Showing posts with label Link of the day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Link of the day. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 December 2010

Turkeys, Silver Firs and Cultivating Christmas Trees


Poinsettia leaves changing colour to their characteristic Winter-red (image by V. Neblik)

Welcome to Weirdbeautiful

In honour of the rapid approach of Christmas,today's link is to one of the American wildlife site - eNature 's Field guides- to the Wild turkey- an indisputably weird creature-
http://www.enature.com/fieldguides/detail.asp?recnum=BD0171

The second link is to Wikipedia's entry on Chritsmas Tree Cultivation.... I am beginning to wonder if there are, in fact, any topics for which there is not a wikipedia entry.

Today's final link is to this factsheet from Borealforest.org on the "original Christmas tree" - the Silver fir, Abies alba.

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Link of the day- lion cubs swimming and white bats

There are 3 links of the day today the first-
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2010/10/lion-cubs-go-for-their-first-swim-at-national-zoo.html

is a wonderful article from the LA times with pictures and videos of lion cubs at The National Zoo in Washington going for their first swim.

The second, is a set of pictures of Honduran white bats from the blog "The Featured Creature"-
http://www.thefeaturedcreature.com/2010/10/honduran-white-bats-are-fluffy.html

The final link has more to do with science than wildlife- a stunning gallery of pictures from the Mir space station-
http://news.uk.msn.com/in-depth/space/special-photo-galleries.aspx?cp-documentid=155143006

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Links of the day-The great pacific Garbage patch, Harvest mice photo gallery

Today's first link does exactly what it says on the tin- it is a gallery of photographs of some harvest mice released from captivity and followed in the wild for a year-

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/gallery/2010/sep/22/animalbehaviour-animals?%2F%3Fpicture=366939504&index=0&ref=nf#/?picture=366939504&index=0

Today's second link is also a photo gallery- this time from The Sun newspaper. The paper gives pride of place to a stunning image of a hummingbird and a green pit viper by Hungarian photographer Bence Mate but also includes some other stunning pictures. There is a scene of masses of frog spawn at the bottom of a mountain pond and one of a hermit crab taking shelter in a bottle-top, in lieu of a shell-

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3150962/OK-you-humm-it-and-Ill-sssing-it.html

On the subject of waste bottles, one article I have been meaning to link to for some time is this piece by Ed Cumming of The Daily Telegraph on "The Great Pacific Garbage Patch". The article, was originally published as "Bottling up a Problem for the Future" on 16th March of this year in the paper version of the newspaper. It looks at the enormous problems posed by (mostly) plastic bottles in the ocean.
This quote gives an idea of the sheer scale of the problem-

"In 2006, the United Nations Environment Programme estimated that there were 46,000 pieces of floating plastic in every square mile of ocean. With its stubborn refusal to biodegrade, all plastic not buried in landfills – roughly half of it – sweeps into streams and sewers and then out into rivers and, finally, the ocean. "

to put this in a biological context, as Mr Cummings's article explains, "there [is] eight times as much plastic as plankton in the North Pacific". The problem is that this material ultimately gets broken down into "nurdles": a really great word, if ever I saw one. Unfortunately, nurdles- tiny grains of plastic- are not a great thing, not in the ocean, at any rate, since they are not only harmful on their own, but they are very absorbent, and "soak up waterborne toxins, such as pesticides and cooling agents". The poison-saturated nurdles are ultimately eaten by filter-feeders at the very bottom of the food chain, and then make their way up it. As any good biologist knows, toxins become increasingly concentrated up the food chain. Aside from the environmental damage this situation will cause, since humans, are at the top of their food chain, this is all bad news.

You can find Ed Cumming's full article online under the title "The Biggest Dump in the World"- [HERE]

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Links of the day- baby sloths, photosynthesis and self-assembling solar panels

First Link-of-the-day today is this to gallery of pictures of baby sloths from a wildlife resuce centre in Costa Rica: sloths don't generally rank highly on most people's lists of cute animals: these pictures may change your mind-

http://thestar.blogs.com/photodesk/2010/08/the-daily-beast-august-29-2010.html

Today's second link is this article reporting research into solar panels/ photosynthesis: according to the link, scientists at MIT have created a synthetic process that imitates photosynthesis. By combining phospholipids and carbon nanotubes, they have been able to produce a "self-assembling solar panel": this is an over simplification, of course, the details are here-

http://dvice.com/archives/2010/09/scientists-disc.php

Monday, 6 September 2010

Link of the day- Natural Wonders of the World...


