from Bodies of mother and two daughters recovered from water tank in Karachi By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 24 09:04:22 +0500 Mother reportedly pushed her daughters into a water tank before jumping in herself. Full Article Pakistan
from Pakistan Army rescues ailing Polish climber from K2 By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Mon, 04 Jan 21 16:11:02 +0500 Kowalewski’s ascent to K2 was cut short after he complained about a hernia that developed during a load-carrying trip Full Article Pakistan Gilgit-Baltistan
from Pakistan Army rescues Russian and Pakistani climbers from Gilgit-Baltistan peak By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Sat, 24 Aug 24 10:35:01 +0500 Group of Russian climbers were trapped after an Avalanch hit the Gasherbrum IV mountain in Gilgit-Baltistan region. Full Article Pakistan
from Over 19 prisoners escape from AJK jail By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Sun, 30 Jun 24 20:35:33 +0500 Absconders include 10 awaiting death penalty, serving life sentences Full Article Pakistan Azad Jammu & Kashmir
from Love from women of steel: 'Sinf-e-Aahan' letters are going viral for all the right reasons By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Wed, 09 Feb 22 05:26:36 +0500 Twitter lauds Umera Ahmed's writing for the emotional reflection and character arc of the girls' PMA journey so far Full Article TV
from From Prince to Paris Hilton: When music icons made unforgettable cameos on TV By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Fri, 09 Aug 24 06:27:40 +0500 These chart-topping artists traded stages for scripts, leaving viewers starstruck with their surprise appearances Full Article Music TV
from 'Heavy rainfall' to hit most parts of country from Thursday By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Tue, 28 Jun 22 14:17:21 +0500 Met Office warns rains may generate urban flooding; asks travellers, tourists to take extra caution Full Article Pakistan
from Salman Khan flaunts INR 419.8 million diamond-encrusted watch from Jacob & Co. By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Wed, 11 Sep 24 12:04:30 +0500 Jacob Arabo gifted Salman Khan a watch worth millions featuring 714 diamonds and an exclusive design. Full Article Life & Style
from Elon Musk accuses Zuckerberg of shielding Meta from accountability in child exploitation scandal By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Sun, 25 Aug 24 23:06:10 +0500 Alleged failures to address key issues lead to growing tensions between high-profile industry leaders in tech world Full Article Technology
from Australia to ban minors from using social media By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Tue, 10 Sep 24 05:37:14 +0500 PM Albanese announces plans for an age verification trial ahead of new legislation aimed at enforcing the ban Full Article World Technology
from WordPress. How to create a redirect from a home page to any URL using the PHP redirect By www.templatemonster.com Published On :: Thu, 02 Jan 2020 07:23:47 +0000 This tutorial is going to show you how to create a redirect from Wordpress home page to any URL using the PHP redirect. The post WordPress. How to create a redirect from a home page to any URL using the PHP redirect appeared first on Template Monster Help. Full Article WordPress Tutorials home page php redirect WordPress
from WordPress. How to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu By www.templatemonster.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Jan 2020 06:42:08 +0000 This tutorial shows how to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu in Wordpress. The post WordPress. How to make pages show posts from certain categories and assign them to top menu appeared first on Template Monster Help. Full Article WordPress Tutorials category menu page post specific template top WordPress
from World's oldest tadpole from dinosaur times unearthed in Argentina By www.geo.tv Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 15:32:00 +0500 A fossil of the world's oldest tadpole, which coexisted with dinosaurs in the Middle Jurassic about 165 million years ago, is pictured next to a 3D-printed representation of the tadpole, in Buenos Aires, Argentina October 28, 2024. — Reuters BUENOS AIRES: Scientists in... Full Article
from Another polio case reported from Balochistan as Pakistan's tally rises to 43 By www.geo.tv Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 22:46:00 +0500 A girl receives polio vaccine drops, during an anti-polio campaign, in a low-income neighborhood in Karachi on July 20, 2020. — Reuters First case in Chagai district confirmed. Lab detects Poliovirus Type-1 .Genetic sequencing of samples underway. Pakistan... Full Article
from Australia's Rex Airlines accused of stealing planes from Arizona boneyard By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 24 09:16:16 +0500 Rex agreed to purchase planes for $US2 million, paying a $200,000 deposit but failed to make further payments in 2020 Full Article World Business
from Afghan girls, barred from school, seek education through TV classes By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Wed, 11 Sep 24 17:46:55 +0500 Afghan girls are part of a TV channel that is broadcasting the entire Afghan curriculum for girls out of school Full Article World
