Beluga sturgeon missing

This is a video about beluga sturgeon and caviar.

From daily The Morning Star in Britain:

Halp! Harald’s gone missing

Tuesday 31 May 2011

A sturgeon called Harald who was part of a Romanian scheme to protect the endangered species has gone missing, researchers said today.

Harald, a beluga sturgeon, had been wired up to a satellite transmitter in 2009.

Scientists hoped that by tracking his movements they could learn the causes of the sturgeons’ decline.

[Beluga] Sturgeons can live for over 100 years and grow up to eight metres in length.

They have been prized for their meat and caviar since Roman times, but their numbers have plummeted since 1989 due to an explosion in illegal poaching following the collapse the Soviet bloc.

Pregnant Indian rhino in Amersfoort zoo

This is a video made in Amersfoort zoo in the Netherlands. It is about weighing the female Indian rhinoceros Saar of this zoo, to find out whether she was pregnant.

Now, the zoo has announced that Saar is indeed pregnant. In mid November this year, a baby Indian rhino is expected to be born.

BBC Indian rhino info: here.

How do we save the Sumatran rhino? Here.

Female rhino born in Uganda, first in 30 years: here.

Rare Northern White Rhino Dies of Old Age–and Then There Were 7… Here.

A new study shows that zoos aren’t just a fun place for kids to visit; they are also a teaching opportunity. Interviewing more than 3,000 children between 7 and 14, the largest study of its kind found that just over half of the kids (53 percent) showed improvement in at least one of three areas: conservation-related knowledge, concern for endangered species, or desire to participate in conservation efforts: here.

South Africa has lost at least 193 rhinos during the first six months of 2011 with Kruger National Park continuing to be hardest hit. The world famous safari destination has already lost 126 rhinos to poaching this year in addition to 146 killed there in 2010: here.

July 2011. Marnus Steyl, a South African lion breeder and safari operator has emerged as a key supplier of millions of rands worth of rhino horn to a ruthless South-East Asian wildlife trafficking syndicate. Steyl allegedly stood to make at least 16 million rand in just a few weeks by supplying 50 sets of rhino horn to a Laotian company fronting for the syndicate: here.

Penguins and herons at Ouwehand zoo

Last Saturday at Ouwehand Zoo in Rhenen, of course there was not just the aquarium.

There were warthog piglets.

This is a warthog video.

When keepers fed the Humboldt penguins fish, that attracted three grey herons. And a lesser black-backed gull: rather far from the coastal habitat of this marine species. And a white stork, from the local stork nest above the bateleur eagle cage.

Two Red River Hogs were born unexpectedly in early May at Bioparc Valencia in Spain. These colorful wild boars live in the African equatorial forest, typically near water: here.

July 2011: The first African penguin to be fitted with a satellite transmitter has been released into the wild off the coast of South Africa: here.

Fish and jellyfish at Rhenen aquarium

On 28 May, Ouwehand’s Zoo in Rhenen.

In the aquarium, red-knobbed starfish, razorfish, and Ocellaris clownfish are housed together.

Longhorn cowfish

A bit further, longhorn cowfish and yellow tang.

The Australian spotted jellyfish have an aquarium of their own. Jellyfish video: here.

A bit further, Atlantic jawfish.

And a common aquarium for Synanceja verrucosa stonefish, red lionfish (see also here), and copperband butterflyfish.

The lionfish population has exploded in the waters from Florida to the Caribbean. Creative measures have been taken to keep this invasive species in check: here.

Little jawfish pretends to be part of mimic octopus – a case of a fish mimicking an octopus that mimics fish: here.

Berlusconi loses Milan, Naples elections

This video is called Underage bellydancer at centre of latest Berlusconi scandal- Copyright France 24.

From CNN:

Berlusconi‘s coalition suffers defeat in Milan, Naples elections

By Hada Messia, CNN

May 30, 2011 — Updated 1724 GMT (0124 HKT)

Rome — Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi‘s ruling coalition has suffered a major defeat in local elections in Milan and Naples, with voters backing left-wing candidates in both cities.

Milan’s turn to the left is a powerful setback for Berlusconi. Milan is his hometown and his political stronghold, and it has been led by a center-right mayor for the past two decades

In Milan, official voting results issued Monday by the Italian Interior Ministry gave the left-wing candidate, Giuliano Pisapia, about 55% of the vote over the incumbent mayor and center-right candidate Letizia Moratti, who had nearly 45% in Sunday’s balloting. In Naples the left-wing candidate, Lugi

sic; Luigi

De Magistris, was winning with 65% of the vote against the 34% of the center-right candidate, Gianni Lettieri. Whichever candidate winds up with more than 51% wins becomes the new major.

Supporters of leading candidates in both Milan and Naples began celebrating their apparent victories even before the final official voting count was over.

Political analysts have said that these local elections were a referendum on the Italian premier, who has been battling to hold his coalition together over the past six months as he fought various corruption trials, as well as a current trial in which he faces charges of abuse of power and prostitution with an underage teenager. That trial resumes tomorrow in Milan.

The voting was the second round of the process. The shock, many say, came two weeks ago, May 14 and 15, when the first ballot round took place and it became clear that his hometown had been lost or was at serious risk.

The Italian premier was on a two-day visit to Romania on Monday and had not released any comments on the election results, But many of his party members, including a minister, have said that this is a time for reflection.

An editorial in Italian leading newspaper, Corriere della Sera, Monday summed it up:

“The premier has already faced the worst-case scenario. His party looses in Milan and in Naples. A double blow with strong political consequences, both real and of the country’s image. Is he worried? They (his political aides) assure us NO. or at least, no more. ….his mind is already in tomorrow.”

Naples is traditionally Rightist rather than Leftist. Even before Berlusconi entered politics, the monarchists and neo-fascists used to be stronger there than in the rest of Italy. That a Rightist candidate now loses 34% to 65% is a big blow for the Right.

The Italian left is being remade: here.

Bye Bye Bunga-Bunga: Italy Prepares for the Post-Berlusconi Era: here.