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)

Dell plans new notebooks with encrypted solid-state drives

Frankfurt – Dell has plans to release new notebooks with hardware encryption for solid-state drives (SSD).

Just like with standard drives, a chip will encrypt all data. According to the company’s German offices, the security system will be available for the Latitude E4200, E4300, E6400 and E6500 models. (dpa)

New dino species might be found in Canada

Washington, May 13 (ANI): The discovery of a gruesome feeding frenzy that played out 73 million years ago in northwestern Alberta may also lead to the discovery of new dinosaur species in northwestern Alberta in Canada.

The discovery includes nesting site and the remains of baby, plant-eating dinosaurs and the teeth of a predator.

University of Alberta student Tetsuto Miyashita and Frederico Fanti, a paleontology graduate student from Italy, made the discovery near Grande Prairie, 450 kilometers northwest of Edmonton.

The researchers matched the teeth to a Troodon, a raptor-like dinosaur about two metres in length.

This finding has opened new doors in dinosaur research on this part of the continent: “It established that dinosaurs were nesting at this high latitude,” said Miyashita.

“It also shows for the first time a significant number of Troodons in the area (who) hunted hatchling dinosaurs,” he added.

Over the course of two summers of field work Miyashita and Fanti began building a theory that Grande Prairie is a “missing link” between known dinosaur species that existed much further to the north and south.

“Prior to this, there were no localities with a variety of dinosaurs and other animals between Alaska and southern Alberta,” said Myiashita.

The list of new finds for the area includes armoured and thick-headed plant eaters and fossilized freshwater fish and reptiles.

According to Miyashita, this small pocket of previously undiscovered life could have had interactions that lead to the evolution of new species.

“New dinosaurs weren’t created by interbreeding. Having a variety of dinosaurs in one area creates new ecological interactions such as competition for food and predation,” said Miyashita. “That can lead to the evolution of a new species,” he added.

One Grande Prairie dinosaur the researchers suspect is a new species is the Duck bill.

Miyashita said that unlike the Duck bill found further north in Alaska, the Grande Prairie has a visible bump or crest on its forehead.

The pair will go back to Grande Prairie area in 2010 to focus on finding other dinosaur species in the area. (ANI)

Tooth evidence shows dinos once lived in the Arctic

Washington, April 27 (ANI): Scientists have discovered a dinosaur tooth along what’s now the Kakanaut River of northeastern Russia, a find that shows dinos once lived above the Arctic Circle.

Scientists say the dinosaurs became extinct 65 million years ago when a big meteor crash set off volcanoes galore, with dust and smoke filling up the air.

One theory holds that cold, brought on by the Sun’s concealment, is what did them in, but a team of paleontologists led by Pascal Godefroit, of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, argues otherwise.

According to them, some dinosaurs (warm-blooded, perhaps) were surprisingly good at withstanding near-freezing temperatures.

The team’s latest find, a diverse stash of dinosaur fossils laid down just a few million years before the big impact, along what’s now the Kakanaut River of northeastern Russia, is proof of their theory.

Even accounting for continental drift, the dinos lived at more than 70 degrees of latitude north, well above the Arctic Circle.

The scientists also say that the dinosaurs above the Arctic weren’t lost wanderers.

The fossils include dinosaur eggshells – a first at high latitudes, and evidence of a settled, breeding population.

But, life was not easy for the dinosaurs during that period.

The size and shape of fossilized leaves found with the bones enabled Godefroit’s team to estimate a mean annual temperature of 50 degrees Fahrenheit, with wintertime lows at freezing.

According to the team of scientists, all that dust in the atmosphere must have curtailed photosynthesis everywhere, weakening the base of the food chain and inflicting starvation, and finally extinction, upon the dinosaurs. (ANI)

Mild earthquake hits parts of North-East

Guwahati, Apr 26 (ANI): An earthquake measuring four on the Richter scale shook Guwahati, Shillong and other parts of North Eastern India on Sunday morning.

