Froghoppers use ‘archery techniques’ for record-breaking jumps

Washington, November 16: University of Cambridge researchers have found that froghoppers use archery techniques to achieve the jump of 700 mm, more than 100 times their own body length.

Writing about their findings in the open access journal BMC Biology, the researchers have revealed that froghoppers achieve their prowess by flexing bow-like structures between their hind legs and wings and releasing the energy in one giant leap in a catapult-like action.

Research leader Malcolm Burrows said that his research focused on determining how the energy generated by the insects” muscles is stored before powering a jump.

He said: “A froghopper stores energy by bending a paired bow-shaped part of its internal skeleton called a ”pleural arch” which is a composite structure made of layers of hard cuticle and a rubbery protein called resilin. When the froghopper contracts its muscles to jump, these arches flex like a composite archery bow, and then on recoil catapult it forwards with a force that can be over 400 times its body mass”.

The researcher also said that there were further parallels with the jumping mechanisms of froghoppers and the design of composite bows used in archery.

He said that the composite of a hard and an elastic material meant that the skeleton of a froghopper, or an archery bow, could resist damage even if they were bent for a long time.

According to him, froghoppers hold the pleural arch in a bent ”ready position”, ready to jump at a moment”s notice, and to be able to jump repeatedly without damaging the body. (ANI)

Little honey, lemon in hot water can help treat kids’ cough and cold

Washington, Wondering how to treat your kid’s cough and cold without using medicines? Well, a little honey and lemon in hot water will do the trick for your little one, says a leading health expert.

Parents concerned about the safety and effectiveness of over-the-counter pediatric cough and cold medicines often opt for home remedies.

“A cold is caused by a virus that cannot be killed by an antibiotic,” said Jacqueline Kaari, a pediatrician and chair of pediatrics at the UMDNJ-School of Osteopathic Medicine.

“Nothing, including over-the-counter cough and cold medicines, will make it go away faster, but you can treat the symptoms,” she added.

Kaari suggests that making them drink honey and lemon in hot water or decaffeinated tea can effectively cure their cough.

For kids suffering from cold steam, such as shower steam, will help loosen secretions.

A good nutrition and drinking plenty of liquids would also work effectively.

Use of cool mist humidifier to moisturize air passageways or throat lozenges to relieve sore throat when age appropriate, would help in faster recovery.

Kaari also urges parents to keep children home from school for one to three days and for at least 24 hours after they have had a fever.

She suggested that using Tylenol, following the recommended dosage instructions could be effective for a fever. (ANI)

Bush successor to inherit Middle East quagmire

Tel Aviv/Ramallah – There are not many parts of the world where George W Bush – one of the most unpopular US presidents in history – is as well liked as he was in Israel.

It remains to be seen whether his successor, either Democrat Barack Obama or Republican John McCain, will be able to fill his shoes.

Outgoing Israeli premier Ehud Olmert called Bush “our closest ally and partner” and “a force of inspiration” during a visit in May. President Shimon Peres welcomed him as a “dear” and “Biblical” friend of Israel.

Bush boycotted late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat at the height of the second Palestinian uprising against Israel. In a 2004 letter to former Israeli premier Ariel Sharon, he effectively promised Israel it would be able to keep its main settlement blocks in the West Bank as part of a negotiated peace deal with the Palestinians, an unprecedented written pledge granted in exchange for Sharon’s unilateral pullout from the Gaza Strip.

On the flip side, the administration often emphasized how Bush was the first US president to publicly call for the establishment of a Palestinian state.

But his policy of rewarding moderates like Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, while isolating the radical Islamic Hamas movement in the Gaza Strip, will have failed abysmally if Israel and Abbas’ West Bank-based administration fail to achieve their stated goal of signing a peace deal before Bush leaves office. The deadline looms.

His successor will likely be left to deal with a Hamas that continues to control the Gaza Strip. Plus, Abbas’ term as president ends January 9.

In Israel, the high-profile negotiations with Abbas have been pushed to the background by Olmert’s resignation amid corruption allegations and possible early elections by March if Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, the new leader of the centrist Kadima party, fails to form a new government. In such a case, the next US president could find himself dealing with the hawkish Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister, currently the favourite to win new elections.

