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Ganga cleanup start of mission to clean waterbodies: Javadekar

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 November 2014 | 22.33

PTI | Nov 29, 2014, 05.11PM IST

Prakash Javadekar said that Centre's Ganga clean-up programme was the 'beginning' of the Narendra Modi-led NDA government's mission to clean up major water bodies in India.

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CHENNAI: The Centre's Ganga clean-up programme was the 'beginning' of the Narendra Modi-led NDA government's mission to clean up major water bodies in India, including southern rivers, Union environment minister Prakash Javadekar said on Saturday.

The Indian rivers and other water bodies were 'filthy' because "we have the habit of throwing (things) into water bodies," he said.

"So Ganga cleaning is beginning of water bodies cleaning mission of India. We will come to Cauvery, Godavari and all southern rivers also because we want to clean all rivers and water bodies. That is our mission," he said in his address at an International Youth Conclave at Ethiraj College here.

He said that the government was committed to mitigate pollution in its various forms--air, water and land.

The minister particularly favoured power generation from renewable sources of energy like solar, wind, and nuclear, saying they don't pollute.

He said the government was particularly keen on increasing solar power generation, recalling the success achieved by Modi as Gujarat chief minister in this sector.

Further, the government has identified 17 sectors with over 3,000 highly polluting industrial units, which have been asked to install round-the-clock real-time monitoring devices to analyze air pollution and the quality of effluents let out.

They have to adhere to government rules regarding pollution-mitigation and there would be no compromise on this issue, he added.

Taking a swipe at the previous UPA government, he said that his environment ministry then used to be a 'roadblock and speed breaker' department where files moved slowly.

However, after the NDA came to power, the processes had been simplified and made more transparent, with introduction of online application for environmental clearances, Javadekar said, adding applicants can now track the movement of their files using an unique ID allotted to them.

Many decisions, including granting environment clearance for blacktop roads to benefit the Indian Army along the line of actual control (LAC) with China were taken in swift time, he said.

Article continues

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Climate Parliament asks govt to create green energy fund

NEW DELHI: Climate Parliament, a global network of legislators working to promote renewable energy, has urged the Urban development ministry to create a green energy fund to focus on utilisation of renewable energy in urban areas.

MP Vandana Chavan in a recent letter to Urban development minister Venkaiah Naidu said that the cell should coordinate directly with the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) for any potential integration of plans and policies.

"Chavan in a recent letter to Venkaiah Naidu has asked for a Green or Renewable Energy Cell in the Ministry to focus on the needs for the utilisation of the renewable energy sources in urban areas.

"The Cell should coordinate directly with the MNRE for any potential integration of plans and policies," a Climate Parliament statement said.

Chavan said that integration of renewable energy in schemes and programs of the Ministry of Urban Development becomes imperative to meet the rising energy demand of the country.

"MOUD should plan renewable energy interventions and components in its programmes and schemes in coordination with MNRE," she said.

Chavan said that Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM), Urban Infrastructure Development Scheme for Small & Medium Towns (UIDSSMT), Smart Cities Programme, North Eastern Region Urban Development Programme (NERUDP) are some of the important government programmes where renewable energy must be integrated.

Climate Parliament is a global network of legislators working to accelerate the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

Chavan suggested in the letter certain innovative and comprehensive renewable energy programmes that can be launched in order to ensure sustainable development of the existing and upcoming cities.

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Deadly virus pushing tigers towards extinction

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 08 November 2014 | 22.33

NEW YORK: Adding to the existing pressures of habitat loss, poaching and depletion of prey species, a new threat to tiger populations in the wild has surfaced in the form of a deadly virus.

According to a new study from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), canine distemper virus (CDV) has the potential to be a significant driver in pushing the tigers towards extinction.

While CDV has recently been shown to lead to the deaths of individual tigers, its long-term impacts on tiger populations had never before been studied, researchers said.

The authors evaluated these impacts on the Amur tiger population in Russia's Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Zapovednik (SABZ), where tiger numbers declined from 38 individuals to 9 in the years 2007 to 2012.

In 2009 and 2010, six adult tigers died or disappeared from the reserve, and CDV was confirmed in two dead tigers - leading scientists to believe that CDV likely played a role in the overall decline of the population.

Joint investigations of CDV have been an ongoing focus of scientists since its first appearance in tigers in 2003.