There were no reports of any loss to life and property.

According to the Meteorological department, the quake was felt in several parts of the region at 7: 59 a.m. and the epicentre of the quake was located near Kamurp of Assam at 26.4 North latitude and 91.7 East longitude. (ANI)

Dell’s new notebook can take a beating

Frankfurt – Dell’s latest laptop is designed to take a beating and can reportedly survive a drop off a table, even when the display is operating.

The Latitude E6400 XFR is billed as a fully ruggedized notebook, designed to withstand drops of up to 120 centimetres when shut down and falls of up to 90 centimetres while running.

Other features include a Core-2-Duo processor, a scratch-resistant cover and the ability to withstand extreme temperatures. The laptop sells for 3,290 euros (4,265 dollars). —

New software provides missing sync between Mac and BlackBerry

Heidelberg, Germany (dpa) – Blackberries and Macs should soon be able to share data, thanks to the release of Version 2.0 of Missing Sync software.

Thus, computer users can now transfer pictures taken with their mobile device onto their Macintosh. Automatic synchronization via Bluetooth is another option, according to Application Systems, a distributor of the software.

The software can also be used to transfer iTunes play lists onto a BlackBerry or archive call lists. The software costs 44.99 euros (58 dollars).

Hot climates make for more baby girls, colder boys

London, Apr 1 (ANI): If you and your husband want a baby boy, then go live in the hills, suggests a new study.

A research has found that women living in cooler climates are more likely to give birth to boys than those in the tropics.

The study, which has for the first time demonstrated that latitude affects the sex of human babies, was based on global birth data collected by the CIA between 1997 and 2006 in 202 countries.

The global average from the data worked out at 51.3 per cent of all births being boys, or 105 for every 100 girls born. At tropical latitudes, the ratio of males born fell to 51.1 per cent, compared with 51.3 per cent in temperate and subarctic latitudes – the same as the global average.

“Of the 20 countries with the lowest ratios, 18 were at tropical latitudes,” New Scientist quoted Kristen Navara of the University of Georgia in Athens, as saying.

And even though the differences might appear small, they translate into large numbers of babies.

Of the “girl-rich” tropical countries, the Central African Republic was the only one where more girls than boys were born in the 10-year study, with a ratio of 0.49 per cent. Navara pointed out that although this figure appears small, it translated in 2006, for example, into 1400 fewer boys than if the ratio was 50:50.

The reason for the result, however, remains elusive.

“It’s very difficult to explain,” says Navara.

She speculates that the most likely drivers are the longer, less variable day lengths, and higher temperatures at tropical latitudes compared with others.

“We think this may be mediated by the hormone melatonin, which is responsible for causing major reproductive changes in response to day lengths,” says Navara.

“Treatment of rodents with melatonin results in pre-natal skews in the sex ratio, and it’s possible something similar is happening with humans,” she added.

Other possible explanations might be that temperature alters the survival of “male” or “female” sperm in semen, or perhaps favour the ability of one or the other to fertilise the egg.

The study has been published in the journal Biology Letters. (ANI)

Subsurface ice on Mars exposed by recent impact craters

London, March 31 (ANI): The HiRISE camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has observed some small, freshly gouged craters in images taken in 2008, which in turn have exposed hidden subsurface ice on the Red Planet.

According to a report in New Scientist, seen at five sites over a latitude range of 43 degrees to 56 degrees north, the excavations are typically 3 to 6 meters across and a third to two-thirds of a meter deep.

One cluster must have appeared sometime between June and August, and a somewhat larger pit showed up between January and September.

What did astound the team were splashes of white seen in and around a handful of these craterlets.

Apparently, fist-sized impactors had punched into a layer of ice hidden by a topping of dust about a third of a metre deep.

In the months that followed, these snowy splashes gradually faded from view.

Water ice isn’t stable at the craters’ latitudes, so most likely, it gradually sublimated, or vaporised, into the atmosphere, leaving behind a veneer of any dust that had been mixed with it.

