One from the Bad Taste Hall of Fame: A Long Island winery is getting slammed for its decision to release two new wines … in honor of 9/11. Almost every detail about the wine, as reported by the LA Times , is cringeworthy. The price? $19.11 a bottle. What to expect…
Continue reading …There was alcohol in Amy Winehouse’s system when she died, but toxicology tests turned up no illegal substances, her family says. No word yet whether the alcohol played a role in her death, and it’s still not clear what killed her, the AP reports. In other Winehouse news, dad Mitch…
Continue reading …With fresh fighting erupting in Tripoli today, the intervention clearly isn’t over yet—but how much are we already in for? The Pentagon yesterday announced how much we’ve spent in Libya through July 31: $896 million. But that’s not the only number ABC News collected. Libya, by the numbers: $25…
Continue reading …Ryan Gosling already has a legion of swooning fans ( see their favorite blog here ), and this should do nothing to cool their ardor: The Academy Award-nominated actor was caught on video uploaded over the weekend breaking up a street fight in New York. In the video, which went…
Continue reading …Protester accuses PM of ‘hypocrisy’ – and union claims 80 local jobs at risk in £2.3m savings Two weeks after England was paralysed by riots, David Cameron chose to deliver a speech on the “slow-motion moral collapse” in Britain at Base 33, a youth centre in his Oxfordshire constituency. He may not have mentioned cuts to youth services, but local youth workers weren’t going to let the opportunity pass. On Tuesday they went on strike to protest against changes that they say could have a “huge impact” on young people’s lives. Standing outside the Bridge Bar, a youth centre, which is due to be replaced on 1 September by an “early intervention hub”, one worker described the anger at the prime minister’s decision to make the speech on 15 August at the youth centre in Witney. “To go to Base 33 and give that speech and not even mention the youth services he was cutting was very, very hypocritical,” she said. Like many protesting she did not want to give her name for fear of jeopardising future job prospects. Another youth worker, from another centre in Witney that is also due to close, said Cameron had argued in a meeting at his surgery that all cuts were down to local authorities and out of his control. “He said he understood what youth work is, but I beg to differ. Unless you are experienced in youth work you have no idea. It’s not like he is the type to ever use a youth club.” Unite – which organised the protest attended by a small but vocal group of around 30 people in Banbury, also in the Witney constituency – say the jobs of 80 professional youth workers are at risk, with the council looking to pass the running of its youth clubs to the voluntary sector. According to the union, Oxfordshire county council plans to cut youth service funding from £3.7m to £1.4m, one of many councils in the UK to slash funding . The council’s 26 youth clubs are set to be replaced by seven “early intervention hubs”, with an additional six “satellites”, according to a spokesman from Oxfordshire county council. A further nine centres will be run by voluntary organisations, and the remaining four are “in discussions with voluntary organisations”, he said. The hubs – which will deal with health, employment and youth justice as well as youth work – will be open to all, said the spokesman, and a website promises ” a base for direct work with children, young people and families “. But critics fear that a focus on referrals – the hubs aim to deliver “high quality early intervention and specialist services to children, young people and families with additional and complex needs” – will leave “non-problem” children out in the cold. “Youth clubs work because young people choose to go there,” said Doug Nicholls, Unite officer for youth workers. “If young people only go to these hubs because they have got to, it will compound in their minds that they are a problem that has to be dealt with.” Young people in rural areas such as west Oxfordshire, which includes Chipping Norton – home to a well-heeled set that includes former News International boss Rebekah Brooks, Jeremy Clarkson and the Camerons – would be left without a local centre to attend, he added. “We have already seen the impact of refusing to hear young people’s voices, and that is not to mention the effects on the silent voices we cannot now hear.” Paul, who has been a youth worker in Chipping Norton for 15 years, said he had refused to apply to be a “community hub worker” and that the role of youth worker had been devalued. “They are going to be seen as social workers, there will not be that voluntary engagement. I think it is very short-sighted and before long it will come back to bite them.” His colleague added that when riots erupted in several cities in England, youth workers received an email asking them to take to the streets and talk to the young people they worked with. “It was ironic, asking us to sort the problem out just as we were losing our jobs – more than ever they clearly need us, which is why this makes no sense.” One Sid Vicious lookalike, who was supporting the protests, said that without the studio in The Bunker – another youth club likely to be replaced – he would have never formed a band. “I’d be doing nothing, there aren’t any jobs around here,” said Daniel Capell, 18. “The people in there stuck their necks out for me so many times. It feels like no one will now.” David Cameron Public sector cuts Public services policy Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Turkey’s military said today airstrikes on suspected Kurdish rebel targets in northern Iraq this week have killed an estimated 90 to 100 guerrillas and warned that it would press ahead with offensives against the group both inside Turkey and across the border. “Iraq’s north and domestic areas will be monitored…
