World”s lizards disappearing due to rise in global temperatures

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Rising temperature is adversely affecting the lizard population, so much so, that a full 20 percent of all lizard species could be extinct by the year 2080, a new study claims.

An international research team, which surveyed Sceloporus lizard populations in Mexico for decades, has found that rising temperatures have driven 12 percent of the country”s lizard populations to extinction.

The detailed surveys of lizard populations in Mexico, collected from 200 different sites, indicate that the temperatures in those regions have changed too rapidly for the lizards to keep pace.

It seems that all types of lizards are far more susceptible to climate-warming extinction than previously thought because many species are already living right at the edge of their thermal limits, especially at low elevation and low latitude range limits.

Although the researchers” prediction for 2080 could change if humans are able to slow global climate warming, it does appear that lizards have crossed a threshold for extinctions-and that their sharp decline will continue for decades at least.

Barry Sinervo from the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of California in Santa Cruz, along with colleagues from across the globe, reached these conclusions after comparing their field studies of the lizards in Mexico with extensive data from around the world. Their research will be published in the May 14 issue of Science, the peer-reviewed journal published by AAAS, the nonprofit science society.

After compiling the global field data, Sinervo and his colleagues studied the effects of rising temperatures on lizards” bodies, and created a model of extinction risks for various lizard species around the world.

Sinervo said: “How quickly can Earth”s lizards adapt to the rising global temperatures? That”s the important question. We are actually seeing lowland species moving upward in elevation, slowly driving upland species extinct, and if the upland species can”t evolve fast enough then they”re going to continue to go extinct.”

The detailed study notes specifically that lizards that bear live young are particularly at risk of extinction, compared to those that lay eggs.

Sinervo added: “Live-bearers experience almost twice the risk of egg-layers largely because live-bearers have evolved lower body temperatures that heighten extinction risk. We are literally watching these species disappear before our eyes.

In order to fine-tune their model with this surprising global outpouring of data, Sinervo and his colleagues used a small electronic device that mimics the body temperature of a lizard basking in the sun. They placed these thermal models in sun-drenched areas for four months at sites in Mexico where lizard populations were still thriving-and at sites where they have already gone extinct.

Sinervo briefed: “There are periods of the day when lizards can”t be out, and essentially have to retreat to cooler places. When they”re not out and about, lizards aren”t foraging for food. So we assessed how many hours of the day lizards would have been driven out of the sun at these different locations. Then, we were able to parameterize our global model.”

The experts claim these findings are both “devastating and heart-wrenching.”

However, hope hasn”t ended for the world”s lizards.

Sinervo concluded: “If the governments of the world can implement a concerted change to limit our carbon dioxide emissions, then we could bend the curve and hold levels of extinction to the 2050 scenarios. But it has to be a global push… I don”t want to tell my child that we once had a chance to save these lizards, but we didn”t. I want to do my best to save them while I can.” (ANI)

Prostate cancer risk increases with number of affected family members

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): The more of a man”s direct relatives, i.e. brothers and fathers, are affected with prostate cancer, the higher is his personal risk to develop the disease himself, claims a study.

Researchers of the department headed by Kari Hemminki at DKFZ have studied how high is an individual person”s risk in familial prostate cancer.

The largest ever such study included 26,651 prostate cancer patients, 5,623 of whom came from families in which the disease had been diagnosed before.

And the researchers calculated that men up to an age of 65 years with three affected brothers have a risk that is 23 times higher than that of the control group (men without affected family members).

Men aged between 65 and 74 years, whose father was or is the only one affected, have a risk that is increased by 1.8 times and, thus, the lowest risk elevation in the familial cancer group.

The DKFZ researchers recognized a general tendency that the personal risk is the higher, the younger affected relatives were at the time of diagnosis.

Elevated familial cancer risks are often doubted.

Critics argue that results tend to be distorted because relatives of affected persons are alarmed and have early detection exams more often than the rest of the population.

Thus, the argument runs, they are more frequently overdiagnosed, because even tumours are found that might never have caused any symptoms during their lifetime.

In order to refute this criticism, the researchers also investigated the prostate cancer mortality in relation to the number of affected family members.

They arrived at the same risk distribution as for newly diagnosed cases—the more direct relatives are affected, the higher is a person”s risk of dying from prostate cancer.