The disappearing act might also be due in part to a coating of dust blown in from the atmosphere.

Either way, notes HiRISE investigator Shane Byrne of the University of Arizona, the icy deposits had to be at least a couple of inches (several centimeters) thick, and they couldn’t have been unearthed from more than a foot or two (0.3-0.6 m) down.

According to Byrne, prior surveys, particularly one done by the neutron spectrometer aboard NASA’s Mars Odyssey orbiter, show that vast reservoirs of ice lay barely buried across most of the planet’s polar and mid-latitude regions.

But, scientists are only now realising just how near the surface the ice lies – and how easily it can be reached.

“It’s probably just tens of centimeters down,” said HiRISE team leader Alfred McEwen. (ANI)

Loch Ness boulder may have been used as guide for crop sowing and harvesting 5000 yrs ago

London, March 28 (ANI): An amateur archaeologist has suggested that a giant boulder on a hill overlooking Loch Ness, a Scottish lake, was used as a guide for crop sowing and harvesting by residents of the Great Glen more than 5000 years ago.

According to a report in The Inverness Courier, John Forsyth, the archaeologist in question, is convinced that the five-meter wide rock was intentionally placed there by early man.

Forsyth said that the boulder was positioned and sculpted so people could use it as a marker against the sun to signal when their crops should be planted in spring and harvested in autumn.

He believes a community lived to the east of the boulder, which is between Creag Dhearg and Meall Fuar-Mhonaidh, and used the setting of the sun to establish the spring and autumn equinoxes – when day and night is roughly the same length.

As part of his research, Forsyth used a global positioning system to locate another rock behind his home, which lies directly east of the boulder and has the same latitude, suggesting an alignment that he thinks is deliberate.

“I’m very confident it’s from that time because the boulder is firmly embedded in peat and there is lichen on its surface,” he said.

How the people of the time managed to put the boulder there is another question, admitted Forsyth, who is confident of his findings, despite another school of thought that markers were also used by man in an attempt to find out more about the sun, moon and stars.

According to Highland Council archaeologist Kirsty Cameron, “People who were living in that time had a very good use of astronomy.”

“We encourage people to contact us about sites of possible interest but establishing a time for this is hard to prove and because it’s a stone, it can’t be excavated. I would be keen to find out more about it,” she said.

Forsyth believes the boulder was last moved at around the same time as the Callanish Standing Stones on Lewis and the structures at Stonehenge were erected. (ANI)

Lower increases in global temps could lead to greater impacts than previously thought

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A new study has determined that lower increases in global temperatures could lead to greater impacts than previously thought.

The study was undertaken by scientists updating some of the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2001 Third Assessment Report.

They found that even a lower level of increase in average global temperatures due to greenhouse gas emissions could cause significant problems in five key areas of global concern.

In 2001, the IPCC published as part of its Third Assessment Report an illustrative figure which identified changes in climate authors determined to be “reasons for concern,” and which could cause some or significant risks among five types of outcomes that could be categorized as “dangerous.”

The study authors contend that there is new and stronger evidence since 2001 of observed impacts of climate change on unique and vulnerable systems, with increasing levels of adverse impacts as temperatures increase further.

Risk of extreme weather events, which tracks increases in extreme events with substantial consequences for societies and natural systems.

Examples include increase in the frequency, intensity, or consequences of heat waves, floods, droughts, wildfires or tropical cyclones.

The study authors point to new and stronger evidence of the likelihood and likely impacts of such changes, such as the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report conclusion that it is now “more likely than not” that human activity has contributed to observed increases in heat waves, intense precipitation events, and intensity of tropical cyclones.

Distribution of impacts, which concern disparities of impacts, i.e. whether the poor are more vulnerable than the wealthy.

Some regions, countries, and populations face greater harm from climate change while other regions, countries, or populations would be much less harmed – and some may benefit.

