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Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Weird fsh with 'rodent-like teeth' found dead on Woolacombe beach, UK


A peculiar creature with 'rodent-like teeth' has washed up on a North Devon beach.

Delphine Sutherland found the dead fish while walking at Woolacombe and posted a photo of it on Facebook to try to find out what it was.


Ilfracombe Aquarium director Lawrence Raybone said it looked like a trigger fish, typically found around the coasts of Spain and France.


He said: "It's more commonly found by sea anglers during the summer months while this shoaling animal is heading north on its migration route.


"It has a powerful set of jaws with rodent-like teeth which it uses to great effect breaking the shells of crab and urchins."


The trigger fish owes its name to its long frontal spine to the dorsal fin locking in an upright position a bit like the safety-catch of a trigger.


This mechanism is used to wedge itself into rock crevices for safety and to express aggression or interest in a mate.


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Florida sheriff's new rug removed for embarrassing typo

typo rug

© mashable.com



A new rug that greeted visitors to one Florida sheriff's office has been pulled up after it was discovered that the standard phrase "In God We Trust" had been mistakenly rendered as "In Dog We Trust."

The Pinellas County Sheriff's Office rug was removed today after the typo wasspotted--nearly three weeks after the floor covering was received from manufacturer American Floor Mats. The Maryland


in dog we trust

© labradorretrieverguide.com

Whoops!



firm will replace the $500 rug with a typo-free model, as first reported by WFTS.

As seen above, the rug features a replica of the sheriff's logo. A second green rug at the Largo headquarters has "God" spelled correctly.


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Herd of deer take over a road after escaping from wildlife park in Japan




Herd of animals take over a road in Japan



Drivers in Japan had their daily commute interrupted - when a herd of deer took over the road.

The group of animals, who had escaped from the nearby wildlife park, decided to bed down for the night in the middle of a busy street.


Taking over one lane of the road, as well as the pavement and some patches of grass in the area, the deer seem unconcerned as the traffic advances towards them, and firmly stand (or lie on) their ground.


But for road users in this area, it isn't a particularly odd phenomenon, because the animals take over this section of the highway every year.


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According to the YouTube user, who uploaded the six and a half minute clip, the deer make the annual trip out of the Nara Wildlife Park because it is cooler to rest by the roadside.

The rogue animals can often be seen stalling traffic in late July, when temperatures in the city of Nara have been known to reach 35 degrees celsius.


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Deep sea prehistoric frilled shark caught by fishermen in Victoria, Australia


© Setfia

The shark has 300 razor sharp teeth and can grow up to 2 metres long



A terrifying prehistoric shark which has 300 razor sharp teeth has been caught by a group of fishermen in Australia.


The bizarre-looking creature was captured by the bemused fishermen near Lakes Entrance in Victoria.


The dark brown two-metre long fish is a frilled shark, which is also known as the 'living fossil'.



© Setfia

The fishermen had no idea what they had captured



Its origin dates back 80 million years and is only one of two species still alive. It is also believed to be the first time a human has seen the fish alive.

Simon Boag, from the South East Trawl Fishing Association (SETFA) said the group of fishermen had not idea what they had caught.


Speaking to ABC News, he said: "It has 300 teeth over 25 rows, so once you're in that mouth, you're not coming out.


"Good for dentists, but it is a freaky thing. I don't think you would want to show it to little children before they went to bed."


The shark captured in 700 metres deep of water, which is unusual because they normally are found at 1,500 metres.


It is now believed the shark has been sold.


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New Hampshire lotto releases bacon-scented scratch ticket


The New Hampshire Lottery announced the release of its first-ever scratch-and-sniff ticket, which is designed to give off the alluring aroma of bacon.

The "I (Heart) Bacon Scratch Ticket," which sells for $1 and offers prizes of up to $1,000, was officially rolled out to stores this month, the lottery announced Monday.


"The (NH) Lottery is focused on developing new and fun ways to engage customers. The I Heart Bacon scratch ticket combines two things people love: the chance to win cash and the wonderful, enticing smell of bacon," Charlie McIntyre, executive director of the New Hampshire Lottery Commission, told WMUR-TV.


Lottery officials said free "I (Heart) Bacon" scratchers will be distributed along with actual slices of bacon Wednesday outside the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester, Friday at the Cumberland Farms in Keene, Saturday at Durham Marketplace and Jan. 30 at the Hooksett Welcome Centers.


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Hundreds of dead mackerel found in Bras d'Or Lake, Canada


© TC Media - Cape Breton Post

Dozens of dead mackerel were visible from the home of Annette Coffin, Monday morning. A week ago hundreds could be seen.



Annette Coffin, a resident of Ben Eoin, first discovered dead fish in the water in front of her home a week ago.


"Last Monday morning, there were dead fish everywhere, on the shore and in the water," she said. "They were sort of under the ice - there was a light coating of ice, and there were tons of them on the beach, and when I came out and had a look they were everywhere."


