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Yoga Can Help Cancer Patients Cut the Risk of Disease Spreading or Returning: Study

Having a twice-a-week yoga practice has recently been shown to be effective at reducing symptoms of fatigue in people with cancer, as well as reducing the likelihood of a beaten cancer from returning.

18 million people around the world develop various forms of cancer every year, and it’s well known that physical inactivity increases the risk of getting cancer.

On top of that, it’s known that most forms of exercise prevent it—the same is true for yoga, which was just the subject of an investigation by what the Guardian newspaper called “the world’s leading cancer researchers.”

Three studies presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), the world’s largest cancer conference, together suggest that prescribing rest for a patient suffering from low energy levels or fatigue is not the best health measure.

In one of the studies, directed by the University of Rochester Medical Centre, 500 cancer patients that had received a treatment program for their cancer between 2 weeks and 5 years in the past were randomly assigned to either a control group or an intervention group that involved two 75-minute yoga classes per week.

“Our data suggest that yoga significantly reduces inflammation among cancer survivors,” the study’s authors wrote in a report published at the ASCO meeting. “Clinicians should consider prescribing yoga for survivors experiencing inflammation, which may lead to a high chronic toxicity burden and increased risk of progression, recurrence, and second cancers.”

MORE YOGA NEWS: Hope for Migraine Sufferers: Clinical Trial Shows Benefits of Yoga and Meditation

One of the many, many societal benefits enjoyed worldwide from the existence of Indian culture, yoga is probably the best form of low-intensity exercise available to a human, as it increases heart rate, engages whole muscle groups, and deepens the breath.

“What I say to doctors is you should recommend to them [cancer patients] yoga as an option and you should help them find places in their community where they can do it,” Karen Mustian, the paper’s lead researcher, told the Guardian.

MORE FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE: Man’s Biological Clock Set Back 10 Years After 93 Days Living Under the Ocean in a Research Station

In the second study, also led by Rochester, researchers examined yoga’s impact on fatigue and quality of life.

Senior cancer patients who attended the same yoga class schedule showed lower levels of fatigue and reported higher statistically significant levels of life satisfaction.

A third study found cancer patients who are classified as “active” such as those who might take a 30-minute brisk walk, have a reduced risk of death by almost one-fifth.

“We also have to educate the family,” said Dr. Jurema Telles de Oliveira Lima, who oversaw the third study. “Because it’s very common that the family wants to protect the older person when they have cancer, like: ‘I’m not going to let him do anything or go anywhere.’ We have to tell the family that it [physical activity] can be best for the patient and also on a psychological level as well.”

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8 Weeks of Lifestyle Changes Reduced Biological Age by 3 Years In Groundbreaking Proof-of-Concept Study

By anupam mahapatra
The intervention was targeted toward older men  (Photo by anupam mahapatra)

Reprinted with permission from World at Largean independent news outlet covering conflict, travel, science, conservation, and health and fitness.

 

Published in April of last year, a study found that older men put on a relatively simple 8-week program were able to reduce their biological age by 3.2 years.

It might be surprising to read, but it wasn’t a magic pill, a miracle cure, or some strange herb from a cave in Peru, that conferred this remarkable benefit on the men aged 50-72, but six small changes to diet and lifestyle aimed at altering their epigenetics.

The 6 changes consisted of recommendations for better sleep and for a duration of at least 7 hours, some phytonutrient powder supplements consisting of polyphenols and curcumin, a 10-minute meditation or breathing practice done twice daily, a 12-hour eating window, such as 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., a probiotic consisting of Lactobacillus plantarum, and 30 minutes of exercise per day 5 days a week at 60-80% of maximum heart rate.

The goal of the study was to affect “epigenetics” which could be described as human adaptation in response to conditions met throughout life. Epigenetics can’t turn us into a different species, but they do allow Sherpas to live in the high altitude of the Himalayas year round, or indigenous Indonesians to stay underwater for long periods without needing to breathe.

It makes babies conceived during periods of famine or food scarcity more susceptible to conserving glucose throughout their life, and much more besides.

There are epigenetic changes that make us age faster, and there are changes that slow or even reverse this process; which is what longevity researchers generally refer to when they make claims such as “reverse aging.”

What aging is today

Over the last few years, life expectancy in some countries like the U.S. is going down for the first time since World War II. With the number one risk factor for disease being ‘aging,’ and ‘disease’ being the second highest risk factor for disease, there’s an enormous incentive to mitigate both.

Doing so has been hypothesized as representing a $7 trillion savings in medical care over 50 years: which is slightly more than the savings predicted for keeping the global temperature from rising 2°C.

The researchers’ goal was to alter epigenetics through methylation, which bears some brief explanation.

“Currently, the best biochemical markers of an individual’s age are all based on patterns of methylation,” the researchers write. Methylation is, as lead author Kara Fitzgerald explained in a recent radio interview, simply the attaching of a methyl group to a cytosine on select areas of the DNA-containing chromosomes.

