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Friday, 27 February 2015

Angry Norwegian lemmings are the bravest rodent of them all




Angry Norwegian lemming



The angry Norwegian lemming is one of the bravest rodents in the world because it has evolved aposematic traits to ward off predators, a study has suggested.

Norwegian lemmings have an interesting reputation, with people often mistakenly believing they are "crazed creatures" that commit suicide by throwing themselves off cliffs, or exploding because they are so angry.


They have bold colouring - with a red-brown back, yellow flanks, a white chest, chin and cheeks, and a big black patch on its head - and so stand out from their less vibrant relatives.


While most other small rodents flee when they sense a threat and only very rarely aggressively protect themselves from predators, the Norwegian lemming laughs in the face of danger.


When predators approach, they make loud, severe barks, and fight back against attacks with lunges, bites and screams. In a BBC report about their behaviour last year, one group of researchers even reported a face off with a farm tractor, "leaving a trail of infuriated lemmings behind".


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Aposematism vs cryptic evolution

© Mika Hiltunen/Flickr

Norwegian lemmings are far more colourful than their relatives.



Malte Andersson, from the University of Göteborg in Sweden, studied the Norwegian lemming over five field tests comparing their behaviour to other, similar rodent neighbours.

His study, published in the Springer journal , suggested the Norwegian lemming's remarkable behaviour can be ascribed to aposematism - the use of warning colours and other means to tell potential predators they themselves are dangerous too.


Aposematism is unusual among herbivorous mammals - normally it is seen in insects, snakes and frogs. Cryptic evolution is an adaptive evolutionary change masked by concurrent environmental change.


In one of his experiments, however, Andersson found that brown lemmings issued an anti-predatory warning call when a human was near in one in 39 cases (2.5%). In comparison, the Norwegian lemming told humans to back off in 36 of 110 cases (32%). Another test showed the Norwegian lemming is far easier to spot, suggesting greater confidence.


Most of the Norwegian lemmings would have a fight response when the human was five metres away, but would flee when the 'predator' was at a distance of at least 10m.


Andersson notes that black and white colouring is a classic warning colouration, with some birds instinctively knowing to avoid creatures with such colours. "The Norwegian lemming combines acoustics with visual conspicuousness, probably to reduce its risk of becoming prey," he said.


He concluded: "The tests corroborate the hypotheses that distinctive, contrast-rich colouration, antipredator calls and threat postures of the Norwegian lemming form a multimodal suit of aposematic traits, warning predators that this is a more dangerous prey than the smaller sympatric voles, and discriminability from undefended species is an important adaptive reason for conspicuous distinctness of many aposematic signals."


Exploding suicidal Norwegian lemmings


The myth that Norwegian lemmings kill themselves by mindlessly throwing themselves off cliffs is not true. It arose because of population booms followed by lots of dead lemmings being found, and was perpetuated by Walt Disney.


In , a sequence shows lemmings reaching the edge of a cliff, the voiceover says "this is the last chance to turn back, yet over they go, casting themselves bodily out into space". It is also worth noting the lemmings used in the film were brown rather than Norwegian.


The footage was faked, with producers paying $1 per lemming, which were then tipped from a truck off the cliff.


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In reality, the dramatic population cycles from high to low have perpetuated the myth. Instead, population booms lead to mass migration. When this happens, they move from higher to lower ground to find more food. In doing so, sometimes they end up falling down cliffs.

Also, they do not explode. After population booms, predators have a field day feasting on Norwegian lemmings. So strewn body parts are not the result of them literally bursting with anger - it is the result of a mass slaughter.


Speaking to the BBC, Nils Christian Stenseth of the University of Olso in Norway, also points out: "No one has seen a lemming explode."


He concluded: "The tests corroborate the hypotheses that distinctive, contrast-rich colouration, antipredator calls and threat postures of the Norwegian lemming form a multimodal suit of aposematic traits, warning predators that this is a more dangerous prey than the smaller sympatric voles, and discriminability from undefended species is an important adaptive reason for conspicuous distinctness of many aposematic signals."


Senator throws snowball on Senate floor during speech criticizing global warming scam


Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) does not believe that humans contribute to global warming, and on Thursday he took to the Senate floor with some hard evidence in tow: a snowball. Then he threw it.