Thus, the scientists have proved that the risk increase is real and not just due to more frequent early detection examinations.

“Our results provide a good guidance for doctors. If a man has several affected relatives who may even have been diagnosed at a young age, then his personal risk is substantially increased. In this case, a family doctor should urgently recommend having an early detection examination,” said study head Kari Hemminki. (ANI)

Scientists map melting history of Greenland’s ice sheet

Washington, September 17 (ANI): Researchers from the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen have mapped the history of the melting of the Greenland ice sheet.

Numerous drillings have been made through both Greenland’s ice sheet and small ice caps near the coast.

By analyzing every single annual layer in the kilometres long ice cores, researchers can get detailed information about the climate of the past.

But now, the Danish researcher Bo Vinther and colleagues from the Centre for Ice and Climate at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, in collaboration with researchers from Canada, France and Russia, have found an entirely new way of interpreting the information from the ice core drillings.

“Ice cores from different drillings show different climate histories. This could be because they were drilled at very different places on and near Greenland, but it could also be due to changes in the elevation of the ice sheet, because the elevation itself causes different temperatures,” explained Bo Vinther about the theory.

Today, the ice sheet is more than three kilometres thick at its highest point and thinning out towards the coast.

Four of the drillings analyzed are from the central ice sheet, while two of the drillings are from small ice caps outside of the ice sheet itself.

By comparing the Oxygen-18 content in all of the annual layers from the four drillings through the ice sheet with the Oxygen-18 content of the same annual layers in the small ice caps, Bo Vinther has calculated the elevation course through 11,700 years.

Just after the ice age the elevation of the ice sheet rose slightly because when the climate transitions from ice age to warm age, there is a rapid increase in precipitation.

But at the same time, the areas lying near the coast begin to decrease in size, because the ice is melting at the edge.

When the ice melts at the edge, it slowly causes the entire ice sheet to ‘collapse’ and become lower.

The calculations show that in the course of about 3,000 years, the elevation changed and became up to 600 meters lower in the coastal areas.

But in the middle, it was a slow process, where the elevation decreased around 150 meters in the course of around 6,000 years.

It then stabilized.

The new results show the evolution of elevation of the ice sheet throughout 11,700 years and they show that the ice sheet is very sensitive to the temperature.

The results can be used to make new calculations for models predicting future consequences of climate changes. (ANI)

Antarctica had more room for ice 34 mln yrs ago than previously thought

Washington, September 10 (ANI): Scientists, in a new research, have found that about 34 million years ago, Antarctica had more room for ice than previously thought.

Scientists from the University of California, Santa Barbara, US, carried out the research.

About 34 million years ago, during the Eocene-Oligocene transition, Earth’s climate shifted from warmer to cooler.

Models for the growth of the Antarctic ice sheet during that transition show a lot of ice in East Antarctica, but very little in West Antarctica.

Other data, however, indicate that much more ice must have existed than those models predict, so climate scientists had trouble explaining where all the ice formed.

To resolve the issue, Douglas S. Wilson and Bruce P. Luyendyk from the University of California, Santa Barbara, created a new model of the topography of Antarctica around 34 million years ago, taking into account several geologic factors that have affected topography since the Eocene-Oligocene transition but have not been considered in other models.

Their reconstruction shows that West Antarctica had a higher elevation 34 million years ago than previously thought.

This adds about 10-20 percent to the total land area above sea level, creating additional area that could have held ice during the formation of the Antarctic ice sheet.

According to the researchers, the study will help improve understanding of the formation of Antarctic ice and will be useful for global climate models. (ANI)

Rat as big as a cat found in extinct volcano in Papua New Guinea

London, September 7 (ANI): An expedition team has found a new species of giant rat in an extinct volcano in the jungle of Papua New Guinea, which at 82cm length, is as big as a cat.

According to a report by BBC News, the creature, which has not yet been formally described, was discovered by an expedition team filming the BBC programme ‘Lost Land of the Volcano’.

The rat, which has no fear of humans, is among the largest species of rat known anywhere in the world.

Like the other exotic species, the rat is believed to live within the Mount Bosavi crater, and nowhere else.

“This is one of the world’s largest rats. It is a true rat, the same kind you find in the city sewers,” said Dr Kristofer Helgen, a mammalogist based at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History who accompanied the BBC expedition team.