Area residents have no illusion that their conflict will be an immediate top priority for the president-elect, who will be preoccupied with other urgent issues, not least of which will be the economic crisis.

Palestinians keep track of the polls, but not passionately. The vast majority of them express apathy, saying neither Obama nor McCain would make any difference to their cause. Many feel any US president would be biased toward Israel.

When asked to make a choice though, they express a clear preference for Obama. McCain, they say, would only mean a continuation of Bush’s “extreme, hawkish, anti-Arab” policies.

The latest opinion poll, conducted by the East Jerusalem Media and Communications Centre early this month in the West Bank and Gaza, gave the Democrat 37 per cent of the vote, while McCain only got 15 per cent. The rest – representing nearly half of Palestinians – did not know who they preferred or had no answer. The poll included 1,200 Palestinians.

Palestinians appreciate the fact that Obama took time to meet Abbas in the West Bank city of Ramallah during his 30-hour visit to Israel in July. This contrasted with McCain, who visited Israel in March but only telephoned the Palestinian leader.

In Israel, the attitudes are less clear cut. What is clear is that MCain is no longer the strong favourite.

But voters remain wary of Obama, due to a perceived lack of foreign policy experience and concerns about his calls to enter into a dialogue with Iran, a nation some Israelis see as a major threat.

A poll conducted by Kevoon, a Tel Aviv-based institute, gave McCain a 7-per-cent lead over Obama among Israelis. At the same time, an Israel Radio poll gave Obama a 9-per-cent lead over McCain.

Obama gets his support from left-wing, liberal Israelis. But the Israel Radio poll showed conservative voters are divided and have no clear preference for McCain, despite him being the natural successor of the Israel-friendly Bush.

“What can McCain do that Clinton or Bush haven’t tried?,” said Benny Razon, a 35-year-old electrician in Tel Aviv and a self- described fervent Likud supporter, summing up his feelings. “Obama has new blood, young blood. He’ll try new things.” dpa

Resurgence of Rheumatoid arthritis among women

Resurgence of Rheumatoid arthritis among womenResurgence of rheumatoid arthritis has been noticed among women in United States. The disease which was dormant for over four decades has seen an uprising. From the year 1955 up to 1994 the incidence rate of the disease showed downward trend while the prevalence and incidence rate from 1995 to 2005 was noticed as gaining strength.

A comparison between the records of the previous decade and the recent one was done and it was found that astonishingly an increment in the number of women developing this disease was noticed. Previously it was 36 out of every 100,000 women yearly who acquired it but now it was 54 while the men recorded at 29 per 100,000 and the population in its entirety rose from 0.85 to 0.95 percent.

The study was conducted upon 350 adult patients who fell into the average age of 56.5 years and where 69 percent were women and all hailed from Olmsted County, Minnesota. The results of the data collected were presented forth in the annual meeting of the American College of Rheumatology/Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals by the Mayo Clinic investigators at San Francisco.

The researchers concluded that they too were unsure of the recent development that is taking place among women in U.S. but doubted that environmental factors might have a role in shifting the incidence as well as prevalence rate among the fairer sex. A Mayo Clinic rheumatologist and lead investigator of the study, Sherine Gabriel said, “More research needs to be done to better understand the causes and treatment of this devastating disease.”

Electrical brain stimulation boosts people’s dexterity

Washington, Electrically stimulating the brain with a non-invasive technique called transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can improve a person’s skill at handling delicate tasks.

According to the Drs. Gottfried Schlaug and Bradley Vines from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, tDCS could improve the use of a person”s non-dominant hand.

In tDCS, electrodes are attached to the scalp and a weak direct current is passed the scalp and skull to alter the excitability of the underlying brain tissue.

The treatment has two principal modes depending on the direction in which the current runs between the two electrodes. Brain tissue that underlies the positive electrode
(anode) becomes more excitable, and it is the other way round for brain tissue that underlies the negative electrode (cathode).

For the study, the researchers tested the effects of tDCS over one side or both sides of the brain on sixteen healthy, right-handed volunteers, as well as testing the effect of simply pretending to carry out the procedure. The test involved using the fingers of the left hand to key in a series of numbers displayed on a computer screen.

The participants were didn’t know which of the three procedures they were receiving.