The finding shows that smaller populations of tigers were more vulnerable to extinction by CDV. Populations consisting of 25 individuals were 1.65 times more likely to decline in the next 50 years when CDV was present.

The results are profoundly disturbing for global wild tigers given that in most sites where wild tigers persist they are limited to populations of less than 25 adult breeding individuals.

The scientists used computer modelling to simulate the effects of CDV infection on isolated tiger populations of various sizes and through a series of transmission scenarios.

These included tiger-to-tiger transmission and transmission through predation on CDV-infected domestic dogs and/or infected wild carnivores.

High and low-risk scenarios for the model were created based on variation in the prevalence of CDV and the tigers' contact with sources of exposure.

Results showed that CDV infection increased the 50-year extinction probability of tigers in SABZ as much as 55.8 per cent compared to CDV-free populations of equivalent size.

"Although we knew that individual tigers had died from CDV in the wild, we wanted to understand the risk the virus presents to whole populations," said WCS veterinarian Martin Gilbert.

"Tigers are elusive, however, and studying the long-term impact of risk factors is very challenging. Our model, based on tiger ecology data collected over 20 years in SABZ, explored the different ways that tigers might be exposed to the virus and how these impact the extinction risk to tiger populations over the long term," said Gilbert.

(The finding appears in the journal PloSONE.)

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Tripura's capital city Agartala gets green city award

AGARTALA: Tripura's 176-year-old capital Agartala has been awarded the clean and green city award by a New Delhi-based urban policy and development experts group, the city's mayor said here on Saturday.

"Agartala topped the 29 towns and cities shortlisted by the Skoch Foundation for the award. The capital city has been selected for the award because of its green cover, cleanliness and solid waste management," Agartala municipal corporation mayor Prafulla Jit Sinha told reporters.

With a city population of around five lakh, the Agartala Municipal Corporation is northeast India's oldest municipal body.

Sinha said — "More than 600 municipal workers are keeping the city clean day and night. Besides, 30,000 labourers are also being engaged occasionally under the urban job scheme — Tripura Urban Employment Programme, to clean the city."

"Daily 250 tonnes of solid waste is generated in the municipal areas and collected from each home and sent to the sanitary land-fill stations," he said, adding that a large number of vehicles and containers are being procured from outside the state to collect the garbage from each part of the city.

Agartala is also set to become northeast India's first city to have energy efficient illumination with light emitting diode (LED).

Ashutosh Jindal, state urban development secretary, said — "Energy Efficiency Services Ltd (EESL) under the union ministry of power, was all set to replace the existing conventional illuminating system of Agartala with LED."

Agartala will be the second city in eastern India after Kolkata where LED street lighting is being installed. So far, Hyderabad and Vijayawada have LED lighting systems.

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Make green laws efficient, cut regulatory bodies: Jairam Ramesh

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 07 November 2014 | 22.33

BENGALURU: Maximize the efficacy of current environment and forest laws. But minimize regulatory bodies to curb official corruption and maladministration. This was former Union environment minister Jairam Ramesh speaking as he moderated a panel discussion on challenges to conservation in the context of a pro-growth agenda, Ramesh said: "We need to take a cue from the US which has minimized regulators and maximized the efficacy of its laws to check acid rain which was a common phenomenon a few decades ago.''

Summing up the discussion, he said: "It is imperative for the country to make economic growth not just inclusive and rapid, but also sustainable to ensure conservation."

Mahesh Rangarajan, director of Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi, said effective ecological conservation needs an all-inclusive approach that protects wildlife and secures livelihood of people

Praveen Bhargav, managing trustee of Wildlife First, a Bengaluru-based NGO, said: "I am not against development but I am worried at the way forest and environment clearances are being given to mining and development projects in forest areas. There is a need for better application of mind, science and knowledge while giving such sanctions to make it sustainable.''

Dr Vidya Athreya, research associate, Centre For Wildlife Studies and Wildlife Conservation Society, India said effective conservation can take place only if the community at large is involved.

To a question from Ramesh on how to make business environment friendly, the panelists suggested recycling as the only hope.

Khoshoo award for Rangarajan

Prof Mahesh Rangarajan, director of Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi was presented the prestigious TN Khoshoo Memorial Award 2014 for conservation by Jairam Ramesh. Rangarajan was selected for understanding nature-society interactions through his ideas and scholarship on history, politics and environment.