from Death toll from Typhoon Yagi in Vietnam reaches 226 By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 24 15:29:03 +0500 More than 100 people remain missing, while some 800 people have been injured Full Article World
from The exclusion of health and climate ministries from cabinet By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Mon, 01 Apr 24 10:54:00 +0500 Our leaders have failed to show their unwavering commitment to two of the most pressing challenges facing our nation. Full Article The Way I See It
from Pakistan's food waste crisis: An enemy from within our kitchens By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Tue, 16 Apr 24 12:49:35 +0500 In a country where millions go to bed hungry every night, 40% of the total food produced is being wasted annually. Full Article The Way I See It
from Ryan Reynolds shares rare deleted moment from set of 'Deadpool & Wolverine' By www.geo.tv Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:32:00 +0500 Ryan Reynolds marked the Disney+ release of Deadpool & Wolverine on November 12 by sharing a humorous deleted scene from the film.Four months after the movie’s theatrical debut, Reynolds celebrated its streaming launch by posting the unseen clip on his Instagram stories and X... Full Article
from Karachi's marine life and coastline under threat from waste and sewage pollution By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 24 11:57:37 +0500 Karachi’s coastline is deteriorating due to plastic and sewage waste, putting marine life at serious risk. Full Article Pakistan
from Balochistan collects Rs2.5b from mineral sector By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Sun, 28 Jun 20 10:38:28 +0500 Computerised weighing scales have been installed Full Article Balochistan
from Analog Equivalent Rights (21/21): Conclusion, privacy has been all but eliminated from the digital environment By falkvinge.net Published On :: Fri, 18 May 2018 18:00:41 +0000 Privacy: In a series of posts on this blog, we have shown how practically everything our parents took for granted with regards to privacy has been completely eliminated for our children, just because they use digital tools instead of analog, and the people interpreting the laws are saying that privacy only applies to the old, analog environment of our parents. Once you agree with the observation that privacy seems to simply not apply for our children, merely for living in a digitally-powered environment instead of our parents’ analog-powered one, surprise turns to shock turns to anger, and it’s easy to want to assign blame to someone for essentially erasing five generations’ fight for civil liberties while people were looking the other way. So whose fault is it, then? It’s more than one actor at work here, but part of the blame must be assigned to the illusion that that nothing has changed, just because our digital children can use old-fashioned and obsolete technology to obtain the rights they should always have by law and constitution, regardless of which method they use to talk to friends and exercise their privacy rights. We’ve all heard these excuses. “You still have privacy of correspondence, just use the old analog letter”. As if the Internet generation would. You might as well tell our analog parents that they would need to send a wired telegram to enjoy some basic rights. “You can still use a library freely.” Well, only an analog one, not a digital one like The Pirate Bay, which differs from an analog library only in efficiency, and not in anything else. “You can still discuss anything you like.” Yes, but only in the analog streets and squares, not in the digital streets and squares. “You can still date someone without the government knowing your dating preferences.” Only if I prefer to date like our parents did, in the unsafe analog world, as opposed to the safe digital environment where predators vanish at the click of a “block” button, an option our analog parents didn’t have in shady bars. The laws aren’t different for the analog and the digital. The law doesn’t make a difference between analog and digital. But no law is above the people who interpret it in the courts, and the way people interpret those laws means the privacy rights always apply to the analog world, but never to the digital world. It’s not rocket science to demand the same laws to apply offline and online. This includes copyright law, as well as the fact that privacy of correspondence takes precedence over copyright law (in other words, you’re not allowed to open and examine private correspondence for infringements in the analog world, not without prior and individual warrants — our law books are full of these checks and balances; they should apply in the digital too, but don’t today). Going back to blame, that’s one actor right there: the copyright industry. They have successfully argued that their monopoly laws should apply online just as it does offline, and in doing so, has completely ignored all the checks and balances that apply to the copyright monopoly laws in the analog world. And since copying movies and music has now moved into the same communications channels as we use for private correspondence, the copyright monopoly as such has become fundamentally incompatible with private correspondence at the conceptual level. The copyright industry has been aware of this conflict and has been continuously pushing for eroded and eliminated