As life evolved, it found that methyl groups were extremely common and useful, and evolution has created perhaps millions of processes that involve methyl groups, not least of which is gene expression, which is the scientific phrase for the degree to which a gene affects our bodies and health.

“Of 20+ million methylation sites on the human genome, there are a few thousand at which methylation levels are tightly correlated with age,” the authors write, adding that a DNA clock that measures methylation will better predict an individual’s risk for mortality than chronological age.

Diet was not significantly altered from normal, yet personalized recommendations, except as part of a general lowering of carbohydrate intake. It was mostly plant-based, with an emphasis on choosing low-glycemic fruit, and replacing proteins with nutrient-dense options like beef liver and eggs. Eating was prohibited after 7 p.m. and before 7 a.m. the next morning. The entire diet plan can be found here.

The study wanted to see what older people who have no adverse risk of disease and are of generally good health could achieve with the multi-faceted approach.

“It took us a long time to run the study because we did some pretty hefty screening,” Fitzgerald said on Revolution Health Radio, “so we can reverse bio-age in healthy individuals, there’s just no doubt in my mind that using these interventions in individuals with various diseases we should see more significant change”.

Fitzgerald feels one of the most significant elements of the study was the weekly appointment of a nutritionist, who was also in charge of ensuring the exercise and mediation were pursued correctly according to a pre-determined script.

Little else of a general nature changed in the control group, apart from a reduction of 25% in mean triglycerides, and a reduction in total cholesterol.

Undoubtedly the most exciting part about this finding is the relative simplicity with which it was achieved. The probiotic and phytonutrient aspects were simple supplements, while the exercise part doesn’t really ask more than the minimum government recommendations. Indeed some individuals will have difficulty finding 20 minutes a day for meditation, but for reducing biological age by 3.2 years, it’s not so much to ask.

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Curious Orangutan Uses Hand Gestures in a Quest to Look Inside Woman’s Purse (WATCH)

Orangutan zoo video - SWNS
– SWNS

When Amber the orangutan met a visitor called Taylor, her day became focused on a single objective—finding out what was inside her purse.

Filmed at the Louisville Zoo in Kentucky, the ape’s gestures are simply too human to believe, such as gesturing with her index finger like an overly proud security guard at a concert security screening.

Then, lifting her chin as if she were trying to look over a ledge, it becomes clear to Taylor she’s interested in what’s inside her small shoulder bag.

As she begins to rifle through it on Amber’s behalf, the orangutan spots a bag of sweets and immediately knows that’s what she wants.

The whole interaction is amazing as she walks to the edge of the enclosure and begins to show Taylor how she can give him the sweets through the keeper’s area.

WATCH the whole video below… 

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Plants Respond to Touch Sending Different Signals Through Their Cells, Shows New Study

- Jonas Denil Unsplash
– Jonas Denil Unsplash

Despite the veins in a leaf appearing like a nervous system, our woody neighbors do not have a nervous system—but that doesn’t mean they can’t feel your touch upon their many hands.

Quite the contrary, scientists have established using sophisticated microscopy that plants register the beginning and end of every touch by sending slow waves of calcium signals to their cells.

Conducted at Washington State Univ., the scientists used 84 experiments from twelve members of tobacco and thale cress species that had been specially bred with calcium sensors.

Previous research has shown that when a pest like a caterpillar bites a plant leaf, it can initiate the plant’s defensive responses such as the release of chemicals that make leaves less tasty or even toxic to the pest. An earlier study also revealed that brushing a plant triggers calcium waves that activate different genes.

Using a glass rod the width of a human hair, they gently probed the leaves’ individual cells under a microscope to see what the response was.

“It is quite surprising how finely sensitive plants cells are—that they can discriminate when something is touching them. They sense the pressure, and when it is released, they sense the drop in pressure,” said Michael Knoblauch, WSU biological sciences professor and senior author of the study in the journal Nature Plants.

“It’s surprising that plants can do this in a very different way than animals, without nerve cells and at a really fine level.”

MORE SCIENCE NEWS: Scientists Have Found a Way to Translate Brainwaves into Speech ‘With Unprecedented Clarity’

It took just 30 seconds for the waves to reach out and begin signaling, pretty fast for tree-time.

The authors believe these waves are likely due to the change in pressure inside the cell. Unlike animal cells with permeable membranes, plant cells also have strong cellular walls that cannot be easily breached, so just a light touch will temporarily increase pressure in a plant cell.

Scientists like Peter Wohlleben, the famous German “tree herder” are prepared to make some pretty jaw-dropping claims about the awareness of plants—that they can see, talk, recognize relatives, and even teach.