His research explores how the history of humanity's co-existence with forests and wildlife could revise the current conservation practice and writing. In 2010, Rangarajan was chairman of the national elephant task force.

Environmentalists say Rangarajan brought integrity and knowledge-based decision-making to clearance processes.

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Eco-tourism project proposed at Sriram Nagar reserve forest

BERHAMPUR: Forest officers have proposed an eco-tourism project at Sriram Nagar reserve forest, adjoining Bhanjanagar reservoir, in Ganjam district of Odisha.

An animal rescue centre is also being planned near Biju Patnaik Children's Park in the town.

State's forest and environment minister Bikaram Keshari Arukh had recently visited the proposed sites and discussed the projects with forest officers. He asked them to submit the detailed project reports (DPRs).

"The DPRs are being prepared and these would estimate cost of the projects," DFO (Ghumusar North) Rama Swamy said.

Thick forest cover, large concentration of wild animals and sylvan surroundings make Sriram Nagar reserve forest an ideal spot for the project. Several species of migratory birds visit the reservoir for their winter sojourn every year.

"Nature lovers and tourists will enjoy spending time at the reserve forest once it is developed into an eco-tourism site," the DFO said. It will have benches, watchtowers, a herbal garden and cottages, he added.

The proposed animal rescue centre will mostly house spotted and barking deer and blackbucks. It will be later developed into a deer park, which will be a major attraction for children visiting the park, official sources said.

Swamy said the eco-tourism project at Saluapalli, 75 km from Bhanjanagar, would soon be opened to tourists. Though the project was completed two years ago, the flow of visitors has been less due to construction of an approach road to the project site, he added.

The main attractions of the 13 km forest streching from Saluapalli to Somanathpalli are a treetop house, medicinal tree garden and a pond with jetty and fibre umbrella sheds.

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Rare snow leopard found in China

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 06 November 2014 | 22.34

BEIJING: A rare snow leopard was spotted for the first time in China since 2006 at a nature reserve in the country's northwest.

The animal was spotted in a photo when a researcher, Hellat with the Annanba branch of the forest police bureau of Gansu was sorting pictures.

The photo was taken by a ranger named Junsibieke, or Jensbek (pronunciation), on March 4 from Gansu Province, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

The Annanba wild camel national nature reserve was founded in 2006. "This is the first time we have found the snow leopard here. It is such a pity that we didn't see the photo until today," said Hellat.

According to Junsibieke, who is from the Kazak ethnic group, the leopard was crouching in a pothole as he patrolled the nature reserve.

Junsibieke recalled that the leopard was an adult about 1.5 metres long. It had a blood stain on its face.

Snow leopards, one of China's Class A protected animals, are usually found in the Himalayan ranges of central and south Asia at altitudes between 3,000 and 5,500 metres.

The animal has rarely been seen in the wild since last century due to loss of habitat and poaching.

An estimated 3,500 to 7,000 snow leopards live in the wild, in addition to 600 to 700 more in zoos worldwide.

"In recent years, decreased rainfall, the rise of snowlines and destruction of vegetation on mountains have driven herbivorous animals to river valleys," Hellat said.

"That snow leopard must be following them", he said. Located at the junction of the provinces of Gansu and Qinghai and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, the Annanba nature reserve covers 39.6 hectares and has an average altitude of about 2,000 meters.

Other rare animals such as the Lynx and Manul also live in the reserve.

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Rail and road transport plan big push for bio-diesel

NEW DELHI: Railways has decided to power a fleet of 4,000 locomotives with alternative fuels such as bio-diesel as an attempt to move towards a cleaner environment and decrease its dependency on diesel. In a similar move, the road transport ministry too has claimed it will decide on approving any engine that uses such fuel, within three months from the date of filing an application seeking a go ahead.

Announcing the railway ministry's move at a convention organized by Bio Diesel Association of India (BAI) on Wednesday, minister Sadanand Gowda said, "Railways is the single largest bulk consumer of diesel in the country and as mentioned in railway budget 2014-15, it will start using bio-diesel up to 5% of the total fuel consumption in diesel locomotives." He added this will save foreign exchange substantially.

The national transporter annually consumes over two billion litres of diesel and foots a bill of over Rs 15,000 crore.

Road transport minister Nitin Gadkari also said that while his ministry is pushing for more use of clean and domestically produced fuel, he would take up the issue of allowing bio-diesel producers to sell their produce directly to bulk consumers in India. At present, only 20% of bio-diesel produced in India is sold here and the rest is exported.