privacy to prop up their crumbling and obsolete monopolies, such as pushing for the hated (and now court-axed) Data Retention Directive in Europe. They would use this federal law (or European equivalent thereof) to literally get more powers than the Police themselves in pursuing individual people who were simply sharing music and movies, sharing in the way everybody does. There are two other major factors at work. The second factor is marketing. The reason we’re tracked at the sub-footstep level in airports and other busy commercial centers is simply to sell us more crap we don’t need. This comes at the expense of privacy that our analog parents took for granted. Don’t even get started on Facebook and Google. Last but not least are the surveillance hawks — the politicians who want to look “Tough on Crime”, or “Tough on Terrorism”, or whatever the word of choice is this week. These were the ones who pushed the Data Retention Directive into law. The copyright industry were the ones who basically wrote it for them. These three factors have working together, and they’ve been very busy. It’s going to be a long uphill battle to win back the liberties that were slowly won by our ancestors over about six generations, and which have been all but abolished in a decade. It’s not rocket science that our children should have at least the same set of civil liberties in their digital environment, as our parents had in their analog environment. And yet, this is not happening. Our children are right to demand Analog Equivalent Privacy Rights — the civil liberties our parents not just enjoyed, but took for granted. I fear the failure to pass on the civil liberties from our parents to our children is going to be seen as the greatest failure of this particular current generation, regardless of all the good we also accomplish. Surveillance societies can be erected in just ten years, but can take centuries to roll back. Privacy remains your own responsibility today. We all need to take it back merely by exercising our privacy rights, with whatever tools are at our disposal. Image from the movie “Nineteen-Eighty Four”; used under fair use for political commentary. Full Article Privacy
from Bank Jam 2024 - Berlin shop closed on August 31st, 2024 from 2:0 By www.kunstform.org Published On :: 2024-08-30 19:47:16 On Saturday, August 31st, 2024, the legendary Bank Jam will take place in Berlin – a day full of BMX action and fun! The pre-session starts at 2:30 PM at Hasenheide, before the main event kicks off at 7:00 PM at Südstern. Therefore, we will close our Berlin shop at 2:00 PM on that day. We look forward to seeing you at Hasenheide! To get you in the mood, here’s the video from Bank Jam 2023 again. Full Article
from Random set of the day: Escape from Privet Drive By brickset.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 03:01:02 GMT Today's random set is 4728 Escape from Privet Drive, released during 2002. It's one of 17 Harry Potter sets produced that year. It contains 278 pieces and 3 minifigs, and its retail price was US$30/£24.99. It's owned by 4,361 Brickset members. If you want to add it to your collection you should find it for sale at BrickLink, where new ones sell for around $154.00, or eBay.Continue reading »© 2024 Brickset.com. Republication prohibited without prior permission. Full Article
from In a first, constitutional bench to begin hearing cases from Nov 14 By www.geo.tv Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:57:00 +0500 Facade of the Supreme Court. — SC website/fileJustice Mandokhail, Justice Mazhar attended committee’s meeting. Meeting held to discuss matters related to constitutional bench.Justice Ayesha will not be available on Nov 14, 15, says SC. Full Article
from From Strong to Justice, meet some of the top freshmen in women's basketball By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 06:10:06 -0400 UConn's Sarah Strong doesn't need to look far to find inspiration as she gets ready to begin her college career. Full Article
from Carbon pollution from high-flying rich in private jets soars By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 11:07:20 -0500 Carbon pollution from private jets has soared in the past five years, with most of those small planes spewing more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in about two hours of flying than the average person does in about a year, a new study finds. Full Article
from Georgetown legend, Hall of Famer Dikembe Mutombo dies at 58 from cancer By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 11:29:56 -0400 Dikembe Mutombo, a Basketball Hall of Famer who was one of the best defensive players in NBA history and a longtime global ambassador for the game, died Monday from brain cancer, the league announced. He was 58. Full Article
from Cincinnati, Ecuador player Marco Angulo, 22, dies from car crash injuries By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:40:17 -0500 Ecuador and FC Cincinnati player Marco Angulo has died from his injuries sustained in a car crash that also killed his former youth team teammate Roberto Cabezas, the Ecuadorian Football Association said on Tuesday. Full Article
from Titleholder Novak Djokovic withdraws from ATP Finals due to injury By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 07:07:50 -0500 Novak Djokovic won't defend his ATP Finals title after ruling himself out on Tuesday due to an unspecified injury. Full Article