OTHER PLANT INTELLIGENCE STORIES: Microphones Reveal Plants Make Many Sounds Especially When Stressed–And Each Species Sounded Different (Listen)

The current study was able to differentiate the calcium waves between touch and letting go, but how exactly the plant’s genes respond to those signals i.e. what the plant is capable of initiating in response to touch remains to be seen.

You can see the reaction of the calcium signals under the microscope in the .gif file at the WSU press page. 

LEAVE This Amazing Story Of Plant Intelligence With Your Friends…

“The hardest arithmetic to master is that which enables us to count our blessings.” – Eric Hoffer

Quote of the Day: “The hardest arithmetic to master is that which enables us to count our blessings.” – Eric Hoffer

Photo by: Nikhil kumar (cropped)

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Tiny Bone Flutes Discovered May Have Been Used for Calling Birds 12,000 Years Ago

The aerophones and one of the archaeologists trying to play one - SWNS
The aerophones and one of the archaeologists trying to play one – SWNS

Researchers have discovered 12,000-year-old miniature flutes that may have been used for mimicking raptor calls.

The precise motive of the mimicry is unknown. It could have had religious connotations or been part of some form of hunting strategy.

Although the prehistoric site of Eynan-Mallaha in northern Israel has been thoroughly examined since 1955, it still holds some surprises, say scientists who found the collection of seven instruments there.

The Natufians, the Near Eastern civilization that occupied a village on the site between 13,000 and 9,700 BCe, are thought to have used them for hunting, music or to communicate with the birds themselves.

“The village, located on the shores of Lake Hula, was home to this civilization throughout its 3,000 years of existence,” the study read.

MORE FROM PREHISTORY: ‘Most Important Prehistoric Discovery in a Century’ Revealed by British Museum

“It is therefore of vital importance in revealing the practices and habits of a culture at the crossroads between mobile and sedentary lifestyles, and the transition from a predatory economy to agriculture.”

The study published on the finding of these aerophones details they’re the first ever to be discovered in the Near East. Aerophones are a class of musical instruments in which a vibrating mass of air produces the initial sound.

They are made from the bones of a small waterfowl, with the smallest one being just 5 millimeters, and produce a sound similar to certain birds of prey, such as the Eurasian sparrowhawk and common kestrel, when air is blown into them.

MORE PREHISTORIC FINDS: Evidence of Amputation in Prehistoric Times Shows Patient Surviving for a Decade–Proves Medical Expertise Existed

Smaller bones would have been deliberately selected in order to obtain the high-pitched sound needed to imitate particular raptors.

“The choice of bones used to make these instruments was no accident—larger birds, with bigger bones that produce deeper sounds, have also been found at the site,” the study authors continue. “Indeed, it is clear that the Natufians attributed birds with a special symbolic value, as attested by the many ornaments made of talons found at Eynan-Mallaha.”

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New Solar System Found Where Planets Orbit Two Suns—Just like Luke Skywalker’s Home in Star Wars

- Fair use. Star Wars TGC: Edge of Darkness (Card: Sandcrawler)
– Fair use. Star Wars TGC: Edge of Darkness

A new solar system has been found where planets orbit two suns just like on Luke Skywalker’s home planet in Star Wars.

It’s the fifth multi-star system ever discovered, and the third one which features two stars.

Tatooine, the desert home planet of Luke and Anakin Skywalker was imagined as a desert world with two suns when Star Wars was first released in 1977. Fans would have to wait more than 30 years for the confirmation that such systems actually exist with the discovery of Kepler 16, a binary star system with a gas giant planet in orbit around them.

Now astronomers at the University of Birmingham have discovered another binary star system called BEBOP-1 after the project which funded its discovery—”Binaries Escorted By Orbiting Planets,” or BEBOP.

Three years ago the Birmingham researchers Dr. Matthew Standing and Dr. Lalitha Sairam found that a planet, called TOI-1338b, orbiting these two suns had already been spotted by NASA’s TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Space Surveyor) space telescope.

That planet was found using the transit method, meaning it was discovered when a telescope recorded the drop in perceived light coming from the host star every time the planet orbited in front of it. Over 5,000 exoplanets have been found since the first two were identified in 1992; most via the transit method.

MORE EXOPLANET NEWS: On Distant Planets that Don’t Rotate, Life May Exist Under Skies of Permanent Dawn and Dusk

They were able to register the planet’s size, but not its mass. In the study of exoplanets, mass is the more important finding, as it can inform whether the planet is rocky or gaseous.

Using state-of-the-art instruments installed on two telescopes in the Atacama Desert in Chile, the team tried to measure the mass of TOI-1338b. Despite their best efforts following years of work, they could not achieve their goal, but instead discovered a second planet—BEBOP-1c—and measured its mass.

Artist’s impression of Kepler 16 – NASA – JPL – Caltech

“BEBOP-1c has an orbital period of 215 days, and a mass 65 times larger than Earth, which is about five times less than Jupiter’s mass,” said Dr. Standing, lead author of the paper documenting its discovery. This likely indicates it’s a gas giant.