In a speech criticizing the "hysteria" around global warming, Inhofe - who chairs the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works - pointed to a particular snowstorm five years ago that set a new record at the time, seemingly suggesting that heavy snowfall is proof against climate change.


Then he pointed to a snowball he brought into the chamber in a plastic bag.


"In case we have forgotten, because we keep hearing that 2014 has been the warmest year on record, I ask the chair, do you know what this is?" Inhofe said as he took the snowball out of the bag.


"It's a snowball. And it's just from outside here. So it's very, very cold out. Very unseasonable. Here, Mr. President, catch this."


Inhofe then threw the snowball towards Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), who was presiding over the Senate.


Inhofe is a well known opponent of the idea that humans are affecting the global climate, though he did recently vote to agree that climate change is real and not a hoax. Inhofe explained his vote by arguing that the climate changes all the time, though not because of human activity. Later Senate amendments that linked climate change to human activity did not earn his vote.


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U.S. take note: When Russia's economy takes a hit, politicians get their salaries cut

moscow

© RIA Novosti / Evgenya Novozhenina



The Russian president has ordered salary cuts of 10 percent for all members of his administration, Vladimir Putin's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, who is also deputy head of the administration, has told reporters.

Peskov added that the announcement was made personally by the president at the Friday conference with the permanent members of Russia's Security Council. The press secretary noted that the salaries' issue was not on the agenda of the meeting.


Earlier this week, State Duma speaker Sergey Naryshkin told fellow lawmakers that he intended to address the president with a request to cut their recently increased salaries as part of the Russian government's budget optimization.


Representatives of all parliamentary parties supported Naryshkin's suggestion in mass media comments, but no decision has been made yet.


In December, Vladimir Putin ordered a one-year freeze on civil servants' pay in various state offices, reacting to the sharp fall of the Russian national currency caused by a plunge in oil prices. The order froze the salaries for all employees in the Russian Presidential Administration, the Government, the Audit Chamber and the central and territorial divisions of the Foreign Ministry.


According to the State Statistics Agency, Rosstat, the average salary in federal executive authorities in the first nine months of 2014 was 96,500 rubles per month, and the average salary in the country over the same period was 31,600 rubles per month. The average salary in the Presidential Administration amounted to 216,400 rubles, and in the government it was 200,400 rubles. Over the same period the average exchange rate was about 34 rubles to the US dollar.


The monthly salary of a State Duma MP in Russia is currently 420,000 rubles, or $6,700 at current exchange rates. Lawmakers also have the right to a quarterly bonus of 81,500 rubles, or about $1,300. Russian MPs are legally banned from receiving any other income while holding their parliamentary posts, with the exception of artistic or educational fees.


Russian MP suggests revising statute of limitations in pedophilia cases


© RIA Novosti/Vladimir Trefilov

Yelena Mizulina, chairman of the Russian State Duma Committee on Family, Women and Children



The head of the State Duma Committee for Family, Women and Children has proposed a revision of the existing statute of limitations in criminal cases that involve sex offences against minors.

"It is necessary to review the statute of limitation in starting criminal cases on all crimes of pedophiles," MP Yelena Mizulina (Fair Russia) tweeted on Thursday.



Необходимо пересмотреть сроки давности привлечения к уголовной ответственности по всем преступлениям педофилов: http://bit.ly/1FG5GCd


— Елена Мизулина (@emizulina) 26 февраля 2015



Russian law allows for a statute of limitations of between two and 15 years depending on the gravity of the crime (which is determined by the maximum punishment ordered for it in the Criminal Code).

In 2012, Russian authorities seriously increased the punishment for sex offences against children, raising the maximum penalty for such crimes to 15 years in prison and introducing the possibility for chemical castration of convicts. However, the statute of limitations for such crimes remained in place, despite criticism from some members of the community.


The following year, the Duma began to look into a bill that, if passed, would increase the punishment to life in prison in cases when sex offence resulted in death or grievous bodily harm of a child.


In November last year, several members of Russia's Public Chamber prepared a legislative motion introducing responsibility for child porn possession, but this document has not yet officially become a bill.


In recent Russian history various politicians have advocated the death penalty for pedophiles, but so far that step has not been taken.


