Tag Archives: research

Gulf’s Oil-Soaked Birds: Rescue or Kill?

By Eliott C. McLaughlin, CNN June 10, 2010 6:18 p.m. EDT A brown pelican coated in heavy oil tries to take flight on East Grand Terre Island, Louisiana. Some experts see it as a well-meaning flight of fancy. To others, cleaning a bird soaked with oil from the Gulf of Mexico is the only chance it has for survival. In the case of the brown pelican, removed last year from the endangered species list, it may be the only way to save the entire lot. “It's like triage on a battlefield. You have to weigh where you can have your best success,” said Ginette Hemley, the World Wildlife Fund's senior vice president for conservation strategies and science. Earlier this week, a German biologist painted a less rosy picture in an interview with the magazine Der Spiegel. Silvia Gaus of the Wattenmeer National Park said it was more humane to euthanize the birds because they will suffer a painful death regardless of whether the oil is scrubbed from their feathers. “According to serious studies, the middle-term survival rate of oil-soaked birds is under 1 percent,” Gaus told the magazine. “We, therefore, oppose cleaning birds.” The statement spotlighted a similar statement in 2002 from the World Wildlife Fund, which said it was reluctant to advise cleaning birds after the Prestige spill off the coast of Spain. In that incident, a sunken tanker dumped about 20 million gallons of oil off the Galician coast. The fund issued a statement earlier this week saying its 2002 remarks could not fairly be applied to the situation in the Gulf of Mexico. Thursday marked Day 52 of the gusher. “In many cases, WWF believes there is value in trying to clean and rehabilitate wildlife, especially if productive, viable adult animals can recover from exposure to oil,” the release said. “But every situation is different, and it is too soon to fully calculate the impact the Gulf spill will have on the long-term viability of populations of many species in the region.” Hemley said it could take up to three years to determine the spill's total impact on wildlife. According to Wednesday's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service numbers, rescue officials have collected 1,075 birds. Of those, 442 were alive and “visibly oiled.” Another 633 were found dead, and 109 of those were visibly oiled. The report states BP's Deepwater Horizon spill is not responsible for all dead birds. “How long will the birds survive that have been cleaned and released? We don't know yet,” Hemley said, explaining it depends on a variety of factors. Included are how quickly the bird was saved, the bird's age and size and the length of exposure to the oil, she said. Lee Hollingsworth, a wildlife adviser with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds in Wales, said other concerns are the level of saturation and how much oil a bird has ingested. Seabirds' feathers are weatherproofed by natural oils, stimulated by a gland in their lower back. This is why birds nuzzle their tail feathers when they're preening, Hollingsworth said. “If that gland is damaged,” he said, “then that no longer secretes oil.” Other rescue methods, such as holding the birds in captivity to protect them or moving them to a new habitat, can be dangerous as well, he said. Captivity is stressful, and changing a bird's environment introduces it to new prey and predators, whereas it was accustomed to its food and enemies in its natural habitat. Many birds are quite specialized, he said, and don't do well in artificial, foreign or zoo-like environs. The Welsh society joined the World Wildlife Fund in 2002, saying that heavily oiled birds could not be helped. But on Thursday, Hollingsworth said the 8-year-old statement was specific to the situation in Spain, which happened in chilly November. The Gulf is warm, which could bode well for the birds, he said. “The majority of [birds affected by the Prestige incident] didn't survive anyway. That, again, is due to the ingestion of oil and weatherproofing,” he said. Hollingsworth said many people cleaning birds are working for charities that don't receive much government funding, and it's important for such groups to prioritize their efforts and target areas where they'll do the most good. In the Gulf of Mexico, that may mean focusing on brown pelicans. The birds, which are native to the Atlantic Coast and eastern Gulf, spent almost 40 years on the endangered species list until last year . “The chances of success increase every time we deal with one of these unfortunate situations. … Hopefully we're getting better at this. –Ginette Hemley, World Wildlife Fund When salvaging just a few birds is so vital to the survival of a species, Hollingsworth said, “something has got to be done, and of course it's worth saving the bird.” Despite conflicting studies on the viability of washing birds, there are plenty of success stories. The International Bird Rescue and Research Center, which is working in the Gulf, cites several examples on its website. After the 2000 Treasure spill off the coast of South Africa, rescuers saved 21,000 African penguins and released about 19,500 birds back into their colonies, according to the center. The website notes rescuers also saved 32 snowy plovers after the 1999 New Carissa spill off the Oregon coast, 180 king eiders after a 1996 spill near Alaska's Pribilof Islands and 175 waterfowl after California's Santa Clara River spill of 1991. “It may seem like a small number but it was significant to us, as we knew what those animals endured being covered in very heavy and thick oil,” wrote Jay Holcomb, the center's executive director. Hemley said the wildlife fund would generally “err on the side of recovering birds.” After all, she said, it's not costly to rinse the birds and let them rest before scrubbing them with Dawn, the dishwashing liquid whose motto once was, “Takes grease out of your way.” Rescuers are always looking to improve on their methods for saving animals, and they've learned a lot since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill off the coast of Southern California, she said. “The chances of success increase every time we deal with one of these unfortunate situations,” Hemley said. “Hopefully we're getting better at this.” added by: EthicalVegan