Socotra dragon tree, Dracaena cinnabari - image by Boris Khvostichenko- this image has a creative commons 1.2 licence- details [here]

Hi. Welcome to Weirdbeautiful.

Link of the day today is this feature/ gallery of natural wonders of the world by MSN-http://travel.uk.msn.com/inspiration/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=149582185

look out especially for the "Andean Penitentes" - bizarre ice formations found mostly in Chile and Argentina- http://travel.uk.msn.com/inspiration/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=149582185&page=3 ,

for the stunning volcanic crater known as "Hell's gate" in Turkmenistan-
http://travel.uk.msn.com/inspiration/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=149582185&page=4

the weird plants of Yemen's Socotra Archipelago- notably the famous Socotra dragon tree-
http://travel.uk.msn.com/inspiration/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=149582185&page=15

and the otherworldly landscape of the Salar de Uyuni saltflat in Bolivia-
http://travel.uk.msn.com/inspiration/photos.aspx?cp-documentid=149582185&page=27


Penitentes- image by "Arvaki"- this image has a creative commons 1.2 licence- details [here]

Blog post by Victoria Neblik- for more details of Victoria's latest photographic book- "Rock in the Landscape", click [here] or search for "Victoria Neblik" on amazon.co.uk

Saturday, 28 August 2010

Brains, Berries, Camouflage and taking out the Biochemical Rubbish


"Wild" strawberries

Hi. Welcome to Weirbeautiful. First link-of-the-day today is this brief news article reporting recent research that claims eating berries including strawberries and acai berries, wards off brain diseases, such as dementia. There seem to be endless health claims made about various foods, but in this case, at least, a biochemical mechanism has been proposed (supposedly the berries help the brain clear biochemical detritus that would otherwise accumulate and cause problems) -
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20100823/thl-berries-help-to-clean-up-brain-d831572.html

Second link is to this impressive gallery of camouflaged animals, from shale grasshoppers, to pigmy seahorses, from The Sun newspaper-
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/features/3108508/Amazing-photographs-of-creatures-camouflaged-for-survival.html

Thursday, 19 August 2010

The Moon is Shrinking?

Hi Welcome to Weirdbeautiful,

Link of the day today is to this bizarre story that the moon may be shrinking (due to internal cooling): the evidence for this comprises images of unusual fault lines on the lunar surface that were captured by a probe. The lines- called "lobate scarps"- have been found in the moon's highlands, as this article explains-

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20100819/tsc-moon-may-be-shrinking-say-experts-4b158bc.html

Thursday, 12 August 2010

Link of the day- Red Clover and Images of Outerspace

Hi. Welcome (back) to Weirdbeautiful.

First link-of-the-day today is this article on "The Garden Lady"'s blog on the Red Clover- I can't endorse any of the author's comments about the plant's medicinal benefits since I know nothing about the scientific research on this (or even if there have been any studies of its pharmacology), but it's an interesting article none-the-less-

http://www.thegardenlady.org/2010/02/15/red-clover-pink-purifier/

Today's second link is this "dazzling" gallery of images of outerspace released by NASA and other agencies, such as the European Space Agency- they include images of Asteroids, the Sun, Cassiopea and the surface of Mars.

http://news.uk.msn.com/photos/photo-galleries.aspx?cp-documentid=154300290

Third link-of-the-day is to this article in the International Herald Tribune about the activities of the oil-slick degrading bacterium Alcinovorax borkumensis (Alkinovorax- roughly translates as alkane- eater) in digesting the giant oil slick off the coast of Mexico-

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/05/science/earth/05microbe.html?ref=science

I wrote on this blog back in May that this would be the most likely end result of the spill and that the clean-up process could be speeded up by introducing this bacterium to the water (it exists in very low concentrations in sea water naturally)- you can find the link to that here-
http://victorianeblik.blogspot.com/2010/05/horseshoe-crabs-and-oil-spill-in-gulf.html
so now, at last, it seems to be happening.

Actually, I got the idea for that (no doubt scores of other microbiologists were thinking exactly the same thing, privately) by reading a great research paper by Susan Schneiker and colleagues some time ago. The paper- published in volume 24 (issue 8) of the journal "Nature Biotechnology"- described the sequencing of this amazing bacterium's genome and -essentially- went some way towards explaining some of its remarkable metabolic abilities. For what it is worth, there is a brief summary of the paper here-
http://ezinearticles.com/?Bees-and-Bacteria&id=2883002

Sunday, 8 August 2010

Floating Giraffes


Picture of the day-Giraffa camelopardalis,2010, taken atChester Zoo.