"The rural development ministry is also preparing a detailed plan for productive utilization of waste land by allowing both edible and non-edible oilseeds," Gadkari said.

BAI president Sandeep Chaturvedi said while drugs and cosmetics can be sold directly to consumers, there is restriction on selling clean fuel to bulk consumers. "Allowing direct sale of bio-diesel to bulk users can help save upto Rs 420 crore of foreign exchange spent on buying crude," he added.

During 2009-2014, export of bio-diesel contributed a forex earning of around Rs 800 crore.

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Small islands may amplify tsunamis: Study

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 05 November 2014 | 22.33

PARIS: Small islands, long thought to be natural tsunami barriers for coast-dwellers, may in fact amplify the waves they are supposed to break, researchers warned on Wednesday.

The findings are of concern, for many coastal communities have settled in areas traditionally believed to be shielded from waves by offshore islands.

But simulations of wave motion found that some of these communities may be at higher risk from tsunamis of the kind that devastated villages in the Indian Ocean in 2004 and in northeastern Japan in 2011.

The study is published in a British journal, Proceedings of the Royal Society A.

In 200 computer simulations, not one concluded that the presence of an island defended the coastal area behind it, they found.

Instead, the tsunami's energy was amplified "by as much as 70 percent," co-author Frederic Dias of France's Center for Mathematical Studies and their Applications (CMLA) told AFP.

An island "often acted as a lens, focusing the wave's destructive power," he said.

The simulations varied the island and beach slope, the water depth, the distance between the island and the beach, and tsunami wavelength.

Dias said coastal communities in countries like Greece and Indonesia were particularly at risk from the phenomenon uncovered by the study.

"The findings might stir some inhabitants of apparently shielded coastlines, and the authorities responsible for their safety, to rethink the risks they face," he said.

The research was inspired by scientists observing that Indonesia's Sumatra was particularly badly hit by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, even though it is dotted with offshore islands.

Similarly, a tsunami that hit the Mentawai islands off Sumatra in 2010 caused the most severe flooding in areas where it was least expected - on the coastline behind offshore islands.

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Rare snow leopard found in China

BEIJING: A rare snow leopard was spotted for the first time in China since 2006 at a nature reserve in the country's northwest.

The animal was spotted in a photo when a researcher, Hellat with the Annanba branch of the forest police bureau of Gansu was sorting pictures.

The photo was taken by a ranger named Junsibieke, or Jensbek (pronunciation), on March 4 from Gansu Province, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

The Annanba wild camel national nature reserve was founded in 2006. "This is the first time we have found the snow leopard here. It is such a pity that we didn't see the photo until today," said Hellat.

According to Junsibieke, who is from the Kazak ethnic group, the leopard was crouching in a pothole as he patrolled the nature reserve.

Junsibieke recalled that the leopard was an adult about 1.5 metres long. It had a blood stain on its face.

Snow leopards, one of China's Class A protected animals, are usually found in the Himalayan ranges of central and south Asia at altitudes between 3,000 and 5,500 metres.

The animal has rarely been seen in the wild since last century due to loss of habitat and poaching.

An estimated 3,500 to 7,000 snow leopards live in the wild, in addition to 600 to 700 more in zoos worldwide.

"In recent years, decreased rainfall, the rise of snowlines and destruction of vegetation on mountains have driven herbivorous animals to river valleys," Hellat said.

"That snow leopard must be following them", he said. Located at the junction of the provinces of Gansu and Qinghai and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, the Annanba nature reserve covers 39.6 hectares and has an average altitude of about 2,000 meters.

Other rare animals such as the Lynx and Manul also live in the reserve.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=snow leopard in China,Snow Leopard

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Fight to save endangered Indus dolphins, turtles

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 04 November 2014 | 22.33

SUKKUR: Local legend has it that Pakistan's Indus River dolphin was once a woman, transformed by a curse from a holy man angry that she forgot to feed him one day.

After thousands of years swimming the mighty river the gentle, blind mammal is under threat from a combination of uncontrolled fishing and damage to its habitat caused by man-made dams.

Conservationists are fighting to save the dolphin as well as the river's black spotted turtle, at risk from poachers who hunt it to sell to collectors and traditional medicine dealers.

