Warmer, wetter weather could create problems for nesting Arctic seabirds

Washington, March 25 (ANI): A team of Canadian scientists has determined that warmer, wetter weather in the Canadian Arctic could create problems for nesting seabirds.

Arctic birds are uniquely adapted to survive in the cold, dry summers that mark the high Arctic.

However, warmer temperatures are bringing more storm events, including incidents of heavy fog, rain, freezing rain, wet snow and stronger winds.

“It”s not really a surprise,” said Mark Mallory, a biologist with the Canadian Wildlife Service in Iqaluit.

“If a bird is adapted to cold conditions and you make things warmer, predictably they”ll find things harder,” he added.

Mortality studies in seabirds typically focus on birds in tropical or temperate regions where ”normal” causes of death include population declines due to fishery collapse, ecto-parasites like ticks, introduced predators such as rats, and storms at sea.

Mallory and two other Canadian scientists decided to combine 33 years of observation into a paper that was released in Arctic, the journal of the Arctic Institute of North America.

In it, the trio track the unusual ways Arctic seabirds die and they predict that a warming climate could have serious consequences for these birds.

The study is based on observations of six species of birds on 11 different seabird colonies in the eastern Arctic ranging from northern Hudson Bay to Devon Island.

Typical causes of death include crashing into each other or cliffs during heavy fog, being slammed into the ocean by Katabatic winds or, perhaps most grizzly of all, dying from a combination of heat stress and blood loss due to mosquito attacks.

Few birds winter in the Arctic because of the harsh climate conditions. But in the spring, there is a veritable explosion as millions of birds return to nest.

Seabirds in Mallory”s study area tend to spend the winter months floating in the North Atlantic ocean.

When they return in the spring, conditions are often still very harsh.

The Arctic has been getting warmer and increased temperatures create stronger storm fronts and bring more precipitation to what is essentially a desert region.

For birds adapted to a cold, dry climate, these changes could be very challenging.

“Arctic seabirds don”t do well in really heavy, wet snowfall. Chicks hatch in early August and they expect it to be dry and cool. They can”t handle soaking wet for very long, even if it is warmer,” said Mallory.

These birds have adapted to past climate shifts, but the changes occurred over long periods of time.

It might be difficult for them to adjust to the rapid changes now underway. (ANI)

How plants prevent their genes from going haywire

Washington, September 11 (ANI): A new study, by researchers at the Universite de Montreal in Canada, has found a key mechanism that enables plants to keep dangerous gene alterations in check to ensure their continued existence.

“We’ve discovered a new pathway that plants use to protect their genes against dangerous alterations that could also allow some useful mutations to occur,” said Normand Brisson, a Universite de Montreal biochemistry professor who made his discovery with graduate students Alexandre Marechal and Jean-Sebastien Parent.

“Such mutations played an important role in the evolution of plants with high nutritional value, resistance to disease and harsh climate that are so important to modern agriculture,” added Dr. Brisson.

“Our results open new research avenues for the study of similar mechanisms of gene repair in humans that might be important for human evolution, our responses to stress and the prevention of devastating diseases,” he said.

All living things are constantly exposed to stressors that can provoke gene mutations, yet if uncorrected such mutations can have disastrous consequences such as the development of cancers in humans or cell resistance to cancer-fighting drugs.

Cells have evolved a battery of mechanisms to correct mutations, including recently discovered strategies that can also modify the number of copies of individual genes.

These corrective mechanisms have attracted a lot of scientific interest since they could play a key role in species evolution.

Dr Brisson suspected that a protein family he has studied for years, called the “Whirlies” might be important to protect against mutations in plant cells – specifically in the chloroplast – the engine of photosynthesis that allows plants to transform carbon dioxide into sugar and expel the oxygen we breathe.

Working with his students and Biochemistry Professor Franz Lang, they showed that Whirlies are key to preventing major rearrangements of genes that could result in the creation of multiple gene copies.

The discovery is important, since the number of copies of a gene must be kept scrupulously in balance with other genes so they can function correctly together.

Even though gene multiplication can be thought of as detrimental, such multiplication can be an important adaptation to stressors and so keeping such mutations in check must be balanced against creating mutations that may actually help living things survive in changing conditions. (ANI)

Farmers in Ladakh take to greenhouses for better yield

Ladakh, Mar 12 (ANI): Farmers in Ladakh have taken to greenhouses, overcoming the hazards of harsh winters in a novel way.

Over 90 per cent of Ladakh’s population is dependent on agriculture. But very short summers and long winters make it hard for farmers to grow vegetables even to sustain themselves.

They now farm in greenhouses, ensuring availability of vegetables throughout the year.

Farmers say that the main advantage of having a greenhouse is the availability of green leafy vegetables throughout the year, especially in the winter season.

“We get green leafy fresh vegetables even during the months of January, February and March. We want that more greenhouses should be promoted so that more people benefit from these,” said Gulam Rasool, a farmer.

The concept of greenhouses was introduced in the region so that farmers can overcome the harsh climate.

The concept of gereenhouses was developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation at its unit in Leh. It was adopted by the Army in Kargil by the Indian Army after the 1999 standoff with Pakistan.

The Horticulture Department in the region has popularized as the method has dramatically transformed vegetable yield in the region.

The project was an immediate success in Ladakh as it receives good sunlight for an average of 325 days in a year because of its unique location.

“We have seen that solar energy has a lot of potential in Ladakh. We have tried to develop farming and we are encouraging farmers to grow vegetables.

This concept was developed in 1998 to make greenhouses using local material,” said Tashi Thokmat, Deputy Director, Ladakh Environment and Health Organization (LEHO).

Vegetables like cucumber, eggfruit and capsicum, which were not grown in this region before, are now a common sight in the marketplaces of the mountainous region. By Jigmet Vangchuk (ANI)