Hi. Welcome (back) to Weirdbeautiful. Today, I wanted to share this link-
http://scienceblogs.com/tetrapodzoology/2010/06/giraffe_flotation_dynamics.php to a great blog post by Darren Naish. His post is all about a research paper he produced with Don Henderson called 'Predicting the buoyancy, equilibrium and potential swimming ability of giraffes by computational analysis'; the title says it all, really. Anyway, Darren Naish's post is a great read and certainly fits in the "weird" category of this blog. You can find the full paper in The Journal of Theoretical Biology.

Thanks to Dolev R. for the tip-off to this link.

Thursday, 5 August 2010

Links of the day- Diving Tigers, Sponges and "The First Animal".


(Image- "Fish Tank, London Zoo"- by V. Neblik- image not for sale- for more images and prints that are on sale, see: victorianeblik.com)

Hi. Welcome to Weirdbeautiful.

There are two links-of-the-day today, but first, I've put the "followers" box back on this page, so if you want to be able to find this blog again easily, please scroll down and click on the "follow" button- it's on the right near the bottom of the page. You can follow either publicly, with a picture and link back to your blog, or privately, in which case you'll be listed as an anonymous follower and there'll be no link back to you that anyone can find or follow.

First link-of-the-day today is this popular science book on sponges by former high school teacher, journalist and (present) diver, William Goodwin-

http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/1469841

- worth the detour for the images alone, there's also a highly readable and informative text to go with them: how educational books should be....

Second of today's links is this great picture of a tiger, diving- tigers are unusual amongst the cat-family for their love of water; however, you'd never guess that from the expression on this tiger's face ....

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1xaE0C/www.zadan.nl/divingtiger/

Diving Tiger link with thanks to StumbleUpon.com

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Link of the day- Seasnakes of England...

Hi. Welcome to weirdbeautiful.
First link of the day today is this odd story in the British tabloid newspaper "The Sun" of a body-boarder who claims he was bitten by a tropical sea snake off the coast of Cornwall (England)-

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3067153/Tourist-believes-he-was-bitten-by-a-tropical-sea-snake-off-the-coast-of-Cornwall.html

Quite a few snakes have venoms that cause their victims to bleed from their mouths in the aftermath of being bitten. Similarly, the bite site oozing fluid and blood is characteristic of a lot of snake bites, including that of the adder (Vipera berus)(something -the badly swollen, oozing wounding- I got to witness at first hand, when my dog was bitten by a snake a few years ago).

The Sun is also hosting this impressive gallery-

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/features/3067121/Amazing-wildlife-pictures-from-photographer-Scott-Linstead.html

- of wildlife images by Canadian teacher-turned photographer Scott Linstead.

Wednesday, 21 July 2010

Link of the day- odd trees and the wonders of faecal transplantation

Hi Welcome to Weirdbeautiful

Weird-link of the day today is this great article on the potential of faeces to heal... and the wonders of faecal transplantation-

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13micro.html?src=me&ref=general

This is not really a new breakthrough, in the sense that the idea has been around for a little while (and previously reported elsewhere), but it is still an interesting story and - perhaps a timely reminder of the often overlooked power of bacteria.

The Beautiful link of the day is this gallery or photoessay on the world's strangest trees, by the search engine Bing-
http://www.bing.com/featured/content/search?q=Fantastic+Trees%3a+Baobab+%28Adansonia%29&FORM=RQHOME

starting with Baobabs and Rainbow Eucalyptus, the features has Sequioas, Jackfruits, Joshua trees, Wolemi Pines and a whole load of other strange trees- not least the magnificent "Dragon Blood Tree"...

Thursday, 10 June 2010

Link of the day- Jupiter, comets, cloud formations seen from space and baby turtles

Hi. Welcome to Weirdbeautiful.
The first link of the day today is this article in "Wired" magazine, with some really awe-inspiring pictures of cloud-formations seen from above-
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/05/gallery-clouds/all/1

and the second is this lovely picture of a baby turtle-
http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1rBM6b/imgfave.com/view/612727

the third link-of-the-day today is this story about amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley observing a comet hitting the surface of the planet Jupiter-
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20100604/tsc-stargazer-spots-fireball-on-jupiter-4b158bc.html

Thanks to Phil France for bringing the first link to my attention and Stumbleupon.com for the second.