The dolphin, which can grow up to 2.5 metres, is one of the world's rarest mammals, with a population of just 1,400 living scattered along a 1,200-kilometre (750-mile) stretch of the Indus, which rises in the Himalayas and flows out into the Arabian Sea near Karachi.

They are classed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list of threatened species, which says the population has fallen by more than 50 percent since 1944.

Functionally blind, they use echolocation -- a form of natural sonar -- to find fish, shrimp and other prey in the muddy river waters.

Sticking their snouts and heads from the waters, the dolphins bring serenity to the river in the shadow of the Sukkur Barrage, built by the British, around 470 kilometres (300 miles) north of Karachi.

The monsoon season draws families and picnickers hoping to catch a glimpse of the dolphins.

But the series of dams and barrages built across the Indus since the late 19th century to help irrigate farmland have divided the dolphin's habitat into 17 separate sections.

The dolphin has died out in 10 of these sections, according to a recent study published in the PLoS One journal by experts from Britain's St Andrews University, and the sub-populations are left more vulnerable by their isolation.

When the river recedes after the heavy rains of the monsoon, the dolphins can become stranded in isolated ponds and tributaries, starving them of food and making them vulnerable to predators.

Another threat to the dolphin, whose pinkish-grey skin breaks the surface of the turbid waters as it comes up to breathe, comes from fishing.

"Narrow fishing nets trap the dolphin under the water and she needs to come out to breathe after every one to two minutes," Muhammad Imran Malik, from the dolphin protection project of World Wildlife Fund (WWF) told AFP on the riverbank in the town of Sukkur.

The WWF has set up a network of fishing communities on both banks of the river and the link canals to keep vigil on any trapped dolphin and report it to conservators.

"We have different awareness activities among local fishermen, communities and other people about the dolphins' habitat, threats and the importance of its existence in the river," Malik told AFP.

Fisherman Gajan Khan Malah is one of the WWF volunteers who plays a role in monitoring the dolphins.

"Some years ago we saw a dolphin stranded in shallow waters, while we were fishing," Malah said.

"We called the WWF officials and they came instantly to rescue her and we netted the dolphin and handed her to them. They released it in the river," he added proudly.

As the WWF and other Pakistani agencies strive to save the dolphin, a new threat to the Indus ecosystem has emerged: smugglers hunting black pond turtles, also known as black spotte turtles, to sell them illegally to clients in China and Thailand.

"There is a market for every species, and this is a very unique turtle. It has a black colour with white and yellow spots, which is fascinating for many turtle lovers who keep them as pets," said Uzma Noureen, the WWF project coordinator at a sanctuary for rescued turtles.

Around 200 turtles, which are listed as vulnerable on the IUCN list, were smuggled from Pakistan to Taxkorgan in China's Xinjiang autonomous region in June.

Pakistan officials travelled by road to bring the turtles back home to the sanctuary in Sukkur, where they were held in a makeshift quarantine.

"It is like we rescued a ship from the clutches of pirates. We are now releasing them into their natural habitat and it is a great accomplishment for me and my whole team," said Javed Mahar, chief of Sindh Wildlife Department, as the turtles were slipped into a tributary of River Indus.

Pakistani customs authorities recently recovered at least two consignments of hundreds of protected turtles, which were being smuggled abroad from Karachi airport.

"There is an alarming rise in smuggling cases of the black spotted turtles because of the lucrative market in countries like Thailand and China," said Ghulam Qadir Shah, researcher at IUCN.

A turtle can fetch $1,600 dollars overseas with prices kept high by both passionate turtle enthusiasts looking for pets and others who want to consume the flesh or use the species for traditional medicine purposes.

Shah stressed the need for regional coordination to protect the turtles.

"We are planning with other Pakistani departments and wild life protectors to stop the smuggling of this beautiful creature".

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Air pollution halves India's potential grain yields

ROME: Air pollution seems to have a direct, negative impact on grain production in India, a study warned on Monday, with recent increases in smog decreasing projected yields by half.

Analysing 30 years of data, scientists developed a statistical model suggesting that air pollution caused wheat yields in densely populated states to be 50% lower than what they could have been in 2010.

Up to 90% of the decrease in potential food production seems linked to smog, made up of black carbon and other pollutants, the study said.

Changes linked to global warming and precipitation levels accounted for the other 10%.

"The numbers are staggering," Jennifer Burney, an author of the study and scientist at the University of California told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"We hope our study puts the potential benefits on cleaning up the air on the table," she said, noting that agriculture is often not considered when governments debate the economic costs of air pollution and new legislation aimed at combating it.