At the moment only two planets are known in the BEBOP-1 system—what are known as ‘circumbinary planets,’ but more might be discovered in the future with repeat observations, the research team said.

MORE ASTRONOMY NEWS: Scientist Finds Saturn Doing Something Never Seen Before in Our Solar System: ‘Hiding in Plain View for 40 Years’

Although rare, circumbinary planets are important in pushing the understanding of what happens when a planet is created, according to scientists.

Discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope, several star systems in the constellation Cygnus have two stars and were the first to excite Star Wars fans. Kepler 16b, also a gas giant, was quickly dubbed “the Real Tatooine,” while a different star system designated Kepler 35, not only has a gas giant, but estimations believe there could be two rocky worlds sitting in the system’s habitable zone where the radiation and temperature are not too hot and not too cold.

Additionally, astronomers found a triple-star system in 2016 using a new instrument at the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope. A planet found there called HD 131399A(b), is one of the strangest ever found—8 times the size of our solar system’s largest planet Jupiter, and which orbits via the influence of all three stars in the system; taking 550 Earth years to finish a single revolution.

“I like to start thinking about it from when the planet is opposite all three stars,” Kevin Wagner, an astronomer at the University of Arizona who helped the discovery, told Gizmodo at the time.

“When they aren’t eclipsing, you’d see three suns in the sky. As the planet progresses in its orbit, the stars will start to grow apart, to the point where the setting of one coincides with the rising of another.”

OTHER ASTROPHYSICS: Astronomers Observe 2 Neutron Stars Colliding and the Extreme Reaction ‘Defies All Expectations’

In essence, writes the Gizmodo author, you’d have two seasons: one with three sunrises and sunsets every day, and another of perpetual daylight, where a rising star (or stellar pair) is always there to replace a setting one.

Not that anyone or anything could live on that world—being as far away from its star(s) as Pluto is to the sun, and made of gas.

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Houston Elephants Do Yoga 7-days a Week to Stay Flexible and Healthy

Jackelin Reyna Houston Zoo
Jackelin Reyna Houston Zoo

Elephants are one of the holiest animals in Hinduism. Also, yoga was invented in India.

Is it any surprise then that elephants really like doing yoga? Check out this picture for example—the world’s largest and heaviest land animal doing a headstand. Can you do a headstand?

At the Houston Zoo, elephants participate in a static or slow-motion stretching practice much like yoga for between 30 seconds and 5 minutes a day to help them strengthen muscle groups while stimulating their brains and bodies.

During their yoga, the zoo’s elephant keepers are able to get a full look at their entire bodies, from trunk to tail, as well as check on their range of motion. If anything seems off, they’ll call over one of the five staff veterinarians for a check-up. To help keep them motivated to move, the elephants are rewarded with special treats like whole wheat bread, cantaloupe, raisins, or bananas, on top of their regular diet of roughage.

Tess the nearly 40-year-old mother of four and grandmother of one, pictured here standing on her head, keeps limber with the most number of moves of any of the herd. Methai, a 54-year-old matriarch, takes things a bit easier.

“Cultivating strong, positive relationships with our elephants is critical to providing them with the best healthcare to ensure their well-being is put first,” said Kristin Windle, Houston Zoo elephant supervisor.

Jackelin Reyna Houston Zoo

“The elephant yoga stretching sessions allow us to build that relationship using positive reinforcement to increase their range of motion and get eyes on their skin, feet, and inside their mouths. We can learn a lot about our elephants in these important sessions.”

MORE ZOO STORIES: Sloth Is Friends With Zookeeper and Won’t Get Out of Bed Until They’ve Had Morning Cuddles

The more intelligent an animal is, the more attention they need when kept at zoos. These are Asian elephants, which are believed to be more sensitive and generally intelligent than African bush elephants.

As any yoga practitioners reading will know, yoga, which means unity, isn’t just a way to limber up but is also extremely beneficial for cognitive exertions, whether academic or emotional.

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Mumbai’s ‘Museum on Wheels’ Travels to Rural Villages to Benefit Children

Museum on Wheels-credit: MOW
Museum on Wheels-credit: MOW

Since 2015, a mobile museum has been traveling around the most rural parts of India, introducing disadvantaged schoolchildren to the rich tapestry of Indian history—from the dinosaurs to the Mughals.

The innovative education idea has so far traveled over 50,000 miles and visited 700 cities in the states of Karnataka, Maharashtra, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, and Delhi NCR.

The “Museum on Wheels” was dreamed up by the staff at a famous Mumbai Museum called Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, who received support for the idea of a pair of large coach buses carrying museum-like exhibitions to rural communities from both parents and the government.