The researchers saw striking results— a 24 percent improvement in the subjects” scores was seen after stimulating the brain over both the right and left motor regions (”dual hemisphere” tDCS), much better than stimulating the brain only over one motor region or using the sham treatment.

There were no relevant negative side effects with this type of non-invasive brain stimulation.

The tDCS is different from electroconvulsive therapy, which uses currents around a thousand times higher.

“The results of our study are relevant to clinical research on motor recovery after stroke. They point to the possibility that stimulating both sides of the brain simultaneously, using the effects of the direct current to block unwanted effects of one motor region while using the opposite effects of the direct current treatment on the other motor region to enhance and facilitate the function of that motor region might catalyze motor recovery,” said Schlaug.

The study was published in the open access journal BMC Neuroscience. (ANI)

Hezbollah condemns “terrorist crime’ committed by U.S. in Syria

Beirut – The Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah movement has condemned the US raid in Syria as a “terrorist crime” that violated Syrian sovereignty, Lebanese media reported said Tuesday.

Hezbollah, in a statement, also urged the Arab League and Arab states to “shoulder their responsibilities because they are threatened by similar attacks,” according to Voice of Lebanon radio.

“US occupation and Israeli occupation pose a threat to the region’s peace and stability,” the statement said.

The Syrian government and Arab leaders in the region have expressed outrage over the purported US helicopter raid Sunday targeting militants in the town of Abu Kamal.

The Syrians said eight innocent civilians, among them children, were killed. Damascus summoned the US and Iraqi envoys to protest against the attack.

US media citing officials on Monday reported that the US military strike in Syria is believed to have killed a top al-Qaeda operative responsible for smuggling of insurgents into Iraq.

The White House has however refused to comment publicly on the matter. (dpa)

Now, laptops to detect quakes!

Washington, Oct 28 : In a new project, scientists have used laptops to detect several earthquakes, taking the help of small accelerometer chips inside the machines.

The project is known as the project Quake Catcher Network (QCN).

Scientists have found out that the tiny accelerometer chip is a pretty good earthquake sensor as well, especially if the signals from lots of them are compared, in order to filter out more mundane sources of laptop vibrations, such as typing.

The project has about 1500 laptops connected in a network that has detected several tremors, including a magnitude 5.4 quake in Los Angeles in July this year.

Led by Elizabeth Cochran at the University of California, Riverside, and Jesse Lawrence at Stanford University, QCN uses the same BOINC platform for volunteer computing that projects like SETI@home rely on.

One of the benefits of this new technology is price.

Research-grade earthquake sensors typically cost between 10,000 dollars and 100,000 dollars. Though they are much more sensitive, and can detect the subtle signals of far-away quakes that laptops will never pick up, but they are expensive.

According to Lawrence, “With many more cheap sensors, instead of guessing where strong motions were felt by interpolating between sensors, we should be able to know where strong motions were felt immediately, because we have sensors there.”

Another advantage is that QCN sensors can record the maximum ground shaking.

Many high-sensitivity sensors cut short the full extent of the oscillations they are measuring even for moderate earthquakes.

Lawrence said that with enough sensors, eventually “we should have the ability to triangulate earthquakes for earthquake early warning, providing several seconds of warning before the earthquake hits neighboring populated regions.”

Carl Christensen, a distributed computing expert, is working on integrating stand-alone sensors that attach to desktop machines with USB connections.

These USB sensors can be as cheap as 30 dollars, and the idea is to have large numbers of them sponsored as educational tools for schools.

“The USB accelerometers will provide a stable backbone, without which the ever-changing configuration of laptops would not be quite as reliable,” said Lawrence.

“The USB accelerometers can also mount directly to the floor, which means they will have better sensitivity to ground motions,” he added. (ANI)

Now, roses, violets and lilies under threat by global warming

Washington,A new study has determined that some of the world’s most beloved species of flowers like lilies, orchids, violets, roses, and dogwoods have also been hit by global warming.

The study, by scientists at Harvard University, US, have found that different plant families near Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, have borne the effects of climate change in strikingly different ways.

Over the past 150 years, some of the plants in Thoreau’s woods have shifted their flowering time by as much as three weeks as spring temperatures have risen, the researchers say, while others have been less flexible.

Many plant families that have proven unable to adjust their flowering time have experienced sharp declines or even elimination from the local landscape.