The research paper "Recent climate and air pollution impacts on Indian agriculture", published in the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, analysed what wheat production could have been if there was less pollution.

Food production in India continues to increase because of new technologies and management techniques.

Scientists examined historical data on crop yields, emissions, and precipitation to draw their conclusions.

The historical research generally confirms what chemists and other scientists have said in past studies about the impact of air pollution on food production.

While tackling global warming requires international action, reducing smog is often a simpler process that can take place at the national level.

"The technologies to fix this problem exist," Burney said. Trucks need better particulate filters for diesel, and the Indian government should help rural residents use cleaner fuels in their cooking stoves, rather than biomass, she said.

"None of these (mitigation techniques) are very high tech," she said, adding that better public policies on clean air could help India meet its goal of reducing hunger to zero.

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Sex-hungry, meat-loving reptiles die early

Written By Unknown on Senin, 03 November 2014 | 22.33

LONDON: A research suggests that meat eating reptiles who engage in sex early in their lives are at a higher risk of early death.

On the other hand, vegan male and female reptiles, who wait until they are older to produce offspring tend to live longer than their counterparts, researchers found.

"We observed that more sex means shorter life for reptiles," said lead researcher, Daniel Pincheira-Donoso, evolutionary biologist from the University of Lincoln in Britain.

"Vegetarian food is an intrinsically low-nutrition food. We think that those who have these diets experience a reduction in reproductive rates which, in turn, increases their lifespan," he added.

For the study, the team examined longevity looked at 1,014 species, which included 672 lizards, 336 snakes, five worm lizards and a lizard-like creature called a tuatara.

They found that reptiles were more likely to die at young age if they reached sexual maturation earlier, Discovery News reported.

The findings support the hypothesis of how natural selection influences life events, the authors concluded.

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UN climate report offers stark warnings, hope

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK: Climate change is happening, it's almost entirely man's fault and limiting its impacts may require reducing greenhouse gas emissions to zero this century, the UN's panel on climate science said Sunday.

The fourth and final volume of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's giant climate assessment offered no surprises, nor was it expected to since it combined the findings of three reports released in the past 13 months.

But it underlined the scope of the climate challenge in stark terms. Emissions, mainly from the burning of fossil fuels, may need to drop to zero by the end of this century for the world to have a decent chance of keeping the temperature rise below a level that many consider dangerous.

The IPCC did not say exactly what such a world would look like but it would likely require a massive shift to renewable sources to power homes, cars and industries combined with new technologies to suck greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

The report warned that failure to reduce emissions could lock the world on a trajectory with ``irreversible'' impacts on people and the environment. Some impacts already being observed included rising sea levels, a warmer and more acidic ocean, melting glaciers and Arctic sea ice and more frequent and intense heat waves.

``Science has spoken. There is no ambiguity in their message. Leaders must act. Time is not on our side,'' UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said at the report's launch in Copenhagen.

Amid its grim projections, the report said the tools are there to set the world on a low-emissions path and break the addiction to burning oil, coal and gas which pollute the atmosphere with heat-trapping CO2, the chief greenhouse gas.

``All we need is the will to change, which we trust will be motivated by knowledge and an understanding of the science of climate change,'' IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri said.

The IPCC was set up in 1988 to assess global warming and its impacts. The report released Sunday caps its latest assessment, a mega-review of 30,000 climate change studies that establishes with 95-percent certainty that most of the warming seen since the 1950s is man-made. The IPCC's best estimate is that just about all of it is man-made, but it can't say that with the same degree of certainty.

Today only a small minority of scientists challenge the mainstream conclusion that climate change is linked to human activity.

Global Climate Change, a NASA website, says 97 percent of climate scientists agree that warming trends over the past century are very likely due to human activities.

The American public isn't as convinced. A year-old survey by Pew Research showed 67 percent of Americans believed global warming is occurring and 44 percent said the earth is warming mostly because of human activity. More recently, a New York Times poll said 42 percent of Republicans say global warming won't have a serious impact, a view held by 12 percent of Democrats and 22 percent of independents.

Sleep-deprived delegates approved the final documents Saturday after a weeklong line-by-line review that underscored that the IPCC process is not just about science. The reports must be approved both by scientists and governments, which means political issues from U.N. climate negotiations, which are nearing a 2015 deadline for a global agreement, inevitably affect the outcome.

