Rare tadpole shrimps rediscovered in Scotland


This is a video from the USA about Triops longicaudatus (commonly called longtail tadpole shrimp, American tadpole shrimp or rice tadpole shrimp).

From Wildlife Extra:

World’s oldest species resurfaces in Scotland

August 2008. Not everyone is unhappy about the dire August weather in the UK; it seems the recent downpours have provided ideal conditions for the re-emergence of near-extinct Tadpole Shrimps on the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust’s Caerlaverock reserve in Scotland.

The Tadpole Shrimp (Triops cancriformis) is a living fossil, thought to be the oldest living creature on the planet. Resembling a small Horsehoe Crab, it has been recorded from at least 220 million years ago in the Triassic period, even before dinosaurs roamed the earth, and may be as much as 300 million years old. The species was first discovered in Britain in the south west Scotland in 1907 just west of Caerlaverock on Preston Merse in Kirkcudbrightshire. However, it was thought to have become extinct in Scotland when the ponds were lost to the sea in 1948.

In Britain, it is currently only known in a single pool in the New Forest. However Tadpole Shrimps were first discovered at WWT Caerlaverock four years ago, again, after a particularly wet August. Back then, in late summer 2004, WWT researcher Dr Larry Griffin found a colony in a small pool on the saltmarsh of the reserve while carrying out a late survey for Natterjack Toads [see also here].

200 near-extinct tadpole shrimps hatch out at WWT Caerlaverock: here. Two colonies of age-old and endangered tadpole shrimps discovered alive and well near Solway coast: here.

Eight new shrimps described from Sulawesi: here. And here.

Horseshoe crabs: here.

Rare monkeys discovered in Cambodia


From Wildlife Extra:

Huge populations discovered of two of Asia’s rarest primates

Cambodia conservation area contains tens of thousands of threatened monkeys

August 2008. Just weeks after announcing the discovery of an unkown population of 50,000 western lowland gorillas, the Wildlife Conservation Society report has revealed large and previously unknown populations of two globally threatened primates in a protected area in Cambodia.

Black-shanked douc langurs & Yellow-cheeked crested gibbons

The survey counted 42,000 black-shanked douc langurs along with 2,500 yellow-cheeked crested gibbons in Cambodia’s Seima Biodiversity Conservation Area, an estimate that represents the largest known populations for both species in the world.

A new population of the extremely rare Tonkin snub-nosed monkey, so-called because of its unusual and distinctive up-turned nose, has recently been discovered in a remote forested area of northern Vietnam: here. And here.

Gorillas might be the smartest apes on the planet: here.

British soldiers’ families sue government on deaths in Afghanistan


This video from England says about itself:

Military Families Against the War Peace Camp – 22nd & 23rd September 2006.

Music by Peggy Seeger.

From British weekly The Observer:

Families sue MoD over air victims’ right to life

Afghan spy plane deaths were unlawful, historic test case is to be told

* Jamie Doward and Mark Townsend

* Sunday August 31 2008

Families of servicemen killed when their Nimrod spy plane exploded in the British military’s biggest loss of life since the Falklands War are to sue the government under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), claiming it failed to respect their right to life.

In what promises to be a historic and controversial legal test case that could trigger scores of similar claims from British military personnel serving around the world, the families will tomorrow issue proceedings against the Secretary of State for Defence, Des Browne, alleging the government failed to offer adequate protection to men by minimising the risks of a fire on board the plane.

It will be the first time the Ministry of Defence has faced a legal challenge under the ECHR and the case is likely to cause a furore as it raises complex questions about the extent to which the government can be liable for the deaths of military personnel killed in war zones overseas. It will also refocus the debate around the military’s preparedness for combat and the condition of the equipment being used by the armed forces in theatres of war.

The RAF Nimrod XV230 Nimrod exploded on 2 September 2006 in Afghanistan, killing all 14 servicemen on board including Benjamin Knight, 25, and Steven Swarbrick, 28, whose families are launching the legal action.

Evidence presented at the inquest into the mens’ deaths highlighted a series of faults with the plane, which exploded after an airborne refuelling operation. The coroner, Andrew Walker, heard how the plane had no fire detection and suppression system and that there were serious design flaws with the way it had been modified that meant ducts were prone to overheat. However, a safety code drawn up for the plane in 2001 considered the possibility of it overheating after refuelling ‘improbable’.

Walker was scathing about the RAF and the MoD. He said the aircraft had ‘never been airworthy’ and called for ‘this cavalier approach to safety to come to an end’. Largely on the strength of the evidence presented at the inquest, the families have now decided to start legal action against the government.