“It had been thought that climate change would result in uniform shifts across plant species, but our work shows that plant species do not respond to climate change uniformly or randomly,” said Charles C. Davis, assistant professor of organismic and evolutionary biology in Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

“Some plants around Walden Pond have been quite resilient in the face of climate change, while others have fared far worse. Closely related species that are not able to adjust their flowering times in the face of rising temperatures are decreasing in abundance,” he added.

Some 27 percent of all species Thoreau recorded in the mid-19th century are now locally extinct, and another 36 percent are so sparse that extinction may be imminent.

Plant families that have been especially hard-hit by global warming have included lilies, orchids, buttercups, violets, roses, dogwoods, and mints.

Many of the gainers have been weedier mustards and knotweeds, along with various non-native species.

“The species harmed by climate change are among the most charismatic found in the New England landscape,” Davis said.

According to Davis, “The plants in our survey now flower, on average, one week earlier in the spring than their ancestors did in Thoreau’s time.”

“However, there is wide variation among plant families. Some have shown no shift in flowering at all, while others now bloom 16 to 20 days earlier in the spring,” he added.

As mean annual temperatures increase, plants can adjust their growth patterns in several ways.

For example, forests shift toward the poles, alpine tree lines move up mountains to higher altitudes, and flowering time can shift.

During eras of climate change, plants that cannot adjust their flowering schedule – and thus flower at sub-optimal times – may experience dramatic declines in population size and local extinction. (ANI)

Why tennis referees mistakenly call more balls ”out” than ”in”

Washington, Tennis referees are very likely to make mistakes when they call balls “out” than when they call them “in”, mainly because of the inherent bias in people perceiving moving objects, according to a new report.

As it turns out, the study by researchers at the University of California, Davis, might just support the recent rule changes allowing professional tennis players to challenge the referees” calls, thus helping them in exploiting the new findings to their advantage.

David Whitney, a member of the research team, said that just like all visual illusions, the new discovery provides visual neuroscientists with a window on how the brain processes information.

“The visual system faces a big challenge when trying to code the locations of objects so that we can perceive them,” said Whitney.

He added: “Our perception lags behind reality. The visual system has mechanisms that help alleviate this problem of living in the past, but these mechanisms are not perfect and occasionally result in visual illusions-like the misperception of tennis ball location we discovered.”

People have a tendency to misperceive moving objects as shifted in the direction of their motion, so that at any moment they appear to be farther along their path than they are.

Whitney decided to study the misconception in the context of tennis when he saw a referee call overturned by a player”s challenge during a Wimbledon match.

On a tennis court, a ball could physically bounce in the court but be called out, or a ball could physically bounce out of the court but be called in.

Tennis referees would be equally likely to make each of these two kinds of errors, only if they were completely bias-free. But as objects generally appear to be shifted in the direction of their motion, referees should incorrectly judge balls as being out more often.

And the researchers confirmed that prediction- in a review of more than 4,000 randomly selected Wimbledon tennis points, 83 incorrect calls were uncovered.

They later confirmed that the refs” mistakes are not the result of poor refereeing, but they attributed it to the errors in the visual information about motion processed by human brain.

In fact, according to the researchers, tennis players and audience members make the same mistakes that refs do.

However, the new findings suggest that players could maximize their opportunity to challenge calls by focusing on balls that are called “out,” since they are more likely to be incorrect.

The report also suggests that every shot in professional tennis should perhaps be reviewed by instant replay.

“If that proves prohibitively time-consuming, the rules allowing players to challenge referee judgments should be scrutinized at least, in light of the current findings,” wrote the authors.

They added; “If all else fails, perhaps professional tennis venues should follow the French, and universalize the clay court,” where skid marks on the clay reduce reliance on the referees” motion perception.

The study was published in the recent issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. (ANI)

Masks, hand washing, can halve spread of flu-like symptoms

Washington. A breakthrough study has found that by wearing masks and using alcohol-based hand sanitizers, people can successfully avert the spread of flu symptoms by as much as 50 percent.

The study by researchers at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, is the first-of-its-kind to deal with the efficacy of non-pharmaceutical interventions in controlling the spread of the flu virus in communities

In the study, the researchers studied more than 1,000 student subjects from seven U-M residence halls during last year”s flu season.