Children under 18 are considered minors in Russia and the legal age of consent is 16 years. Persons under 14 are legally considered small children incapable of meaningful consent and any crimes against them are seen as crimes against people in helpless situation which is an aggravating condition.


Chinese diplomat lectures U.S. on Russia's security concerns in Ukraine


© Reuters / How Hwee Yong

Russian President Vladimir Putin (L) and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping



Western nations should heed Russia's legitimate security concerns over the volatile situation in Ukraine, a top Chinese diplomat has said in a rare public statement on the crisis that has damaged relations between Russia and the West.

Qu Xing, China's ambassador to Belgium, said the Ukrainian crisis came about due to the ongoing "game" - a metaphor similar to that used by US geopolitical strategist Zbigniew Brzezinski, who referred to it as the "grand chessboard" - between Russia and the West, which has not abated despite, or because of, the collapse of the Soviet Union.


Arguing that outside interference by various powers inflamed the Ukrainian situation, Xing said Moscow would naturally feel threatened unless Western powers engaged in a more constructive approach.


Xing advised Western powers to "abandon the zero-sum mentality" in their efforts to deal with Moscow and the Ukraine crisis and "take the real security concerns of Russia into consideration," Reuters reported, quoting state news agency Xinhua.


China in the past has urged all involved parties to sit down and negotiate for peace.


The Chinese ambassador, whose Brussels office is in the same city as NATO's headquarters, then offered some insight as to what motivates the United States on the international stage, and what could lead to its possible decline.




"The United States is unwilling to see its presence in any part of the world being weakened, but the fact is its resources are limited, and it will be to some extent hard work to sustain its influence in external affairs," he was quoted as saying.

Xing said Washington's involvement in Ukraine could "become a distraction in its foreign policy."


The Chinese diplomat's comments represent a sharp departure from the relentless wave of hostile rhetoric coming from the West, which has gone to great lengths to blame Russia as the aggressor in the crisis.


Russia has been accused of arming eastern Ukrainian militia and dispatching soldiers and armaments as reinforcement - claims Moscow has denied on numerous occasions. There were even suggestions that Russia was somehow involved in the downing of Malaysian Airlines MH17 over eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014.


Despite the extreme nature of the allegations, no substantive evidence has ever been presented to support such claims.


Indeed, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has blamed the United States as being the primary destabilizing factor in Ukraine.


"Through every step, as the crisis has developed, our American colleagues and the EU under their influence have tried to escalate the situation," Lavrov told participants at the Munich Security Conference earlier this month.


Lavrov pointed to the failure of the EU to engage Russia over Brussels' efforts to have Ukraine sign an economic association agreement with the bloc; the involvement of Western political figures during the Maidan protests; the failure of the West to condemn Kiev for branding its own citizens "terrorists;" and for supporting a coup that led to the toppling of a democratically elected president.




"The US made it public it brokered the transit of power in Ukraine. But we know perfectly well what exactly happened, who discussed candidates for the future Ukrainian government on the phone, who was at Maidan, and what is going on [in Ukraine] right now," Lavrov said.

China is a member of BRICS, the economic association that includes Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa.


Man goes on shooting spree in Missouri, killing 7


© Reuters / Adrees Latif



A man has gone on a shooting spree in rural Missouri, killing seven people before turning the gun on himself, local media report.

The rampage occurred in the rural Missouri community of Tyrone, which is located roughly 40 miles north of the Arkansas border in Texas County.


According to a statement released by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, at 10:15 p.m. on the evening of February 26, the Texas Country Sheriff's Department received a phone call from a female juvenile indicating she was in a residence in Tyrone and had heard gunshots. When police responded to the call, they found two bodies. The girl, meanwhile, had fled to a neighboring house.



One of the crime scenes in Tyrone, Mo where 9 people have died. 8 victims and one suspect dead . http://bit.ly/1FG5G52


— Mazda Road Runner (@RoadRunnerSTL) February 27, 2015



"Further investigation revealed five additional victims who were deceased and one additional victim who was deceased and one additional victim who was wounded in three additional residences. All three residences were in Tyrone," the statement read.

#Missouri: 8 dead incl 36yo #Tyrone shooter who killed himself http://bit.ly/1aw8Fnn http://bit.ly/1aw8Fnr


— RT (@RT_com) February 27, 2015



An elderly female who had died of natural causes was also found at another residence. A total of nine deceased individuals, including the shooter and the elderly female, were discovered. The individual who sustained injuries in the rampage was taken to an area hospital, AP reports.