Initially, the giant rat was first captured on film by an infrared camera trap, which BBC wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan set up in the forest on the slopes of the volcano.

The expedition team, from the BBC Natural History Unit, recorded the rat rummaging around on the forest floor, and was awed by its size.

Immediately, they suspected it could be a species never before recorded by science, but they needed to see a live animal to be sure.

Then trackers accompanying the team managed to trap a live specimen.

“I had a cat and it was about the same size as this rat,” said Buchanan.

The trapped rat measured 82cm in length from its nose to its tail, and weighed approximately 1.5kg.

It had a silver-brown coat of thick long fur, which the scientists who examined it believe may help it survive the wet and cold conditions that can occur within the high volcano crater.

The location where the rat was discovered lies at an elevation of over 1,000m.

Initial investigations suggest the rat belongs to the genus Mallomys, which contains a handful of other out-sized species.

It has provisionally been called the Bosavi woolly rat, while its scientific name has yet to be agreed.

Mount Bosavi, where the new rat was found, is an extinct volcano that lies deep in the remote Southern Highlands of Papua New Guinea.

The expedition team entered the crater to explore pristine forest, where few humans have set foot.

The island which includes Papua New Guinea and New Guinea is famous for the number and diversity of the rats and mice that live there. (ANI)

Antarctica’s plumbing system more dynamic than previously believed

Washington, Sept 2 (ANI): Scientists, using space-based lasers on a NASA satellite have created the most comprehensive inventory of lakes that actively drain or fill under Antarctica’s ice, which has revealed a continental plumbing system that is more dynamic than previously thought.

“Even though Antarctica’s ice sheet looks static, the more we watch it, the more we see there is activity going on there all the time,” said Benjamin Smith of the University of Washington in Seattle, who led the study.

Unlike most lakes, Antarctic lakes are under pressure from the ice above. That pressure can push melt water from place to place like water in a squeezed balloon.

The water moves under the ice in a broad, thin layer, but also through a linked cavity system. This flow can resupply other lakes near and far.

Understanding this plumbing is important, as it can lubricate glacier flow and send the ice speeding toward the ocean, where it can melt and contribute to sea level change.

But figuring out what’s happening beneath miles of ice is a challenge.

Researchers led by Smith analyzed 4.5 years of ice elevation data from NASA’s Ice, Cloud and land Elevation satellite (ICESat) to create the most complete inventory to date of changes in the Antarctic plumbing system.

The team has mapped the location of 124 active lakes, estimated how fast they drain or fill, and described the implications for lake and ice-sheet dynamics.

Smith, Helen Fricker, a geophysicist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and colleagues extended their elevation analysis to cover most of the Antarctic continent and 4.5 years of data from ICESat’s Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS).

By observing how ice sheet elevation changed between the two or three times the satellite flew over a section every year, researchers could determine which lakes were active.

They also used the elevation changes and the properties of water and ice to estimate the volume change.

Only a few of the more than 200 previously identified lakes were confirmed active, implying that lakes in East Antarctica’s high-density “Lakes District” are mostly inactive and do not contribute much to ice sheet changes.

Most of the 124 newly observed active lakes turned up in coastal areas, at the head of large drainage systems, which have the largest potential to contribute to sea level change.

According to Robert Bindschadler, a glaciologist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, “The survey shows that most active subglacial lakes are located where the ice is moving fast, which implies a relationship.” (ANI)

Treelines not universally responding to climate warming as expected

Washington, August 13 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that treelines are not universally responding to climate warming by advancing as expected.

Treelines are the elevation or latitudinal limits where trees are capable of growth or survival and are considered to be early indicators of climate warming because they are constrained primarily by cold temperatures.

Summer temperature is widely considered to be the primary control of treeline formation and maintenance, whereas winter temperatures have previously been considered less critical because of the insulative effects of snow.

This study reveals how winter warming has overturned this prevailing view.

“Average temperatures have risen over the last century, with a more pronounced and rapid change at high altitudes and latitudes,” said Melanie Harsch from the Bio-Protection Research Centre in New Zealand.

“Within these zones, treelines are thought to be more temperature sensitive and so the rise in summer temperatures should result in an advance of treeline position,” she added.

Harsch and her co-authors conducted a multivariate meta-analysis, using a global dataset of 166 treeline sites with temperature data taken from the closest climate station to each site.