“The first-year results (2006-2007) indicate that mask use and alcohol-based hand sanitizer help reduce influenza- like illness rates, ranging from 10 to 50 percent over the study period,” said Allison Aiello, co-principal investigator and assistant professor of epidemiology at the U-M SPH.

Aiello pointed out that the first year of the two-year project, called M-Flu, was a very mild flu season and only a few cases were positive for flu, so results should be interpreted cautiously.

“Nevertheless, these initial results are encouraging since masks and hand hygiene may be effective for preventing a range of respiratory illnesses,” she said.

At the start of flu season in the last two years, participants were randomly assigned to six weeks of wearing a standard medical procedure mask alone, mask use and hand sanitizer use, or a control group with no intervention.

For the study, the researchers followed students for incidence of influenza like illness symptoms, which according to the one of the principal investigator of the study, Dr. Arnold Monto, can be defined as cough with at least one other characteristic symptom such as fever, chills or body aches.

Starting from the third week, both the mask only and mask/hand sanitizer interventions showed a significant or nearly significant reduction in the rate of influenza-like illness symptoms in comparison to the control group.

The reduction persisted in rate of flu-like symptoms even after adjusting for gender, race/ethnicity, hand washing practices, sleep quality, and flu vaccination.

Non-pharmaceutical interventions such as hand washing and masks, especially in a pandemic flu outbreak, are critical to study because pharmaceutical interventions such as vaccinations and antivirals may not be available in sufficient quantity for preventing and controlling pandemic influenza outbreaks.

“Although a few of these measures can be evaluated during seasonal influenza outbreaks, many are difficult or impossible to evaluate in advance of a pandemic. However, use of face masks and hand hygiene interventions can be evaluated now, during seasonal influenza outbreaks, which can provide concrete evidence for decision makers,” said Monto.

The findings, “Mask Use Reduces Seasonal Influenza-like Illness In The Community Setting,” was presented at The Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy and the Infectious Diseases Society of America annual meeting in Washington, D. C. (ANI)

Common epilepsy drug could reverse Alzheimer”s symptoms

Washington, Scientists have found that a treatment with Valproic Acid (VPA) in the early stages of Alzheimer”s disease can reverse memory deficit.

Lead researcher Weihong Song, the Jack Brown and Family Professor and Chair in Alzheimer”s Disease at UBC, has found that VPA works by inhibiting the activity of an enzyme that produces a neurotoxic protein called beta Amyloid, in turn discontinuing plaque formation.

Writing about the new findings in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, the research team highlighted the fact that amyloid beta-proteins are the central component of neurotoxic plaques in AD.

“We found that if we used VPA in the early stage of Alzheimer”s disease, in model mice, it reduced plaque formation and further prevented brain cell death and axon damage. The drug also improved performance in memory tests,” says Song, who is a Canada Research Chair in Alzheimer”s disease and Director of the Townsend Family Laboratories in UBC”s Faculty of Medicine.

The researchers believe that their findings might help inform the design of human clinical trials, as scientists these days understand the mechanisms and pathology of VPA in AD animal models.

“We are very excited about these results because we now know when VPA should be administered to be most effective and we now know how VPA is working to prevent AD. A small human clinical trial is currently underway and we expect results to be available in the next year,” says Song, who is also a member of the Brain Research Centre at UBC and VCHRI. (ANI)

New software that shows a woman’s curves even while fully clothed!

Washington, Online shopping can turn out to be more fun when you can try on new clothes on your own computerised image, all thanks to a new program that creates an accurate computerized image of a person”s body even when the subject is clothed.

Developed by Brown computer scientists, the new technology could be put to use in fashion, film, forensics, sports medicine, and video gaming.

The program can accurately estimate the human body”s shape from digital images or video.

“If you see a person wearing clothing, can the computer figure out what they look like underneath?” asked Michael Black, professor of the computer science at Brown.

Created by Black and graduate student Alexandru Balan, the new program is an advance from current body scanning technology, which requires people to stand still without clothing in order to produce a 3-D model of the body.

With the new 3-D body-shape model, the scientists can determine a person”s gender and calculate an individual”s waist size, chest size, height, weight and other features.

The program has wide-ranging potential applications-other than forensics and fashion, the research could also benefit the film industry.

