Science & Environment

spaminator

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Oysters distributed in B.C., Alberta, Ontario recalled for norovirus contamination
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Dec 21, 2024 • 1 minute read

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued a recall due to possible norovirus contamination of certain oysters distributed in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario.


The agency says the recall covers certain Fanny Bay, Sunseeker and Cloudy Bay oysters under the Taylor Shellfish Canada brand.

The recall says most of the affected oysters were harvested and processed in early December, although some may have been harvested as early as Nov. 27.

The agency says consumers who have purchased the recalled oysters should discard or return the products to the point-of-sale, and those experiencing symptoms should seek medical care.

Norovirus symptoms, which can start as quickly as 12 hours after exposure, include vomiting, diarrhea, nausea and stomach cramps.

The agency says while most people who contract the virus recover within a couple of days, some severe cases may require hospitalization and intravenous injections.
 

spaminator

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Oysters distributed in B.C., Alberta, Ontario recalled for norovirus contamination
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Dec 21, 2024 • 1 minute read

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued a recall due to possible norovirus contamination of certain oysters distributed in British Columbia, Alberta and Ontario.


The agency says the recall covers certain Fanny Bay, Sunseeker and Cloudy Bay oysters under the Taylor Shellfish Canada brand.

The recall says most of the affected oysters were harvested and processed in early December, although some may have been harvested as early as Nov. 27.

The agency says consumers who have purchased the recalled oysters should discard or return the products to the point-of-sale, and those experiencing symptoms should seek medical care.

Norovirus symptoms, which can start as quickly as 12 hours after exposure, include vomiting, diarrhea, nausea and stomach cramps.

The agency says while most people who contract the virus recover within a couple of days, some severe cases may require hospitalization and intravenous injections.
its always a good idea to cook everything well done. 🦪 💡
 

Taxslave2

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Dozens get sick with ’norovirus-like’ illness after eating raw B.C. oysters
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Dec 19, 2024 • 1 minute read

Health officials in British Columbia say dozens of people have gotten sick after eating raw oysters from restaurants and retail locations.
Health officials in British Columbia say dozens of people have gotten sick after eating raw oysters from restaurants and retail locations.
VANCOUVER — Health officials in British Columbia say at least 64 people have become sick after eating raw oysters from restaurants and retail locations.


A statement from the BC Centre for Disease Control and the provincial health authority says the “norovirus-like” gastrointestinal illnesses have been reported since Nov. 1 in the Vancouver Coastal Health, Fraser Health and Island Health regions.

Federal agencies have closed some areas of the province to commercial shellfish harvesting, including parts of Baynes Sound, west of Denman Island, while the cases are being investigated.

Authorities say some people went to emergency departments with symptoms of diarrhea, vomiting, or stomach pain, but there have been no hospital admissions reported.

The statement says norovirus is common during the winter months, and can cause intense symptoms, including dehydration which can be a serious problem for older adults or those who are very young.


Norovirus spreads very easily from person to person but can also be caused by consuming contaminated food or water.

The statement says food contaminated with noroviruses may look, smell and taste normal, and that to kill the virus oysters can be cooked to an internal temperature of 90 C for 90 seconds before eating.

“Oysters can become contaminated with norovirus that may be present in the marine environment where they are grown and harvested,” the statement says.

“The BC Centre for Disease Control and regional health authorities are reminding the public of risks associated with consuming raw or undercooked oysters, especially those who may be at higher risk of severe illness such as children, older adults or people who may be immunocompromised.”
My backyard. There is a lot of human waste pumped into this area daily.
 

spaminator

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'Crazy' lifeform found for 1st time in human bodies: Scientists
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Dec 22, 2024 • 1 minute read

A ‘crazy’ new lifeform has been found lurking inside our bodies, scientists say.
A ‘crazy’ new lifeform has been found lurking inside our bodies, scientists say.
A “crazy” new lifeform has been found lurking inside our bodies, scientists said.


Virus-like entities called “obelisks” — circular bits of genetic material that contain one or two genes and self-organize into a rod-like shape — appear in half of the world’s population, but were only found when researchers were searching for patterns that didn’t match any known organisms in genetic libraries, the U.K.’s Daily Mail reported.

They colonize the bacteria inside the mouths and guts of humans, according to the Mail, living in their host for about one year.

Scientists don’t know how they spread.



Obelisks have genomes of loops of RNA that resemble viroids — viruses that infect plants, leaving experts puzzled as to why they were found in human-associated bacteria.


“It’s insane,” Mark Peifer, a cell and developmental biologist who was not involved in the research, told Science, per the Daily Mail. “The more we look, the more crazy things we see.”