“Even in today’s day and time, people from rural backgrounds, especially children, do not see museums as a place that can aid learning. With this initiative, we want to change the narrative and say, ‘If you can’t visit a museum, we can bring it to you’,” says Krutika Mhatre, who spearheads the MOW project.

She told The Better India that the subject matter rotates every 6 months based on feedback from schoolteachers in the towns and cities visited.

Museum on Wheels -MOW

The overwhelming success of the MOW initiative led to the museum getting a government grant for the purchase and outfitting of a second bus in 2019.

“We wanted to start with a topic that everyone was familiar with. So we based it on Harappan civilization, and it was a great success,” said Krutika.

It makes sense—the Harappan, or Indus Valley Civilization, was the first great civilization of the Indian subcontinent, dating back to 3,300 BCE. The Harappans built the Great Baths, an archaeological find today recognized as a World Heritage Site.

Museum on Wheels – MOW

But the MOW has also featured exhibitions on the dinosaurs of Cretaceous India, traditional Indian games, Indian coinage through the ages, and other past civilizations.

Krutika remembers that not only did many of the schools they visited not have a museum in town to go to, but many of the classrooms didn’t even know what a museum was.

It’s especially important in a nation like India that is so big, where human history stretches back so far, and which is also rapidly modernizing.

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“Gladly, as his suns fly through the Heavens’ glorious plan. Run, brothers, your race—Joyful, as a hero to victory.” – Friedrich Schiller, Ode To Joy

Quote of the Day: “Gladly, as his suns fly through the Heavens’ glorious plan. Run, brothers, your race—Joyful, as a hero to victory.” – Friedrich Schiller, Ode To Joy, the poem used in Beethoven’s 9th Symphony (translated from German)

Photo by: Will Li (cropped)

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Firefighting Drone Can Douse Wildfires From Above the Hillsides Where Firefighters Can’t Go

Photo by ADAI / University of Coimbra
Photo by ADAI / University of Coimbra

In one of Europe’s technical centers for firefighting research, a nimble drone that can carry a fire hose is being tested for quick-response firefighting.

Hovering 164 feet above a potential blaze, a pair of symmetrical jet streams can channel the water from a nearby fire engine onto mountainsides where the bulky automobile can’t get.

In a demonstration video, a pile of burning roadside brush the size of a 4-door sedan was snuffed out by the jets in about 15 seconds.

Called SAP (for “ported nozzle system” in Portuguese) the device took 4 years to manufacture at the University of Coimbra’s Forest Fire Research Laboratory.

Certain parts of Portugal have been scorched recently, more so than usual, and the firefighters working at Coimbra are looking for quicker, more flexible responses to combat small fires before they become large blazes.

Science has shown that the greater a nation’s abilities to target and contain small fires, the statistically fewer are their larger ones. This type of drone could be a critical tool for quick and early fire control.

MORE GOOD FIRE NEWS: California Tribe Reignites Age-Old Practice of Intermittent Burns to Prevent Wildfires

It’s designed to be user-friendly and as light as possible (46 pounds or so). While it’s limited in range to the length of its hoses, the developers believe it will be ideal for fires that are dangerous to approach such as those created by chemicals or explosives.

Currently, the durations of droughts across many parts of the world have reached short-term records, leaving many forests in North America, Australia, and Southern Europe vulnerable to blazes.

MORE GOOD FIRE NEWS: Europe Realizes its Shepherds and Ranchers Are Key in Preventing Wildfires

Reporting on the subject, the BBC adds that another pair of eyes in the sky—satellites—are becoming one of the most important tools for firefighters, as they can scan forest reserves for the early stages of wildfires, as well as use smart-computing to create a picture of the wind conditions.

The development comes as New York City’s air quality was suddenly made the worst in the world after winds blew the smoke from Canadian wildfires down across the Mid-Atlantic.

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103-year-old Mainer ‘Lobster Lady’ Celebrates Birthday Marking Her 95th Lobster Season

Credit - Wayne Gray

Virginia Oliver has already renewed her lobster fishing license for the 2023 season. Unlike other lobstermen however, for this Mainer it’s an almost century-long ritual.

That’s because Virginia is the state’s oldest lobster fisherman—at 103 years old, an anniversary that she celebrated with friends, family, news reporters, and lobster-shaped earrings studded with jewels last Tuesday.

Affectionately named the “Lobster Lady,” Virginia has been trapping and hauling the crustaceans since she was 8 years old.

“It’s really not work to me,” the Messenger reported she had said when she was 101. “It’s just what I do. I like to do it. I wouldn’t go if I didn’t want to.”

Credit – Wayne Gray

All four of her children lobster, as well as her late husband. She says she loves the freedom that working on the water offers her.

Her life, upon reaching its 102nd year, was illustrated in a children’s book called The Lobster Lady—Maine’s 102-year-old Legend

Asked candidly when she planned to retire, she replied to News Center Maine that it would have to be when she dies, and not a moment before.

