Saturday or Sunday, according to Jakueke, Paraguay’s national new agency. Meanwhile, Brazil has already sent 1 million vaccines.

The yellow fever can be contracted from the bite of infected mosquitoes and its main symptoms are fever, headaches, muscle pain, shivering, nausea and vomiting and others. Although most persons get better after a few days, some people enter a second so-called “toxic” phase that causes fever, jaundice and blood in vomiting, according the World Health Organization. About 50% percent of the people that enter the toxic phase die within 10 days.

Yellow fever can't be cured, so medical authorities recommend vaccinations.

U.N. says world fisheries face collapse

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MONACO (Reuters) - A deadly combination of climate change, over-fishing and pollution could cause the collapse of commercial fish stocks worldwide within decades, said Achim Steiner, head of the United Nations Environment Program.

"You overlap all of this and you see you're potentially putting a death nail in the coffin of world fisheries," Steiner told reporters on Friday on the fringes of a climate conference involving more than 150 nations and 100 environment ministers.

Some 2.6 billion people worldwide depend on fish for protein, said a UNEP report "In Dead Water" published on Friday.

Climate change has compounded previous problems such as over-fishing, as rising temperatures kill coral reefs, threaten tuna spawning grounds, and shift ocean currents and with them the plankton and small fish which underpin ocean food chains.

"The question is not whether we should stop fishing but to address climate change, which is creating a degree of impact we've not seen before," said lead author of the UNEP report, Christian Nellemann.

"We are getting more and more alarming signals of dramatic changes in the oceans. The recovery from the changes we're making will probably take a million years."

The report found the most affected areas included those responsible for half the world's fish catch.

A slowing of ocean currents as a result of climate change may over the next 100 years interrupt the transport of nutrients to the most valuable coastal fishing zones, and the flushing away of pollution.

In other impacts, Nellemann said he expected more than 50 percent of coral reefs to die by 2050 as a result of rising temperatures, with resulting impacts on tourism.

Carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels create an acid when dissolved in water, and could over the coming decades make the sea more acidic than at any time in the past 65 million years, and by 2100 could prevent mollusks in some seas from forming shells.

Forest health falling fast

Lodgepole pines that were killed by pine beetles stand along the Peak to Peak highway in Boulder County. (Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file photo )

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Nearly 2 million acres of forests across the state are being killed by pine beetles, spruce beetles and other maladies, the Colorado State Forest Service said Wednesday in its annual report on forest health.

The report highlights the need to do something quickly to protect still-living trees and clear away the dead ones, lest the state become a tinderbox.

"I've never seen such interest in forest health and forests in general," Rick Cables, the regional forester for the U.S. Forest Service, said at a morning legislative-committee meeting.

But state lawmakers quickly turned their anger on Washington for what they said was a lack of support on the issues. While the budget to fight fires continues to rise — nationally receiving an extra $148 million in the proposed 2009 budget — funding for programs to prevent fire risk and help the forests continues to drop. In that same proposed budget, state and private forestry programs see a 58 percent cut.

Sen. Jack Taylor, R-Steamboat Springs, said money spent on forest health is money saved later in firefighting.

"We're in an emergency in Colorado," he said. "And we've got to get through on the federal level."

Rep. Cory Gardner, R-Yuma, suggested the state explore whether to sue the federal government over lack of funding for national forests in Colorado.

"The regional office and the state office are doing a good job," he said. "But we just need some more support from our friends inside the beltway."

Sen. Gail Schwartz, D-Snowmass Village, said the federal government should use some of the money it gets in mineral-lease royalties in Colorado to help the state's forests.

"I don't think it's an unreasonable question that we ask they reinvest some of that money back into our forest health," she said.

Colorado's delegation in Washington already is doing its part, Cables noted. Late last year, they signed on to a letter that resulted in an extra $15 million in forest-health funds coming to the region.

Cables said the state and federal governments must work together, and with private industry, to heal the forests.

"The reality is appropriated funds are not going to solve the problem," he said later. "There's not enough money."

Northeast Hit by Major Winter Storm

A major winter storm struck the northeast Friday morning, with snowfall causing massive delays at airports, closing schools and snarling traffic on streets and highways in the region.

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Jacob Silberberg for The New York Times

Plowing in front of a school on the Upper East Side. More Photos »

Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times

The West Side Highway in the West Village on Friday. More Photos >

Earl Wilson/The New York Times

Astor Place in Manhattan on Friday. More Photos >

Snow started falling earlier than expected, before daybreak, with four inches measured at mid-morning in Manhattan’s Central Park. A total of six to nine inches was expected before the snow is to change to sleet and rain in the afternoon

Arrival delays of more than five hours were reported by the Federal Aviation Administration at Kennedy and Newark airports with a lesser delay of slightly more than three hours at La Guardia.

Philadelphia Airport also reported delays of more than five hours, and delays were expected at Logan Airport in Boston later in the day as the storm moved in that direction.

More than 800 flights were canceled in the New York area, according to Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. They included 330 at Newark, 450 at La Guardia and 40 at Kennedy. The schedule at Kennedy is weighted toward the afternoon, so the number of cancellations there could grow, Mr. Coleman said.

At the Port Authority Bus Terminal in midtown Manhattan, hundreds of travelers were stranded as bus runs were canceled as well. Several carriers, including Greyhound and Peter Pan, scrubbed most of their schedules for the day.

The speed limit on the New Jersey Turnpike was reduced to 35 miles per hour, and numerous automobile accidents were reported on the highway, although there were no serious injuries. Earlier, jackknifed trucks shut the southbound lanes of Interstate 95 in Greenwich, Conn. for several hours.

The Port Authority reduced the speed limit to 35 miles per hour on the Outerbridge, Goethals and Bayonne bridges, which connect Staten Island to New Jersey.

Speeds were reduced on other bridges in New York City and some delays were reported on subways and buses in New York City and Long Island. In general, authorities in the region advised anyone who did not have to travel to stay home.

The storm stretched from northeastern Pennsylvania through New England, and transit delays are expected throughout the region.

EMEA Recommends Authorisation Of First Pre-Pandemic Influenza Vaccine, Europe

he European Medicines Agency recommended the authorisation of the first 'pre-pandemic vaccine' for humans against influenza caused by the H5N1 virus. This is an avian influenza ('bird flu') virus strain that has the potential to evolve into a pandemic influenza virus affecting humans.

Prepandrix, from GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, is a pre-pandemic vaccine that is intended to trigger an immune response against the H5N1 strain of the influenza virus before or during an officially declared influenza pandemic, in accordance with official guidance.

An influenza pandemic is a global outbreak of influenza that leads to serious illness in large numbers of people. It is caused by an influenza virus strain against which most or all humans have no natural protection, and which has mutated into a form that spreads easily from person to person. Health authorities are concerned that the next pandemic could occur at some point within the next few years and could be caused by the H5N1 strain.

The EMEA recommendation has been sent to the European Commission for the adoption of a marketing authorisation decision. Continue

Rural Nevadans begin cleanup after rare quake

WELLS, Nevada (AP) -- A powerful earthquake damaged hundreds of homes, toppled chimneys and reduced part of a historical district to rubble, but residents of rural Wells, Nevada, town are grateful it wasn't worse.

art.wells.quake.ap.jpg

A corner building is damaged on Front Street in the historic district from Thursday's quake near Wells, Nevada.

No one was killed and no serious injuries were reported after the magnitude-6.0 quake jolted the high desert town at 6:16 a.m. Thursday and rumbled across much of the West.

About 20 to 25 buildings suffered heavy damage in the largely vacant historical district of Wells, where brick facades tumbled off several buildings, signs fell and windows broke. A support beam crushed one unoccupied car.