from Andy Murray goes from Centre Court to the stage for a 4-stop tour to talk about his tennis career By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:03:54 -0500 Retired tennis star Andy Murray will talk about his pro career during a four-show theater tour in Scotland and England in June 2025, his management group announced Tuesday. Full Article
from Maryland frontrunner Alsobrooks sweats out challenge from Hogan in Senate race By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 19:18:14 -0500 An unusually competitive Senate race in Maryland went down to the wire Tuesday night with Democrat Angela Alsobrooks hoping her robust polling lead turned into victory against Republican Larry Hogan, a former two-term governor banking on his popularity to fuel an upset win the deep-blue state. Full Article
from New York couple sentenced for Hamptons fire that killed 2 sisters from Potomac, Maryland By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 10:31:48 -0500 A husband and wife from Long Island, New York, were sentenced this week for their role in a 2022 fire at their rented-out home in the Hamptons that killed two sisters from Potomac, Maryland. Full Article
from Envoy insists Taiwan has right to U.N. membership, counters China's claim from 1971 resolution By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Sep 2024 13:02:24 -0400 Taiwan's top diplomat in the United States tells The Washington Times in an exclusive interview that China's communist government is intensifying its campaign to pressure countries not to recognize the legitimacy of the island democracy and to block it from participating in the United Nations and other key international organizations. Full Article
from Norris will start Brazilian Grand Prix from pole with Verstappen 16th after rain-affected qualifying By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Sun, 03 Nov 2024 09:50:30 -0500 McLaren driver Lando Norris will start Sunday's Brazilian Grand Prix from pole with Formula One championship leader Max Verstappen in 16th after struggling in his Red Bull during a rain-affected qualifying session that was marred by five crashes. Full Article
from Alpine to use Mercedes power units in F1 from 2026 By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 07:43:28 -0500 The struggling Alpine Formula 1 team will use engines and gearboxes from Mercedes starting in 2026 after parent company Renault cuts its in-house F1 engine program. Full Article
from Facts rebut climate alarm from U.N. Secretary-General Guterres By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:16:03 -0500 There's a reason we heard so much about extreme heat deaths over the summer. Full Article
from Why Latinos deported Harris from the White House By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:19:03 -0500 Latinos left the Democratic party in a mass exodus last week, costing Kamala Harris the presidency. Full Article
from Ex-NFL coach Jack Del Rio to resign from Wisconsin role after drunk driving arrest By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 15:46:54 -0500 Former NFL coach Jack Del Rio will part ways with the University of Wisconsin's football team after he was arrested last week on a drunk driving charge. Full Article
from City of Berlin launches official bid to host NFL games from next year By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 09:23:29 -0500 Berlin's city government launched an official bid campaign on Tuesday to host NFL games over a five-year period from next year. Full Article
from 1 monkey recovered, 42 others still remain on the run from South Carolina lab By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 13:46:55 -0500 One of 43 monkeys bred for medical research that escaped a compound in South Carolina has been recovered unharmed, officials said Saturday. Full Article
from RFK Jr. cues up clash by calling for the removal of fluoride from drinking water By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 10:11:40 -0500 Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is pushing President-elect Donald Trump to crack down on fluoride levels in drinking water, saying the mineral can lead to unintended medical problems -- and setting up a clash with medical experts who defend it as a proven way to fighting cavities. Full Article
from Former NBA player Kyle Singler spurs concern from basketball world with cryptic Instagram post By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:21:28 -0500 Former Duke star Kyle Singler's cryptic Instagram post saying he fears for his life has drawn an outpouring of concern and support from former teammates and others. Full Article
from Vision Is Getting His Own Show, From Star Trek’s Terry Matalas By www.scifistream.com Published On :: Wed, 22 May 2024 19:55:14 +0000 Disney+ has ordered a new series for the Marvel character, picking up where WandaVision left off. The post Vision Is Getting His Own Show, From Star Trek’s Terry Matalas first appeared on SciFi Stream. Full Article Marvel Disney+