Flotilla Fallout Hits Madrid’s Gay Pride Parade

Cultural and international politics collided this week after a contingent of Israeli gays from Tel Aviv were pointedly barred from participating in an upcoming gay pride march because their home city’s officials haven’t condemned last month’s flotilla raid near Gaza. A spokesperson for the city of Tel Aviv gives his displeased response after the jump.

High School Dropouts Aren’t Helping

A smaller percentage of American highschoolers is making it through all four years, reports the Christian Science Monitor. Lower graduation rates adds up to an economic loss of billions in wages and tax revenue and a gloomy future competing with those overachieving brainiacs in China and India. Extra credit: Read Mike Rose’s masterful assessment of the education reform hype machine here . Christian Science Monitor: The percent of students earning a standard diploma in four years shifted from 69.2 percent in 2006 to 68.8 percent in 2007, according to an analysis of the most recent data in “Diplomas Count 2010.” It was the second consecutive year of decline, says the report, which was released Thursday by Education Week and the Editorial Projects in Education (EPE) Research Center, a nonprofit in Bethesda, Md. That translates to 11,000 fewer graduates in 2007 than in 2006. At its peak in 1969, the national graduation rate was 77 percent. Read more Related Entries June 10, 2010 Israel’s Gift to Iran’s Hard-Liners June 10, 2010 Sarah Palin: Competent Manager

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High School Dropouts Aren’t Helping

NASA Taking First Trek to Arctic for Ocean Research

Photo Credit: U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer Patrick Kelley NASA researchers are getting ready for a voyage to the Arctic to study how climate change is impacting the ecosystems and chemistry of icy north. The 5-week long mission, appropriately named Impacts of Climate on Ecosystems and Chemistry of the Arctic Pacific Environment (ICESCAPE) begins June 15th, and by comparing the research team’s observations with NASA’s satellite views of the Arctic Ocean biology and sea ice, the team hopes to come back with answers on how our oceans and ice condi… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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NASA Taking First Trek to Arctic for Ocean Research

Shocking New Report: The CIA Performed Human Experiments on Prisoners Under Bush

Over the last year there have been an increasing number of accounts suggesting that, along with the CIA's “enhanced interrogation” torture program, there was a related program experimenting with and researching the application of the torture. For example, in the seven paragraphs released by a British court summarizing observations by British counterintelligence agents of the treatment of Binyan Mohamed by the CIA, the first two of these paragraphs these paragraphs stated: It was reported that a new series of interviews was conducted by the United States authorities prior to 17 May 2002 as part of a new strategy designed by an expert interviewer…. BM had been intentionally subjected to continuous sleep deprivation. The effects of the sleep deprivation were carefully observed. [emphasis added] The suggestion was that a new strategy was being tested and the results carefully examined. Several detainees have provided similar accounts, expressing their belief that their interrogations were being carefully studied, apparently so that the techniques could be modified based on the results. Such research would violate established laws and ethical rules governing research. Since Nazi doctors who experimented upon prisoners in the concentration camps were put on trial at Nuremberg, the U.S. and other countries have moved toward a high ethical standard for research on people. All but the most innocuous research requires the informed consent of those studied. Further, all research on people is subject to review by independent research ethics committees, known as Institutional Review Boards or IRBs. In the U.S., there was a major push toward more stringent research ethics when the existence of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was publicly revealed in the early 1970s. In that study nearly 400 poor rural African-American men were denied existing treatment for their syphilis, and indeed, were never told they had syphilis by participating doctors. The study by the U.S. Public Health Service was intended to continue until the last of these men died of syphilis. When the study became public the resulting outcry helped cement evolving ethical standards mandating informed consent for any research with even a possibility of causing harm. These rules were codified in what has become known as the Common Rule, which applies to nearly all federally-funded research, including all research by the CIA. Experiments in Torture A new report of which I am a coauthor, Experiments in Torture: Evidence of Human Subject Research and Experimentation in the “Enhanced” Interrogation Program, just released by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) confirms previous suspicions and provides the first strong evidence that the CIA was indeed engaged in illegal and unethical research on detainees in its custody. The report, the result of six months of detailed work, analyzes now-public documents, including the “torture memos” from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel and the CIA's Inspector General Report and the accompanying CIA Office of Medical Services (OMS) guidelines for monitoring of detainees. The report points to several instances where medical personnel — physicians and psychologists — monitored the detailed administration of torture techniques and the effects upon those being abused. The resultant knowledge was then used both as a legal rationale for the use of the techniques and to refine these abusive techniques, allegedly in order to make them safer. For example, the OMS guidelines contain this note emphasizing how important it is “that every application of the waterboard be thoroughly documented” by medical personnel, and clarifying the nature of this documentation: “how long each application (and the entire procedure) lasted, how much water was applied (realizing that much splashes off), how exactly the water was applied, if a seal was achieved, if the naso- or oropharynx was filled, what sort of volume was expelled, how long was the break between applications, and how the subject looked between each treatment.” This type of documentation was not part of routine medical care as it was not being done in the interests of the person being waterboarded. Rather, the OMS made clear that this was being done “[i]n order to best inform future medical judgments and recommendations” [regarding how to torture people.] The purpose of this systematic monitoring was to modify how these techniques were implemented, that is, to develop generalizable knowledge to be utilized in the future. As Ren

