Saturday, 28 December 2013

SECRET BADGER CULL REPORT

A WHITEHALL department is denying  producing a secret report into badger cull to tackle TUBERCULOSIS.CARE FOR THE WILD-ANTI BADGER CULL CAMPAIGN GROUP cliams to have  evidence of report  that a expanding the culls was already been taken but should be made public,DEFRA  said any report would be a narrowly focused on raw data-IF CULLS SAFE-HUMANE,EFFECTIVE.MY OPINON IS NO CAMPAIGN TO VACCINE BADGERS OR CATTLE IN NUMBERS DUE TO PRESSURE FROM FARMERS.

CRYPTOZOOLOGY ONLINE: Still on the Track: CONFUSION REIGNS WHERE THE GONZO BLOG DOO-DAH MAN ...

CRYPTOZOOLOGY ONLINE: Still on the Track: CONFUSION REIGNS WHERE THE GONZO BLOG DOO-DAH MAN ...: The Gonzo Daily - Saturday www.gonzomultimedia.co.uk/about.html   The forthcoming year is the 100th Anniversary of the start of the F...

CURSE OF NUKE

The woman father in thie article spent a year cleaning  up areas of CHRISMAS ISLAND after nuclear tests.He swept irradiated sand, ate poisoned fish,swam in toxic lagoons and died aged 66 of AGGRESSIVE BONE CANCER.The woman has RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS,LIPOMUS,DERCUMS DISEASE and has been told she has the body of an 80 year old believed to be linked to her father being near nukes. A BLOG TO E MAIL IS FAILOUT@BNTVA OR FALLOUTGROUP.BLOGSPOT.UK

Met Office to offer daily space weather forecasts

The Met Office is to begin offering daily forecasts about the weather in space.
The 24 hour service will aim to help businesses and government departments by providing early warnings of solar storms that can disrupt satellites, radio communications and power grids.
The first forecast is expected to be available next spring.
The Department for Business will support the scheme with £4.6m of funding over the next three years.
The Met Office will aim to develop better ways of predicting space weather in collaboration with the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25517466

Diabetes risk gene 'from Neanderthals'

A gene variant that seems to increase the risk of diabetes in Latin Americans appears to have been inherited from Neanderthals, a study suggests.
We now know that modern humans interbred with a population of Neanderthals shortly after leaving Africa 60,000-70,000 years ago.
This means that Neanderthal genes are now scattered across the genomes of all non-Africans living today.
Details of the study appear in the journal Nature.
The gene variant was detected in a large genome-wide association study (GWAS) of more than 8,000 Mexicans and other Latin Americans. The GWAS approach looks at many genes in different individuals, to see whether they are linked with a particular trait.READ MORE

Wildlife 'thrived' in 2013 after hot summer

Tree bumble beeTREAD MOREhehot summer in the UK provided a much-needed boost for wildlife with butterflies, moths and grasshoppers all thriving, the National Trust says.
The warm weather also led to an explosion of berries, nuts and seeds.
The trust's Matthew Oates said 2013 was "one of the most remarkable wildlife years in living memory".
But it said a cold, late spring meant badgers and hedgehogs did not have their usual quantity of worms, and some seabirds died from starvation.
'Real cracker' Bees and crickets were among other winners.
The distinctive tree bumblebee - which only began to colonise in the UK 12 years ago - was seen north of Hadrian's Wall for the first time.
Many insects had been scarce last year because of poor weather.
The cool spring also provided a long flowering season for snowdrops, primrose and bluebells.
And in some places, there was an explosion of orchids.

New analysis of ocean currents may solve eel mystery

eels
A new analysis of wind-driven Atlantic currents may help scientists solve a mysterious decline in eel numbers.
These secretive creatures are born in the Sargasso sea but migrate to Europe where they spend most of their lives.
But unexplained fluctuations in the numbers of those traversing the ocean have thwarted efforts to save the species.
Now researchers believe they have built a computer model that will accurately predict the level of migration.READ MORE

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