"There are a number of buildings that look completely destroyed," Gov. Jim Gibbons said late Thursday after surveying the damage. "Bricks and mortar and foundations are just about all that is left of them right now."

Gibbons said most everyone was safe, citing just three minor injuries.

"I think we were just blessed that Mother Nature struck when it did ... rather than some time later on when the people would be out and about and the sidewalks might have had more people on them when these structures came down," he said.

County commissioners declared a state of emergency in Wells and the town of about 1,600 was closed to all but residents, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol.

Elko County Commissioner Mike Nannini was standing in the middle of the 4-way Cafe & Casino in Wells when the quake began.

"The walls and ceilings started coming down. Almost all of the businesses are shut down. We have no services and no fuel," he said at an emergency meeting of the county commissioners.
Continue

Manila rice plea a wake-up call for a hungry world

By Carmel Crimmins and Rosemarie Francisco
MANILA, Feb 22 (Reuters) - The Philippines' unusual plea for Hanoi to guarantee rice supplies is the clearest sign of a growing global anxiety over how nations will feed their people.
President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo had contacted Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung to see if he could pledge an undisclosed supply of rice, officials said on Thursday, an exceptional move in a market that normally operates on a purely commercial basis among traders or state procurement agencies.
It was not the first time an Asian government has taken action in the face of soaring grain prices and growing fears over the security of food supplies. India has restricted some rice exports, Indonesia has raised taxes on palm oil shipments and Malaysia is building up stocks.
But Arroyo appears to be the first to take an overtly political route to allay fears that the Philippines, whose rapidly expanding population is among the most dependent on imports, could run short of its staple national food.
"This is a wake-up call," Robert Zeigler, director general of the Philippines-based International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), told Reuters on Friday. "We have a crisis brewing in terms of rice supply."...Continue

Cholera, diarrhea kill 72 Mozambicans

Devastating floods have displaced some 100,000 Mozambicans.
At least 72 Mozambicans have died of cholera and other intestinal diseases brought on by floods ravaging the country since January.
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"Of the 450 cholera patients we have treated in areas affected by the floods, eight have died. This figure is added to the 64 other deaths ... from diarrhea in the single village of Tete reported by municipal authorities two weeks ago," global humanitarian organization Doctors without Borders said Tuesday.

According to official figures, the floods have directly claimed ten lives in Mozambique as people were either drowned or devoured by crocodiles emerging from rising river beds.

Devastating floods swept through central Mozambique at the beginning of January, forcing more than 100,000 people to flee and leaving a trail of
destruction.

Mysterious illness killing bats spreading throughout the U.S. Northeast.

Mysterious illness killing New York bats

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ALBANY, N.Y., Feb. 22 (UPI) -- A mysterious disease that killed thousands of bats in upstate New York appears to be spreading throughout the U.S. Northeast.

Biologists said some 8,000 to 11,000 bats died in upstate New York last year of an unknown illness. The State of New York Department of Environmental Conservation said many of the bats had a white fungus on their noses and occasionally on other parts of their bodies.

Cavers are coordinating with state biologists to help assess the situation, the agency said in a release.

The white fungus has been spotted this year on bats hibernating in New York, southwest Vermont and western Massachusetts. Scientists said they don't know if the fungus is causing the deaths or is symptomatic of a disease.

Yellow Fever May Have Spread to Paraguay's Capital

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Feb. 21 (Bloomberg) -- A yellow fever outbreak that has killed more than a dozen people in jungle areas of Latin America in the past two months may have spread to the outskirts of Paraguay's capital, Asuncion, the World Health Organization said.

Doctors are testing four people suspected of having the mosquito-borne disease from the San Lorenzo municipality, 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Asuncion, the WHO said in a statement on its Web site yesterday. The 33 cases previously confirmed in Paraguay and Brazil had so-called jungle yellow fever, in which the virus spreads among monkeys and humans.

If the San Lorenzo cases are confirmed as urban yellow fever, it would be the first such outbreak on the continent in more than half a century. The last reported cases occurred in Brazil in 1942, according to the WHO's regional office in Washington, D.C.

There is no specific treatment for yellow fever, which is transmitted by the bite of an infected mosquito in tropical regions of Africa and the Americas.

Initial symptoms include fever that disappears after a few days. In some cases, it causes complications including liver inflammation and hemorrhaging, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta said on its Web site. About half of the patients who enter this toxic phase die within 10 to 14 days, according to the WHO.

Paraguay's President Nicador Duarte declared a state of emergency in an effort to control the disease, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported on Feb. 16, a month after the country's first human case was confirmed.

Mass Vaccination

The nation, which borders Brazil, Argentina and Bolivia, requested 2 million doses of yellow fever vaccine from the WHO to prevent further spread, the Geneva-based United Nations agency said. Seven confirmed jungle yellow fever cases occurred in San Pedro Department, it said.

Paraguay's Health Ministry is implementing mass vaccinations for people at the highest risk of infection, insect control measures and heightened surveillance to ``prevent serious public health consequences given the current low level of immunization among the people living in the affected area,'' the WHO said.

In 2007 and the beginning of 2008, Brazil reported an ``intense and extensive'' outbreak in animals in an area encompassing six states, the Pan American Health Organization said in a statement last week. In the past two months, 26 human cases were reported in Goias and Mato Grosso do Sul states, and the Federal District. Of those, 13 were fatal, it said.

Earlier this month, Argentina confirmed the infection in one of 17 dead monkeys in Pinalito Park, in Misiones Province.

Urban yellow fever is spread by Aedes aegypti, which prefers to live close to humans rather than in jungles, where other Aedes species are the main carriers.

The last epidemic of yellow fever in North America occurred in New Orleans in 1905, according to the CDC.

Trees play key role in addressing global warming

Andrew KekacsIn addition to providing opportunities for recreation (like this cross-country ski trail at the Tanglewood 4-H Camp in Lincolnville), woodlands help to offset global warming by removing a key 'greenhouse gas' from the atmosphere. (Andrew Kekacs)

(Feb 22): You'll see earlier ice-outs on Maine lakes, black flies arriving sooner in the spring, and birds lingering before heading south in the fall, according to Ivan Fernandez, a professor of plant, soil and environmental sciences at the University of Maine.

Temperatures will rise three or four degrees, bringing a longer growing season. The gain will be partly offset by longer dry spells just before harvest. Despite the droughts, there will be slightly more rain throughout the year....Continue

Human survival at risk from warming

SPARROWS POINT STEEL MILL

Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley is making the case that limits on global warming pollution could cost businesses in the short term. But in the long term, O'Malley argues that the cost of inaction is much greater -- the flooding of waterfront businesses and homes, and eventually, the extinction of humans.

“We need to move into a much more sustainable future or else we cease to exist as a species,” O’Malley, a Democrat, said while surrounded by environmental activists during a press conference at the State House yesterday. “People can talk about the increased cost of things. But what sort of increased costs will come from a four foot rise in sea level for businesses located at Sparrows Point (the steel mill) or in Annapolis or in downtown Baltimore?”
Continue

21 February 2008

Fears of a New Arms Race in the Heavens and Increased Tensions on Earth.




U.S. Shot Raises Tensions and Worries Over Satellites


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The shot that slammed into a crippled U.S. spy satellite Wednesday has raised fears of a new arms race in the heavens and increased tensions on Earth.

Thirteen months after China destroyed an aging satellite with a missile, the operation also added to concerns about disruption of space assets vital for 21st-century global commerce and security.

The craft was hit 247 kms (153 miles) over the Pacific, the Pentagon said, using arms designed for the ship-based leg of a multibillion-dollar shield against missiles that could be tipped with chemical, germ or nuclear warheads.