The team used this data to analyze treeline advance throughout the 20th century and consider the contributing factors to that advance.

The team found that only 87 of the 166 sites (52 percent) had advanced while simultaneously the mean annual local temperatures had increased at 111 of the 166 sites at an average rate of 0.013 degrees Celsius a year (or 1 degrees C in 77 years).

Of the remaining sites, 77 (47 percent) remained stable and only two (1 percent) had treelines that receded.

Both of the receding sites showed evidence of disturbance, indicating that regardless of form, location or degree of temperature change experienced over the last century, treeline positions have either advanced or remained static.

“Surprisingly these results reveal that treelines are not universally responding to climate warming by advancing, as expected,” said Harsch.

Another surprising result of this study was the association with winter, rather than summer, warming.

These results provide no evidence of the prevailing view that high altitude and latitude treelines are controlled only by summer temperatures.

Instead, they show that treelines are more likely to advance at sites that had warmed during the winter months.

It is known, at least in northern latitudes that climate-associated changes in winter conditions are on average more extreme than changes in summer conditions.

“These results show that treelines are responding to warming, but are not consistent in that only half of the sites showed signs of advance despite most sites experiencing warming,” said Harsch. (ANI)

2008 China earthquake destroyed 23 percent of the pandas’ habitat

Washington, July 28 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have shown that when the magnitude 8 Sichuan earthquake struck southern China in May 2008, more than 23 percent of the pandas’ habitat was destroyed in the area.

The Sichuan region is designated as one of 25 global hotspots for biodiversity conservation.

Home to more than 12,000 species of plants and 1122 species of vertebrates, the area includes more than half of the habitat for the Earth’s wild giant panda population, according to study lead author Weihua Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.

“We estimate that above 60 percent of the wild giant panda population was affected to some extent by the earthquake,” said Xu.

In an effort to develop conservation strategies for the panda’s remaining habitat, Xu and his colleagues used satellite imagery, field observations and published research to determine the pandas’ habitat loss and fragmentation in the South Minshan region, which is adjacent to the earthquake’s epicenter.

Since forests are the main vegetation type used by the pandas, the authors compared forested areas in satellite images from September 2007, before the earthquake, to images after the earthquake and its aftershocks, in July 2008.

The authors then combined results based on these satellite data with criteria that make forests suitable for pandas, including elevation, slope incline and presence of bamboo.

Their analyses revealed that more than 354 square kilometers, or about 23 percent, of the pandas’ habitat was converted to bare land.

Of the remaining habitat, the researchers found that large habitat areas had been fragmented into smaller, disconnected patches, which Xu says can be just as harmful as habitat destruction.

“It is probable that habitat fragmentation has separated the giant panda population inhabiting this region, which could be as low as 35 individuals,” said Xu.

“This kind of isolation increases their risk of extinction in the wild, due in part to a higher likelihood of inbreeding,” he added.

Xu and his colleagues propose a plan to encourage pandas to move between patches using specially protected corridors.

They also recommend areas to be protected outside of nature reserves, where the earthquake caused more than twice as much damage to panda habitat as inside reserves.

Finally, they recommend that post-earthquake relocation of affected towns takes panda habitat into consideration.

“It is vital to the survival of this species that measures are taken to protect panda habitat outside nature reserves,” Xu said. (ANI)

Brown set for humiliating third place in June 4 elections

London, May 10 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour Party is heading for a humiliating third place, trailing the Liberal Democrats as well as the Tories as it heads into the June 4 elections in 34 English local authorities.

Brown has been battered by revelations over ministerial expenses and a series of embarrassing climb-downs, which would be affecting his party’s election prospects in next month’s local elections.

An analysis for The Sunday Times by Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, predicted that Labour will lose all four of the councils it controls and half the 500 seats it is defending.

Senior aides have warned Brown that if Labour comes third in the elections next month, a challenge to his leadership is almost inevitable.

It comes as more Labour ministers and backbenchers faced embarrassing disclosures about taxpayer-funded expenses.

Hazel Blears, the Communities’ Secretary, faces questions over the sale of a flat she had designated as a second home. She made a profit of 45,000 pounds on the sale but paid no capital gains tax.

Work And Pensions Minister Kitty Ussher carried out a 20,000 pounds makeover on her run-down Victorian townhouse using taxpayer-funded expenses, The Times reports.