from The Future of Botanical Monography: Report from an international workshop, 12–16 March 2012, Smolenice, Slovak Republic By www.eubon.eu Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2013 17:42:00 +0200 Monographs are fundamental for progress in systematic botany. They are the vehicles for circumscribing and naming taxa, determining distributions and ecology, assessing relationships for formal classification, and interpreting long-term and short-term dimensions of the evolutionary process. Despite their importance, fewer monographs are now being prepared by the newer generation of systematic botanists, who are understandably involved principally with DNA data and analysis, especially for answering phylogenetic, biogeographic, and population genetic questions. As monographs provide hypotheses regarding species boundaries and plant relationships, new insights in many plant groups are urgently needed. Increasing pressures on biodiversity, especially in tropical and developing regions of the world, emphasize this point. The results from a workshop (with 21 participants) reaffirm the central role that monographs play in systematic botany. But, rather than advocating abbreviated models for monographic products, we recommend a full presentation of relevant information. Electronic publication offers numerous means of illustration of taxa, habitats, characters, and statistical and phylogenetic analyses, which previously would have been prohibitively costly. Open Access and semantically enhanced linked electronic publications provide instant access to content from anywhere in the world, and at the same time link this content to all underlying data and digital resources used in the work. Resources in support of monography, especially databases and widely and easily accessible digital literature and specimens, are now more powerful than ever before, but interfacing and interoperability of databases are much needed. Priorities for new resources to be developed include an index of type collections and an online global chromosome database. Funding for sabbaticals for monographers to work uninterrupted on major projects is strongly encouraged. We recommend that doctoral students be assigned smaller genera, or natural portions of larger ones (subgenera, sections, etc.), to gain the necessary expertise for producing a monograph, including training in a broad array of data collection (e.g., morphology, anatomy, palynology, cytogenetics, DNA techniques, ecology, biogeography), data analysis (e.g., statistics, phylogenetics, models), and nomenclature. Training programs, supported by institutes, associations, and agencies, provide means for passing on procedures and perspectives of challenging botanical monography to the next generation of young systematists. Source: Crespo, A., Crisci, J.V., Dorr, L.J., Ferencová, Z., Frodin, D., Geltman, D.V., Kilian, N., Linder, H.P., Lohmann, L.G., Oberprieler, C., Penev, L., Smith, G.F., Thomas, W., Tulig, M., Turland, N. & Zhang, X.-C. 2013. The Future of Botanical Monography: Report from an international workshop, 12–16 March 2012, Smolenice, Slovak Republic. Taxon 62: 4–20. Full Article News
from The cyber-centipede: From Linnaeus to big data By www.eubon.eu Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2013 13:34:00 +0200 Taxonomic descriptions, introduced by Linnaeus in 1735, are designed to allow scientists to tell one species from another. Now there is a new futuristic method for describing new species that goes far beyond the tradition. The new approach combines several techniques, including next generation molecular methods, barcoding, and novel computing and imaging technologies, that will test the model for big data collection, storage and management in biology. The study has just been published in the Biodiversity Data Journal. While 13,494 new animal species were discovered by taxonomists in 2012, animal diversity on the planet continues to decline with unprecedented speed. Concerned with the rapid disappearance rates scientists have been forced towards a so called 'turbo taxonomy' approach, where rapid species description is needed to manage conservation. While acknowledging the necessity of fast descriptions, the authors of the new study present the other 'extreme' for taxonomic description: "a new species of the future". An international team of scientists from Bulgaria, Croatia, China, UK, Denmark, France, Italy, Greece and Germany illustrated a holistic approach to the description of the new cave dwelling centipede species Eupolybothrus cavernicolus, recently discovered in a remote karst region of Croatia. The project was a collaboration between GigaScience, China National GeneBank, BGI-Shenzhen and Pensoft Publishers. Eupolybothrus cavernicolus has become the first eukaryotic species for which, in addition to the traditional morphological description, scientists have provided a transcriptomic profile, DNA barcoding data, detailed anatomical X-ray microtomography (micro-CT), and a movie of the living specimen to document important traits of its behaviour. By employing micro-CT scanning in a new species, for the first time a high-resolution morphological and anatomical dataset is created - the 'cybertype' giving everyone virtual access to the specimen. This, most data-rich species description, represents also the first biodiversity project that joins the ISA (Investigation-Study-Assay) Commons, that is an approach created by the genomic and molecular biology communities to store and describe different data types collected in the course of a multidisciplinary study. "Communicating the results of next generation sequencing effectively requires