Sorry… I dropped the link which had a picture of the animal in question…

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Stumpy, an 8-day-old duckling born in Britain, has a rare mutation: 4 legs
Published: Monday, February 19, 2007 | 3:52 PM ET
Canadian Press
LONDON (AP) – Webbed feet run in Stumpy’s family, but he’s the first to have four of them.

A rare mutation has left the eight-day-old duckling with two nearly full-sized legs behind the two he runs on. Nicky Janaway, a duck farmer in New Forest, Hampshire, 95 miles southwest of London, showed the duckling to reporters Saturday.

absolutely bizarre. I was thinking ‘he’s got too many legs’ and I kept counting ‘one, two, three, four,’” Janaway said.

Stumpy would probably not survive in the wild, but Janaway, who runs the Warrawee Duck Farm in New Forest, says he is doing well.

“He’s eating and surviving so far, and he is running about with those extra legs acting like stabilizers,” Janaway said.

The mutation is rare, but cases have been recorded across the world. One duckling named Jake was born in Queensland, Australia, in 2002 with four legs but died soon after.

 

PBS is doing a documentary on Colony Collapse Disorder…

We should know. Elsewhere…

CBC News
http://tinyurl.com/24caeu

Honeybees dropping like flies from mystery illness

A mysterious illness killing tens of thousands of honeybee colonies across the United States has industry experts baffled and Canadian beekeepers concerned about the health of their hives.

Researchers in the United States are searching for the cause of the ailment, called Colony Collapse Disorder.

Beekeepers from at least 22 states have reported unusual colony deaths. Some commercial beekeepers have reported losing more than 50 per cent of their colonies.

“We have seen a lot of things happen in 40 years, but this is the epitome of it all,” Dave Hackenberg, of Lewisburg-based Hackenberg Apiaries, said by phone from Fort Meade, Fla., where he was working with his bees.

While the problem has been discussed in Canada, most apiaries north of the border have closed their hives for the winter.

Until the beekeepers check on the hives in late March, they won’t know whether the colonies have suffered similar losses, said Doug McRory, provincial apiarist with the Ontario Beekeepers Association.

“It’s been a poor fall but we haven’t seen the same collapse here,” McRory told CBC News Online. “But because it’s winter we don’t have a good handle on it. We’ll have to wait until after winter to see how many are still alive.”

A honey bee colony can have roughly 20,000 bees in the winter and up to 60,000 in the summer.

The bee population throughout North America has already faced a decline in recent years because of two parasitic bugs – the varroa mite and the honey bee tracheal mite – that have caused viruses in the bee population.

Particularly hard hit by Colony Collapse Disorder are migratory operations where beekeepers take their colonies to warmer climates for the winter to help pollinate local agriculture.

McRory said moving colonies already puts stress on the bees, with beekeepers traditionally losing up to 20 per cent of their hives in the move.

Working towards a solution

Scientists at Penn State, the University of Montana and the U.S. Department of Agriculture are among the groups working to solve the mystery of the shrinking colonies.

Analysis of the dissected bees turned up weakened immune systems and an alarmingly high number of foreign fungi, bacteria and other organisms, according to Diana Cox-Foster, a Penn State entomology professor investigating the problem.

What separates this disorder from other known colony ailments is that no remains are found around the colonies. Instead, scientists assume the bees have flown away from the hive before dying. Another oddity is that no stronger bee colony swoops in and overruns the weakened hive.

“They seem to just abscond from the hive,” said McRory. “That’s what is really confusing.”

With files from the Associated Press

 
Birth defects major cause of infant deaths in U.S.
http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2007/01/19/birth-defects.html

Birth defects, not diseases linked to premature births, are the leading cause of death in young babies in the United States, according to a new report.
Continue reading »

 

I recently finished reading the book “Dust” by Charles Pellegrino.

It freaked me out. It made me think about global warming. Something which is easy to wrap one’s mind around given the weather over the last 8 months. And I thought about mites on bees, beetles destroying trees, flus jumpiing the species barrier…

Charles connects a diferent set of dots but they are in some ways more chilling cause they clearly show how a sseries of small events may actually add up to a global cascade. In the book, the world barely survives – which is the only thing I didn’t think was plausible.

Excerpt from http://www.sfsite.com/05b/dust33.htm
A review by Alexander von Thorn

    … The premise of Dust is chillingly plausible. The story opens with a prologue set almost 66 million years ago, with a pre-sentient saurian facing a disaster far worse than a mere asteroid. Paleontological evidence suggests that every 33 million years (give or take a couple of hundred thousand), a pattern of genetic timers cause some key species of insects, like aphids and fungus gnats, to die off in a mass extinction. Within months, the ants die. Then bees, termites, grasshoppers; after that, birds, most mammals, cultivated plant species, and well, then things start to become unpleasant very quickly. The last time this happened was about 33 million years ago, at the end of the Eocene Age. From this book I learned about prey-switching, prions, disease vector-switching, and other catalysts of ecological change…

 

Oh how I miss the stuff.

Living in Vancouver gets pretty tired weather wise. As a Prairie girl I miss all the things one can do with snow. And i miss thunder and lightening and i miss the Northern Lights…

Last night at about 12:30 am C__ and I went out into the snow and threw it at each other. I even beaned a couple of strangers who were very good natured about it. As we walked down the street past Grandview Park we noticed that a couple of games of tic tac toe sixed 20 x20 had been played, and a couple of snow angels were lying in the grass.

To day I’m heading out again and I can barely wait!!

I’d really like to build a snow person.

Can’t do THAT with rain….

 

Sometimes all I can do is shake my head:

http://www.playerappreciate.com/pimphandle.asp

I turn out to be: Reverend Doctor Kona Slither

 

OK…

Another games to fill the hours

http://www.funny-games.biz/splash-back.html

level 16 for me.

Lordy… I’m blind… Not the way I thought I’d go blind mind ya

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