The researchers find, for example, there is increased evidence that low-latitude and less-developed areas generally face greater risk than higher latitude and more developed countries and there will likely be disparate impacts even for different groups within developed countries.

Impacts distributed across the globe can be aggregated into a single metric such as monetary damages, lives affected, or lives lost.

The study authors determine that it is likely there will be higher damages for increases in average global temperature then previously thought, and climate change over the next century will likely adversely impact hundreds of millions of people. (ANI)

Lower increases in global temps could lead to greater impacts than previously thought

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A new study has determined that lower increases in global temperatures could lead to greater impacts than previously thought.

The study was undertaken by scientists updating some of the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2001 Third Assessment Report.

They found that even a lower level of increase in average global temperatures due to greenhouse gas emissions could cause significant problems in five key areas of global concern.

In 2001, the IPCC published as part of its Third Assessment Report an illustrative figure which identified changes in climate authors determined to be “reasons for concern,” and which could cause some or significant risks among five types of outcomes that could be categorized as “dangerous.”

The study authors contend that there is new and stronger evidence since 2001 of observed impacts of climate change on unique and vulnerable systems, with increasing levels of adverse impacts as temperatures increase further.

Risk of extreme weather events, which tracks increases in extreme events with substantial consequences for societies and natural systems.

Examples include increase in the frequency, intensity, or consequences of heat waves, floods, droughts, wildfires or tropical cyclones.

The study authors point to new and stronger evidence of the likelihood and likely impacts of such changes, such as the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report conclusion that it is now “more likely than not” that human activity has contributed to observed increases in heat waves, intense precipitation events, and intensity of tropical cyclones.

Distribution of impacts, which concern disparities of impacts, i.e. whether the poor are more vulnerable than the wealthy.

Some regions, countries, and populations face greater harm from climate change while other regions, countries, or populations would be much less harmed – and some may benefit.

The researchers find, for example, there is increased evidence that low-latitude and less-developed areas generally face greater risk than higher latitude and more developed countries and there will likely be disparate impacts even for different groups within developed countries.

Impacts distributed across the globe can be aggregated into a single metric such as monetary damages, lives affected, or lives lost.

The study authors determine that it is likely there will be higher damages for increases in average global temperature then previously thought, and climate change over the next century will likely adversely impact hundreds of millions of people. (ANI)

Lower increases in global temps could lead to greater impacts than previously thought

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A new study has determined that lower increases in global temperatures could lead to greater impacts than previously thought.

The study was undertaken by scientists updating some of the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2001 Third Assessment Report.

They found that even a lower level of increase in average global temperatures due to greenhouse gas emissions could cause significant problems in five key areas of global concern.

In 2001, the IPCC published as part of its Third Assessment Report an illustrative figure which identified changes in climate authors determined to be “reasons for concern,” and which could cause some or significant risks among five types of outcomes that could be categorized as “dangerous.”

The study authors contend that there is new and stronger evidence since 2001 of observed impacts of climate change on unique and vulnerable systems, with increasing levels of adverse impacts as temperatures increase further.

Risk of extreme weather events, which tracks increases in extreme events with substantial consequences for societies and natural systems.

Examples include increase in the frequency, intensity, or consequences of heat waves, floods, droughts, wildfires or tropical cyclones.

The study authors point to new and stronger evidence of the likelihood and likely impacts of such changes, such as the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report conclusion that it is now “more likely than not” that human activity has contributed to observed increases in heat waves, intense precipitation events, and intensity of tropical cyclones.

Distribution of impacts, which concern disparities of impacts, i.e. whether the poor are more vulnerable than the wealthy.

Some regions, countries, and populations face greater harm from climate change while other regions, countries, or populations would be much less harmed – and some may benefit.

The researchers find, for example, there is increased evidence that low-latitude and less-developed areas generally face greater risk than higher latitude and more developed countries and there will likely be disparate impacts even for different groups within developed countries.

Impacts distributed across the globe can be aggregated into a single metric such as monetary damages, lives affected, or lives lost.

