Toads can detect quakes and switch to evacuation mode

Washington, March 31 (ANI): A new study by scientists has suggested that common toads can detect impending seismic activity and alter their behaviour from breeding to evacuation mode.

Researchers from The Open University in the UK reported that 96 per cent of male toads in a population abandoned their breeding site five days before the earthquake that struck L’Aquila in Italy in 2009.

The breeding site was located 74 km from the earthquake’s epicentre.

The number of paired toads at the breeding site also dropped to zero three days before the earthquake.

No fresh spawn was found at the site from the date that the earthquake struck to the date of the last significant aftershock.

Breeding sites are male-dominated and the toads would normally remain in situ from the point that breeding activity begins, to the completion of spawning.

This shift in the toads’ behaviour coincided with disruptions in the ionosphere, the uppermost electromagnetic layer of the earth’s atmosphere, which were detected using very low frequency (VLF) radio sounding.

The release of radon gas, or gravity waves prior to an earthquake have both been attributed to changes in atmospheric electric fields and currents.

In this case, the cause of the ionosphere disruptions was not determined.

Other environmental changes that affect toad behaviour, including lunar phases and changing weather conditions were accounted for.

The number of toads breeding at the study site was known to increase during a full moon.

However, following the earthquake the number of toads present during a full moon was 34, in comparison to between 67 and 175 individuals in previous years.

“Our study is one of the first to document animal behaviour before, during and after an earthquake,” said lead author Dr Rachel Grant.

“Our findings suggest that toads are able to detect pre-seismic cues such as the release of gases and charged particles, and use these as a form of earthquake early warning system,” she added. (ANI)

Lunar clock to be built by River Thames by 2012

London, September 3 (ANI): Scientists and artists are planning to build a 40m-wide lunar clock by the River Thames by the year 2012.

According to a report by BBC News, the aim is to create a new London landmark close to the proposed Olympic stadium as a monument to a more natural way of marking time.

The proposed site is at East India Dock, six miles along the river from Westminster Palace. It is currently a bedraggled nature reserve.

The designers of the clock hope that the instrument will become as iconic as Big Ben, which has been marking time for 150 years.

Laura Williams, an East London artist, explained that the clock would be powered by the tides from the Thames.

“There are three giant concentric rings made from recycled glass. Light shines through from the glass in time with the Moon’s cycles so the largest ring shows the lunar phase,” she said.

“Gradually, the light waxes on all the way around the ring and connects full circle when it’s full Moon,” she added.

“The second ring is like the big hand of the clock. It’s a marker of light that tracks the Moon around the globe so that’s the lunar day cycle,” said Williams.

“The third ring – the smallest – is the small hand that tracks the tide as it goes from high tide to low,” she said.

The clock has been called Aluna. It is a word from the Kogi indigenous people of Colombia.

“It means memory, possibility. It’s also being in tune with the planet’s rhythms and living in harmony with our planet,” said Williams.

According to Dr Usama Hasan, an astronomer, in this age of iPods and atomic clocks, there is a greater need than ever for an older way of measuring time.

“Aluna is a project which tries to connect us back to the cosmic cycle, with nature. I think that’s very important especially in the very technological age we live in,” said Hasan. (ANI)

“Mars spectacular” event on August 27 a hoax, say astronomers

Washington, August 27 (ANI): Astronomers have confirmed that an email promising a “Mars spectacular” event on August 27, when the Red Planet will look as large as the full moon, is nothing but a hoax.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the anonymous message from an unknown part of the globe says that the red planet “will look as large as the full moon” in the night sky, and that “no one alive today will ever see this again.”

The claim has been bombarding people’s inboxes worldwide every summer for five years.

Today, the Mars hoax has grown into a kind of cyber legend-one that astronomers are still struggling to debunk.

“The possibility of seeing Mars as large as the moon strikes the imagination,” said Marc Jobin, staff astronomer at the Montreal Planetarium in Quebec.