The technology will do away with the need for actors to wear tight-fitting suits covered with reflective markers to have their motion captured, as it could capture both the actors” shape and motion.

In sports medicine, doctors would be able to use accurate, computerized models of athletes” bodies to better identify susceptibility to injury.

In the gaming world, instead of acting through a character, a camera could track the user, create a 3-D representation of that person”s body and insert the user into the video game.

Brown University has filed two provisional patents covering the research and its potential commercial applications.

For developing this ground-breaking application, the researchers created a computerized body model from 2,400 detailed laser range scans of men and women in minimal clothing.

They found that by combining information from a person in multiple poses, the computer was able to infer the gender of the person and the 3-D body shape. They further refined the model by incorporating the computer”s detection of skin in the images.

“As I move, my clothes become loose or tight on different parts of my body. Each pose gives different constraints on the underlying body shape, so while a person”s body pose may change, his or her true shape remains the same. By analyzing the body in different poses, we can better guess that person”s true shape,” Black said.

However, the researchers stress the technique is not invasive-it does not use X-rays, nor does it actually see through clothing.

The software only makes an intelligent guess about the person”s exact body shape.

Black and Balan debuted their findings this month at the European Conference on Computer Vision in Marseilles, France. (ANI)

Women in red really do make men go weak in the knees

Washington, Planning for a romantic dinner with the man of your dreams? Well, don’t forget to wear something in red, for the colour will sure make him drool all over you, according to a new study.

In their study, Professor Andrew Elliot and Dr Daniela Niesta of the University of Rochester, New York, have said that men find women in red more sexually attractive, confirming it really is the colour of romance.

Elliot claimed that men rated a woman shown in photographs as more sexually attractive if she was wearing red clothing or if she was shown in an image framed by a red border rather than some other colour.

The researchers also speculated that the attraction towards red could be an evolutionary trait too.

“It could be this very deep, biologically based automatic tendency to respond to red as an attraction cue given our evolutionary heritage,” ABC Online quoted Elliot as saying.

In the study more than 100 men, mostly college undergraduates, were shown pictures of women and asked to rate how pretty they were, how much the men would like to kiss them and how much the men would like to have sex with them.

They were then shown a woman, with some of the pictures bordered in red and some bordered in white, grey or green.

When framed in red, the men rated a woman as more attractive if she was framed in red, than when she was bordered by another colour.

Later, the men were shown photographs of a woman that were identical, but in some versions, the researchers digitally made her shirt red or blue in others.

And the researchers again saw the inclination towards woman in red.

They pointed out that the colour red only altered men’s attractiveness and not likability, intelligence or kindness – only attractiveness.

The study is published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. (ANI)

Yellowstone’s amphibians declining fast due to climate change

Washington, A research has determined that despite being protected longer than anywhere else on Earth, Yellowstone National Park’s amphibians are declining fast, all due to climate change.

Yellowstone National Park, founded in 1872, has been protected by law longer than anywhere else in the world.

In 1992 and 1993, researchers in Elizabeth Hadly’s group at Stanford University surveyed amphibians dwelling in ponds left behind by glaciers in northern Yellowstone National Park.

Over the last three summers, Hadly’s graduate student Sarah McMenamin repeated the study.

According to a report in Discovery News, McMenamin looked for the four species of amphibians found in the park – a salamander, two frogs and a less common toad – in
49 ponds, counting even the presence of one member of a given species in a particular pond as a “population.”

Fewer than half of the populations recorded in the 1992 survey remained 15 years later.

“I found that not only had a lot of the amphibian populations disappeared from the ponds, but the ponds themselves were disappearing,” McMenamin said.

Nineteen of 49 ponds that were either permanent or seasonally full in 1992 and 1993 were dry in 2006 and 2007, although 11 of them filled again in 2008, the third wettest spring on record.

Amphibians returned to only six of the refilled ponds.

“This is really catastrophic to the local amphibian population, because obviously they need these environments to breed and exist as larvae,” McMenamin said.

Climate records over the last 60 years show a strong trend of increasing temperature and decreasing precipitation, she added.

“We were just blown away,” Hadly said of the findings. “Sixteen years is so fast. It’s an effect on the entire amphibian community distributed all across this landscape,” she added.

The fact that this happened in Yellowstone made it easy to rule out other impacts.