Weerribben nature reserve, final day


This is a video of a kestrel nest, in a church in Livorno, Italy.

Friday 29 August was the last day in Weerribben nature reserve.

For the last time, to the hide where there had been a kingfisher day after day.

Today, there are birds in the trees of the small island just in front of the hide, where the kingfisher often sits. Not kingfishers today, but blue tit and chiffchaff.

Great cormorants on trees of a more distant, bigger island, spreading their wings to dry them.

And then, the kingfisher. Now we feel free to leave.

As we left Weerribben nature reserve, on the canal first a juvenile great crested grebe; then, an adult great crested grebe.

A buzzard flying away from a pole in a meadow.

A kestrel hovering in the air.

Nazis infiltrate United States army


This video is called The First Jewish Broadcast on Nazi Soil – 1944. In Aachen, Germany.

By Matt Kennard in the USA:

The new Nazi army: How the U.S. military is allowing the far-right to join its ranks.

“I find it very disconcerting that there are high-level military officials that are unaware of this growing problem. This is a serious issue that deserves serious attention from the Pentagon brass.”

Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Littleton) asking General David Petraeus about the infiltration of American gangs into the United States military during a hearing on U.S. progress in Iraq on April 9th 2008.

Racism in the US armed forces: here.

New giant clam species discovered


This video is about spawning of Tridacna clams in a marine aquarium.

From the BBC:

New giant clam species discovered

By Elizabeth Mitchell
Science reporter, BBC News

A new species of giant clam has been discovered in the Red Sea.

The fossil record suggests that, about 125,000 years ago, the species Tridacna costata accounted for more than 80% of local giant clams.

The species may now be critically endangered, researchers report in Current Biology journal.

The scientists believe their findings may represent one of the earliest examples of the over-exploitation of marine organisms by humans.

T. costatahas “very peculiar characteristics” that set it apart from two other species of giant clam that are also found in the area.

The Latin word costatus means “ribbed” and T. costata has a disitinctive, zig-zag outline to its shell.

“The new species are mid-sized clams – up to 40cm long and a couple of kilograms heavy,” explained co-author Dr Claudio Richter, from the Alfred-Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Germany.

The new species has a distant relative, T. gigas, which can grow up to 1.4m long.

Live specimens of T. costata appear to be restricted to very shallow waters. Other species were also found in deeper reef zones.

The clam has an earlier and shorter breeding season that coincides with the seasonal plankton bloom. Genetic analysis confirmed the status of the new species.

‘Time travel’

“One of the great features of the desert-enclosed Red Sea is that you can literally time-travel from the present, several hundred thousand years into the past,” said Dr Richter.

The research team uncovered well-preserved fossil evidence that suggested stocks of these giant clams plummeted some 125,000 years ago – during an interval between Ice Ages.

They believe this period coincides with the appearance of modern humans in the Red Sea area.

Giant clams were abundant, large in size and easily accessible – making them an attractive food source for hunter-gatherers.

In “pre-human times”, T. costata may have been up to 60cm long. Since then, shell size has also decreased dramatically.

Do giant man-eating clams actually exist? Here.

Noam Chomsky on Guantanamo Bay


This video from the USA is called Noam Chomsky Lecture – Distorted Morality. Speech at Harvard University about America’s war on terror.

From British daily The Independent:

Chomsky: Britain has failed US detainees

By Robert Verkaik, Law Editor

Saturday, 30 August 2008

Britain has failed in its duty to stop the US from committing “shameful acts” in the treatment of suspects detained during the war on terror, one of America’s most respected intellectuals warns today.

In an interview with The Independent, Professor Noam Chomsky calls on the Government to use its special relationship with Washington America to secure the closure of Guantanamo Bay.

Claiming that he has heard only “twitters of protest” in the UK , the emeritus professor of linguistics also asks British “thinkers” to be more conspicuous in their opposition to the erosion of civil rights since the 9.11 attacks on the US.

In the wake of the invasion of Iraq, Prof Chomsky, a leading opponent of the Vietnam conflict, has been the most prominent among US intellectuals critical of the war with Iraq and the treatment of terror suspects sent to Guantanamo Bay and other prison camps around the world.

See also here.

White storks and kingfisher


This is a kingfisher video.

Rather cloudy, my third day at Weerribben nature reserve.

Not many birds, not many dragonflies, at first. Also not near the southern hide, where there are probably more birds in spring.

Near Wetering West village, two white storks.

Later, near Wetering Oost, one white stork and two grey herons.

We go to the northern hide, like yesterday.

Mute swans, grey lag geese. Great cormorants, sitting while spreading their wings, to dry them.

Again, a kingfisher.

An adult great crested grebe with two youngsters.