The study authors determine that it is likely there will be higher damages for increases in average global temperature then previously thought, and climate change over the next century will likely adversely impact hundreds of millions of people. (ANI)

Lower increases in global temps could lead to greater impacts than previously thought

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A new study has determined that lower increases in global temperatures could lead to greater impacts than previously thought.

The study was undertaken by scientists updating some of the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 2001 Third Assessment Report.

They found that even a lower level of increase in average global temperatures due to greenhouse gas emissions could cause significant problems in five key areas of global concern.

In 2001, the IPCC published as part of its Third Assessment Report an illustrative figure which identified changes in climate authors determined to be “reasons for concern,” and which could cause some or significant risks among five types of outcomes that could be categorized as “dangerous.”

The study authors contend that there is new and stronger evidence since 2001 of observed impacts of climate change on unique and vulnerable systems, with increasing levels of adverse impacts as temperatures increase further.

Risk of extreme weather events, which tracks increases in extreme events with substantial consequences for societies and natural systems.

Examples include increase in the frequency, intensity, or consequences of heat waves, floods, droughts, wildfires or tropical cyclones.

The study authors point to new and stronger evidence of the likelihood and likely impacts of such changes, such as the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report conclusion that it is now “more likely than not” that human activity has contributed to observed increases in heat waves, intense precipitation events, and intensity of tropical cyclones.

Distribution of impacts, which concern disparities of impacts, i.e. whether the poor are more vulnerable than the wealthy.

Some regions, countries, and populations face greater harm from climate change while other regions, countries, or populations would be much less harmed – and some may benefit.

The researchers find, for example, there is increased evidence that low-latitude and less-developed areas generally face greater risk than higher latitude and more developed countries and there will likely be disparate impacts even for different groups within developed countries.

Impacts distributed across the globe can be aggregated into a single metric such as monetary damages, lives affected, or lives lost.

The study authors determine that it is likely there will be higher damages for increases in average global temperature then previously thought, and climate change over the next century will likely adversely impact hundreds of millions of people. (ANI)

Songbirds fly 3 times faster than expected

Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): By tracking the migration of songbirds, scientists have found that they have, till now, underestimated the birds’ flight performance dramatically, and have determined that the species actually fly 3 times faster than expected.

Bridget Stutchbury, a professor of biology in University of York’s Faculty of Science and Engineering, and her team, fitted some songbirds with tiny geolocator backpacks, in order to track the migration route that the birds take.

“Never before has anyone been able to track songbirds for their entire migratory trip,” said Stutchbury. “We’re excited to achieve this scientific first,” she added.

Stutchbury and her team mounted miniaturized geolocators on 14 wood thrushes and 20 purple martins, breeding in Pennsylvania during 2007, tracking the birds’ fall takeoff, migration to South America, and journey back to North America.

The geolocators, which are smaller than a dime, detect light, allowing researchers to estimate birds’ latitude and longitude by recording sunrise and sunset times.

The devices are mounted on birds’ backs by looping thin straps around their legs. The weight of the geolocator rests at the base of the bird’s spine, so as not to interfere with its balance.

In the summer of 2008, the team retrieved the geolocators from five wood thrushes and two purple martins and reconstructed individual migration routes and wintering locations.

Data from the geolocators indicated that songbirds can fly in excess of 500 km (311 miles) per day.

Previous studies estimated their flight performance at roughly 150 km (93 miles) per day.

The new study found that songbirds’ overall migration rate was two to six times more rapid in spring than in fall.

“We were flabbergasted by the birds’ spring return times. To have a bird leave Brazil on April 12 and be home by the end of the month was just astounding. We always assumed they left sometime in March,” said Stutchbury.

She emphasized the importance of this research not only to protect at-risk species of songbirds, but also to gauge environmental concerns.

“Tracking birds to their wintering areas is also essential for predicting the impact of tropical habitat loss and climate change,” she said.