WATCH the story below from News Center Maine…

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This Super Sniffer Dog Can Help Save the Endangered Species of Great Crested Newts

Freya the springer spaniel - SWNS
Freya the springer spaniel – SWNS

A super skilled sniffer dog called Freya is helping to track down highly-endangered great crested newts in an attempt to save the species.

The six-year-old English springer spaniel’s powerful nose can sniff out the semi-aquatic creatures even when they are hiding underground, say scientists who found that Freya was able to locate the newts 87% of the time.

The great crested newt is a species of special conservation concern across the UK as well as central and northern Europe.

While much is known about their life in the water, little is known about their behaviors on land, as they’re often underground and out of sight in mammal burrows or rocky crevices. By being so hidden, it’s difficult to gather data about them.

Great crested newts breed in ponds and spend the majority of their lives either in woodland, grassland, freshwater, wetlands, or farmlands.

They have black warty skin with a striking orange stomach and can be found across lowland England and Wales, but due to a loss of ponds across the years, the UK populations have fallen accordingly.

Freya was sent out to find how environmental factors specific to great crested newts might affect their detectability.

She was tested to see whether she could identify the newts at a range of distances and in different types of land, including sandy or clay soil either with or without vents, which are present in mammal-like burrows.

While she had two false positives during the first run-through, she had an 87% success rate overall.

OTHER UNLIKELY CONSERVATIONISTS: Island is Wonderland for Penguins Once Again After Dog Helps Eradicate 300,000 Invasive Rabbits

She was also able to detect newts in both sandy and clay-vented and unvented soils with high accuracy.

Over 128 trials, published together in PLoS One, she showed an 88% success rate, with the 12% of false calls generally being false positives.

Freya and the newts – SWNS

Freya was significantly faster at detecting great crested newts in vented soil versus unvented soil, naturally because more scent-carrying air would be leaving the burrows.

Study author Nikki Glover believes other dogs would likely require significant training to achieve success rates as high as Freya, with accuracy also depending on the specifics of the detection site.

MORE INTERESTING SCIENCE: 10-year-old’s Backyard Discovery Reveals ‘Mind-blowing’ Interaction Between Plants and Insects

“This pioneering research shows how detection dogs can be a valuable addition to the current toolbox used to locate threatened amphibian species, particularly those using subterranean shelters,” said Ms. Glover, a research student at Salford University.

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Four Colombian Children Found Alive in Jungle Five Weeks After Plane Crash

Presidency handout
Presidency handout

Four Colombian children from an indigenous community who survived a plane crash have been found alive after being lost five weeks in the jungle.

GNN reported two weeks ago about the plight of four Colombian children who miraculously survived a plane crash that killed all three adults on board.

At the time, rescuers were hot on their trail, and unconfirmed reports said they might have been found deep in the Guaviare province, but now the military rescue squad who had found cast-away items they were using to survive, finally managed to locate the youths and bring them home after a harrowing 5 weeks in the jungle.

Sounding like the beginning of a young adult novel series, the crash took place on May 1st on a route between the cities of Araracuara, in Amazonas province, and San Jose del Guaviare, a city in Guaviare province.

It took 2 weeks for Colombian military and rescue units to locate the crashed Cessna 206 light aircraft.

The units followed a trail of cast-away items, including a baby bottle, hair scrunchies, scissors, and plastic wrapping, to several areas where the children, aged 13, 9, and 4, along with a 12-month-old baby, sheltered and found food to eat.

Narcizo Mucutuy, the grandfather of the three girls and one boy, told reporters he was delighted at the news of their rescue.

MORE STORIES OF SURVIVAL: Little Boy Lost for 6 Days in Harsh Kenyan Wilderness is Rescued: ‘An Amazing Moment’

“As the grandfather to my grandchildren who disappeared in the jungles of the Yari, at this moment I am very happy,” he said.

“A joy for the whole country!” Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro said in a message via Twitter.

The children had some knowledge of where to look for food and shelter from their indigenous backgrounds.

WATCH the story below… (Note: GNN has no affiliation with any ads displayed)

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“If a window of opportunity appears, don’t pull down the shade.“ – Tom Peters

Quote of the Day: “If a window of opportunity appears, don’t pull down the shade.“ – Tom Peters

Photo by: Jack Ward (cropped)

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Some People Are Magnets for Mosquitoes – It Could Be the Soap They’re Using

By Akshay Bandre
By Akshay Bandre

Why some people are mosquito magnets might be due to which soap they use in the shower, according to new research, as the pesky insects fly towards or away from specific aromas.

“It’s remarkable the same individual that is extremely attractive to mosquitoes when they are unwashed can be turned even more attractive to mosquitoes with one soap,” said senior author Dr. Clement Vinauger. “Then, they become repellent or repulsive to mosquitoes with another soap.”