The Bush administration has insisted it was not trying to demonstrate anti-satellite capabilities of the Lockheed Martin Corp "Aegis" ballistic missile defense -- though experts said the effect was just that. Continue

Total lunar eclipse: Once in a red moon

It took 50 minutes for the moon's ghostly-white colour to turn to deep orangey-red

The first total lunar eclipse for four years stunned observers across the world yesterday. Steve Connor explains what caused its dramatic change of colour.

If the Moon were made of cheese it would have been a Red Leicester last night for about 50 minutes. That was the time it took to complete a total lunar eclipse, when the Moon's ghostly-white colour turns to a deep orangey-red.

A total lunar eclipse can only occur at a full moon and when the Sun, the Earth and the Moon align in the same plane. As the Moon moves behind the Earth it eventually becomes totally engrossed in our reddish umbral shadow.

The Earth casts two types of cone-shaped shadows. The outer shadow is the penumbra, where the Earth blocks some, but not all of the Sun's rays. When the Moon passes through this shadow, there is a partial eclipse (see main image, to the left and right of the central red Moon). Inside this outer shadow lies the umbra, where the Earth blocks all of the direct rays – but leaves some indirect rays which give a total lunar eclipse its distinctive red coloration. Continue

Brace yourself for famine, warns report

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A famine could hit the country this year, a report warns.

The food situation update for February says serious shortages could be experienced following post-election violence, which mainly hurt the grain basket region of Rift Valley and Western provinces.

"Unless the insecurity is addressed, and resettlement and recovery interventions are carried out, the national food supply will be dented significantly," says the report released last week.

The report, prepared by United Nations World Food Programme, Usaid, the Government and the Famine Early Warning System further says last year’s poor short rains and low prospect of long rains in the productive region would increase food shortage.

National maize production from last July to June was expected to decline.

"Trans-Nzoia, Uasin Gishu, Nakuru, Bungoma, Nandi, Buret and Kericho districts, which were severely affected by the conflict, account for about 50 per cent of cereals produced annually. As a result, current and future production has severely been disrupted," states the report.

About 100,000 hectares of productive land in the agricultural-rich region might remain idle during the long rains expected in March.

"This would combine with the potential losses of 300,000 metric tonnes in the 2007 long-rains harvest, indicating that national food supply will be dented significantly toward the end of 2009," says the update.

It further say the livestock industry had been hit. Milk delivery had reduced, and cattle rustling increased.

"Insecurity has provided a favourable environment for livestock raiding, particularly in West Pokot, Turkana, Marakwet, Trans Nzoia, Uasin Gishu, Samburu and Bungoma districts," it says.

However, the report says there is sufficient maize to last seven months, coinciding with the start of the long rains harvest.

The world is running out of clean water

Drying Out
The world is running out of drinking water, Canadian writer Maude Barlow says, and the impacts will be devastating.

The world is running out of clean water.

“We have polluted it … or we have moved it,” international water-rights activist Maude Barlow said Tuesday evening (Feb. 19) at a presentation about the world’s water crisis. “Use every drop of water twice.”

The Canadian author of Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water spoke to nearly 80 people at the Chico Grange Hall as part of a national book tour sponsored by Food & Water Watch, with this stop co-sponsored by the Butte Environmental Council and the Sacramento River Preservation Trust.

“Water is the most urgent, human [and] ecological crisis,” Barlow said, indicating that as many as two-thirds of the world’s people won’t have access to an adequate water supply by 2025 if existing practices and conditions continue.....Story Here

With Wheat Shortage, Pizza Prices Could Triple

Many people enjoy pizza, but would you eat it if a pie was priced at $40?
Those in the business said the market is headed that way because of a wheat shortage.

At Fox's Pizza in Hempfield Township, the price of crust has doubled in the last month. It's expected to double again by next month, which means by summer time, pizza prices could triple.Jim Fox has been making pizzas since 1959 and his 336 stores in 36 states sell about 10 million of them a year."Without flour, that goes from 10 million to zero," said Fox.

Wheat prices are the highest they've been in history because worldwide demand is huge, and the supply is at its lowest level in 30 years.Bad weather in places like Australia and Argentina means getting it is tough and if you can, it's really expensive.Fox's Pizza has ordered 20 truckloads of buns and dough balls that they hope to keep inside their freezer at the Murrysville headquarters. Other restaurant chains are doing the same, so the price you pay won't change right way.

Wheat shortage sends bread, pasta prices soaring

Soaring wheat prices have Canadian bakeries struggling, farmers rejoicing and customers digging deeper at the till to pay for their bread and pasta purchases.

The price of flour has been climbing steadily over the last year. The price of flour has been climbing steadily over the last year.
(CBC)

The price of flour has doubled in the past two months as weather problems, including two years of droughts in Australia, have depleted wheat stocks to lows not seen since the 1970s.

Also contributing to the shortage is the flux of grain farmers switching to other crops, such as canola or corn, that produce biofuels....Continue

Price of bread rising on wheat shortage

A world wide shortage of wheat means shoppers will soon be shelling out more dough for a loaf of bread.

"Within a week, our prices will increase by about 30%," said Hilton Dinner, who owns west Edmonton's popular Bon Ton Bakery. "And I think the whole baking industry is in the same boat."

The price of flour has risen by 100% to 150% in the last seven or eight months, said Dinner, adding that he's never seen such a leap in his 19 years in the baking industry.

"Prices creep up seasonably. They might go up 10%, then down 5%. They never go back to where they started, but they creep. This is not creeping, this is drastic," he said.

The wheat shortage is being driven in part by a two-year drought in Australia that has diminished yields.....Continue

Zimbabwe: Massive Sugar Shortage Looms

A SERIOUS shortage of sugar is looming after the country's producers were last week forced to halt production due to crippling shortages of sugarcane and coal.

Industry sources told The Financial Gazette that Hippo Valley and Zimbabwe Sugar Refineries (ZSR), the country's major producers of sugar, had exhausted their supplies of sugarcane and were now waiting for fresh supplies from the next harvest, which would be after April.

The shortages of sugarcane are believed to have worsened an already precarious situation as companies had been battling acute power shortages, foreign currency and spares supply constraints....Continue

Panic after 'Franken-fish' that is deadlier than a piranha is caught in Britain

Giant snakehead are voracious predators

Worldwide shortage of rice shoots prices soaring

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As the price of rice climbs across South Asia, farmers and millers in Thailand are sitting on stocks and waiting for it to rise even further, said a top rice exporter in Bangkok.

The exporter, who requested anonymity, told The Straits Times: 'In my 25 years of trading, I have never seen such a bad position.' There is a rice shortage in Bangladesh and China too, among other countries, while there is a wheat shortage in Afghanistan.

In local markets in Pakistan, the price of rice has gone up over the past month by more than 60 per cent year on year. India recently contributed to soaring world prices when it imposed a ban on rice exports — relaxed only partially to allow some supplies to Madagascar, Mauritius, the Comoros Islands and cyclone-hit Bangladesh. China has banned rice exports to ensure enough is available for domestic demand.

From Kansas to Kabul, high rice and wheat prices are worrying officials and economists, and beginning to hit consumers — especially tens of millions of poor people — harder than many can remember. In Singapore, while rice importers and supermarkets have no problems getting the staple grain, prices have escalated.

In the past three months, prices have risen sharply by 30 per cent to 40 per cent, said a spokesman for rice importer Tong Seng Produce. FairPrice, which has diversified its rice import — with supplies coming from Australia, Thailand, Vietnam and India — has been able to secure its regular supply.

While prices of imported rice have spiked, its spokesman said the supermarket chain would try to hold prices steady for as long as it could. Singapore imports rice from more than 20 countries, including Thailand, Vietnam, Burma, China, Pakistan, the United States, Egypt and Australia.