“Until now, our hands have been tied in many ways, because we didn’t know where the birds were going. They would just disappear and then come back in the spring. It’s wonderful to now have a window into their journey,” she added. (ANI)

Songbirds fly 3 times faster than expected

Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): By tracking the migration of songbirds, scientists have found that they have, till now, underestimated the birds’ flight performance dramatically, and have determined that the species actually fly 3 times faster than expected.

Bridget Stutchbury, a professor of biology in University of York’s Faculty of Science and Engineering, and her team, fitted some songbirds with tiny geolocator backpacks, in order to track the migration route that the birds take.

“Never before has anyone been able to track songbirds for their entire migratory trip,” said Stutchbury. “We’re excited to achieve this scientific first,” she added.

Stutchbury and her team mounted miniaturized geolocators on 14 wood thrushes and 20 purple martins, breeding in Pennsylvania during 2007, tracking the birds’ fall takeoff, migration to South America, and journey back to North America.

The geolocators, which are smaller than a dime, detect light, allowing researchers to estimate birds’ latitude and longitude by recording sunrise and sunset times.

The devices are mounted on birds’ backs by looping thin straps around their legs. The weight of the geolocator rests at the base of the bird’s spine, so as not to interfere with its balance.

In the summer of 2008, the team retrieved the geolocators from five wood thrushes and two purple martins and reconstructed individual migration routes and wintering locations.

Data from the geolocators indicated that songbirds can fly in excess of 500 km (311 miles) per day.revious studies estimated their flight performance at roughly 150 km (93 miles) per day.

The new study found that songbirds’ overall migration rate was two to six times more rapid in spring than in fall.

“We were flabbergasted by the birds’ spring return times. To have a bird leave Brazil on April 12 and be home by the end of the month was just astounding. We always assumed they left sometime in March,” said Stutchbury.

She emphasized the importance of this research not only to protect at-risk species of songbirds, but also to gauge environmental concerns.

“Tracking birds to their wintering areas is also essential for predicting the impact of tropical habitat loss and climate change,” she said.

“Until now, our hands have been tied in many ways, because we didn’t know where the birds were going. They would just disappear and then come back in the spring. It’s wonderful to now have a window into their journey,” she added. (ANI)

Songbirds fly 3 times faster than expected

Washington, Feb 14 (ANI): By tracking the migration of songbirds, scientists have found that they have, till now, underestimated the birds’ flight performance dramatically, and have determined that the species actually fly 3 times faster than expected.

Bridget Stutchbury, a professor of biology in University of York’s Faculty of Science and Engineering, and her team, fitted some songbirds with tiny geolocator backpacks, in order to track the migration route that the birds take.

“Never before has anyone been able to track songbirds for their entire migratory trip,” said Stutchbury. “We’re excited to achieve this scientific first,” she added.

Stutchbury and her team mounted miniaturized geolocators on 14 wood thrushes and 20 purple martins, breeding in Pennsylvania during 2007, tracking the birds’ fall takeoff, migration to South America, and journey back to North America.

The geolocators, which are smaller than a dime, detect light, allowing researchers to estimate birds’ latitude and longitude by recording sunrise and sunset times.

The devices are mounted on birds’ backs by looping thin straps around their legs. The weight of the geolocator rests at the base of the bird’s spine, so as not to interfere with its balance.

In the summer of 2008, the team retrieved the geolocators from five wood thrushes and two purple martins and reconstructed individual migration routes and wintering locations.

Data from the geolocators indicated that songbirds can fly in excess of 500 km (311 miles) per day.revious studies estimated their flight performance at roughly 150 km (93 miles) per day.

The new study found that songbirds’ overall migration rate was two to six times more rapid in spring than in fall.

“We were flabbergasted by the birds’ spring return times. To have a bird leave Brazil on April 12 and be home by the end of the month was just astounding. We always assumed they left sometime in March,” said Stutchbury.