“The sad reality is that a lot of people have little comprehension of astronomy and are unable to call the hoax,” he added.

But, there is a thread of truth that inspired the prank several years ago.

Planets are not on perfectly circular orbits, and during their elliptical paths around the sun, planets can vary in their exact distances to each other over time.

On August 27, 2003, Mars made a historically tight approach to Earth, coming about 56 million kilometers away.

Such a near pass hadn’t happened in nearly 60,000 years, and it won’t happen again until August 28, 2287.

In 2003, planetariums had sent out notices alerting stargazers of the real astronomical event.

“At the time, through the telescope, Mars looked as large as the full moon would with the naked eye,” explained Geza Gyuk, astronomer at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago, Illinois.

Through a backyard telescope with a high-power eyepiece, viewers could even make out many surface features on Mars’s disk.

With the naked eye, Mars still appeared as nothing more than a brilliant orange-colored star in the sky.

Still, an email hoax was born.

If the red planet actually did appear as huge as purported in the Mars hoax email, the planet would be just 750,000 kilometers from Earth, or about twice as far away as the moon.

According to Jobin, at that distance, life on Earth would likely be doomed.

Given the interplay of gravity between the planets and the sun, a much closer Mars “would have extreme consequences on the shape of the Earth’s orbit, with our planet swinging much closer and much farther away from the sun,” he said. (ANI)

Amphibians like to mate under a full Moon

London, July 14 (ANI): Scientists have discovered that amphibians around the world synchronize their mating activity by the full Moon.

According to a report by BBC News, this global phenomenon has never been noticed before, but frogs, toads and newts all like to mate by moonlight.

The animals use the lunar cycle to co-ordinate their gatherings, ensuring that enough males and females come together at the same time.

In doing so the creatures maximize their spawning success and reduce their odds of being eaten.

Biologist Rachel Grant of the Open University, UK, was studying salamanders near a lake in central Italy for her PhD in 2005 when she noticed toads all over the road, under a full Moon.

“Although this might have been a coincidence, the following month I went along the same route every day at dusk and found that the numbers of toads on the road increased as the Moon waxed, to a peak at full Moon, and then declined again,” she said.

A review of the scientific literature found little mention of any similar records, so Grant returned to the same site in 2006 and 2007 to survey the amphibians in more detail.

She then collated her data with a 10-year analysis of the mating habits of frogs and toads at a pond near Oxford, UK, collected by her supervisor Tim Halliday, and with data on toads and newts living in Wales collected by colleague Elizabeth Chadwick from Cardiff University, UK.

“We analysed the data, and found a lunar effect at all three sites,” Grant said.

For example, the common toad (Bufo bufo) arrives at all its breeding sites, mates and spawns around the full Moon. The common frog (Rana temporaria) also spawns around the time of the full Moon.

“Newts also seem to be affected by the lunar cycle but the results are less clear,” said Grant.

Newt arrivals peak during both the full and new moons.

The researchers have also looked at historical data collected in Java on the Javanese toad and found that it too mates by the lunar cycle, with females ovulating on or near to the full Moon.

“We now have evidence of lunar cycles affecting amphibians in widespread locations. We definitely think that Moon phase has been an overlooked factor in most studies of amphibian reproductive timing,” said Grant.

“We think this may be a worldwide phenomenon. However, differences between species in ecology and reproductive strategy may mean that not all amphibians are affected in the same way. This is something we would like to investigate further,” she added. (ANI)

Moon-Venus-Mars grouping to dazzle weekend sky show

Washington, June 19 (ANI): Get ready to witness a weekend sky show, with the Moon making a series of cosmic pit stops as it hovers near Venus and Mars, a famous star cluster, and finally Mercury in the predawn skies between Friday and Sunday, June 19 and 21.

This chain of conjunctions-when objects appear to be close together in the sky-is not unusual, astronomers note.

But, according to a report in National Geographic News, the event will create striking cosmic groupings that should be easy to spot without optical aids.