Continue reading …If the judge dismisses the sexual assault charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn today as expected, Strauss-Kahn could be on a plane bound for France within hours—and ready to re-enter the French presidential race, reports the Guardian . Although Strauss-Kahn missed the July deadline for joining the Socialist party’s primary, another leading…
Continue reading …Apparently, when Rick Perry wrote his book Fed Up! Our Fight to Save America from Washington , he did not anticipate running for president. (As proof, see the passage where he explicitly states that he did not write the book “because I seek higher office.”) Now that he is running…
Continue reading …Latest bid to count and catalogue the living world is billed as the most accurate yet – but only a tiny proportion is known to science Humans share the planet with as many as 8.7 million different forms of life, according to what is being billed as the most accurate estimate yet of life on Earth. Researchers who have analysed the hierarchical categorisation of life on Earth to estimate how many undiscovered species exist say the diversity of life is not equally divided between land and ocean. Three-quarters of the 8.7 million species – the majority of which are insects – are on land; only one-quarter, 2.2m, are in the deep, even though 70% of the Earth’s surface is water. The study, which is published in the journal PLoS Biology , underlines just how little humans know about what is out there – and which plants and animals will become extinct before scientists can even record their existence. “Scientists have been working on this question of how many species for so many years,” said Dr Camilo Mora of the University of Hawaii and Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The quest was growing increasingly urgent. “We know we are losing species because of human activity, but we can’t really appreciate the magnitude of species lost until we know what species are there,” he said. An astonishing 86% of all plants and animals on land and 91% of those in the seas have yet to be named and catalogued, the study said. The authors drew on the taxonomy, or categorisation system, devised by Carl Linnaeus about 250 years ago to arrive at their estimate of 8.7 million – give or take 1.3 million. The Swedish biologist devised a hierarchical, tree-like structure where each individual species was classed in a series of progressively larger groups, culminating at the kingdom level. Thus a single species of hermit crab is classified in the decapod order, which belongs to the sub-phylum of crustaceans, the phylum of arthropods, and finally the animal kingdom. The authors, in their analysis of existing data on 1.2m species, detected patterns between those hierarchical groupings which they could use to infer the existence of missing species that scientists have not yet described. That allowed them to use data from higher orders – such as anthropods, where there is a lot of data – to predict the number of creatures at the species level. Their estimate that the various forms of life on the planet included 7.8 million species of animal, 298,000 species of plant and 611,000 species of mushrooms, mould and other fungi along with 36,400 species of protozoa, single-celled organisms, and 27,500 species of algae or chromists. The researchers did not venture to put an estimate on the number of bacteria. Scientists have been trying to count and catalogue the living world for 250 years, since around the time when the Linnaeus devised his method of cataloging and naming living things. Current estimates range from 3 million to 100 million. “It’s not that we just don’t know the names in the phone book. We don’t know how big the phone book is,” said Derek Tittensor , a co-author who works for the UN Environment Programme. Robert May, a former US government science adviser, acknowledged that this effort, like all those of its predecessors, was based on imperfect knowledge. But he said the study’s conclusions were reasonable. “It is sort of saying that the trunks and lower branches of the tree seem similar from group to group. At one end of the thing, you have birds and mammals that really are completely known. At the other end, you have just got a handful of branches and twigs. But if you do the big assumption the trees are similar, then it seems sensible.” The new estimate – like those that came before it – is unlikely to be the last word. There is still too much unknown to catalogue life, said Rob Dunn, author of Every Living Thing . “What I almost guarantee will happen next is that someone will write a response saying that if you just change the parameters in such and such a way you will get fewer species, or you will get more species,” he said. “The truth is we are still so ignorant … There is still not a plot of tropical forest anywhere in the world that has been inventoried completely – not even a hectare.” Linnaeus, in his day, was confident he had captured the entire