The results of the team’s experiments found that washing with Dove and Simple Truth increased the attractiveness of some of the volunteers, while the smell of the Native brand tended to deter the blood suckers, according to the team at Virginia Tech.

Commenting on the many theories for why some people attract mosquitoes while others get off bite-free, co-author Dr. Chloe Lahondere says it’s not easy to pinpoint a specific reason.

“Everybody smells different, even after the application of soap. Your physiological status, the way you live, what you eat, and the places you go all affect the way you smell.

“And soaps drastically change the way we smell, not only by adding chemicals, but also by causing variations in the emission of compounds that we are already naturally producing.”

A series of experiments found soaps did impact mosquitoes’ preferences. Chemicals emitted by four human volunteers were analyzed both before and an hour after they’d applied body washes by Dial, Dove, Native, and Simple Truth (see the specific types below). Odor profiles of the soaps themselves were also broken down by chemical.

Choose a coconut-scented soap

Each participant emitted their own unique odor, some of which were more attractive to mosquitoes than others. Soap-washing significantly changed these—and not only by adding floral fragrances to the mix.

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Effects of exhaled carbon dioxide (CO2), another important cue for mosquitoes, were excluded by conducting tests on fabric that had absorbed the participants’ odors.

Humans can’t smell CO2, which we and other animals exhale with each breath. Mosquitoes can. It boosts females’ activity, making them explore surrounding space in search of a host.

“All of the soaps contained a chemical called limonene which is a known mosquito repellent but in spite of that being the main chemical in all four soaps, three out of the four soaps we tested increased mosquitoes’ attraction,” said Dr. Vinauger.

The study published in iScience identified four chemicals associated with mosquito attraction. Three chemicals repulsed the mosquito, including a coconut-scent in American Bourbon and a floral compound used to treat scabies and lice.

The two soaps advertised as more “natural” (Simple Truth and Native) tended to be less chemical-heavy soaps (e.g., lower abundance of saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons, such as alkanes and alkenes) than Dial and Dove.

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Four body washes were selected based on their brand popularity, and fragrance: 1) Dial Body Wash with Marula Oil, 2) Dove Deep Moisture Nourishing Body Wash 3) Simple Truth Organic Honey Blossom Baby Shampoo & Body Wash, and 4) Native Coconut and Vanilla Body wash.

Clement Vinauger / Virginia Tech

They were combined to create and test attractive and repellent odor blends, which had strong impacts on the preference of the insects from the Aedes aegypti species.

“With these mixtures, we eliminated all the noise in the signal by only including those chemicals that the statistics were telling us are important for attraction or repulsion,” said Vinauger.

However, the effect of soap applications on the proportion of landing observed was a function of the interaction between the soap and the volunteer. Specifically, fewer mosquitoes landed on either sleeve when volunteer 1 was washed with either Dial, Simple Truth, or Native soap, than when only their unwashed scent was presented.

“I would choose a coconut-scented soap if I wanted to reduce mosquito attraction.”

He now plans to expand the results and find some general patterns or rules by testing more soap varieties and many more people—and explore how soap impacts mosquito preference over a longer period of time.

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“We’re very curious to look at the time course of the effect… if you take a shower in the morning, does it still matter to mosquitoes in the evening?”

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Scientists Amazed By Sighting of Extremely Rare Jellyfish Only Seen Once Before (WATCH)

The Ocean Exploration Trust via SWNS
The Ocean Exploration Trust via SWNS

A group of scientists were left amazed after the sighting of an extremely rare jellyfish that was only seen once before.

The team of experts spotted the animal during an expedition by the Ocean Exploration Trust, a nonprofit dedicated to marine exploration and research.

The video below captures the moment and shows the bizarre-looking creature slowly making its way through the depths, as the team of experts is left entranced at the sight of it.

One scientist can be heard exclaiming, “Woah! What is that?”—while the vehicle they’re operating remotely first encounters the jellyfish.

“I’ve never seen anything like that,” another can be heard saying. “I have no idea what it is.”

The animal was sighted on May 31 in the deep and remote Pacific Ocean, 130 miles from the nearest landmark Kingman Reef, which is 4,800 miles away from Australia.

Classified an “undescribed” because it has no name or detailed description by any researchers, the species has only ever been seen once before, on a 2015 expedition by The Ocean Exploration Trust.

It distinguishes itself from other jellyfish by three long “tentacles” sprouting at an odd angle from the top of its head.

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It is also, surprisingly, believed to prey on other jelly-like animals, such as other jellyfish and swimming sea cucumbers using its long tentacles to catch prey.

Dr. Dhugal Lindsay, a research scientist with the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science & Technology, commented on the creature’s strange tentacles, saying, “This is extremely rare for a jellyfish as they are normally radially splittable into ‘pizza slices’ with even, rather than odd, numbers.

“They hold the tentacles in front of them as they swim, so that the tentacles come into contact with their large gelatinous prey before the bow wave of the water they “push” before them as they swim reaches it and it senses this water movement and escapes—a kind of stealth predation so-to-speak.”