the next generation of data publishing" says Prof. Lyubomir Penev, Managing director of Pensoft Publishers. "It is not sufficient just to collect 'big' data. The real challenge comes at the point when data should be managed, stored, handled, peer-reviewed, published and distributed in a way that allows for re-use in the coming big data world", concluded Prof. Penev. "Next generation sequencing is moving beyond piecing together a species genetic blueprint to areas such as biodiversity research, with mass collections of species in "metabarcoding" surveys bringing genomics, monitoring of ecosystems and species-discovery closer together. This example attempts to integrate data from these different sources, and through curation in BGI and GigaScience's GigaDB database to make it interoperable and much more usable," says Dr Scott Edmunds from BGI and Executive Editor of GigaScience. Additional information: Pensoft and the Natural History Museum London have received financial support by the EU FP7 projects ViBRANT and pro-iBiosphere. The China National GeneBank (CNGB) and GigaScience teams have received support from the BGI. The DNA barcodes were obtained through the International Barcode of Life Project supported by grants from NSERC and from the government of Canada through Genome Canada and the Ontario Genomics Institute. Original Sources: Stoev P, Komerički A, Akkari N, Shanlin Liu, Xin Zhou, Weigand AM, Hostens J, Hunter CI, Edmunds SC, Porco D, Zapparoli M, Georgiev T, Mietchen D, Roberts D, Faulwetter S, Smith V, Penev L (2013) Eupolybothrus cavernicolus Komerički & Stoev sp. n. (Chilopoda: Lithobiomorpha: Lithobiidae): the first eukaryotic species description combining transcriptomic, DNA barcoding and micro-CT imaging data. Biodiversity Data Journal 1: e1013. DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.1.e1013 Edmunds SC, Hunter CI, Smith V, Stoev P, Penev L (2013) Biodiversity research in the "big data" era: GigaScience and Pensoft work together to publish the most data-rich species description. GigaScience 2:14 doi:10.1186/2047-217X-2-14 Watch the 3D cybertype video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqPuwKG8hE4&feature=em-upload_owner Full Article News
from Despatch from the field: New species discovery, description and data sharing in less than 30 days By www.eubon.eu Published On :: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:35:00 +0200 Researchers and the public can now have immediate access to data underlying discovery of new species of life on Earth, under a new streamlined system linking taxonomic research with open data publication. The partnership paves the way for unlocking and preserving a wealth of 'small data' backing up research conclusions, which often become lost within a few years of an article's publication in an academic journal. In the first example of the new collaboration in action, the Biodiversity Data Journal carries a peer-reviewed description of a new species of spider discovered during a field course in Borneo just one month ago. At the same time, the data showing location of the spider's occurrence in nature are automatically harvested by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), and richer data such as images and the species description are exported to the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL). This contrasts with an average 'shelf life' of twenty-one years between field discovery of a new species and its formal description and naming, according to a recent study in Current Biology. A group of scientists and students discovered the new species of spider during a field course in Borneo, supervised by Jeremy Miller and Menno Schilthuizen from the Naturalis Biodiversity Center, based in Leiden, the Netherlands. The species was described and submitted online from the field to the Biodiversity Data Journal through a satellite internet connection, along with the underlying data . The manuscript was peer-reviewed and published within two weeks of submission. On the day of publication, GBIF and EOL have harvested and included the data in their respective platforms. The new workflow established between GBIF, EOL and Pensoft Publishers' Biodiversity Data Journal, with the support of the Swiss NGO Plazi, automatically exports treatment and occurrence data into a Darwin Core Archive, a standard format used by GBIF and other networks to share data from many different sources. This means GBIF can extract these data on the day of the article's publication, making them immediately available to science and the public through its portal and web services, further enriching the biodiversity data already freely accessible through the GBIF network. Similarly, the information and multimedia resources become accessible via EOL's species pages. One of the main purposes of the partnership is to ensure that such data remain accessible for future use in research. A recent study published in Current Biology found that 80 % of scientific data are lost in less than 10 years following their creation. Donald Hobern, GBIF's Executive Secretary, commented: "A great volume of extremely important information about the world's species is effectively inaccessible, scattered across thousands of small datasets carefully curated by taxonomic researchers. I find it very exciting that this new workflow will help preserve these 'small data' and