“When the moon parks itself next to starlike objects, this is the kind of astronomical happening that everyone takes note of and anyone can really enjoy,” said Anthony Cook of the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.

“The only requirements you need to worry about are having clear skies and an unobstructed view of the low eastern horizon 45 minutes before dawn,” he added.

The sky show begins worldwide Friday when the waning crescent moon snuggles up to brilliant white Venus and the much fainter, rust-colored Mars.

Venus and Mars will be in close conjunction that morning-just two degrees apart, or the equivalent of four full-moon disks.

On Saturday, the moon will sit to the right of the Pleiades star cluster, which lies 400 light-years away.

“They should make quite an attractive pair in binoculars, but the trick to enjoying the cluster will be to catch sight of it while skies are still dark,” Cook said.

The show closes out on Sunday, when the moon sinks closer toward the eastern horizon and settles to the upper left of faint Mercury.

“For many sky-watchers, Mercury is always a challenge, because it gets lost in the glare of the dawn,” Cook said.

“But for one morning, the razor-crescent moon will act as a wonderful guidepost to easily track it down,” he added. (ANI)

Amarnath yatra registration for pilgrims begins

Jammu, May 21 (ANI): The registration for the annual pilgrimage to the Hindu cave shrine of Amarnath in Jammu and Kashmir commenced across the country on Wednesday.

The pilgrimage spread over two months is scheduled to begin on June 6.

At Jammu and several other places, the pilgrims were seen in long queues to register their names.

Jammu and Kashmir Bank has been authorised by the government to register the intending pilgrims.

Around 110 branches of the bank spread over the country will facilitate the registration of the pilgrims.

According to Madan Gupta, Vice President (Central Zone) of J and K Bank has said that facilities like mobile ATMs and banking facilities at the base camp are the latest additions this year.

“We are doing bookings up to 3,00,000 in this counter and through Internet up to 1,20,000 bookings. We request people to get their bookings done through Internet because it would be more convenient. For pilgrims, we have arranged mobile banking facilities at the base camp, which will remain for June 6 to August 5. ATM facility will be available round the clock. We would be providing the pilgrims with on-the-spot banking facilities at the base camp,” Gupta added.

He further said that in Jammu, the bank has set up an extra counter at the Exhibition Ground for registration, which will remain open on week days from 3.p.m in the afternoon till 6.p.m. on weekdays and on Saturday from 1.p.m to 4.p.m. in the afternoon.

The registration will close on July 30.

“Every year we go on this pilgrimage. We pray to Lord Shiva for the pilgrimage journey to proceed smoothly this year unlike last year,” said Rajkumar, a pilgrim.

The Amarnath pilgrimage will culminate on August 5, which according to Hindu almanac is the Shravana Purnima (full moon in the monsoon month of Shravana).

Every year a large number of devotees trek the steep, slippery 48-km route to reach the Amarnath cave shrine, which stands at a height of nearly 12,500 feet above sea level. (ANI)

Mystery of Milky Way’s X-ray glow solved

Washington, April 30 (ANI): An image of a region near the center of our galaxy has resolved a long-standing mystery about an X-ray glow along the plane of the galaxy, attributing it to hundreds of point-like X-ray sources, implying that the glow is due to millions of such sources.

The image shows an infrared view from the Spitzer Space Telescope of the central region of the Milky Way, with a pullout showing a Chandra X-ray Observatory image of a region located only 1.4 degrees away from the center of the galaxy.

The so-called galactic ridge X-ray emission was first detected more than two decades ago using early X-ray observatories such as HEAO-1 and Exosat.

The ridge was observed to extend about two degrees above and below the plane of the galaxy and about 40 degrees along the plane of the galaxy on either side of the galactic center. It appeared to be diffuse.

One interpretation of the galactic X-ray ridge is that it is emission from 100-million-degree gas.

This interpretation is problematic because the disk of the galaxy is not massive enough to confine such hot gas, which should flow away in a wind.