The causes of the shortages and high prices are diverse, and vary from country to country. They include natural disasters or adverse weather; high fuel prices, which add to transport costs; hoarding and smuggling of rice and wheat to take advantage of higher prices across national borders; and, in Pakistan, a shortage of electricity that is reportedly hampering mills from functioning at full capacity.

Only around 7 per cent of the world's rice supply is traded internationally, but it is a critical amount for any country facing a shortage because rice is also a political commodity. Worldwide, economists are worried that the diversion of agricultural land and certain crops to biofuel production is cutting into grain and cereal production for human consumption.

The prices of rice and wheat are linked. India's ban was not as much in response to a shortage of rice as to worries over the coming wheat harvest. Indian officials are waiting for the results of the March-April wheat harvest as well as the rice harvest from south India to gain a fuller picture of their stocks. In the United States, wheat futures in Kansas City, Chicago and Minneapolis have surged to record highs on forecasts of tighter supplies and continued strong demand at home and abroad.

A recent food price survey by the Farm Bureau in the American state of Missouri found that in the fourth quarter of last year, the retail price of a 20 ounce loaf of bread had already risen 30 US cents from the previous quarter to $2. In South-east Asia, rice traders are waiting for the results of the rice harvest in another major producing country in the region—Vietnam.

Norway suffers biggest earthquake in its history

6.2-magnitude temblor hits sparsely populated Svalbard archipelago

OSLO, Norway - An earthquake of 6.2 magnitude — the biggest in Norwegian history — jolted the thinly populated Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic on Wednesday night, the Norsar seismic research institute said on Thursday.

Norwegian media reported no one was hurt by the quake and no damaged had been reported in the islands, about 600 miles from the North Pole.

"This is the biggest earthquake on Norwegian territory in history," the institute said in a statement....Continue

14 dead, 289,000 displaced in Visayas flooding

MANILA, Philippines -- Floods, triggered by over a week of heavy rains, have left 14 people dead and six injured in the provinces of Eastern Samar and Leyte in Eastern Visayas, Albay in the Bicol region, and Capiz in Western Visayas, the Office of Civil Defense (OCD) said Thursday.

The floods also affected 339,736 people or 69,176 families, of which, 288,782 people or 59,338 families had to be brought to evacuation centers, the report said.

In Albay alone, Governor Joey Salceda said 6,263 families or 33,068 persons had been evacuated as of late Thursday afternoon, although these figures did not include Oas, Pio Duran, Rapu-Rapu, Bacacay and Ligao City, which had not submitted any reports.

Ten of the fatalities, including two girls aged eight and nine, were from Eastern Samar, the worst hit by the floods, OCD spokesman Anthony Golez said in a report.

Two people drowned in Leyte while Capiz and Albay each reported one death each, from electrocution and drowning, respectively, Golez said in the OCD's 3 p.m. report....Continue

Madagascar: Violence of Cyclone Ivan Overwhelms Careful Preparations

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The initial assessments indicated that nearly 15,000 people had been affected - already double the estimates made on Tuesday - with over 8,000 left without shelter and two people dead. An additional nine victims are thought to be buried under the rubble of a collapsed hotel.

"The cyclone damaged road infrastructure and houses and blew down trees. In many parts of the country, especially the northeast, the electricity is cut off and rivers are reported to have begun flooding," said Volana Rarivoson, public information officer of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Madagascar.

Concerns have also been raised over food security after large areas of rice fields were flooded in the Ambatondrazaka region, where most of Madagascar's rice, the staple food, is grown.

Almost all the regions of Madagascar are flooded and accessibility is a real problem.

Vietnam on high bird flu alert after new poultry outbreaks

Story Here HANOI (AFP) — Vietnam is on high alert over bird flu after the virus killed thousands of birds in three provinces, having claimed its third human victim of the year last week, the communist government said Wednesday.

The north of Vietnam has been in the grip of a cold snap that has lasted for over a month, bringing rare ice and snow to mountain tops, killing crops and livestock and heightening the risk of flu and other respiratory diseases.

The latest bird flu outbreaks killed nearly 2,500 unvaccinated chicken, ducks and geese in the northern Hai Duong, Nam Dinh and Tuyen Quang provinces, the Agriculture and Rural Development Ministry said in an online report.

20 February 2008

Water gushes created "staircases" on Mars

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sudden, tremendous gushes of water from underground most likely carved out unusual fan-shaped geological formations with steps like a staircase long ago on the surface of Mars, scientists said on Wednesday.

The Martian surface boasts perhaps 200 large basins that have formations resembling fans. About 10 of them are terraced, with what looks like steps into the basin. Since they were first seen three years ago, scientists have debated how these formations, some of them 9 miles wide, were created.

The Martian surface boasts perhaps 200 large basins that have formations resembling fans. About 10 of them are terraced, with what looks like steps into the basin. Since they were first seen three years ago, scientists have debated how these formations, some of them 9 miles wide, were created.....Continue

Africa's Great Lakes nations launch project to protect rare gorillas

A mountain gorilla holds her day-old baby in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Virunga park in 2007. Three Great Lakes nations -- including DR Congo -- have launched a joint project to protect the rare mountain gorillas that are threatened with extinction in the east central African region.(AFP/WILDLIFEDIRECT/File) A mountain gorilla holds her day-old baby in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Virunga park.

KAMPALA (AFP) - Three Great Lakes nations on Wednesday launched a joint project to protect the rare mountain gorillas that are threatened with extinction in the east central African region.

About 720 critically endangered mountain gorillas remain in the wild, all of them in the mountain forests of Rwanda, Uganda and the volatile east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
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Bird flu remains dangerous as it continues to mutate

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WASHINGTON — Like the rumble of distant thunder, bird flu continues to spread across Asia , Africa and Europe . Although it's been out of the news lately in the United States , scientists say that avian influenza, as it's also known, remains a serious threat to human and animal health.

The lethal H5N1 version of the virus is mutating rapidly and rampaging through bird flocks throughout those parts of the world, infecting and often killing people who come in contact with them.

The fear is that the virus will change into a form that makes human-to-human transmission quick and easy. At least seven slightly different subtypes already have been identified.

``New genes are being formed all the time,'' said Henry Niman , a molecular geneticist who tracks bird flu outbreaks around the world.

Although H5N1 hasn't reached the Western Hemisphere, Joseph Domenech , the chief veterinary officer for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization , warned last month that it ``could still trigger a human influenza pandemic.'' A pandemic is a worldwide outbreak such as the 1918 Spanish flu, which killed tens of millions of people in the United States and Europe .

The virus ``continues to cause human disease with high mortality and to pose the threat of a pandemic,'' the latest situation report from the World Health Organization says.

As of Wednesday, bird flu had infected 362 people and killed 228 of them in 14 countries in Asia , Africa and Europe .

In the last year, the WHO confirmed 98 new human cases, including 69 deaths, an alarming 70 percent death rate. It was the second worst year for bird flu, topped only by 2006, when 115 cases and 79 deaths (69 percent) were reported.

Since the major outbreak in China in 2003, the virus has killed millions of chickens, ducks and geese along with pigs, cats and other mammals in some 50 countries.

Almost all the people who've been infected caught the disease from close contact with domestic poultry and occasionally from wild ducks, geese or swans. In a handful of cases, scientists think the virus passed from one human to another, usually among relatives or people living close together.

``So far the spread of H5N1 from person to person has been very rare,'' the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

For example, eight family members in Indonesia caught the disease in 2005, and all but one of them died. A pregnant Chinese woman passed the virus to her 4-month-old fetus last fall. Both died. Four brothers in Pakistan were infected last winter, and two of them died.