It not clear if obelisks are harmful or beneficial, but the team suggested they could “exist as stealthy evolutionary passengers.”

These tiny, primitive entities may have played a critical role in shaping the biodiversity that currently exists on Earth, scientists said, as they could be capable of infecting organisms of many different species throughout their evolution.


Obelisks, viroids and viruses are all technically non-living organisms that depend on a host for survival.

However, some researchers believe that viroids and their relatives represent Earth’s oldest lifeforms.

The research team, led by Stanford biochemist Ivan Zheludev, detected the obelisks by sorting through data from an RNA database that contained thousands of sequences collected from human mouths, guts and other sources.

Their analysis revealed 30,000 distinct obelisk types.
 

spaminator

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Ontario reports spike in measles cases; 37 linked to exposure in New Brunswick
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Nicole Thompson
Published Dec 23, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

Public health officials reported another 10 cases of measles in Ontario linked to an exposure in New Brunswick, bringing the number of patients affected by the outbreak to 37 as of mid-December.


In an epidemiological summary released last week, the public health agency said the outbreak began in October after someone was exposed to the highly contagious virus in New Brunswick. So far, 28 of those sickened were children or teens.

“Among the cases that have occurred since October, all but two cases were unimmunized,” Dr. Christine Navarro, a physician with Public Health Ontario, said in an interview Monday.

“They’re not all occurring among young infants, and that’s what we would typically see: young infants who haven’t received one (vaccine) dose or both doses in childhood yet.”


Navarro said the number of cases has ballooned this year — up to 63 as of Dec. 18, compared to just seven cases last year. Symptoms of the virus include fever, a red blotchy rash, red watery eyes, and cough.

In May, the province reported its first measles-related death in years: An unvaccinated child under the age of five.

Navarro said the proportion of seven-year-olds who have had both doses of a measles-containing vaccine has dropped significantly over the years.


This year, school boards reported 70.4% of students that age have had both doses, compared to 86% in the 2019-20 school year.

There are likely multiple reasons for the drop, Navarro said, including missed doses during the pandemic years, delayed reporting of vaccination rates to local public health units and vaccine hesitancy.

But she said boosting the vaccination rate is the best way to prevent such high numbers and serious consequences.

Public Health Ontario says there were 101 confirmed cases of measles in the province between 2013 and 2023, and never more than 22 cases in a year.
 

spaminator

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Baby mammoth preserved for 50,000 years unveiled in Russia’s Siberia
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Dec 24, 2024 • 1 minute read

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In this photo released by the Mammoth Museum at the Russian North-Eastern Federal University on Monday, Dec. 23, 2024, University's Scientists show the remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia's Siberia. Photo by Michil Yakovlev /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOSCOW (AP) — The remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth uncovered by melting permafrost in Russia’s Siberia have been unveiled to the public.


Nicknamed Yana, the female mammoth weighs more than 100 kilograms 220 pounds and is 120 centimetres (47 inches) tall and 200 centimetres (79 inches) long.

Scientists believe that Yana was only 1 year old when she died some 50,000 years ago. They have described her remains, one of seven mammoth carcasses recovered worldwide, as the best-preserved mammoth body ever found.

Yana was found among the melting permafrost at the Batagaika crater in the far-eastern Russian region of Yakutia. Known as the “gateway to the underworld”, the crater is 1 kilometre deep and has previously revealed the remains of other ancient animals, including bison and horses.

Yana will now be studied by scientists at Russia’s North-Eastern Federal University, which has its own dedicated mammoth research center and museum.

The university described the find as “exceptional” and said it would give researchers new information about how mammoths lived and adapted to their surroundings.
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spaminator

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Squirrels were filmed feasting on tiny rodents. Scientists are perplexed.
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Kyle Melnick
Published Dec 24, 2024 • 4 minute read

First, the predators ripped off the rodents’ heads. Then they dug their teeth into their prey’s torsos, feasting on meat, organs and cartilage.


The predators? Squirrels, the populous mammals who have long been known to mostly eat nuts, seeds and plants.

While studying ground squirrels in Northern California this past summer, biologists expected to observe the animals banding together to forage for grass seeds and walnuts and avoid predators. But what they saw shocked them: Despite an abundance of their main food sources, the squirrels also hunted and ate small rodents called voles.

The researchers said their study, published Wednesday in the Journal of Ethology, marked the first widespread observation of squirrels hunting another mammal and showed that squirrels don’t only stalk prey when they’re out of other food options.