Sunday, 30 May 2010

Links of the week- the umbilical cord, its stem cells and why 4 kidneys are better than 2

Hi. Welcome to Weirdbeautiful, both todays links are medical, rather than wildlife stories. The first is about a girl whose body apparently spontaneously grew an extra pair of kidneys to replace her original, malfunctioning ones-

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/5/20100518/tod-docs-astonished-as-girl-grows-new-ki-870a197.html

The second link is to a story about research on the benefit of stem cells from the umbilical cord to newborn babies-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1281688/Babies-helped-delay-clamping-umbilical-cord.html

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

Serval and Jaguar conservation, tracking turtles and the usefulness of cigarette butts- links of the day


Serval, Leptailurus serval, London Zoo. Image (copyright) Victoria Neblik 2010. All rights reserved.

Hi. Welcome to Weirdbeautiful.


The first of today's links of the day is to the African Serval Conservation Organisation's homepage - http://www.servals.org/home.htm. There is no reason for this link, other than that I think they are magnificent creatures and that, although they are much less threatened than many other big cats, it would be a crying shame if "we" were to lose them. You might think, from its markings, that the serval is a relative of the jaguar, but it is actually more closer kin to the caracal and cheetah. There's more information on servals here- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serval including information on their range, behaviour, unusually high kill-rate and the fact that the ancient Egyptians kept them domestically and worshipped them as gods.

The second link is to this piece by Elisabeth Rosenthal from the New York Times about the conservation of another big cat- The Jaguar in Costa Rica-
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/12/science/earth/12jaguar.html?pagewanted=1&ref=science

The final link is this rather odd science article about using discarded cigarette butts to protect steel pipes from rusting...(there's a reason this blog is called "weirdbeautiful")

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100513/sc_nm/us_butts


My own news is that my latest interview- a conversation with leading turtle expert Prof. John Davenport- is now on sale in Practical Reptile Keeping Magazine. Prof Davenport talks about his recent research, the difficulties of tracking turtles and the wildlife of Bermuda. Copies of the magazine are available for worldwide delivery from here- http://www.practicalreptilekeeping.co.uk/pages/main.php?nav=latest

Sunday, 16 May 2010

STOP PRESS- link of the day- Eduardo Izquierdo

One of my personal favourite photographers, Eduardo Izquierdo, has produced a really awe-inspiring natural image again-
http://www.flickr.com/photos/odreiuqzide/4611763903/

Eduardo was also the artist/photographer behind this stunning image of ice posted on this blog back in September last year-
http://victorianeblik.blogspot.com/2009/09/ice.html

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

Link of the day- Jane Goodall

Good Morning, Welcome to Weirdbeautiful.

Quote of the day (sticking with the Spring theme) is from Doug Larson, the British middle-distance runner-

"Spring is when you feel like whistling even with a shoe full of slush." -Doug Larson (1902-1981)

Link of the day is this interview with Jane Goodall; the interviewer is Emma Wells and it was published a week or two ago in "The Times" (of London)-

http://property.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/property/article7086164.ece

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Link of the day- Truffle Sex

There seems to have been a bit of a dearth of good or interesting scientific news stories over the past couple of weeks (apart from the Mephedrone story- see below), even in The New York Times, which seems to run a lot of good science stories. However, I did find this little gem by Nicolas Wade- "Unearthing the Sex Secrets of the Perigord Black Truffle"-
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/29/science/29truffle.html?src=me&ref=science

It has all you could ever want to know about truffles and their biology but if that doesn't sound very entertaining, let me whet your appetite with this choice quote from the article- [WARNING- This may put you off truffles for life...]

"Don’t the fly’s eggs and larvae degrade the edibility of the truffle? It seems the opposite is the case. “If collected at late maturation stages, the truffles will likely carry eggs and larvae — adding proteins and aroma to the truffle,”"...

- not beautiful, but certainly Weird.

Saturday, 27 March 2010

Link of the day- insects covered in dew droplets...

...make much more interesting photographic subjects than you might expect-
this article gives more details and has a gallery of 3 stunning dew-drenched insects
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2909586/Amazing-snaps-of-dew-droplets-on-bugs.html