``It's pretty clear that was a case of human-to-human transmission,'' said Niman, founder of Recombinomics, a genetics research firm in Pittsburgh .

Multiple teams of researchers are studying the details of how the virus performs its deadly work. They hope that their findings will lead to better vaccines to limit or prevent infection, but the problem is difficult.

``The rate of evolution makes it hard to make a vaccine. There are a lot of moving parts,'' Niman said.

Vaccines such as Tamiflu that are used for common seasonal flu offer partial but not complete protection from H5N1. Furthermore, the virus already is developing resistance to these vaccines.

Recent research has discovered several reasons that human-to-human transmission of H5N1 has been limited so far.

For one thing, bird and human viruses have different shapes, according to Ram Sasisekharan, a biological engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge .

To cause infection, the virus must fit a spike on its surface, known as HA, into a hollow ``receptor'' on the surface of a human cell. The virus that attacks birds fits its HA spike into a cone-shaped receptor. To infect humans, however, the spike must fit into a slightly wider receptor shaped like an open umbrella, Sasisekharan said.

``For animal influenza viruses to cause pandemics in human population, their HA protein must acquire mutations that allow human-to-human transmission,'' Carole Bewley , a biochemist at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md ., noted in the January issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology. ``Fortunately, this barrier has so far protected us from rapid spread of H5N1.''

Climate Change Threatens Human Rights of Millions: UN

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GENEVA - Climate change threatens the human rights of millions of people who are at risk of losing access to housing, food and clean water unless governments intervene early to counter its effects, experts said on Tuesday.0220 07

At a conference on climate change and migration, United Nations officials said rising sea levels and intense storms, droughts and floods could force scores of people from their homes and off their lands — some permanently.

“Global warming and extreme weather conditions may have calamitous consequences for the human rights of millions of people,” said Kyung-wha Kang, the U.N. deputy high commissioner for human rights.

“Ultimately climate change may affect the very right to life of various individuals,” she said, pointing to threats of hunger, malnutrition, exposure to disease and lost livelihoods, particularly in poor rural areas dependent on fertile soil.

Kang, a South Korean, said countries had an obligation “to prevent and address some of the direst consequences that climate change may reap on human rights.”

This may include providing safe housing, ensuring good sanitation and water-drinking supplies, and making sure citizens have access to information and legal redress, and take part in decision-making, she said.

Environmental disasters and natural resource scarcity have long been seen as contributors to displacement, for instance in Sudan’s Darfur region where 2.5 million people have been driven from their homes by conflict rooted in part in access to water.

But the United Nations has not yet expressly tackled climate change as a human right, for instance by enshrining the right to protection from its effects in an international convention.

Michelle Leighton, director of human rights programs at the University of San Francisco’s law school, told the conference pressures from global warming could also force would-be migrants into the hands of criminals.

Some three quarters of sub-Saharan Africa’s agricultural drylands are now degraded to some degree, she said, pointing to West African countries such as Ghana, Senegal and Nigeria as most acutely vulnerable to climate change-related damage.

Many people in Somalia, Mali and Cape Verde will also have little option but to leave their lands in coming years, and many are likely to turn to human smugglers for help in accessing more prosperous countries in Europe and elsewhere, she said.

“This is a big business now,” Leighton said. “If the climate change predictions come true, and we see much more pressure on agricultural lands in sub-Saharan Africa, we are likely to see an increase in illegal smuggling as well.”

Gordon Shepherd of WWF International told the session that such pressures must be addressed by the international community as well as governments. “None of us will escape the effects of the disasters that are facing the future generations,” he said.

China warns of forest fires following snowstorms

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BEIJING (Reuters) - Unseasonably cold weather across large swathes of southern China killed trees which could worsen forest fires later in the year and lead to landslides and pest outbreaks, officials warned on Tuesday.

The country's forestry industry incurred direct economic losses of 57.3 billion yuan ($8.01 billion) from the snow and ice storms, which impacted millions of people who depend on the sector for their livelihood, said deputy State Forestry Administration head Zhu Lieke.
"The disaster situation is at present still continuing for the forestry sector, and the losses will get ever bigger," he told a news conference.....Continue

Record U.S. beef recall a wake-up call

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A California meatpacker caught torturing cattle and processing the unfit animals for human consumption is provoking calls for reform that could prove hard to ignore.

The Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Co announced on Sunday it wanted back nearly 143 million pounds (65 million kilograms) of meat -- enough to feed more than 2.2 million Americans for a year -- that it had shipped out since February 2006.

But the wrongdoings at the plant were not exposed under the watchful eye of inspectors from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Instead, the Humane Society of the United States captured employees in a gruesome, undercover videotape that was made after an apparent random decision to investigate the plant located in Chino, California....Continue

"Suicide palm tree" seeds arrive

LONDON (Reuters) - The seeds of the "suicide palm", a newly discovered and extremely rare palm tree, have arrived for urgent study and conservation, the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew said on Wednesday.

The tree, whose nickname stems from its habit of flowering itself to death once every half century, was discovered only recently on the island of Madagascar.

Only about 100 examples are known to exist of the tree, which grows to more than 18 metres high over a period of 50 years before bursting into bloom just once with hundreds of tiny flowers for pollination and then dying.

About 1,000 of the Tahina spectabilis tree's grape-sized seeds, harvested by local villagers, arrived at Kew's Millennium Seed Bank earlier this week.

The tree's bizarre lifecycle means opportunities to harvest more seeds are likely to be rare.

"With less than a hundred of these palms in the wild, and the fact that they flower so rarely, the race is on to learn as much as possible, and as quickly as possible, about this spectacular new species," said Moctar Sacande, who heads up Kew's Seed Bank work in Madagascar.

"Not only is our science team at the Seed Bank studying the seeds to assess whether or not we can bank them, but we have also sent seeds to 11 botanical gardens around the world, where we hope the palm will thrive," he added.

Seeds have been sent to gardens in countries including the United States, Spain, Australia, South Africa, Singapore and Indonesia. Palm experts at Kew are also propagating the seeds for research and public display in the Gardens. Continued...

Meteor, meteorite, meteoroid, asteroid... what's the difference?


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BOISE - Thousands of people saw a bright light flash across the sky this morning – but was it a meteor, or a meteorite?

A meteor is what people saw this morning – it is the phenomenon created when a meteoroid or asteroid enters the Earth’s atmosphere. The object itself interacts with the atmosphere, creating the bright light.

A meteorite is the name given to the object when – and if - it hits the ground. So far, it hasn’t been confirmed if the object seen in the sky today made impact, though the FAA said a pilot saw it hit in Adams County, WA.

What’s the difference between an asteroid and a meteoroid? It all comes down to size. A meteoroid is anything from the size of a grain of sand up to a boulder. Anything bigger than that is considered an asteroid

Snowstorms in China may have damaged wheat crops

Inflation in Middle East May Be Stoked by China Snow, RBS Says
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Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Inflation in the Middle East may be stoked by recent snowstorms in China that damaged wheat crops, said Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

The Middle East is the world's largest importer of wheat, so any increase in the price of the commodity will fuel food prices, Ben Simpfendorfer said in an e-mailed research note today.

Inflation accelerated to records across the region in the past 12 months as rapid economic growth boosted demand for goods and services, while the weaker dollar made European imports dearer. Wheat prices more than doubled in the past year, reaching a record this month as supply failed to keep pace with demand.

``Wheat prices are already a serious problem for the Middle East, while recent snowstorms in China may aggravate the problem,'' Simpfendorfer said in the note. ``This risk underscores our view that the Middle East economies will continue to face serious inflation risks, so the case for adopting basket pegs or permitting faster appreciation is strong.''

