Showing posts with label One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label One. Show all posts

Monday, 11 October 2010

Watches Hunger index shows one billion without enough food

Hunger index shows one billion without enough food


The number of undernourished people, especially children, has increased in recent years
One billion people in the world were undernourished in 2009, according to a new report.

The 2010 Global Hunger Index shows that child malnutrition is the biggest cause of hunger worldwide, accounting for almost half of those affected.

Countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia were shown to have the highest levels of hunger.

The report's authors called on nations to tackle child malnutrition in order to reduce global hunger.

The Global Hunger Index is produced by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), Welthungerhilfe and Concern Worldwide.

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Global hunger 'unacceptably high'
Food push urged to avoid hunger
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) defines hunger as the consumption of fewer than 1,800 kilocalories a day - the minimum required to live a healthy and productive life.

Despite the number of undernourished people in the world falling between 1990 and 2006, the report's authors say in that number has crept up in recent years, with the data from 2009 showing more than one billion hungry people.
coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11503845

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

Watch Hungary: toxic sludge will take one year to clean up

Hungary: toxic sludge will take one year to clean up
The wave of toxic sludge that has poured into seven villages in Hungary could take up to 12 months and tens of millions of dollars to clean up, officials have warned

Zoltan Illes, the environment minister, told the BBC the clean-up of the country's worst chemical accident would take at least one year and probably require technical and financial assistance from the European Union.
The red tide, which inundated streets and homes after the walls of residue reservoir at an aluminium plant collapsed, has so far killed four people and injured 120, but the death toll is expected to rise.

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Six people are missing and another eight are in critical condition in hospital, suffering from chemical burns. The sludge is a mixture of water and mining waste containing heavy metals and is considered highly dangerous.
In some places the torrent, which swept cars off roads and damaged bridges, was eight feet deep.
It is estimated that 38.8 million cubic feet (the equivalent of 440 Olympic-size swimming pools) of red, poisonous sludge has affected some 15 square miles.
Hundreds of residents have been evacuated and a state of emergency has been declared in three western counties.
As the clean-up operation began fears mounted that the highly poisonous sludge could have reached the River Danube.
Coppied by http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/hungary/8045257/Hungary-toxic-sludge-will-take-one-year-to-clean-up.html

Saturday, 21 August 2010

Watch Chernobyl species decline linked to DNA

now we saw this Chernobyl species decline linked to DNA
By Victoria Gill
Science reporter, BBC News

The scientists have studied the exclusion zone for more than a decade
Scientists working in Chernobyl have found a way to predict which species there are likely to be most severely damaged by radioactive contamination.

The secret to a species' vulnerability, they say, lies in its DNA.

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Mammals decline in Chernobyl zone
This discovery could reveal which species are most likely to decline or even become extinct in response to other types of environmental stress.

The researchers published their findings in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology.

Professor Tim Mousseau from the University of South Carolina, US, and Dr Anders Moller from the National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris, France, led the study.

The two scientists have been working in Chernobyl for more than a decade, gathering data about the populations of insects, birds and mammals in "zone of alienation" surrounding the desolate nuclear power station.

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One explanation may be that these species have, for whatever reason, less capable DNA repair mechanisms”

Tim Mousseau
University of South Carolina
For this study, they used existing databases to examine in detail the DNA patterns of each of the species they had studied in Chernobyl.

DNA secret
With every generation of a species' lineage, the pattern of its DNA changes ever so slightly, as a result of the natural balance between mutations and the individual's ability to repair damaged DNA. This is how species evolve.

The rate of this change - as each piece of the DNA code is replaced by another - is called the substitution rate.

"This information is available in large database," Professor Mousseau explained to BBC News. "So you can get the DNA sequences [of each species] and examine the changes that have occurred among a species over time.

"What we have discovered is that when we look at the species in Chernobyl, we can predict, based on their substitution rates, which ones are most vulnerable to contaminants."

Professor Mousseau said that the Chernobyl setting offered a "unique opportunity to look at a natural experiment in progress - [to see] what happens to species when they have this kind of environmental perturbation".

The results of this study could shed light on which species are most vulnerable to other kinds of environmental contamination.

Brightly coloured birds and birds that have a long distance migration were some of the organisms most likely to be affected by contaminants.

"One explanation may be that these species have, for whatever reason, less capable DNA repair mechanisms," said Professor Mousseau.

Lousise Johnson, an evolutionary biologist from the University of Reading, said the findings were "fascinating".

"Extreme events like Chernobyl provide opportunities to test predictions about evolution," she told BBC News.

"One of the difficulties of such research is that it isn't really an experiment- it is impossible to control for all of the confounding variables.

"But [the scientists] have been very careful to test all of the other factors that could be important - antioxidants, population size, body size, etc. of bird species and it appears... that there is a shared causal relationship between accumulating mutations over time and the ability to withstand radiation."
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11023530