world of living things: he named about 10,000 species, most of which were confined to Europe. More modern attempts to classify the living world have sought patterns from the size of living creatures, or their location. Were there more species in hot, tropical zones or in cooler areas? And what about the ocean depths? Others focused on the relationship between species. In 1979, Terry Erwin, a carabidologist – beetle expert – at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, went out into the jungles of Panama, rolled some sheeting on the ground and sprayed several trees with pesticide. He discovered the bodies of more than 1,100 new species of beetle from the canopy of a single type of tree. There could be as many as 30 million species of insects in tropical rainforests alone, calculated Erwin. The finding drew controversy, but Erwin defended his method against those in the latest study. “Virtually all of them are really measuring human activity,” he said. “These guys base these on classification of animals, and classification of animals are human constructs. The reason it is predictable is that humans are predictable, especially in the scientific field. What they are measuring really is human activity. It is not real activity out in the wild.” He went on: “I was the first to use real critters, not some kind of limp arithmetic. I had to make some assumptions and came out with 30 million. What it started was a kind of cottage industry of estimating everything on the planet.” However, Nigel Stork, a professor of environmental science at Griffith University, south-east Queensland, believes the current study appears to be closer towards an accurate count. “I think it’s a landmark paper,” he said, adding that advances in electronic lists of species gave the authors a fuller set of data to work from. “Too often in the past, they used limited data and extrapolated way beyond the realm of what you could extrapolate.” The authors note that identifying and describing new life forms is expensive and slow, especially when set against the magnitude of species yet to be found or catalogued. Barely 14% of creatures on Earth have been logged in central databases – just 9% of those in the seas, the study noted. And, according to David Kavanaugh, a beetle expert at the California Academy of Science, funding and other resources fall short of the task as research institutions are cutting back, and governments are more preoccupied with finding life on Mars than on Earth. “The most frustrating this is to realise how little resources go into answering this question,” he said. “One of those flights to Mars would fund us for decades in exploring life on this planet,” he said. “It is very hard to get any money at all to go out, and yet they can go and blow up a rocket on a launch pad that would have funded my career and that of 100 others.” Most of those species waiting to be discovered will be small, and they are likely to be concentrated in remote areas or the depths of the ocean. But the authors said: “Many could be found literally in our own backyards.” But aAt the current pace, it would take 300,000 specialists 1,200 years to go through the laborious process of describing the new discoveries in scientific journals, and then entering them in electronic databases. “Describing species is a very time consuming process,” said Tittensor. “Although it will be relatively straightforward to find a new species – there are millions of them out there – it is not necessarily an easy process to describe them in scientific literature.” Many of those species will be extinct before scientists have even registered their presence. Discovering new species Scientists and conservationists are regularly updating the inventory of life with the discovery of new species. Last week, scientists at the Smithsonian Institution reported the discovery of a primitive eel in a reef off the coast of the South Pacific island nation of Palau. The new species, Protoanguilla palau , bore little relation to 19 other forms of eel currently in existence and some of its characteristics – such as a second upper jaw – were more in line with fossils from 65 million years ago. Other recent highlights, as compiled by the International Institute for Species Exploration (IISE) at Arizona State University, include the eternal light mushroom, or Mycena luxaeterna , which emits bright yellowish light. The new species was collected from forests near Sao Paulo, Brazil. Another highlight was the golden spotted monitor lizard ( Varanus bitatawa ), a two-metre long beast discovered on Luzon Island in the Philippines. It has evaded earlier discovery by spending most of its time in the trees. But most scientists expect the next rush of discovery to come from even smaller organisms, such as bacteria. The IISE also highlighted the discovery of a new bacteria growing on the shipwrecked hull of the Titanic. Halomonas titanicae is an iron oxide-eating bacteria, that could eventually eat the wreck up. Biodiversity Wildlife Conservation Insects Birds Marine life Biology Taxonomy Zoology Plants Animals Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Baby No. 3 is on the way for Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck, the couple announced yesterday. The two 39-year-olds, who wed in 2005, are already parents to Violet, 5, and Seraphina, 2, the AP notes. In a statement, they said they are “thrilled” to be welcoming a new member…
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