Kuwait became the first Gulf Arab state to drop its currency's peg to the dollar, shifting to a currency basket in May, citing the inflationary impact of the weaker dollar.

Qatar is considering changing the currency regime, following a slump in the dollar, Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah bin Hamad al-Attiyah said on Jan. 30. The United Arab Emirates has ruled out moving to a currency basket this year.

Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy, said that the dollar peg will only be reviewed in the case of extreme necessity, Arab News reported on Feb. 18.

Inflation accelerated to a record 6.5 percent in Saudi Arabia in December, while in Qatar, prices rose an annual 13.7 percent in the fourth quarter, the same as the previous three months. U.A.E. inflation accelerated to a record 9.8 percent in 2007 from 9.3 percent in 2006, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Famines May Occur Without Record Crops This Year

By Christopher Donville

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Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Grain farmers will need to harvest record crops every year to meet increasing global food demand and avoid famine, Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. Chief Executive Officer William Doyle said.

People and livestock are consuming more grain than ever, draining world inventories and increasing the likelihood of shortages, Doyle said yesterday in an interview on Bloomberg Television. Global grain stockpiles fell to about 53 days of supply last year, the lowest level since record-keeping began in 1960, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

``If you had any major upset where you didn't have a crop in a major growing agricultural region this year, I believe you'd see famine,'' Doyle, 57, said in New York.

Potash, the world's largest maker of crop nutrients, has more than doubled in market value in the past year as record crop prices allowed farmers to spend more on fertilizer to boost yields. The company has more than doubled net income in the past two years to $1.1 billion and expects gross profit from potash to expand to $8 billion within five years from $912 million in 2007. Potash is a form of potassium that helps plants grow.

Potash, based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, rose C$7.90, or 5.3 percent, to a record C$157.25 yesterday in Toronto Stock Exchange trading.

Mosaic Co., the world's largest producer of phosphate fertilizer, rose $6.18, or 6 percent, to $109.55 in New York. Agrium Inc., the largest retailer of crop nutrients in the U.S., rose C$3.22, or 4.9 percent, to C$69 in Toronto.

China and India

Crop prices have soared as much as fourfold this decade because of increased demand for food in India and China, where hundreds of millions of people are moving up to the middle class and can afford to eat more meat from animals raised on grain- based feeds, Doyle said.

Soybean futures rose to a record $14.2875 a bushel yesterday on the Chicago Board of Trade, capping an 85 percent gain in the past 12 months. Wheat prices, which have more than doubled in the past year in Chicago, reached a record on Feb. 11, and corn climbed to a record on Feb. 6.

``There is a dietary shift occurring in China today, particularly amongst the young,'' Hugh Grant, chief executive officer of Monsanto Co., the world's biggest seed producer, said in a Feb. 6 interview. ``As protein consumption increases, as they move from fish to chicken, chicken to pork, and pork to beef, the demand for commodities increases almost by an order of magnitude.''

`Enormous Pressure'

``We keep going to the cupboard without replacing and so there is enormous pressure on agriculture to have a record crop every year,'' Doyle said. ``We need to have a record crop in 2008 just to stay even with this very low inventory situation.''

Planting more crop land in Brazil and boosting yields from existing fields in China and Russia, where agricultural productivity has lagged behind the U.S. and Canada, may be needed to avoid food shortages, Doyle said.

``The agriculture fertilizer sector offers tremendous fundamentals that will prove unique in an otherwise challenging and eroding macroeconomic environment,'' Robert Koort, a New York-based analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said in a Feb. 13 report. He recommends buying Potash shares.

Potash Corp. is expanding output of potash by about 7 million metric tons a year in the next eight years as farmers seek to boost crop yields. The company currently can produce about 10 million tons.

``You won't have a global shortage of food because you don't have enough potash,'' said Doyle, whose company also makes phosphates and nitrogen-based nutrients.

7.5-magnitude quake hits Indonesia

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At least three people have been killed and 25 seriously injured by a 7.5-magnitude quake near Indonesia's western Aceh province, officials say.

The tremor, whose epicentre was near the island of Simeulue, 319km (198 miles) off the coast of Sumatra, also damaged many buildings, they added.

The epicentre was close to that of the earthquake which triggered the 2004 Asian tsunami, killing 200,000 people.

Tsunami warning centres initially issued alerts, but later lifted them.

Indonesia lies on the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, one of the most seismically active regions of the world.

'Mass panic'

Local residents said Wednesday's earthquake, which hit Simeulue at 1508 (0808 GMT) according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), lasted for almost a minute.

It was felt strongly more than 300km (185 miles) away in the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, where people left their offices after buildings started shaking.

Everything shook very strongly for more than a minute and I ran along with the others
Ahmad Yushadi

"Everything shook very strongly for more than a minute and I ran along with the others. I heard people screaming in panic," Ahmad Yushadi told the Associated Press news agency.

An official from the Indonesian ministry of health, Rustam Pakaya, said the authorities on Simeulue had reported three deaths and 25 serious injuries caused by the earthquake.

"People have evacuated to the mountains," he said.

After the earthquake, the Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre and Thailand's National Disaster Warning Centre briefly issued precautionary tsunami alerts for Indonesia and nearby coastal areas.

A nine-magnitude earthquake close to Simeulue on 26 December 2004 triggered the Asian tsunami which spread thousands of kilometres across the Indian Ocean.

Three months later, an 8.7-magnitude earthquake killed 1,000 people on Simeulue and the neighbouring island of Nias.

19 February 2008

Birds choke to death on migrant fish

A puffin

A puffin with fish in its mouth.

Baffled scientists warn of a 'catastrophic' impact as snake pipefish flood into British waters

Britain's sea birds are facing a deadly new threat from a population explosion of strange, seahorse-like creatures in our coastal waters. The snake pipefish, virtually unknown around the UK in 2002, has undergone a massive, baffling and dangerous expansion since then, scientists have discovered.

Divers report seeing hundreds on single dives, while dozens of pipefish - which can grow to more than 18 inches in length - have been found in the nests of puffins, kittiwakes, terns and other sea birds.

The discovery has alarmed biologists because they have found that chicks are choking to death on the rigid, bony bodies of pipefish, while adults are feeding on them despite the fact they have very little nutritional value.

The implications for future generations of sea birds - already badly affected by depletion of Atlantic and North Sea fish stocks - are alarming, scientists warned at a meeting of the Zoological Society in London last week. 'It is an extremely worrying development,' said Professor Sarah Wanless, of the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH), Edinburgh. 'The spread of pipefish in our waters could have a catastrophic impact on sea bird breeding.'.......Continue

Antarctic depths reveal bizarre new life forms

Sea spiders the size of dinner plates, giant worms and jelly fish with 18 ft-long tentacles have been discovered by a scientific expedition exploring the largely unknown waters of Antarctica.
The bizarre menagerie - many of the creatures are new to science - was documented by a fleet of three Australian, French and Japanese marine research ships which docked in Hobart, Tasmania, this week.

Sponges, gorgonians and lace corals on the ocean floor (left) and tunicates which look like glass tulips (right)
Sponges, gorgonians and lace corals on the ocean floor (left) and tunicates which look like glass tulips (right)

"In some places every inch of the sea floor is covered in life. In other places we can see deep scars and gouges where icebergs scour the sea floor as they pass by."

The collected specimens, which include sea urchins, fish and glass-like animals called tunicates or sea squirts, will be sent to universities and museums around the world for identification, tissue sampling and DNA analysis. Some of the creatures hauled up from the deep weighed up to 65 lbs.

"Not all of the creatures that we found could be identified and it's very likely that some new species will be recorded as a result of these voyages," said Graham Hosie, leader of the Collaborative East Antarctic Marine Census project.