A YouGov poll for The Sunday Times puts the Tories on 43 percent, up two points on last month, with Labour down seven on 27 percent and the Liberal Democrats up two on 18 percent. It predicts Labour will get barely more than a fifth of the vote in European parliament elections, also to be held on June 4.

The prime minister suffered a new blow this weekend as a top Labour official, who had played a key role in Brown’s elevation to No 10, labelled him a “disaster”.

Peter Watt, former party general secretary, said: “At the moment the government appears to have absolutely no direction.” (ANI)

Scientists see evidence of young and vast river valleys on Mars

Washington, May 7 (ANI): A team of scientists has reported evidence of young and vast river valleys on Mars, which date back to 1.8 billion years.

Most river valley systems on Mars existed only during the early history of the planet, before a major climate transition to colder, drier conditions.

Now, J. L. Dickson, C. I. Fassett, J. W. Head, from the Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, US, have reported evidence of younger fluvial valley systems that formed during the middle to late Amazonian epoch, which extends from about 1.8 billion years ago to the present.

The data suggests that these fluvial valley systems, located in the Lyot crater in the northern midlatitudes, are tens of kilometers in length and are among the youngest river valley systems of this size reported to date.

Past research indicates that conditions overall on Mars during the middle to late Amazonian were too cold to support liquid water.

However, the researchers propose that in the microenvironment of the Lyot crater, high surface pressure due to low elevation, combined with local temperature conditions, at times made possible the melting of surface ice.

They suggest that observed glacial deposits in the crater indicate that glaciers provided the continuous melt water needed to form these fluvial valley systems. (ANI)

Bollinger a casualty of Lee’s Ashes campaign

Sydney, May 6 (ANI): New South Wales fast bowler Doug Bollinger must be feeling a touch unlucky not to have made it to the Australian Twenty20 squad for next month’s World Cup, especially in the wake of the selectors pitching for 32-year-old Brett Lee, who has not bowled in a match since December last year.

After a string of superb performances in the one-dayers against Pakistan, Bollinger was looming as the next cab off the rank among Australia’s pacers, but he was squeezed out of the squad by Lee’s elevation.

Bollinger was NSW’s T20 player of the year when they won the domestic title last summer and his efforts against Pakistan had moved him to the brink of World Cup selection, despite an earlier omission from a preliminary 30-man squad, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Bollinger was unavailable for comment last night.

Hilditch said Lee’s selection was an essential part of his preparation for the Ashes.

Australian squad: Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, David Hussey, Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Peter Siddle, Andrew Symonds, David Warner, Shane Watson. (ANI)

Bollinger a casualty of Lee’s Ashes campaign

Sydney, May 6 (ANI): New South Wales fast bowler Doug Bollinger must be feeling a touch unlucky not to have made it to the Australian Twenty20 squad for next month’s World Cup, especially in the wake of the selectors pitching for 32-year-old Brett Lee, who has not bowled in a match since December last year.

After a string of superb performances in the one-dayers against Pakistan, Bollinger was looming as the next cab off the rank among Australia’s pacers, but he was squeezed out of the squad by Lee’s elevation.

Bollinger was NSW’s T20 player of the year when they won the domestic title last summer and his efforts against Pakistan had moved him to the brink of World Cup selection, despite an earlier omission from a preliminary 30-man squad, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Bollinger was unavailable for comment last night.

Hilditch said Lee’s selection was an essential part of his preparation for the Ashes.

Australian squad: Ricky Ponting (capt), Michael Clarke, Nathan Bracken, Brad Haddin, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, David Hussey, Mike Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Peter Siddle, Andrew Symonds, David Warner, Shane Watson. (ANI)

Chronic ankle pain could be more than just a sprain

Washington, May 2 (ANI): An unfortunate fall, sudden twist or blow to the ankle often causes sprains leading to chronic ankle pain among many sufferers. But scientists have said that the underlying cause of the pain could be more than just a sprain.

Usually, almost 40 percent of those who suffer an ankle sprain experience chronic ankle pain, even after being treated for their initial injury.

Now, a new study has explained that tendon injuries to the ankle can be a possible cause for this chronic pain.

In some cases, the condition is untreated or overlooked which prolongs the pain and the problem.