Gates Foundation Suggests Sterilizing Males with Ultrasound

Among the 78 research projects to receive $100,000 grants from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation earlier this week as part of the Grand Challenges in Global Health initiative, is an effort by researchers at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, to develop a non-invasive, reversible form of birth control for men — using ultrasound. Based on preliminary trials in rats, researchers James Tsuruta and Paul Dayton hope to develop a technique that would render men temporarily infertile for up to six months after one or two ultrasound exposures. The project is one of 10 to receive grants toward the goal of creating new technologies for contraception. Other projects geared toward men include a male contraceptive pill that researchers say would work by limiting the maturation of sperm, and research into the specific chemical compounds in the vagina that guide sperm to egg — which researchers hope to recreate in the lab and potentially use to “disrupt” sperm navigation en route to the egg. (Earlier this year, researchers at the University of California, San Francisco uncovered clues about how pH levels impact how sperm swim, and expressed hope that further research in this arena could yield possibilities for male contraception as well.) In early trials, Tsuruta and Dayton at UNC were able to halt rats' sperm production for up to six months after giving the animals two blasts of ultrasound spaced by two days, the New Scientist reports. The researchers believe that ultrasound disrupts sperm production with a combination of heat and shaking, and plan to further explore the mechanism at work with the new funding. http://wellness.blogs.time.com/2010/05/14/male-birth-control-stopping-sperm-with… added by: Dagum

Goh Kian Chee is Goh Keng Swee son

Goh Keng Swee and Alice Woon have one married son, Goh Kian Chee in 1942. two years later In 1945 he relocated his young family to Malacca, but they returned to Singapore the following year after the Japanese occupation ended. That year, he joined the Department of Social Welfare, and was active in post-war administration. He became supervisor of the Department#39;s Research Section six months later. In 1986, Goh separated from his first wife Alice. He married his former Ministry of Education c

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Goh Kian Chee is Goh Keng Swee son

Justin Bieber Dishes On ‘Hanging Out’ With Miley Cyrus

‘If you look on the Internet you’ll see other girls that I hang out with,’ Bieber tells Ellen DeGeneres. By Jocelyn Vena Justin Bieber (file) Photo: Michael Loccisano/ Getty Images Earlier this week, Miley Cyrus and Justin Bieber were spotted getting sushi together in Hollywood. The video had many fans wondering if Cyrus, who once claimed Kurt Cobain was more her type than Bieber, and Bieber were the newest item on the Young Hollywood block. So when Bieber stopped by “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” this week to tape an episode airing on Monday, the hot-button discussion was his dinner with Cyrus. The issue was initially brought up when Degeneres asked Bieber if he had a girlfriend. His response? “Not really. Like, I’m dating around, hanging out with girls, but not really dating.” “Like hanging around with Miley Cyrus?” DeGeneres asked. Bieber, however, kept his response general. “Just like hanging around with people … just hanging out. Yeah, and just people …” he said, adding that if fans really do their research they can see he’s been spending his time with lots of girls. “If you look on the Internet you’ll see other girls that I hang out with,” he explained. When the duo wasn’t talking girls, Bieber’s famous hair was also brought up. And the teen star explained that his coif is actually quite easy to maintain. “It all comes together. Like 5 minutes. Like, seriously,” he said. “People are always like, ‘Yeah, right.’ I get out of the shower, I blow-dry it and then it’s done in like five minutes.” So where does Bieber draw the line when it comes to his hair? Well, when DeGeneres tried to cut his hair, Bieber quickly moved away, saying, “Hey! Hey!” Do you think Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus would make a good couple? Let us know in the comments below! Related Photos Justin Bieber And His Many Lady Friends Related Artists Justin Bieber Miley Cyrus