She emphasized the importance of this research not only to protect at-risk species of songbirds, but also to gauge environmental concerns.

“Tracking birds to their wintering areas is also essential for predicting the impact of tropical habitat loss and climate change,” she said.

“Until now, our hands have been tied in many ways, because we didn’t know where the birds were going. They would just disappear and then come back in the spring. It’s wonderful to now have a window into their journey,” she added. (ANI)

Strauss faces severe test after 51-run capitulation

Jamaica (West Indies), Feb.9 (ANI): England’s cricketers who are currently on a tour of the West Indies will need to pull up their socks, and be brutally honest about their latest performance at Jamaica’s Sabina Park, a report in The Independent says.

According to the paper, while they must move on, they also need to look back and learn, and quickly.

The innings and 23 run defeat against the West Indies, will ensure that the England cricketers have a rethink on whether they do really have the abundant talent in their dressing room that they keep speaking about in public.

“England are now in the classic position of all such sufferers. Until they recognize their shortcomings nothing can be done to address them. If being bowled out for 51 by a largely unsung West Indies side and losing the first Test by an innings and 23 runs does not put an end to their sophistry, then nothing will,” warns the paper.
It further goes onto say that the “seeds of this destruction were sown in the wake of the Ashes triumph of 2005. They began to take deep root during the return series against Australia 18 months later and have since sprouted in several corners of Planet Cricket from Galle to Hamilton.”

The trumpeting about their talent now seems risible as each batsman came and went, undone by ill-conceived strokes and extremely high-class bowling.

The West Indies, on the other hand, were a revelation.

“The way they ended the match might have been bewilderingly spectacular but over the course of the three-and-a-bit days that went before those final 150 minutes they had been the more dogged and disciplined side,” says the paper.
It has been a shocking start to Andrew Strauss’s captaincy. The result was bad enough but he had made it plain within days of assuming office that his tenure would be based on players taking responsibility. Instead responsibility was a stranger, almost an enemy, and nobody wanted any truck with it.

“These batsmen have been given plenty of latitude by the selectors. The top six who failed lamentably on Saturday were the same top six who left Sydney abjectly two years ago after being beaten 5-0 by Australia.

Indeed, eight of the team who lost in Sydney in January 2007 lost in Kingston. This is taking to the extreme the idea that everybody deserves a shot at redemption,” the paper concludes. (ANI)

The sat nag that’s the bane of bunking employees, love cheats’ lives!

London, February 5 (ANI): Google techies have come up with a new Internet service that can put bunking employees and love cheats in danger, for the device can show their exact location.

The Google service, which works with Google Maps, can tell where a person exactly is by making use of GPS sat-nav signals from his/her mobile phone.

However, for those wishing to disconnect or manually programme their phone to conceal certain locations have the option to do so.

While company bosses and parents can rejoice, critics are apprehensive that employees may be forced to participate in the service, which can unveil somebody’s location on a phone or computers in a jiffy.

Users can then call, text or email them with a single click, reports the Sun.

Gadget guru Stuart Miles revealed the latest latitude technology “will send a chill down many people’s spines”.

The hi-fi navigation service will be formerly compatible with BlackBerries, latest Nokia phones and Windows Mobile devices. (ANI)

Jamie Bell to be Tintin, Craig villain in Spielberg flick

London, January 28 (ANI): BAFTA-winning English actor Jamie Bell has been chosen to provide the voice and movement for the cartoon character Tintin in Steven Spielberg’s animation film.

The signing of Bell to do voice-overs for the Belgian journalist in the film ‘The Adventures of Tintin: Secret of the Unicorn’ is the last key casting decision in the project, which has taken almost 30 years to come to fruition.

The appointment of Bell, who appeared as the title character in Billy Elliot at the age of 14, to play Tintin coincides with the announcement that James Bond star Daniel Craig will play Red Rackham, one of the villains of the story.

Craig recently starred opposite Bell in Defiance, an action drama set during the Second World War.