The scientists are monitoring how the impact of environmental change in Antarctic waters, such as ocean acidification caused by rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, could affect marine life.

It is feared that acidification will make it harder for marine organisms to sustain their calcium carbonate skeletons.

A giant scale worm on the Antarctic seabed (left) and brightly coloured coralline bryozoans and sponges (right)
Giant scale worm on the seabed (left) and brightly coloured coralline bryozoans and sponges (right)

Scientists are also concerned that another threat to Antarctica - global warming - could draw sharks to the Southern Ocean, shattering a delicate ecological balance.

Biologists who gathered in Boston last week for the annual conference of the American Association for the Advancement of Science warned that sharks would devastate soft-shelled mollusks and other invertebrates inhabiting the ocean floor.

Global warming has already pushed temperatures up by 1 - 2ºC in the past 50 years, and within a century sharks might be able to move into Antarctic waters, scientists said.

"The Antarctic seafloor has been dominated by relatively soft-bodied, slow-moving invertebrates, just as in ancient oceans prior to the evolution of shell-crushing predators," said University of Rhode Island biology professor Cheryl Wilga.

"The water only needs to remain above freezing year round for it to become habitable to some sharks, and at the rate we're going, that could happen this century."

"Once they get there, it will completely change the ecology of the Antarctic benthic community," she said.

Global warming would also make Antarctica more appealing to crabs which have previously been unable to survive the freezing temperatures, threatening marine life which has not changed since the Paleozoic era of 250m to 500m years ago.

"Predatory crabs are poised to return to warming Antarctic waters for the first time in millions of years, which will disrupt the composition of the archaic marine communities," said Rick Aronson, of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama.

Tiny snail crucial to Antarctic life may be wiped out

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A tiny marine snail that grows no bigger than a lentil supports an entire community of animals in the southern oceans. But the food chain is in danger of collapse, because warmer seas are making it impossible for the snail to survive.

Scientists have found that, as the seas around Antarctica become warmer and more acidic, pteropod snails that are the ultimate food source for everything from fish and seals to penguins and whales are at greater risk of being wiped out.

A study has found that at the current rate at which the southern oceans are becoming more acidic – due to a rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide – it will be impossible for the snails to make their shells from the middle of this century.

The pteropods are victims of "double jeopardy" because as the snails try to compensate for more acidity, they are less able to cope with warmer temperatures, said Gretchen Hofmann of the University of California at Santa Barbara. "These animals are not charismatic but they are talking to us just as much as penguins or polar bears," Professor Hofmann told the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

"They are harbingers of change. It's possible by 2050 they may not be able to make a shell anymore. If we lose these organisms, the impact on the food chain will be catastrophic," she said.

Pteropods are known as the "potato chip" of the oceans because they are eaten by so many species. Fish that feed on pteropods are eaten by bigger fish, seals and penguins, which are eaten by killer whales.

The snails make their calcium carbonate shells from minerals found in seawater but the chemistry involved can only take place when the water is not too acidic.

But, the build-up of carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere is causing more of the gas to dissolve in the oceans to form carbonic acid.

The rate of increase in ocean acidity is faster than at any time in the past tens of millions of years and the problem will last for many centuries, said Doney Scott of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

"Laboratory experiments show that acidification directly harms many marine species by reducing shell formation, slowing growth rates and hindering reproduction," Dr Scott said. "It is likely that the ocean of the future under high carbon dioxide will look quite different within the lifetimes of today's children if we continue on our current course."

Pteropods are particularly vulnerable to warmer, acidic seas because they live in an environment where temperatures and acidity do not fall outside a certain range. "For pteropods, that's the only place they can reside. There is no place for them to go to because of this temperature boundary," Dr Scott said. "They cannot move closer to the equator where things may be happier for them from an acidity point of view, because it's too warm for them."

Dr Hofmann said pteropod snails could "re-tune" their metabolism to cope with rising acidity but this comes at a cost – they are less able to withstand warmer temperatures and they grow smaller.

Australian rice crop slashed by 90 percent: forecaster

Water depth indicators sit on dry land west of Melbourne

SYDNEY (AFP) — Australia's rice crop will drop by 90 percent and cotton production will fall 58 percent this year as a result of water shortages in the south, the nation's commodities forecaster said Tuesday.

Above average rainfall in the northeast, however, meant the grain sorghum crop would increase by 80 percent to a record 2.45 million tonnes in 2007-08, The Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) said.

"While recent floods... damaged some of central Queensland's grain sorghum crop, the increased yield potential in the southern Queensland grain sorghum growing regions will more than offset the losses," executive director Phillip Glyde said in ABARE's monthly Australian Crop Report for February.

Glyde said total summer crop production was forecast at more than 3 million tonnes, almost 40 percent higher than last year but well short of the 2000-01 record of 5.3 million tonnes.

A lack of irrigation water at the time of planting caused by Australia's long-running drought meant that only 2,000 hectares (4,942 acres) of rice and 63,000 hectares (155,680 acres) of cotton were planted last year, ABARE said.

Rice production in 2007-08 is forecast at 18,000 tonnes, about 90 percent lower than the 2006-07 harvest. Cotton lint and cottonseed production were forecast to fall 58 percent to 116,000 tonnes and 164,000 tonnes respectively.

ABARE said the 2007-08 winter cropping season was up 30 percent on the previous year's harvest which had been hard hit by the drought, but was still below average.

The bureau said total winter grains production was estimated at about 22.6 million tonnes in 2007-08, well down on the five-year average of 35 million.

"Wheat production is estimated at around 13 million tonnes, barley around 6 million tonnes and canola just over 1 million tonnes," Glyde said of the major winter grain crops

Thousands of families flooded in Bolivia

Children in the Santa Cruz camp
Children in the Santa Cruz camp
The government in Bolivia has officially declared there to be a natural disaster with more than 58,000 families affected by heavy flooding. Despite rising water levels across the country due to sustained and frequent rainfall, many families are still refusing to be evacuated and are now totally cut off from surrounding areas. Of those who have been rescued and taken to camps, hundreds are suffering from waterbourne diseases and acute diarrhoea. An estimated 52 people have died, eight are missing and more than 616,000 hectares of crops destroyed as rivers burst their banks. Caused by the 'La Niña' climate phenomenon, Plan has already released US$20,000 to help those affected and is now applying for funds from the United Nations' Flash Appeal to continue to provide assistance. The region most affected is Beni, but water levels are starting to drop in the city of Trinidad. Camps are already reporting 10 cases of dengue fever, 5 of leptospirosis, 538 of acute diarrhoea and 501 acute respiratory infections with medical attention, fumigation, clothes and tents considered an urgent priority.....Continue

Spike in poaching threatens Mexican cacti

Collectors pay well for rare plants on black market

EL ARBOLITO, MEXICO — These moonscape lands used to guard secret treasures. Delicate balls of snowy thread, twisting cones topped with graceful pink flowers, spiky lemon-lime colored orbs until recently dotted the central Mexican desert.

But rare and endemic cacti are disappearing at an increasing rate. Cactus poaching is booming in Mexico, helping to make wildlife species trafficking the third-largest smuggling industry in Mexico behind drugs and guns.

The trade is fueled by private collectors and the burgeoning xeriscape movement in the U.S. South and Southwest.

Rare cacti species can fetch hundreds of dollars on black markets from the United States to Japan.

Mexico's deserts are so ravaged by cactus poachers that researchers no longer publish the location of new species they find, lest eager collectors plunder the newfound cacti.