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You Cut Ned Yost Trey Hillman Maurice Strong

Here are the latest news items trending for today. You Cut , Ned Yost , Trey Hillman , Maurice Strong , and Missing Money . You Cut is designed to defeat the permissive culture of runaway spending in Congress. It allows you to vote, both online and on your cell phone, on spending cuts that you want to see the House enact. Vote on this page today for your priorities and together we can begin to change Washington’s culture of spending into a culture of savings. Read more here . Ned Yost will be taking over the Kansas City Royals as the manager, replacing Trey Hillman. Hillman’s management was largely based on the terms of the players performance, that in turn was the secret of his success. He was praised as one who could make miracles possible if he were in the team, but the didn’t turn out to be much of a performance blast from his team. Maurice F. Strong, is a Canadian businessman. He is an entrepreneur, environmentalist, and one of the world’s leading proponents of the United Nations’s involvement in world affairs. Today Strong spends most of his time in the People’s Republic of China, and is President of the Council of the United Nations’s University for Peace. UPEACE is the only university in the UN system able to grant degrees at the masters and doctoral level. He is an active honorary professor at Peking University and Honorary Chairman of its Environmental Foundation. He is Chairman of the Advisory Board for the Institute for Research on Security and Sustainability for Northeast Asia. You Cut Ned Yost Trey Hillman Maurice Strong is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Jay Sean Agrees With Usher’s Comments: ‘Longevity Trumps Everything’

Usher recently said British R&B stars like Sean and Taio Cruz ‘have a lot to prove.’ By Akshay Bhansali Jay Sean Photo: Nuzhat Naoreen/ MTV News With two monster singles in “Down” (featuring Lil Wayne) and “Do You Remember” (featuring Sean Paul and Lil Jon) , British pop/R&B singer Jay Sean has delivered for Cash Money Records and his fans around the world. Sean recently invited MTV News into the New York studio of the Orange Factory — the production team behind the majority of his debut album, All or Nothing — to let fans know that he’s already moved on to his next album. In fact, he’s roughly three-quarters done with it. Still, as eager as Sean was to introduce us to the direction and tone of his forthcoming project, he was also aware of some comments lobbied at him by a fellow R&B star. A few weeks back, while on a promotional tour, Usher spoke to MTV UK’s Wrap-Up urban blog and was asked what he thought of the Stateside success of British R&B artists like Sean and “Break Your Heart” singer Taio Cruz. “Sustaining longevity is all about time,” Usher said. “They have a lot to prove.” While Sean could have responded aggressively the comments, he went a different route. “He’s been in the game for, what, 17 years? I completely agree with what he says,” Sean said. “Longevity trumps everything. America has only heard one album. “I’ve only had four Billboard top 20’s in America so far,” Sean said with a smile. “But that’s still new.” Some music fans aren’t even aware of Sean’s chart assault, which gained the attention of Ronald “Slim” Williams, co-CEO of Cash Money Records, and eventually led to his joining the CM roster. “Outside of America, maybe Usher doesn’t know that I’ve been touring and recording for seven years,” Sean said. “This [ All or Nothing follow-up] is my fourth studio album. I’ve had a couple of multiplatinum albums on my own record label. But he wouldn’t know that if he didn’t do his research or nobody told him.” With that said, it appears Sean agrees that a solid career in the music industry is defined by consistency and quality. And he eagerly awaits the opportunity to share his new material with an ever-growing American fanbase. “I’m so new to America,” he said. “I’ve got so much more to show them, so much more to give them.” What do you think of Sean’s music? Could he match Usher’s lengthy career? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Jay Sean Related Artists Jay Sean Usher

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Jay Sean Agrees With Usher’s Comments: ‘Longevity Trumps Everything’