“Never in a million years did I ever anticipate squirrels to become avid hunters with a taste for meat,” Jennifer Smith, the study’s lead author, said in an email to The Washington Post.


Smith, an associate biology professor at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire, has been studying squirrels’ genetics, behaviors and stress responses at Briones Regional Park in Contra Costa County, California for 12 years. The area features an open grassland, walnut and oak trees and scenic trails.

The research – conducted by biologists and students at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire and the University of California at Davis – has consisted of baiting squirrels to caged traps with peanut butter and sunflower seeds, recording their gender, body mass and reproductive status and placing metal tags on their ears. Researchers have trapped and released 1,337 different squirrels, Smith said.

Studying hunting behavior wasn’t part of the plan until early June, when two University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire undergraduate students filmed a squirrel chasing and attempting to kill a vole – unsuccessfully – at Briones Regional Park. When the students told Sonja Wild, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of California at Davis, she was skeptical.


When she watched the video, however, Wild said she could hardly believe her eyes.

Squirrels have been found to eat insects, meat from carcasses, eggs and young birds. Female squirrels sometimes eat their own babies. Squirrels have also been seen occasionally preying on small animals, such as lizards, lemmings and snowshoe hares. But the researchers said squirrels are rarely spotted hunting.

“Seeing the squirrels that you normally observed foraging on grasses and seeds chasing voles across the landscape was a little shocking but pretty spectacular,” Wild said in an email.

For the remainder of June and most of July, the researchers witnessed squirrels hunting voles nearly every day they observed the mammals, Wild said. The researchers sat at least 21 yards from squirrels – to avoid scaring them – and watched them through binoculars. They filmed squirrels with their phones and a Canon camera.


The researchers observed squirrels – of both genders and of a wide age range – hunting voles 31 times, including 17 kills. Voles were most hunted near squirrels’ burrows, leading the researchers to believe voles were seeking safety in the burrows when squirrels encountered them.

Most of the time, squirrels chased voles across the dirt landscape. If squirrels came close to their prey, they usually pounced on it with their paws and teeth. Other times, squirrels squatted and approached stealthily before launching themselves at voles. Squirrels typically bit a vole’s neck to kill it.

But a major question remained: What caused squirrels to hunt voles? A large increase in vole population in California this summer prompted the unusual behavior, according to Smith and Wild.


Vole populations peak every four to eight years in many areas before rapidly declining, according to the University of California’s pest management program. Smith and Wild said 2024 was a peak year, and squirrels saw the abundance of voles as another source of high-energy meals.

Cory Williams, an associate biology professor at Colorado State University who wasn’t involved in the study, supported the researchers’ theory, telling The Post that ground squirrels sometimes eat small mammals when that species sees a population boom.

“Because it’s so foreign to us, it seems like super crazy,” Williams said of squirrels hunting. “But it’s one of those things when you’ve got a species out there that can take advantage of something like this, you know, they will do so.”


Briones Regional Park’s squirrels will probably return to their normal diets after the vole population returns to normal, Smith said, but there are other ways eating voles could impact the local squirrel population.

Squirrels are mostly income breeders, meaning they can produce more offspring if they eat more, so Smith wonders if eating voles could cause squirrels to have more babies. She has other unanswered questions, such as how widespread hunting is among squirrels and if they earn to hunt by nature or nurture.

“It will be exciting to see what happens next,” Smith said, “and if, given their new found taste for meat, squirrels target other animals in the future.”

12-23-2024 08:35PM
 

spaminator

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Hawaii volcano spews 260-foot lava fountains in dramatic eruption
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Leo Sands, The Washington Post
Published Dec 24, 2024 • 2 minute read

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This handout image provided by the US Geological Survey (USGS) shows a view of a new eruption within the summit caldera of Kilauea, Kaluapele, that began this morning at the Kilaeau volcano on Hawaii's Big Island, December 23, 2024, at approximately 2:20 am local time (12:20 GMT). Photo by HANDOUT /US Geological Survey/AFP via Get
A volcano in Hawaii fired fountains of lava some 260 feet into the air in a dramatic eruption on the Big Island, filling its crater with the glowing molten rock.


The latest eruption of Kilauea volcano – one of the most active in the world – began early Monday and was limited to a closed area of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, according to the United States Geological Survey’s local observatory.

The eruption started within the volcano’s Halemaʻumaʻu crater around 2:20 a.m. local time and within hours enveloped the surrounding 400 acres of caldera floor with lava.

According to the USGS, the volcano fired out partially molten “lava bombs” from its vents, fragments of lava measuring wider than 2.5 inches that are ejected in explosive eruptions, along with the fountains measuring up to 262 feet.