The rift between developed and developing countries in the U.N. talks opened up in Copenhagen over a passage on what levels of warming could be considered dangerous. After a protracted battle, the text was dropped from a key summary for policy-makers, to the disappointment of some scientists.

``If the governments are going to expect the IPCC to do their job,'' said Princeton professor Michael Oppenheimer, a lead author of the IPCC's second report, they shouldn't ``get caught up in fights that have nothing to do with the IPCC.''

The omission meant the word ``dangerous'' disappeared from the summary altogether. It appeared only twice in a longer underlying report compared to seven times in a draft produced before the Copenhagen session. The less loaded word ``risk'' was mentioned 65 times in the final 40-page summary.

``Rising rates and magnitudes of warming and other changes in the climate system, accompanied by ocean acidification, increase the risk of severe, pervasive, and in some cases irreversible detrimental impacts,'' the report said.

World governments in 2009 set a goal of keeping the temperature rise below 2 degrees C (3.6 F) compared to before the industrial revolution. Temperatures have gone up about 0.8 C (1.4 F) since the 19th century.

Emissions have risen so fast in recent years that the world has used up two-thirds of its carbon budget, the maximum amount of CO2 that can be emitted to have a likely chance of avoiding 2 degrees of warming, the IPCC report said.

``This report makes it clear that if you are serious about the 2-degree goal ... there is nowhere to hide,'' said Alden Meyer of the Union of Concerned Scientists, an advocacy group. ``You can't wait several decades to address this issue.''

US Secretary of State John Kerry said the report demands ``ambitious, decisive and immediate action.''

``Those who choose to ignore or dispute the science so clearly laid out in this report do so at great risk for all of us and for our kids and grandkids,'' Kerry said in a statement.

The IPCC said the cost of actions such as shifting to solar and wind power and other renewable sources and improving energy efficiency would reduce economic growth only by 0.06 percent annually.

Pachauri said that should be measured against the implications of doing nothing, putting ``all species that live on this planet'' at peril.

The report is meant as a scientific roadmap for the U.N. climate negotiations, which continue next month in Lima, Peru. That's the last major conference before a summit in Paris next year, where a global agreement on climate action is supposed to be adopted.

The biggest hurdle is deciding who should do what. Rich countries are calling on China and other major developing countries to set ambitious targets; developing countries saying the rich have a historical responsibility to lead the fight against warming and to help poorer nations cope with its impacts. The IPCC avoided taking sides, saying the risks of climate change ``are generally greater for disadvantaged people and communities in countries at all levels of development.''

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Soon, 'toxic' Li-ion batteries may be turned into eco-friendly ones

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 02 November 2014 | 22.33

WASHINGTON: A new research has revealed that most of the electrolytes that are superhalogens in lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries contain toxic halogens, which on being replaced with halogen-free electrolytes can make the batteries both nontoxic and environmentally friendly.

Lead author Puru Jena of the study from Virginia Commonwealth University said that the significance of their findings is that one can have a safer battery without compromising its performance and the implication of the research is that similar strategies can also be used to design cathode materials in Li-ion batteries.

Jena added that they hope that their theoretical prediction will stimulate experimentalists to synthesize halogen-free salts which will then lead manufacturers to use such salts in commercial applications.

The researchers also found that the procedure outlined for Li-ion batteries is equally valid for other metal-ion batteries, such as sodium-ion or magnesium-ion batteries.

The study is published in the chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

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Climate change fight affordable, cut emissions to zero by 2100: UN report

COPENHAGEN: Governments can keep climate change in check at manageable costs but will have to cut greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2100 to limit fast-worsening risks, a UN report showed on Sunday.

The 40-page synthesis, summing up 5,000 pages of work by 800 scientists already published since September 2013, said global warming was now causing more heat extremes, downpours, acidifying the oceans and pushing up sea levels.

"There is still time, but very little time" to act at manageable costs, Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), told Reuters.

He was referring to a UN goal of limiting average surface temperature rises to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6F) above pre-industrial times. Temperatures are already up 0.85 C (1.4F).

To get a good chance of staying below 2C, the report says that world emissions would have to fall to "near zero or below in 2100." UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will help present the report in Copenhagen on Sunday.

The study, given authority by the approval of officials from more than 120 governments in a week of editing, will be the main handbook for 200 nations which are due to agree a UN deal to combat global warming in Paris in late 2015.