Replenishing the gas would then be a problem, since plausible sources of energy such as supernovas are not nearly powerful enough.

A very deep Chandra observation, lasting for about 12 days, was used to study the nature of this ridge emission.

The field was chosen to be close enough to the galactic plane so that the ridge emission was strong, but in a region with relatively little absorption from dust and gas to maximize the number of sources that might be detected.

A total of 473 sources were detected in an area on the sky only about 3 percent of the size of the full Moon, one of the highest densities of X-ray sources ever seen in our galaxy.

It was found that more than 80 percent of the seemingly diffuse ridge of X-ray emission was resolved into individual sources.

These are believed to be mostly white dwarfs pulling matter from companion stars and double stars with strong magnetic activity that are producing X-ray outbursts or flares that are similar to, but more powerful than the flares seen on the Sun.

These stars are unrelated to the large-scale structures seen towards the center of the Spitzer image, which are probably caused by young massive stars. (ANI)

Stressed corals can switch from male to female and back again

Sydney, March 31 (ANI): A new study has found that stressed mushroom corals can switch from male to female and back again, the first to show that coral can change sex in either direction, all for conserving energy.

According to a report by ABC News, researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel conducted the study.

Mushroom corals belong to a family called Fungiidae. They are solitary, mobile species that live throughout the Pacific and Indian Oceans.

Mushroom corals are abundant and diverse, but how they reproduce is something scientists haven’t known much about.

“We know in detail the reproductive patterns of more than 500 coral species, but no one reported before on the fact that some coral species may change sex,” said lead author professor Yossi Loya, a zoologist at Tel Aviv University.

“I believe this was quite a big surprise to all coral reef scientists,” he added.

To learn more, Loya and a colleague travelled to a patch reef near Okinawa, Japan. The reef is home to tens of thousands of mushroom corals, representing a dozen species.

In 2004, the researchers collected, weighed, measured, and tagged about 15 individuals from two species. Each coral then got its own aquarium in the lab.

That July, about five days after the full moon, the mushroom corals did what many corals do – simultaneously release sperm and eggs.

In the ocean, these gamete explosions produce larvae that drift off to become new corals. In the lab, the scientists collected the gametes and looked at them under a microscope.

Then, they returned the corals to the sea.

Initial analyses showed that each coral produced either sperm or eggs. Some types of corals are hermaphroditic, with both male and female parts.

But, mushroom corals appeared to be just one or the other.

The researchers repeated the same experiment in 2006 and 2007. The results grew increasingly surprising.

In 2006, about 25 percent of one species and 50 percent of the other had changed sex since they’d been tagged two years earlier.

In 2007, 80 percent of the corals had changed sex from the year before. A quarter of those had reverted back to the sex they had originally been in 2004.

According to Professor Robert van Woesik, a marine biologist at the Florida Institute of Technology, “We never realised in our wildest dreams that these corals can undergo sex changes. This is really exciting.”

The fact that the corals sometimes switch back from female to male, might be a sign that they are in distress and need to conserve resources. (ANI)

“Eye of God” seen staring down from space!

London, Feb 26 (ANI): A stunning new photo taken by astronomers shows a Big Brother-style cosmic eye, nicknamed the “Eye of God”, staring down from space.

According to a report in New Scientist, the amazing object is actually a shell of gas and dust that has been blown off by a faint central star.

Our own solar system will meet a similar fate five billion years in the future.

The “Eye of God” lies around 700 light-years away in the constellation of Aquarius, and can be dimly seen in small backyard telescopes by amateur astronomers who call it the Helix nebula.

It covers an area of sky around a quarter the size of the full moon.

The bright blue pupil and the white of the eye are fringed by flesh-coloured eyelids, but this eye is so big that it light takes two and a half years to cross from one side to the other.

The photo was taken with a giant telescope at the European Southern Observatory, high on a mountaintop at La Silla in Chile.

It is so detailed that a close-up reveals distant galaxies within the central eyeball. (ANI)