The volcanic eruption ejected a plume of gas including sulfur dioxide and fine volcanic particles that reached up to 8,000 feet altitude, which the USGS said Monday was the primary concern.


The sulfur dioxide reacts with the atmosphere to create volcanic smog, a visible haze known as vog, which can pose a health risk for people with respiratory or cardiovascular diseases.

The agency said winds carried the emissions southwest within a closed area of the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

The volcanic activity was centered on the summit area, which has been closed to the public since 2007.

After the lava fountains stopped spurting by around 4 p.m., the USGS said in a Monday evening update that the eruption appeared to have paused as seismic tremors decreased.

Earlier in the day, Hawaii’s Emergency Management Agency said in a social media post that the volcanic alert level had been downgraded from a “warning” to a “watch.”

Kilauea is the second-largest volcano in Hawaii after Mauna Loa – which is also located on the Big Island.

In the past seven decades, Kilauea has erupted dozens of times, including three times in 2023. In 2018, an eruption that lasted months engulfed homes in lava, destroying more than 700 as hundreds of residents evacuated.
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spaminator

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TikTok prankster jailed for spraying groceries with pesticides for clicks
Smith said he performs these pranks as a 'troll for social media'" and earns $6,000-$10,000 a month

Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Amber Ferguson
Published Dec 30, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Charles Smith was arrested Dec. 21 after admitting to spraying bug killer on produce in an Arizona Walmart for a social media video.
Charles Smith was arrested Dec. 21 after admitting to spraying bug killer on produce in an Arizona Walmart for a social media video.
Charles Smith walked into a Walmart, picked up a can of bug spray, and sprayed produce and other food items, according to police in Mesa, Arizona – all in the name of going viral on social media.


The 27-year-old, known online as Wolfie Kahletti and Wolfie Party, faces a felony count for “introducing poison,” along with three misdemeanor charges for criminal damage, endangerment, and theft after the Dec. 19 incident at the store.

According to a police report obtained by The Washington Post, Smith entered the store, took a can of bug spray from a shelf, and sprayed it on vegetables, fruit, and rotisserie chickens.

He later posted video of the episode on his TikTok page and Instagram stories. In the now-deleted videos, Smith is seen wearing a black hoodie and pink bandanna as he records the entire incident.

Smith returned to the store about 10 minutes later and recorded himself attempting to gather the contaminated items and wheeling them away in a cart to the rear of the store. It’s unclear whether he managed to retrieve everything. Authorities reported that Walmart ultimately had to remove products worth $931 from the shelves.



“It should be noted that the time between when the defendant sprayed the items to when he placed them into the cart, left plenty of time for customers to take the contaminated items and purchase them,” the police report states.

Mesa Police said Smith was identified through prior police contacts and has an open case with the Tempe Police, along with an active warrant for failure to appear. He turned himself in to Mesa Police and was arrested Dec. 21.

Smith did not respond to a request for comment.

“We’re disgusted by what happened at our Mesa store, and social media pranks like this cannot be tolerated,” Kelsey Bohl, director of media relations for Walmart, told The Post in a statement. “The health and safety of our customers and associates is always a top priority. We removed all directly impacted product and cleaned and sanitized the affected area of the store. We are grateful for the swift action of law enforcement, and we’ll continue to work closely with them throughout their investigation.”


Smith admitted to police to stealing the bug spray and using it on produce before leaving the Walmart, the police report says. He said that online backlash prompted him to return to the store to collect the contaminated items.

“This incident underscores the potential dangers of reckless actions disguised as social media pranks,” Detective Brandi Myers, a public information officer with the Mesa Police Department, told The Post on Friday.



During his interview with police, Smith said he performs these pranks as a “troll for social media” and earns between $6,000 and $10,000 a month from posting these kinds of videos.


He has garnered widespread criticism for his controversial prank videos, which include drawing obscenities on counters, spraying unsuspecting people with fire extinguishers, and throwing food in public spaces. A Reddit thread discussing Smith’s antics surfaced before his latest arrest, warning people in the Tempe, Arizona, area about his history of disruptive stunts. People wrote about him throwing food off balconies and sneaking into fast food restaurants.

Smith’s TikTok account is currently disabled. Newsweek reported earlier this week he had 345,000 followers and his bio read: “tycoon creator,” and “supreme villain.” His Instagram account is still active with more than 370,000 followers.

During a court appearance Monday, Smith asked the judge whether he could leave jail to feed his dog, according to Fox10 Phoenix. The request was denied.

The judge also barred him from using social media if he posts bail.

Smith’s next court appearance is Monday.