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This new species is believed to be part of the Bathykorus genus, but does not match any other species of this kind due to its brown color.

At this point, it’s really anyone’s guess.

The Ocean Exploration Trust has more free live streams of their expeditions at www.nautilus.live.com.

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Dancing or Brisk Walks Can Slash Diabetes Risk By 74%, Even When it Runs in the Family

Dancing or going for brisk walks can slash the risk of diabetes by three quarters, according to a huge new study.

Those who managed more than an hour of moderate-to-vigorous exercise per day were 74 percent less likely to be diagnosed, compared to sedentary peers.

The protection even applied to genetically-predisposed patients when the disease runs in the family. In fact, their susceptibility fell further than individuals at low genetic risk who were inactive.

“People are unable to control their genetic risk and family history,” said the study’s senior author Professor Melody Ding, of Sydney University. “But this finding provides promising and positive news that through an active lifestyle, one can fight off much of the excessive risk for type 2 diabetes.”

The Australian team tracked 59,325 adults from the UK Biobank—a database holding detailed information about the genes and health of around half a million Brits.

Participants wore accelerometers on their wrist at the start and were then followed for up to seven years.

It is the first study to show that genetic risk of type 2 diabetes, linked to unhealthy lifestyles, can be counteracted by exercise.

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Moderate-intensity physical activity describes movements that get you sweating and slightly out of breath, such as brisk walking or landscaping. Examples of vigorous-intensity physical activity include running, aerobic dancing, cycling uphill or at a fast pace and heavy gardening such as digging—all activities that make you out of breath or cause you to breathe heavily.

Prof. Ding’s father who’s in his sixties was recently diagnosed with diabetes, which has turned into one of the world’s top ten killers due to the obesity crisis.

“So the result of the study is extremely heartening for my family and myself,” she said. “As an already active person, I now have extra motivation to keep this active lifestyle.

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The researchers say the study demonstrates higher levels of physical activity should be promoted as a major strategy for prevention.

The study also found that people with a high genetic risk score were 2.4 times more likely to develop it, if they didn’t exercise.

“If you have a family history of type 2 diabetes, or even if you don’t, today is the day to start being physically active,” said Susan Luo, lead author of the paper published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

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2 Conservatives on Supreme Court Seal Historic Decision to Preserve Voting Rights in Alabama Gerrymandering Case

2023 Supreme Court Justices – By Fred Schilling, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States
2023 Supreme Court Justices – By Fred Schilling, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States

In a historic win for voting rights, the U.S. Supreme Court Thursday ruled in Allen v. Milligan in favor of Black voters, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joining the court’s three liberal justices, ruling that Alabama’s congressional map violates the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits racially discriminatory voting practices or procedures.

They gave their thumbs up to the decision of a 3-judge district court order that struck down Alabama’s 2021 congressional map, and required the redrawing of the state’s congressional map.

Even though Blacks make up 27 percent of the voting-age population in Alabama, the map passed by the state legislature only carved out one district out of seven that contains a majority of Black voters, which equates to 14% of the districts reflecting the state’s demographics.

In its decision, the high court also affirmed that under Section 2 of the VRA, race can be considered in the redistricting process to provide equal opportunities to communities of color and ensure districts are not drawn in a way that weakens their voting strength.

The five justices cited in their decision the overwhelming evidence of discrimination presented by the plaintiffs in the district court.

“Alabama attempted to rewrite federal law by saying race could not be considered in the redistricting process even when necessary to remedy racial discrimination,” said Legal Defense Fund deputy director of litigation Deuel Ross, who argued the case before the court in October.

“Today’s decision is a recognition of Section 2’s purpose to prevent voting discrimination and the very basic right to a fair shot.”

Plaintiffs from the case released a joint comment that read, in part: “The Supreme Court affirmed the district court’s order that a new map be drawn that complies with federal law—one that recognizes the diversity in our state rather than erasing it. Today we can move forward with these reaffirmed protections (that) civil rights leaders fought and died for.”

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In 2018, Michigan voters successfully passed a proposition that would eliminate gerrymandering for future elections—and it was all thanks to one woman’s Facebook post. They followed in the footsteps of a California measure passed in 2010 that put the duty of drawing Congressional districts into the hands of an independent, transparent commission—instead of leaving it to partisan politicians.

Tish Gotell Faulks, a Legal Director at the American Civil Liberties Union, hopes that when the Alabama Legislature redraws the new, more fair voting districts, more residents can vote for representatives that reflect their beliefs, values, and priorities.

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This decision sends a clear message to U.S. lawmakers that their responsibility has not changed: They must ensure that voters of color are not denied an opportunity to participate in the electoral process.

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Quote of the Day: “If the path be beautiful, let us not ask where it leads.” – Anatole France

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