Other British actors associated with the project are Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, who will portray Thompson and Thomson, the pair of bowler-hatted detectives with no instinct for solving crime.

Andy Serkis, the British actor who appeared as Gollum in the Rings trilogy, will play Captain Haddock, the whisky-soaked sea dog who acts as Tintin’s travelling companion.

Toby Jones, who recently portrayed Karl Rove in W, and Mackenzie Crook, who appeared in the television series The Office and the Pirates of the Caribbean films, will be the other English stars to join them.

Mark Rodwell, of Moulinsart, which controls the rights to Tintin, said that the film-makers were allowed a certain degree of latitude as long as they did not alter the fundamentals of the story.

“I don’t think a love interest would be possible. But when you’re transforming something from the written page on to the big screen you have to have some new characters. What Steven and Peter (Jackson) are trying to do is be as true to Herge’s original story as possible but they have to have some artistic licence,” Times Online quoted him as saying.

Spielberg bought the option to create a Tintin film from Herge in 1982, a year before the author’s death. It lapsed in the late 1980s but the director took out another in 2003.

He exercised it four years later when he felt that animation technology had become sophisticated enough to do the books justice. (ANI)

Dinosaurs might have died out rapidly

London, January 20 (ANI): An analysis of fossils that were recently found in the Arctic suggests that the dinosaurs might have died out quickly, contrasting the idea that the massive reptiles declined slowly.

The study also suggests that the rapid extinction of dinosaurs might have resulted from an event like a massive meteor hitting Earth.

The finding contravenes the idea that dinosaurs were already declining by this time.

While geological evidence indicates that an impact occurred near the Yucatan Peninsula at the end of the Cretaceous 66 million years ago, it has still continued to be a matter of debate whether the event created an all-out apocalypse that wiped out the dinosaurs.

Even though many species died out, many others survived, including mammals and the small-feathered dinosaurs that were the ancestors of present-day birds.

Some palaeontologists are of the opinion that non-avian dinosaurs were in decline before the impact – perhaps as a result of major volcanic events or global cooling.

However, Pascal Godefroit and his colleagues at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences insist that they have analysed fossils found in northeastern Russia, and found that dinosaurs were not in decline at all.

Reporting their study in Naturwissenschaften, the researchers say that no doubt dinosaur fossils have already been found in the Arctic, but the new find is unique because of its age.

Godefroit’s team have dated the beds at between 68 million and 65 million years old, just before the time of the extinction.

“We found that there is no indication that the biodiversity of dinosaurs decreased just before the (extinction) event,” Nature magazine quoted Godefroit as saying.

The researchers discovered that herbivorous, duck-billed hadrosaurs and velociraptor-like bipedal theropods seemed to be as common as they were in other parts of the planet at the time.

They even say that the presence of dinosaur eggshells found in polar regions also goes to show that the massive reptiles were residents rather than migrants.

However, palaeontologists are still proceeding with caution about the suggestion that the dinosaurs were not declining at the time.

“The presence of these dinosaurs is certainly concordant with the idea of a sudden extinction, but not incontrovertible evidence for it,” says Tom Rich of Museum Victoria in Melbourne, Australia.

Robert Spicer of the Open University’s Earth sciences department in Milton Keynes, UK, suggests that when the dinosaurs died out, the site might have lain along the edge of the Arctic Circle rather than deep within it.

“The weak link here is the palaeoposition of the site. With that said, such diversity even at this latitude suggests that dinosaurs were far more robust than we give them credit for. It makes me ask very serious questions about what could make animals that were resilient enough to live under these conditions suddenly go extinct,” he said.

Bill Clemens of the University of California, Berkeley, believes that attributing the extinction of dinosaurs to any one cause would not be right, for some other stuties have suggested that their decline involved a variety of factors ranging from the introduction of predators to disease and habitat loss.

“Ask what is endangering modern amphibians, the answer varies according to species. I think the same was probably true with the dinosaurs,” he said. (ANI)