Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Indonesian Kangaroos are being Set Free

In Jakarta, Indonesia, rescuers are returning seventeen rare pygmy kangaroos to the Papuan rain forest. These kangaroos were rescued in recent years from illegal traders and private zoos. These animals are very rare and it is unknown as to how many are left in the world today. These kangaroos can grow up to be three feet long and weigh twentyfive pounds. The animals being released were born to six males and females cared for by the Cikananga Animal Rescue Center on West Java where they have been reared to survive on their own again in their natural habitat. I feel that it is so important that there are still people in our world today who care for animals the way the rescuers did. Thanks to them, these kangaroos are safe and have been retrained as to how to survive in the wild. Now the kangaroos will be able to live normal lives again back in their natural habitat.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19046182/

Animal Ringtones are Used to Lure Leopards

In Ahmedabad, India, forest gurads are using cellphone ringtones to lure leopards from villages. The ringtones are sounds of cows mooing, goats bleating, and roosters crowing. Rather than using these actual animals, such as using a goat to attract the leopards, forest guards feel that this is a much safer way to get the leopards out of the village. The leopards have wandered into the villages in search of food, which ofter results in many human attacks. Therefore, it is important that the leopards are removed from the villages as quickly as possible. The guards play the ringtones for up to two hours and eventually, the cats come out and are tricked into going into cages with a meal inside. Once the cats are caught, they are placed back into the wild. Since the newest ringtone idea, five of the cats from the village have been caught. The guards are thankful for this new method of trapping because so far, the ringtones seem to work and no animals are harmed.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/06/05/leopards.ringtones.reut/index.html

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Activists Want Chimp Declared a Person

In Vienna, Austria, animal-rights advocates are looking to get 26-year-old male chimpanzee Hiasl legally declared a person. Activists are looking to get the chimp basic humans rights, such as the right to life, the right not to be tortured, and freedom under certain conditions. This situtation all started when Hiasl and another chimp Rosi's animal sanctuary went bankrupt, where they lived for 25 years. Activists want to make sure that the chimps do not end up homeless if the shelter closes. Both chimps have already been through enough: They were captured as babies and smuggled to a lab where they were used for pharmaceutical testing. Their food and veterinary bills are known to be about $6,800 a month. Donors have offered to help, but under Austrian law, only a person can receive personal donations. Activist hope that if Hiasl is deemed a person, he will be allowed to own property. Then, if people want to make donations towards him, he will be able to accept them. A date for the appeal has not been set yet, so the struggle to earn Hiasl "person" rights will continue on.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18498435/

Opossum's Genetic Code May Help Humans

The opossum became the first marsupial animal to have its DNA decoded on Wednesday. Research is being conducted on these animals because they get melanoma skin cancer just as much as people do. Also, these furry animals' newborns can regenerate a severed spinal cord. Scientists hope that studying the animals' genome can help the cause of finding a cure for treating human cancer. By studying these creatures, scientists are provided with an understanding of how mammalian genomes have evolved over millions of years and is providing insight as to what the origins of the human genome is. Scientists hope that after all tests and experiments are complete, they will have a better understanding of the human genome and a better lead on cures for cancer.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18596452/

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Orangutans Playing with Video Games!

At Zoo Atlanta in Atlanta Georgia, Orangutans are playing video games! Four-year-old Bernas and his mother Madu are learning to use a touch-screen system built into a tree-like structure while researchers study their cognitive skills. Researchers are hoping that by studying the orangutans thinking process, they will be able to discover what the primates need to survive. This whole experiment is very important because the whole orangutan population is expected to completely disappear within the next decade, so this video game experiment may help provide keys to their survival and show people how smart orangutans really are. Not only are researchers learning, but video cameras enable visitors to watch the primates' every move from in front of the exhibit.
The computer games that the orangutans play around on test the primates' memory, reasoning, and learning. The computer games consist of various mini games, including matching sounds and pictures and even creating their own drawings. Correct answers in these games are awarded with food pellets. Hopefully, this new experiment will lead to the answers researchers are looking for in order to keep the estimated 37,000 orangutans from becoming extinct.


http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/04/12/orangutan.videogames.ap/index.html

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Red Pandas

On Wednesday, baby twin red pandas were exposed to the public for the first time in the Sydney Taronga Zoo. The zoo features a breeding program that aims to help prevent the extinction of endangered species. The pandas are three months old and are named Jishnu and Tenzin. The pandas parents are Wanmei and Mayhem. Their mother, Wanmei, was brought from Erie Zoo to mate with Mayhem and to establish a significant new bloodline in the Australian breeding program. Fortythree cubs have been born at the zoo since the program began in 1977. This program is a great help because there have been guessed to be as low as only 2500 Red Pandas left in the world today. Thanks to the Taronga Zoo, these Red Pandas will recieve the care, attention, and protection they need while still living in a healthy enviornment.

http://www.zoo.nsw.gov.au/content/view.asp?id=1243

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Punnett Square

Throughout the topic of genetics in science class, we have been learning about and using the Punnett Square. The Punnett Square is a type of grid, in the topic of genetics, used to show the gametes of each parent and their possible offspring, or a type of grid that can indicate all the possible outcomes of a genetic cross; also called [checkerboard]. We have done various experiments and activities that involve using Punnett Squares, such as Hamster Vacation, the Super Hero project, Toothpick Fish Activity, and various coin flipping activities. To see a Punnett Square, click the link below:


Throughout the genetics topic, I have learned that Punnett Squares show all of the possible combinations of alleles, that a Punnett Square is used like a multiplication table, and that a capital letter on the Punnett Square will always represent the dominant gene, and the lower case letter on the Punnett Square will always represent the recessive gene. I believe that knowing how to read a Punnett Square is very important and useful because it is a quick and simple way to figure out a child's allele possibilities and can be used throughout life. To learn how to use a Punnett Square, follow the steps below:


Steps to Using a Punnett Square-

1. Draw a box that is two blocks by two blocks

2. Label one of the dominant allele combination's alleles in each of the boxes across the top.

3. Label one of the recessive allele combination's alleles in each of the boxes along the right-hand side

4. Use the Punnett Square like a multiplication table
(dominant allele comes before recessive)

5. Determine the outcome by counting the number of new dominant and recessive allele pairs



Monday, February 26, 2007

Exotic Creatures Found After Melting of Ice Shelves in Antarctica

After ice shelves near Antarctica collapsed due to what appears to be Global Warming, scientists have been able to observe the exotic marine life below the surface earlier this week. These crumbling ice shelves are not expected to directly cause rising seas, but since the ice shelves act like damns to slow down glaciers, without them, the glaciers may move more quickly, substantially causing rising sea levels. Although the melting ice shelves are causing a sense of worry, this event also let scientists a great opportuninty to see the unique and exciting life under the surface, which used to only be seen through holes in the thick ice. The scientists found creatures at a depth of 2,800 feet that would normally only be found in water almost three times as deep. Gauthier Chapelle and other scientists found 15 possible new species of amphipods, and four possible new species of cnidarians. Orange sea stars, fan-finned ice fish, sea cucumbers, sea squirts, and blue ice fish were among the hundreds of of speciments collected. The discovered specimens will be examined to determine whether or not they truly are newly discovered. http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/02/25/antarctica.icecreatures.reut/index.html

BEAVERS!!

Earlier tis week, a twig-and-mud lodge was spotted on te Bronx River's bank, indicating that a beaver was living there. Then on Wednesday, February 21, a beaver was actually videotaped swimming up the river by Biologists. This may seem normal ad insignificant, but beavers hve not been present in the city for more that 200 years when they had disappeared because of trappers in the early 1800's. Now that that the beaver population is expanding and there is less room for habitats, more beavers are expected to be seen, says beaver expert Dietland Muller-Schwarze. The beaver that has been seen is thought to be a male, about 2 or 3 years old, and several feet long, says Patrick Thomas, from the Bronx Zoo. The animal was nicknamed "Jose", in honor of Jose Serrano, a U.S. Representative who worked to clean up the river. It is predicted that "Jose" is the first of many beavers soon to venture back to the Bronx.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/02/23/beaver.bronx.ap/index.html

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

electronic light boards shut down most of Boston

Last Wednesday, January 31, electronic light boards advertising the late-night Adult Swim cartoon "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" were mistaken for bombs in the city of Boston. These advertisements depicted light up moon-men that blinked, and were placed throughout the city. Once these advertisements were noticed by police, most of the city was evacuated and bridges were closed down, causing a major disruption. Police and prosecutors blame Turner Broadcasting for not taking the proper steps to stop the confusion and for not apologizing properly. Compared to police and prosecutors, some citizens disagree with arrests made and say that the situation may be taken way to seiously.


http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/01/31/boston.bombscare/index.html

Thursday, February 1, 2007

DNA Structure

On Wednesday, January 31, 2007, Mrs. Rousseau's blue science class built the DNA structure out of toothpicks, gummy bears, chocolate and strawberry licorice, and string. We used green gummy bears to represent Guanine, yellow for Cytosine, orange for Thymine, and red for Adenine. The chocolate licorice represented Phosphate. We learned that Cytosine only goes with Guanine, and Adenine only goes with Thymine. During class, we also learned that the DNA structure is called a Double Helix. I learned from http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/VL/GG/structure.html that Adenine and thymine are connected by two hydrogen bonds and guanine and cytosine are connected by three. I also learned that there are 4 different bases in a DNA molecule: adenine (a purine), cytosine (a pyrimidine), guanine (a purine), and thymine (a pyrimidine). This piece of information was from http://www.accessexcellence.org/AE/AEC/CC/DNA_structure.html. I definitely think that this was such a great way to learn about the structure of DNA because since we used candy to build it, the class was definitely more interested. Also, I really enjoyed the hands-on activity and thought that we learned more by actually building the structure. To sum it up, I learned a lot from building the DNA structure and also had fun while doing it.

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

intro

whats up? i love eating peanut butter sandwiches on a hot summer day. to relax, i like to watch tv or frolic through the fields with my pet cat. flying kites is my passion, and there is nothing more delicious than warm cocoa on a nippy february day. as you can tell, i am a very complex person. on friday nights, i like to sit on the couch with a bucket of ice cream and watch Grey's Anatomy. i greatly admire madonna and sheryl crow. seeing spy kids 3 truly touched me and changed me emotionally. my favorite color is fuschia and i adore buffaloes. in the future, i hope to strive to achieve my greatest goals, such as eating 27 pancakes in one hour, making a whole town out of legos, and knitting matching pajamas for my whole family. while i take baths, i like to light scented candles and listen to some backstreet boys. i do yoga and pilates in a room full of hotties. on weekends, my friends and i enjoy taking horse-drawn carriage rides through the park or playing a fun game of Monopoly. wednesday nights are family bonding time... which means spaghetti dinner my pappy's house. i have a special interest in postage stamps, and i have 200 in my collection. well, thats all for now.