Renewables, Nuclear

The report points to options including energy efficiency, a shift from fossil fuels to wind or solar power, nuclear energy or coal-fired power plants where carbon dioxide is stripped from the exhaust fumes and buried underground.

But carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies are little tested. In most scenarios, the report says "fossil fuel power generation without CCS is phased out almost entirely by 2100".

China, the United States, the European Union and India are top emitters.

Without extra efforts to rein in greenhouse gas emissions, "warming by the end of the 21st century will bring high risks of severe, widespread, and irreversible impacts globally," it said.

"Irreversible" could mean, for instance, a runaway melt of Greenland's vast ice sheets that could swamp coastal regions and cities or disruptions to monsoons vital for growing food.

"Fighting climate change is affordable...but we are not on the right pathway," said Ottmar Edenhofer, a German scientist who was a co-chair of an IPCC report in March about tackling climate change.

Deep cuts in emissions would reduce global growth in consumption of goods and services, the economic yardsstick used by the IPCC, by just 0.06 percentage point a year below annual projected growth of 1.6 to 3.0 percent, it said.

"We must act now to reduce dangerous carbon pollution," said California Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer, chair of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, to avert risks to health, food supplies, water and infrastructure.

Environmental groups welcomed the report, including its focus on zero emissions. "This is no longer about dividing up the pie. You need to get to zero. At some stage there is no pie left for anyone," said Kaisa Kosonen of Greenpeace.

The report also says that it is at least 95 percent sure that manmade emissions of greenhouse gases, rather than natural variations in the climate, are the main cause of warming since 1950, up from 90 percent in a previous assessment in 2007.

The report draws on three studies about climate science, impacts ranging from crop growth in Africa to melting Arctic sea ice, and solutions to warming published since September 2013. It is likely to be the first document that policymakers read.

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Rumours make tiger tracking tougher

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 01 November 2014 | 22.34

LUCKNOW: There is no trace of the stray tiger a week after its pugmarks were found at Hasankhera village on October 25

"From Godhan where it killed a bull on October 22 till Hasankhera where its pugmarks were last found, we have been tracking along the entire route but no new kill or pugmark have been found," said DFO, Awadh, Suresh Yadav.

Rumours, on the other hand, are giving the team a tough time. "People who see a blue bull in the night come to us next morning saying they have seen a tiger," said an official. Every carcass of a cattle is being reported to the team as a tiger kill. Since the team has been told to verify each and every input coming from the villagers, a lot of time is spent acting on the information.

On October 26, locals said a CCTV installed in a house in Madiaon has recorded a tiger. Later, after officers saw the footage, it turned out to be a jungle cat. On Thursday, villagers in Kakori raised an alarm after they said they saw pugmarks of a tiger in a farmhouse. On investigation, it turned out to be an impression of hooves.

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UN panel scrambling to finish climate report

COPENHAGEN: After an all-night session, the United Nations' expert panel on climate science was scrambling on Saturday to finish a report on global warming that a top UN official said offers "conclusive evidence" that humans are altering the Earth's climate system.

Combining the findings of three earlier reports, the report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is also expected to describe how climate impacts, including melting Arctic sea ice and rising levels, are already happening and could become irreversible unless the world curbs its greenhouse gas emissions.

The IPCC says scientists are now 95 per cent certain that the buildup of such gases from the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation is the main cause of warming seen since the middle of the 20th century.

"The report offers conclusive scientific evidence that human activities continue to cause unprecedented changes in the Earth's climate," said Achim Steiner, the head of the UN Environment Program.

The world has the technology and capacity to act, and needs to do so urgently, Steiner told The Associated Press, as the cost of achieving emissions cuts increases exponentially with each year "because you will have to make far more drastic changes in our economy."

While the IPCC tries to avoid explicitly telling governments what they should be doing, the report will present scenarios showing that warming can be kept in check if the world shifts its energy system toward renewable sources like wind and solar power and implements technologies to capture greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

Racing against the clock, scientists and government representatives, who jointly approve the document line by line, worked all night until 5 a.m. Saturday then rested for a few hours before resuming the session in Copenhagen. IPCC spokesman Jonathan Lynn said delegates still needed to agree on some parts of the report before it's proof-read and prepared for release.

"We're looking forward to releasing the report Sunday as scheduled," he said.

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