“When patients injure their ankles, the injury may not seem serious at first. People may not seek medical attention and they can think it will just get better on its own. I think that is why this condition often goes undiagnosed,” explained Terrence Philbin, DO, lead author of the article.

The researchers explained how in some cases chronic ankle pain may actually be the result of injuries to the peroneal tendons.

The peroneal tendons are located behind the outside portion of the anklebone (called the fibula). The tendons help to stabilize the foot and ankle.

Tendon injuries can include tendonitis or swelling around the tendons. In more severe cases, the peroneal tendons can actually tear or there can be a swelling of the tendons behind the fibula bone. This can cause the ligament that holds the tendons together to stretch out and tear, or even rupture.

Peroneal tendon injuries can be characterised via ankle pain that is not responding to treatment, swelling and tenderness around the outside of the ankle, pain behind the anklebone or pain that transmits from the ankle down into the foot.

The use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or ultrasound can be helpful when identifying and diagnosing peroneal tendon injuries and disorders.

“These imaging techniques offer a more complete look at the peroneal tendons. One might consider getting an MRI or ultrasound especially if you have chronic ankle pain,” noted Philbin.

If the condition is caught early, non-operative treatment options can include, rest, ice and elevation, anti-inflammatory medication, immobilization in a cast or brace, or physical therapy.

More serious injuries of the peroneal tendons, including tears or ruptures, will very likely require surgery.

Peroneal tendon injuries can happen suddenly or can develop over time and is most common among athletes involved in sports that require repetitive ankle motion and in individuals who have high arches of the foot.

A proper diagnosis is essential in order to treat peroneal tendon injuries correctly and to help alleviate chronic pain.

“If you have ankle pain and it is not getting better, do not ignore it. Get it evaluated by a physician who has experience treating foot and ankle injuries,’ recommended Philbin.

The study is published in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (JAAOS). (ANI)

Navin Chawla takes over as CEC

New Delhi, Apr 21 (ANI): Election Commissioner Navin Chawla took over as the Chief Election Commissioner today, succeeding N. Gopalaswami who retired on Monday after serving in the Commission for five years.

Power Secretary V S Sampath also took charge as the Election Commissioner following the elevation of Chawla. Dr. S Y Qureshi already holds the post of Election Commissioner.

Chawla, who was appointed Election Commissioner on May the 16, 2005, will hold charge till July 29, 2010.

The outgoing CEC was given a warm farewell by Chawla and Dr. Qureshi along with the entire staff. Gopalaswami expressed hope that the Election Commission would uphold its sanctity and achieve new heights under the able leadership of Chawla.

The 63-year-old Chawla has taken over the position in the midst of the five-phased Lok Sabha elections and will have to oversee the remaining four phases of the polls.

Chawla, an IAS officer of the 1969 batch, had recently been in the news as Gopalaswami had unilaterally recommended his removal from the Election Commission on grounds of partisanship.

The recommendation was, however, rejected by the President on March 1, 2009.

The Chief Election Commissioner, a Constitutional post, enjoys a term of six years or till the age of 65 years, whichever is earlier.

Chawla has served the government of India in various capacities. He had last been the Secretary in the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.

He has also worked as the Secretary of the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC).

At the time of emergency, Chawla served as the secretary to the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi.

Chawla has also been the proud recipient of the Mazzini Award, which was presented to him by the Italian Government for his contribution in promoting ties between India and Italy. (ANI)

Navin Chawla to take over as CEC today

New Delhi, Apr 21 (ANI): Election Commissioner Navin Chawla will take over as the Chief Election Commissioner today as N. Gopalaswami demits office.

Power Secretary V S Sampath will take over as Election Commissioner following the elevation of Chawla.

Chawla, who was appointed Election Commissioner on May the 16, 2005, will hold charge till July 29, 2010.

Chawla, who will be taking over in the midst of the five-phased Lok Sabha elections, will oversee four phases of the polls.

Chawla, an IAS officer of the 1969 batch, had recently been in the news as the Chief Election Commissioner of India had unilaterally recommended his removal from the Election Commission on grounds of partisanship.

The recommendation was rejected by the President on March 1, 2009. (ANI)

Moon dust becomes eco hazard to astronauts due to Sun’s elevation

Washington, April 18 (ANI): A new study has revealed that the Moon dust, which causes hazards like ruining scientific experiments and endangering astronauts’ health, is influenced by the Sun’s elevation.