“It’s not that there’s an exotic species invasion. It’s not that there are human impacts like plowing or irrigation. It’s not like direct habitat degradation due to humans has any role to play here,” Hadley said. “There’s nothing upstream in this place except mountains and water,” she added.

“Our study shows that even an area as protected as Yellowstone is not immune to the effects of climate change,” McMenamin said.

“This is the strongest scientific evidence I’ve seen on the climate changes in Yellowstone,” said John Varley, director of Montana State University’s Big Sky Institute in Bozeman. “Many believe they see changes, but this paper is solid proof,” he added. (ANI)

Pregnant women consuming flaxseed oil quadruple premature birth risk

Washington, Pregnant women consuming flaxseed oil are four times more likely to have premature baby births, according to a new study.

Led by University of Montreal researchers, the study has found that the risks of a premature birth quadruple if flaxseed oil is consumed in the last two trimesters of pregnancy.

A majority of pregnant women prefer to use natural health products during the pregnancy.

The most consumed natural health products by pregnant women are chamomile, green tea, peppered mint and flaxseed oil.

“We believe these products to be safe because they are natural. But in reality, they are chemical products and we don”t know many of the risks and benefits of these products contrarily to medication,” said Professor Anick Berard of the Universite de Montreal”s Faculty of Pharmacy.

In the study involving 3354 Quebec women the only one product had a very strong correlation with preterm births was flaxseed oil.

“In the general population, the average rate of premature births is 2 to 3 percent. But for women consuming flaxseed oil in their last two trimesters that number jumps up to 12 percent,” said Berard.

“It”s an enormous risk,” Berard added. (ANI)

Diet rich in whole grains significantly lowers heart failure risk

Washington, A new study has found that a diet rich in whole grains can significantly reduce heart failure risk, while egg and high-fat dairy

consumption can increase it.

Diet is among the prominent lifestyle factors that influence major HF risk factors: coronary artery disease, obesity, diabetes and insulin resistance and

hypertension.

The researchers analysed the results of baseline exams of more than 14,000 White and African American adults conducted in 1987-89, with follow-up exams

completed during 1990-92, 1993-95, and 1996-98.

The study showed 7pct lower risk per 1-serving increase in whole grain intake, 8pct greater risk per 1-serving increase in high-fat dairy intake and 23 pct

greater risk per 1-serving increase in egg intake

“Although risk estimates were modest the totality of literature in this area suggests it would be prudent to recommend that those at high risk of HF increase

their intake of whole grains and reduce intake of high-fat dairy and eggs, along with following other healthful dietary practices consistent with those

recommended by the American Heart Association,” said Jennifer A. Nettleton, Ph.D.

The results are published in the November 2008 issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association. (ANI)

Evolution makes vampires out of fruit-eating moths

Washington, A previously unknown population of vampire moths has been found in Siberia by entomologists, who say that the bloodsuckers may have evolved from a purely fruit-eating species.

Only slight variations in wing patterns distinguish the Russian population from a widely distributed moth species, Calyptra thalictri, in Central and Southern Europe known to feed only on fruit.

According to a report in National Geographic News, when the Russian moths were experimentally offered human hands this summer, the insects drilled their hook-and-barb-lined tongues under the skin and sucked blood.

Entomologist Jennifer Zaspel at the University of Florida in Gainesville said the discovery suggests the moth population could be on an “evolutionary trajectory” away from other C. thalictri populations.

In January, she will compare the Russian population’s DNA to that of other populations and other species to confirm her suspicions.

“Based on geography, based on behavior, and based on a phenotypic variation we saw in the wing pattern, we can speculate that this represents something different, something new,” Zaspel said.

“But it is really difficult to say without knowing genetic differences between individuals in that population, and among individuals from other populations, how different this group is going to be,” she added.

If it turns out that Zaspel has indeed caught a fruit-eating moth evolving blood-feeding behavior, it could provide clues as to how some moths develop a taste for blood.

Some researchers, she noted, hypothesize that blood-feeding in insects and animals evolved from behaviors such as feeding on tears, dung, and pus-filled wounds.

“We see a progression from nectar feeding and licking or lapping at fruit juices to different kinds of piercing behaviors of fruits and then finally culminating in this skin piercing and blood-feeding,” she said.