make them immediately available for re-use through our networks." "Re-use of data published on paper or in PDF format is a huge challenge in all branches of science", said Prof. Lyubomir Penev, managing director of Pensoft and founder of the Biodiversity Data Journal. "This problem has been tackled firstly by our partners from Plazi who created a workflow to extract data from legacy literature and submit it to GBIF. The workflow currently launched by GBIF, EOL and the Biodiversity Data Journal radically shortens the way from publication of data to their sharing and re-use and makes the whole process cost efficient", added Prof. Penev. The elaboration of the workflow from BDJ and Plazi to GBIF through Darwin Core Archive was supported by the EU-funded project EU BON (Building the European Biodiversity Observation Network, grant No 308454). The basic concept has been initially discussed and outlined in the course of the pro-iBiosphere project (Coordination and policy development in preparation for a European Open Biodiversity Knowledge Management System, addressing Acquisition, Curation, Synthesis, Interoperability and Dissemination, grant No 312848). Original source: Miller J, Schilthuizen M, Burmester J, van der Graaf L, Merckx V, Jocqué M, Kessler P, Fayle T, Breeschoten T, Broeren R, Bouman R, Chua W, Feijen F, Fermont T, Groen K, Groen M, Kil N, de Laat H, Moerland M, Moncoquet C, Panjang E, Philip A, Roca-Eriksen R, Rooduijn B, van Santen M, Swakman V, Evans M, Evans L, Love K, Joscelyne S, Tober A, Wilson H, Ambu L, Goossens B (2014) Dispatch from the field: ecology of micro web-building spiders with description of a new species. Biodiversity Data Journal 2: e1076. DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.2.e1076 Full Article News
from Biodiversity and Food Security – From Trade-offs to Synergies By www.eubon.eu Published On :: Thu, 29 May 2014 09:54:00 +0300 3rd International Conference on Biodiversity and the UN Millennium Development Goals - October 29-31, 2014, Aix-en-Provence, France This international conference is the third in a series, organized by the French CNRSInstitut Ecologie et Environnement (InEE) and the German Leibniz Association (WGL). The goal is to identify science-based solutions for global sustainability focusing on the issues of biodiversity and food security. Current ecological, economic and societal challenges for development require a holistic understanding of food security and environmental management: from this perspective, biodiversity can be seen as key to overcome trade-offs and to develop synergies between the food system and the conservation of landscapes, ecosystems, and species. The conference seeks to attract scientists from basic and applied research. It involves policy makers and other stakeholders concerned with biodiversity and food security themes who are interested in developing new solutions and strategies. It will connect researchers and stakeholders from natural sciences, social sciences, economics, humanities, technology and related fields. Full Article News
from Biodiversity and Food Security – From Trade-offs to Synergies By www.eubon.eu Published On :: Fri, 22 Aug 2014 16:21:00 +0300 The 3rd International Conference on Biodiversity and the UN Millennium Development Goals will take place between October 29-31, 2014 in Aix-en-Provence, France. under the tematic title "Biodiversity and Food Security – From Trade-offs to Synergies". This conference is the third in a series, organized by the French CNRS Institut Ecologie et Environnement (InEE) and the German Leibniz Association (WGL). The conference is based on invited keynotes and contributed posters for any of the topics relevant to the conference theme. Keynote speakers are now confirmed, including Professor José Sarukhán, UNAM, México, and Professor Jacqueline McGlade, UNEP, Nairobi. Across scales from genes to species, landscapes and biomes, biodiversity is an important resource for humanity. It is the key for a broad range of services provided by ecosystems. Biodiversity helps regulate the nutrient cycle, water (e.g. floods) and mitigates impacts of climate change. Biodiversity is also of direct importance for human well-being and for cultural and other values including recreation. The provisioning of clean water and diverse food supply makes it vital for all people. Biodiversity at all levels, including the diversity of genes, species and ecosystems, is lost at alarming rates. Critical factors for these trends are habitat destruction, global warming and the uncontrolled spread of alien species. Pollution, nitrogen deposition and shifts in precipitation further affect biodiversity. Food security faces significant challenges due to population growth, poverty, globalization, climate change and other factors. Supplying healthy food to all citizens is crucial for global development - to reach it, not only food production but also equitable access to food for all people must be improved substantially. Biodiversity loss and global food security are hence two major challenges of our time. Linking biodiversity and food security issues from a research perspective, and seeking synergies between them is likely to generate multiple benefits for social, ecological and economic development. Follow this link to register, submit your abstract and secure your hotel reservations. Full Article News