Lunar dust has long been described as the No. 1 environmental hazard on the Moon.

It causes miscellaneous havoc: from destroying scientific equipment deployed on the lunar surface, to creating blinding dust clouds that interfere with lunar landings.

It also may be a health hazard to space travelers, since dust clinging to space suits detaches when astronauts reenter their lunar module.

It then floats free in zero gravity, ready to be inhaled, during the 3-day journey back to Earth.

Now, a study reveals that forces compelling lunar dust to cling to surfaces, change during the lunar day with the elevation of the sun.

The study analyzes the interactions on the Moon among electrostatic adhesive forces, the angle of incidence of the sun’s rays, and lunar gravity.

It concludes that the stickiness of lunar dust on a vertical surface changes as the sun moves higher in the sky, eventually allowing the very weak lunar gravity to pull the dust off.

“Before you can manage the dust, you have to understand what makes it sticky,” said Brian O’Brien, the sole author of the study.

He used data from the matchbox-sized Dust Detector Experiments deployed on the Moon’s surface in 1969 during the Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 missions.

O’Brien analyzed the behavior of dust on horizontal and vertical solar cells in one of the Apollo dust-detecting experiments.

On the first morning of the experiment, the lunar module – 130 meters (426 feet) away from the dust detector – took off from the Moon’s surface.

The blast of exhaust gases completely cleansed a dusty horizontal solar cell, because it was illuminated only by weak early-morning light and thus the adhesive force of dust was faint.

But, only half the dust covering the vertical cell was removed by the blast, because its surface faced east – into more intense sunlight- and thus the sticky forces were stronger.

O’Brien found that later, as the sun rose and the angle of incidence of the sun’s rays on the dusty vertical surface facing east decreased, the electrostatic forces on the vertical cell weakened.

The tipping point was reached when the sun was at an angle of about 45 degrees.

Then, the pull of lunar gravity counteracted the adhesive forces and made the dust start falling off. All dust had fallen by lunar night.

“These are the first measurements of the collapse of the cohesive forces that make lunar dust so sticky,” O’Brien said. (ANI)

Laughter is indeed the best medicine

Washington, Apr 17 (ANI): Laughter is indeed the best form of medicine – because it is good for the heart, says a new study.

In the research, “mirthful laughter” was linked to lower cholesterol and less risk of cardiovascular disease.

Lee Berk, a psychoneuroimmunologist, of Loma Linda University, and Dr. Stanley Tan, an endocrinologist and diabetes specialist at Oak Crest Health Research Institute in Loma Linda, examined the effects of mirthful laughter on 20 high-risk diabetic patients with hypertension and hyperlipidemia – an elevation of lipids in the bloodstream.

In the study, a group of 20 high-risk diabetic patients with hypertension and hyperlipidemia were divided into two groups: roup C (control) and Group L (laughter). Both groups were started on standard medications for diabetes (glipizide, TZD, metformin), hypertension (ACE inhibitor or ARB) and hyperlipidemia (statins).

The researchers then followed both groups for 12 months, testing their blood for the stress hormones epinephrine and norepinephrine; HDL cholesterol; inflammatory cytokines TNF-a FN-? and IL-6, which contribute to the acceleration of atherosclerosis and C-reactive proteins (hs-CRP), a marker of inflammation and cardiovascular disease.

Group L viewed self-selected humor for 30 minutes in addition to the standard therapies described above.

At the end of the time period, 26 percent of the laughter group had higher levels of high-density lipoprotein, the “good” cholesterol, compared to 3 percent in the control group. Harmful C-reactive proteins decreased 66 percent in the laughter group vs. 26 percent for the control group.

The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Physiological Society, part of the Experimental Biology 2009 gathering in New Orleans Convention. (ANI)

China calls up its first black athlete

Beijing, Apr.16 (ANI): China has called up its first black athlete to play a key role in China’s push for gold at the London Olympics in 2012.

Ding Hui, 19, who is affectionately nicknamed Xiao Hei, or Little Black, by his teammates, was included in the national team’s new 18-man volleyball training squad, reports The Telegraph.

The son of a South African father and a Chinese mother, Ding was born in China and only speaks Mandarin and his city’s local dialect. His elevation has stirred up some racial prejudices among his countrymen.

Commentators have noted that he has a “pleasant and perky nature” and is talented at “singing and dancing”.