684 species of cacti

Mexico represents the Holy Grail in the lucrative world of cactus collecting. It is home to more unique cacti, about 684 species, than anywhere else on the planet. But more than one third of Mexico's cactus species are considered at risk of disappearance, according to the Mexican government.....Continue

Villages snowed in across Greece for third day

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Athens - Heavy snowfall left more than 100 villages cut off across Greece on Tuesday for the third straight day while schools and universities remained closed. State emergency services remained on alert as temperatures plunged to minus 15 degrees Celsius in parts of northern Greece, resulting in power and water supply cuts. Roughly 113 villages on the southern Mediterranean island of Crete, the Peloponnese and on various Cycladic islands remained cut off. Air, sea and land transport resumed on Tuesday after being paralysed due to heavy snow, low temperatures and gale force winds.

Floods kill 10,force thousands to flee in Philippines

Gordon said nearly 30,000 families, or 140,000 people, have been affected as collapsed bridges, landslides and floodwaters isolated Eastern Samar province, a poor rural area facing the Pacific Ocean in the central Philippines. Gordon said they were asking the military to open an airfield for a C-130 cargo plane to deliver relief goods.MANILA, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Flash floods have killed at least 10 people in the central Philippines and forced tens of thousands to flee to higher ground after three days of heavy rain, the head of the local Red Cross said on Tuesday. "Ten people have drowned," said Richard Gordon, appealing for food, medicine, warm clothes and materials for temporary shelter. Three people were injured. Ben Evardone, the provincial governor, said many families were still trapped in interior villages after rising floodwaters caused rivers to swell and burst their banks. "We cannot get to them because the only means of transportation is by boat," he said. Landslides and floods are common in the Philippines, which is lashed by about 20 typhoons each year. Information on casualties can be difficult due to poor communications and hard-to-reach disaster sites. Environmental groups blame illegal logging for making flooding worse, particularly in the central Philippines, where more than 5,000 people died in 1991 in floods triggered by a typhoon. In February 2006, about 1,000 people were buried alive when several days of heavy rain loosened soil from a barren mountain and covered a farming village on a central island.....continue

Incessant snowfall paralyzes life across Turkey, feeds reservoirs


Unremitting snowfall over the last three days has raised water levels in İstanbul's reservoirs to more than 30 percent of capacity, while at the same time causing many problems in air, sea and land transportation across the country.

Officials from the İstanbul Waterworks Authority (İSKİ) stated yesterday that the level of water in İstanbul's dams has increased by 17 million cubic meters, reaching a level of 262 million cubic meters. "The water level in İstanbul's reservoirs was around 245 million cubic meters prior to the latest snowfall. The level of water in İstanbul's dams has exceeded 30 percent capacity in the last three days," the İSKİ officials noted.....Continue

Freakish winter weather hits 11.87 million hectares of crops in China

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BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- About 11.87 million hectares of crops in China had been damaged by low temperatures or freezing weather in 20 provinces, most hit by disastrous winter storms, by Thursday, according to the monitoring of Chinese Ministry of Agriculture (MOA).

About 5.85 million hectares of crops were affected, and about 1.76 million hectares of crops would expect no yields at all this year, said the MOA.

Winter storms have plagued the country's south since mid-January, leading to widespread traffic jams, blackouts and crop loss.

Cole and other vegetables, oranges and wheat, in particular, suffered severely from the snow.

Nearly half of the cole, or about 3.26 million hectares, was hit by the freakish winter weather, as well as 2.81 million hectares of other vegetables, 1.26 million hectares of fruit trees including oranges and about 584,000 hectares of wheat, according to latest statistics from the MOA.

Transport problems in some snow-hit provinces had led to shortages and price rises of vegetables there, posing new threats to the country's rising inflation rate.

However, prices of vegetables in disaster-stricken areas had already begun to fall as the government increased supplies to these regions.

Statistics revealed that between Feb. 6 and Feb. 12, 170,000 tons of vegetables were shipped to 14 snow-stricken provinces, including Jiangsu, Hunan, Anhui and Guizhou, to ease a shortage of fresh produce and price increase pressures.

Vegetable prices in 14 snow-affected provinces in China monitored by the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) decreased 3.2 percent on Feb. 12 from the average price before the Spring Festival starting on Feb. 7, and price falling continued in the following days.

"The price of vegetables will further decrease as the weather is getting warmer," Huang Hai, assistant minister of MOC said Thursday.

In the meantime, the country was still optimistic about this year's grain output.

The ongoing snowstorm, the worst in five decades in China, rendered limited effects on grain production, Chen Xiwen, head of the Office of the Central Leading Group on Rural Work, said earlier, as most winter grain crops were planted in the north.

China's grain output this year will be stable at around 500 million tons if no major natural disasters happen again, the State Grain Administration (SGA) said.

China's Snow Storms Destroy Forests

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BEIJING (AP) — China's unusually strong winter snow storms damaged 10 percent of the country's forests, leading to huge economic losses and widespread environmental destruction, the forestry administration said Tuesday.

Economic losses for the forest industry reached $8 billion, Vice Minister of the State Forestry Administration Zhu Lieke told a news conference. The storms hit some of China's best forest areas, and vital supplies for the timber industry, in southern China, he said.

"There's no doubt this natural disaster has caused great losses to the forestry resources in the southern part of China, but nationwide China's timber production capacity has not been fundamentally affected," he said.

Heavy ice and snow storms during January and through the Lunar New Year this month toppled trees, paralyzed much of China's rail and road transport, froze power grids and stranded hundreds of thousands of people heading home for the holiday.

Zhu said 46 million acres of forest from 19 provinces in southern China suffered from the snow disaster. Forests in Fujian, Jiangxi and Zhejiang provinces were hit the worst.

The timber production capacity of the disaster-struck areas will be "seriously affected" for three to five years, Zhu said.

Some companies that rely on bamboo and timber for raw materials will likely have to close, he said. But the government will use timber from damaged forests to meet the market demand this year to ensure stable supply, he said.

The destruction will also alter the local ecology, causing landslides, forest fires, forest pests and diseases, he said.

The storm caused trees to fall over, increasing the risk of forest fires, he said, especially as dry weather normally comes after a storm.

About 30,000 nationally protected wild animals were injured and froze to death during the storms, Zhu said.

Falling satellite revives concerns over proliferation of 'space junk'

Space debris
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WASHINGTON — A lifeless satellite targeted for destruction by the United States has raised new concerns about the vast array of space debris — ranging from old rocket bodies to abandoned astronaut tools — that hurtle though the skies at thousands of miles an hour.

Since the Soviets launched Sputnik as the first satellite on Oct. 4, 1957, space has evolved into a cosmic junkyard. The Joint Space Operations Center at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., is now tracking more than 18,000 manmade objects, including an estimated 850 functioning satellites, the international space station and debris from rocket launches dating to the dawn of the space era.

That tally reflects a 30 percent increase in the last 13 months, in large part because of debris created after the Chinese destroyed one of their satellites with a missile in 2007, said the center's director, Col. Stephen Whiting.

"At the speed with which debris orbits around the Earth, if two pieces were to hit each other, that would be a very catastrophic event," Whiting said....continue

18 February 2008

Haiti's efforts to save trees falters

A shack sits on the hillside of a deforested mountain area near Jacmel, in southern Haiti, Monday, Jan. 28, 2008. Nearly all of the 30 million trees planted in the 1980's with a US$22.8 million project by the U.S. Agency for International Development, have been cut down to make charcoal for cooking. Without trees to anchor the soil, erosion has reduced Haiti's scarce agricultural land, making the island more vulnerable to devastating floods each hurricane season. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos) AP Photo: A shack sits on the hillside of a deforested mountain area near Jacmel

Fanel Cantave, 36, says he has little choice but to make his living in a way that is causing environmental disaster in Haiti. And these days, he and his 15-year-old son, Phillipe, must travel ever farther from their village to find trees to cut...