Argonaut octopuses use shells as flotation devices

Melbourne, May 19 (ANI): Australian researchers have found that unique, free-swimming octopuses called argonauts, use their stunning white shells to remain neutrally buoyant beneath the sea surface.

For the first time, Dr Julian Finn and Dr Mark Norman from Museum Victoria in Melbourne have observed the animals, Argonauta argo, in the wild, in the Sea of Japan.

The research say that females of these rarely-seen octopuses actively fill their shells with air, and then jet down into the water column, where the air compresses as water pressure increases with depth.

This allows argonauts to remain neutrally buoyant at depths of up to 10 metres, with the volume of air in their shells exactly compensating for their weight, they researchers say.

Finn took three female argonauts captured by Japanese fishermen scuba diving in Okidomari Harbour on the western coast of Honshu, and released them at depths of 2-7 metres. Prior to release, the shells were depleted of air.

All three argonauts jetted to the surface and rocked their shells forward to ”gulp” air, which they then sealed in their shells with specially-adapted tentacles.

The argonauts then dived until buoyancy from the trapped, compressed air cancelled their weight.

“To my delight the argonauts immediately put to rest decades of conflicting opinions, demonstrating their expert ability at obtaining and managing surface-acquired air,” ABC Science quoted Finn as saying.

“Female argonauts released with no air in their shells flailed from side-to-side when swimming, struggling to maintain vertical orientation. Argonauts released with ample air in their shells at the water surface displayed no difficulty in diving to depth,” Finn added.

The findings have been reported in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

South Korea claims North has test-fired three more missiles

Seoul (South Korea), July 4 (ANI): South Korea’s Defence Ministry said on Saturday that North Korea had test-fired three missiles, further stoking tensions in the international community, which continues to berate Pyongyang for its nuclear ambitions.

The firing of the missiles, reported to have a range of up to 500 kilometres (312 miles), follow a series of missile launches earlier this week by North Korea.

A spokesperson of the South Korean Defence Ministry claimed that the first two of the three missiles were launched between 8 and 8.30 a.m., while the third one was fired at 10:45 a.m. local time.

She said all three missiles were launched from the Kitdaeryong Base, near the eastern port of Wonsan, into the East Sea (Sea of Japan).

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency said the first two missiles were Scuds.

North Korea fired four short-range missiles on Thursday into the Sea of Japan but the range of those missiles was estimated to be only around 120 km.

Japan condemned the latest missile launches as a “serious act of provocation.”

“It is a serious act of provocation against the security of neighbouring countries, including our country,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Takeo Kawamura was quoted by Jiji Press as saying.

The Japanese government’s top spokesman said the act was also against a UN Security Council resolution, according to Jiji.

North Korea has made a series of bellicose moves this year. It launched a long-range rocket on April 5 and followed it up with a nuclear test on May 25.

Thereafter, the country has fired a total of six short-range missiles, renounced the truce on the Korean peninsula that has been in place for for half a century and threatened to attack South Korea. (ANI)

Chinese schools were evacuated after North Korea nuclear test

Chinese schools were evacuated after North Korea nuclear test Beijing – Authorities evacuated schools in eight border districts of north-eastern China after Monday’s declared nuclear test by North Korea, according to reports seen on Wednesday.

The Chinese authorities also moved to reassure local residents that no earthquake had taken place, after the tremor of the nuclear blast was felt.

Dozens of schools were evacuated following the shockwaves from the blast in eight districts of Yanbian, which lies about 180 kilometres from the site of the nuclear test.

The schools’ pupils returned to classrooms once an all-clear was sounded, local state media reported.

The seismological bureau in the prefecture of Yanbian, which has a long border with North Korea in China’s Jilin province, had initially said it recorded an “earthquake of
4.5 magnitude” – at the time the nuclear test took place on Monday morning.

“There was no earthquake in Yanbian prefecture and no earthquake in Yanji city,” the city government of Yanji clarified later in a statement. “Please citizens, don’t panic,” it added.

China on Tuesday said it had informed North Korea of its “firm opposition” to its neighbour’s nuclear test, again urging Pyongyang to resume negotiations on ending its nuclear weapons programme.

North Korea on Wednesday fired a short-range missile across the Sea of Japan, its fifth such launch since Monday’s nuclear test, which was unanimously condemned by the UN Security Council in New York. (dpa)

Japan orders military to destroy North Korea rocket

Tokyo, Mar.27 (ANI): Japan has ordered its military to destroy any part of the rocket that North Korea is planning to fire early next month should it approach Japanese territory.

A meeting of the Security Council of Japan approved the decision out of concern that debris from the missile – which Pyongyang claims is a launch vehicle for a satellite – could land on northern Japan, report The Telegraph.

“I issued the necessary order to the Self-Defence Forces … to prepare for an event in which a North Korean projectile falls onto our country in an accident,” the paper quoted Defence Minister Yasukazu Hamada, as saying.

“It is important to deal with and eliminate the North Korean projectile should it threaten the safety and security of the people by entering our airspace or falling into our waters or soil,” he added.

As a precaution, Patriot surface-to-air missiles are being deployed in coastal regions of Akita and Iwate prefectures, north of Tokyo, while two Maritime Self-Defence Force destroyers are expected to put to sea from the naval base at Sasebo, near Nagasaki, in the near future and take up station in the Sea of Japan.

North Korea has stated that it has the right to launch the experimental communications satellite and that it will consider any attempt to intercept the rocket as a hostile act.

It has also threatened to withdraw from the six-party talks on eliminating nuclear weapons from the Korean peninsula and, on Thursday, warned that it is considering resuming its atomic weapons programme.

Pyongyang says the launch has been set for some time between April 4 and 8. (ANI)

South Korea blasts North Korea’s warning on flights

Press Trust of India
Friday, March 06, 2009, (Seoul)
South Korea on Friday blasted North Korea’s warning on South Korean flights flying over the North’s airspace and the Sea of Japan, calling the move an “inhumane act”.

The North’s “military warning on civilian flights flying in accordance with international flight regulations is an inhumane act and should never be tolerated under any circumstances,” Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Ho Nyong said, reading a statement at a press briefing.

North Korea on Thursday warned it can no longer assure the safety of South Korean passenger flights flying over its airspace and the Sea of Japan, protesting a joint military exercise by South Korea and the United States scheduled to start from next Monday to March 20.

“Under the situation no one knows what military conflicts will be touched off,” according to a statement from the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, monitored by Yonhap news Agency.

North Korea is “compelled to declare that security cannot be guaranteed for South Korean civil airplanes flying through the territorial air of our side and its vicinity above the East Sea of Korea, in particular, while the military exercises are under way,” the statement said.

South Korean airlines Korean Air and Asiana Airlines said on Friday that they have rerouted flights to stay well clear of North Korean airspace after the North’s warning, according to airline officials.

The North’s warning came amid reports that North Korea is prepared to launch a longer range ballistic missile, following missile launches in 1998 and 2006.