On Chinese Internet forums, he has been lauded for the “whiteness” of his teeth and the “athleticism of his genes”.

China’s black population is tiny, and attitudes remain relatively unsophisticated. One predominately African suburb in the southern city of Guangzhou is cheerfully referred to as “Chocolate City”.

However, China’s black population is growing rapidly.

Since 2003, when China started pouring investments into Africa, there has been a significant movement of Africans in the opposite direction. Guangzhou authorities believe there are now 100,000 Africans from Nigeria, Guinea, Cameroon, Liberia and Mali in the city, and the flow is growing by 30 to 40 per cent annually. (ANI)

Flower believes KP has the goods to deliver Ashes to England

London, Apr.16 (ANI): New England cricket team coach Andy Flower believes batsman Kevin Pietersen can help England regain The Ashes this year.

The ex-Zimbabwe skipper, 40, insists that the talented but sometimes self-obsessed Pietersen is fundamental to the side’s chances in the busiest summer in their history.

“Kevin is very important to English cricket – he is a very fine player. Kevin and I have always got on pretty well and that hasn’t changed. As to any detail on that, you’ll have to ask Kev,” Flower was quoted, as saying.
Pietersen, who is in South Africa preparing to captain Bangalore Royal Challengers in the IPL, revealed Flower came out of his shell in the Windies.

He said: “Andy Flower is a totally different bloke without Peter Moores around. We smoothed things over and have a great working relationship now. He has the makings of a world-class coach.”

Once Test skipper Andrew Strauss made it clear he wanted Flower to get the top job, his elevation was virtually certain.

Little more than three months ago, Pietersen wanted Flower axed along with coach Peter Moores.

England knew they could not afford another bust-up between captain and coach so the hiring of a head-hunting firm became little more than a show to avoid accusations of a cosy appointment.

England managing director Hugh Morris said: “The ECB believe he has the vision, drive and ambition to be just as successful in his new post as he was as a player. (ANI)

Many autistic people do have savant-like skills

London, Apr 15 (ANI): A new study has shown that one-third of adults with autism have savant-like skills – such as astounding memory, perfect pitch or the ability to multiply very high numbers together.

The study of about 100 autistic patients revealed that a larger number of people have skills that stand out, both in comparison with their other abilities and with the skills of the general population.

“People often focus on the things people with autism can’t do. One of the things our study illustrates is that these are people who do have special skills but they are not being used,” New Scientist magazine quoted Patricia Howlin of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College in London, an study leader, as saying.

The notion of the savant has long been fascinating cognitive scientists and the general public, but a connection between autism and savantism was not established until now.

Thus, the researchers looked at two different measures of exceptional ability in a group of people with autism – all now adults – who the team have been studying periodically since they were first diagnosed between 1950 and 1985.

They found that 39 met criteria for either what they call a “savant skill” or an “exceptional cognitive skill”.

To identify savant skills, the researchers quizzed the parents of the autistic adults asking them to identify and describe, using specific examples, any outstanding skills and talents that were present “at a level that would be unusual even for normal people”.

Out of almost 100 parents who replied, about half (45) claimed that their child had a special skill.

However, only 24 met the study’s tough criteria for what constitutes a savant skill – both exceptional in terms of population norms and above the individual’s overall level of ability.

Some of the savant-like skills considered were: being able to name the elevation of both the sun and the moon at any time of day, on any specified date; being able to name the day of the week for any date in the distant past or future (a fairly common savant ability known as calendrical calculation); perfect pitch; and the ability to say, from a single chord, which piece of music it came from.

To identify exceptional cognitive ability, the researchers also examined the volunteers’ scores on standard intelligence tests consisting of a range of subtests aimed at different aspects of IQ, such as arithmetic, spatial and motor skills and memory span.

And it was found that 23 had an ability on at least one of these subtests that was well above the general population’s average score on that subtest.

According to the first criteria, eight out of 23 had also been identified as a mathematical or calendrical savant.

The researchers concluded that overall 28.5 percent – or almost one third – of their volunteers had either a savant skill or an exceptional cognitive ability.

They said that the study opened a window into the mind of a child with autism.

They also recommended using such isolated, exceptional abilities as a way to motivate people with autism to learn other skills – such as social or communication ones – that might not come as easily. (ANI)