Coffin said there were at least 200 dead mackerel visible from her waterfront home, which is located across from Ski Ben Eoin. On Monday, a week after Coffin made the initial discovery, there were still dozens of dead mackerel in the water near the shore, with seagulls and other birds circling the area as they have been for days.


Having just become a year-round resident of the area in the last few years, Coffin checked with some of her neighbours who also spotted lots of dead mackerel in the waters in front of their homes.


Coffin, who has since heard reports that the dead mackerel stretch at least as far as Big Pond, said everyone was surprised by the discovery.


"It was new to me but it was also new to some of the longtime neighbours," she said. "We have some people who think that with the change in the weather - the mild November - that they didn't make it to the ocean and that they were without oxygen and just basically froze to death when the cold weather hit. That's one theory."


Coffin said she contacted various fisheries officials to report the situation.


"I'm pretty sure they died of natural causes but we would like to be sure because this is a protected waterway," she said.


Coffin said it's her understanding an official came to the site last week and took a couple of the dead fish and water samples for testing.


An official with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans directed the Cape Breton Post to Environment Canada. No one from Environment Canada responded to calls for comment Monday.


According to the Nova Scotia Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture website, Atlantic mackerel are found in open ocean during the winter months where water temperatures are at or above 7 C, with the optimum temperature range for adults being from 9 C to 12 C. In the spring, as the water warms, schools of mackerel begin their migration to inshore waters, like the Bras d'Or Lake.


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How India's Patent Office destroyed Gilead's Big Pharma global game plan

Gilead Sciences protests

© Manish Swarup/AP Photo

In 2006, members of the Indian Network for People Living with HIV/AIDS demonstrated in New Dehli against a patent applied for by Gilead Sciences.



Gilead Sciences charges a lot for the hepatitis treatment Sovaldi, which sells for as much as $84,000 to U.S. patients. The innovative medication has become one of the world's best-selling drugs despite its price tag, fueling huge growth at Gilead. The company had revenue of $24.2 billion in 2014, according to analysts' estimates, more than double its sales in 2013. Earnings for last year are projected to reached $12.8 billion, more than four times higher.

But the high price of Sovaldi threatens to make the drug too expensive for many patients with hepatitis C in developing countries such as India, where protesters last year lobbed accusations of gouging and carried signs renaming the company "Killead." In September the U.S. pharmaceutical company announced a licensing deal with seven Indian drugmakers to produce generic versions of Sovaldi that could be sold in 91 countries. That, according to Gilead, would help take care of the problem. "Our view is that the competition and the capabilities of these partners will bring down the price," Gregg Alton, executive vice president, told reporters in New Delhi at the time of the announcement.


Unfortunately for Gilead, this week government officials stepped in the way: India's patent office on Tuesday sided with critics who had challenged the company's patent. By rejecting the claim, the Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trademarks has opened the door for more Indian pharmaceutical companies to produce sofosbuvir, the generic version of Sovaldi. And unlike the seven companies that agreed to the deal with Gilead in September, the newcomers won't have any restrictions on where they can sell their generics.


"Getting sofosbuvir out of the stronghold of Gilead's monopoly will be crucial to expanding treatment for people with hepatitis C globally," Dr. Manica Balasegaram, executive director of the Action Campaign of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières, one of the groups behind the Indian patent office challenge, said in a statement.


The news is a victory for MSF partner Tahir Amin, the New York-based lawyer in charge of intellectual property at the Initiative for Medicines, Access & Knowledge. Amin is an English-trained solicitor who once worked as a corporate lawyer for Levi Strauss and now oversees a small team of attorneys challenging big pharma patents in India and other countries. While Gilead had pointed out to the Indian patent office that 17 countries, including China, Indonesia, and Israel, had already granted patents for similar claims, India makes challenges easier thanks to its policy of requiring would-be patent holders to demonstrate that their compounds are new and not obvious - and also better than existing compounds.


"India believes that the patent standards are so low that companies can get patents for inventions very easily," Amin said in an interview. The patent office's examiner ruled Gilead's patent claim "lacks novelty and inventive step," as Bloomberg News noted, and also doesn't demonstrate it's significantly more effective than already known compounds. Amin explains that the controller general's decision holds that "there are a number of earlier compound structures that are very close to what Gilead is trying to get a patent for."


But Sovaldi is a breakthrough drug. Shouldn't that be worth something? "It's important to recognize that what the patent office deals with is whether something is new in science," Amin said. "The decision says there are a number of earlier compound structures that are very close to what Gilead is trying to get a patent for. It's a scientific decision and has nothing to do with the utility of the drug." Gilead didn't offer comment on Wednesday.


The company can appeal, a process that could take years. For now, Amin is hopeful the patent office decision will allow 49 million people - or 74 percent of the total number of hepatitis C patients globally - access to the drug in countries that had been off-limits to generics under the September agreement between Gilead and the seven Indian drugmakers. "Gilead's licensing deal is what we call managed competition," he says. "What this case can achieve is open competition, a real free market."


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