Chris Nice, a biologist who studies butterfly evolution at Texas State University in San Marcos, said that few butterfly and moth species are equipped with the hook-and-barb-lined tongues needed to pierce fruit.

“The fruit-piercing stage in the first place sets the stage, in a morphological sense, for further transitions into, in this case, the blood-feeding,” he said. (ANI)

GOP leaders in key states irked by McCain camp’s constant stone walling

GOP leaders in key states irked by McCain camp’s constant stone wallingWashington, Oct 28 : Virginia Republican Party Chairman Jeff Frederick has said that John McCain”s campaign dismissed his input on his state’s historically conservative voters, even as the Republican presidential candidate slid in polls and the state unexpectedly became a battleground.

“They act as if, ‘How could you tell us to change our plan?’” said Frederick, who had offered advice on how to minimize losses in the state’s liberal-leaning northern region.

Republican Party leaders from several states – including tightly contested, must-win battlegrounds – have begun privately voicing reservations about McCain strategies and the campaign’s failure to return phone calls or respond to suggestions and offers of volunteer support, The Washington Times reported.

“They ignore you. They don’t keep their commitments. And word is that the party has a clock counting down the days till it can throw the McCain people out of state party’s headquarters,” said one state party leader, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The leaders also question McCain’s decision to embrace the “700 billion dollar Wall Street bailout,” which riled voters, and his reluctance to make issues out of his Democratic rival’s relationships with his inflammatory former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., and with Bill Ayers, a 1960s radical.

Florida Republican Party Chairman Jim Greer agrees that McCain has had problems within the party, but that Republicans desperately want to unite behind their presidential standard-bearer to stave off a Democrat-run White House and Congress.

“If McCain pulls it off, it will be a rejection of how people see Barack Obama governing the country – his liberal philosophy,” said Greer, who thinks McCain will emerge victorious in Florida despite his lagging poll numbers.

McCain’s campaign rejected the suggestion that it hadn’t tapped the party’s talent.

“Our campaign has aggressively reached out to state parties, county leaders and Republicans across this country to build an impressive grass-roots network and campaign structure,” said McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds. (ANI)

Factors behind exceptional health in old age uncovered

Washington, A positive outlook, lower stress levels, moderate alcohol consumption, abstention from tobacco, moderate to higher income and no chronic health conditions are some of the factors that underlie exceptional health in old age, according to a study.

Researchers from Portland State University, the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Oregon Health & Science University, and Statistics Canada surveyed
2,432 older Canadians about their quality of life.

The few who maintained excellent health over an entire decade were considered “thrivers”.

“Important predictors of ”thriving” were the absence of chronic illness, income over 30,000 dollars, having never smoked, and drinking alcohol in moderation,” said Mark Kaplan, DrPH, lead author and professor of community health at Portland State University.

“We also found that people who had a positive outlook and lower stress levels were more likely to thrive in old age,” the researcher added.

Dr. David Feeny, co-author and senior investigator at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, said: “Many of these factors can be modified when you are young or middle-aged. While these findings may seem like common sense, now we have evidence about which factors contribute to exceptional health during retirement years.”

During the study, the participants filled out an extensive health survey every other year, starting in 1994 and continuing through 2004.

One measure, called the Health Utilities Index, asked people to rate their abilities in eight categories, including vision, hearing, speech, ambulation, dexterity, emotion, cognition, and pain.

The researchers observed that “thrivers” were those who rated themselves as having no or only mild disability in all eight categories on at least five of the six surveys.

Respondents who reported moderate or severe disability on any of the six surveys were classified as “non-thrivers”.

Just over half of the respondents started out as “thrivers”, but by the end of the 10 years, only 8 percent of the respondents were considered thrivers.

At the end of the study period, 47 percent of the respondents were classified as non-thrivers. Thirty-six percent had died and 9 percent were institutionalised.

“Even though the study was conducted in Canada, the findings are certainly applicable to the United States and other industrialized nations. Our population here in the United States is similar demographically to Canada”s, and both health care systems rely on the same underlying technologies,” says Bentson McFarland, MD, PhD, co-author and professor of psychiatry, public health and preventive medicine at at Oregon Health & Science University.

The study has been reported in The Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences. (ANI)