Texas County Sheriff James Sigman told the there are four confirmed crime scenes in Tyrone. A fifth and six location have also been identified in nearby Shannon County.


A Missouri State Highway Patrol confirmed the death of the alleged shooter to the paper. The 36-year-old assailant was reportedly found dead in a parked car in Shannon County, apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.



Multiple killings under investigation in southern Missouri http://bit.ly/1aw8Fnu http://bit.ly/1aw8Gb2


— CBS Evening News (@CBSEveningNews) February 27, 2015



Staff at schools in the area were told to arrive early to provide counseling to students. Authorities have yet to identify the victims or the gunman.

The Missouri Highway Patrol is set to hold a news conference on Friday to provide further details. A motive behind the killings or any potential connection between the shooter and his victims remains unclear.


Greek economist: 'Economic center of gravity shifting eastwards' as Greece develops ties with Eurasian Union





"Alexis, let's get out of here!"

"Yes, but let's do it carefully; we don't want to act until we're sure the plan works."




Whether western European countries want it or not, the center of economic gravity is shifting eastwards, and the member-states of the Eurasian Economic Union as well as India and China are displaying sizable growth and are playing a greater role in global economy, the President of the Greek-Eurasian Business Council, Dr. Spyros Kouvelis said on Thursday.


He said it at a ceremony devoted to the start of the organization's activity.


"," he said adding that unless Greece took account of the persistently growing role of the region in the world economy it might lose a big part of this important market.


Dr. Kouvelis voiced the conviction that business ties should be untied from politics.


" [the EU sanctions against Russia over the turmoil in Ukraine - TASS] ," he said.


Dr. Kouvelis believes that the kick-off of operations of the Greek-Eurasian Business Council opens up big prospects for Athens in terms of collaboration with the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU).


He said the council would cooperate in a manner that would utilize the EEU's business advantage.


Members of the council will make the first trip to Astana where the EXPO international exhibition will be held in 2017. It is important for Greek enterprises to establish working contacts with Kazakhstan already now, Dr. Kouvelis said.





Comment: A somewhat more elucidating article appeared in the last month:

'Alarm bells ring over Syriza's Russian links' - January 28th 2015



Soon after Syriza, the Greek radical leftwing party, swept to power this week, alarm bells began ringing in the capitals of Europe. However it was not finance officials who were rattled but Europe's defence and security chiefs.



Naturally! Take note, however, that when the here says "Europe", it really means the 'Two Towers' of the Atlantic Alliance: Washington and London.

The day after his election as Greece's new prime minister, Alexis Tsipras threw a grenade in the direction of Brussels: he objected to calls for further sanctions against Russia as a result of rising violence in Ukraine.


On Wednesday, Athens went further. "We are against the embargo that has been imposed against Russia," said Panagiotis Lafazanis, the energy minister and leader of Syriza's far-left faction, according to the semi-official Athens News Agency. "We have no differences with Russia and the Russian people." [...]


While some diplomats and analysts see Mr Tsipras's intervention against more sanctions as an opening gambit in forthcoming negotiations over Greece's international bailout and debt burden, others point to it as another example of spreading Russian influence in southeastern Europe.


European and Nato intelligence officials are now poring over links between the Kremlin and senior figures from Syriza and its coalition partner, the Independent Greeks party.



"European and Nato intelligence officials"... In other words, the CIA and MI6.

The fact that the first foreign official Mr Tsipras invited to the Maximos Mansion in Athens on Monday was Andrey Maslov, Russia's ambassador, speaks to their concerns.


Mr Tsipras's previous comments on the Ukrainian crisis are also clear enough: in a trip to Moscow in May, he chief accused Kiev of harbouring "neo-Nazi" elements and denounced sanctions against Russia.


"It's a regression for us to see fascism and the neo Nazis entering European governments again and for this to be accepted by the EU," Mr Tsipras said at the time. "The EU is shooting itself in the foot with this strategy."


Other members of Greece's new government harbour similar views. Nikos Kotzias, the foreign minister, and Panos Kammenos, defence minister, have both been cultivated by figures close to Russian president Vladimir Putin's inner circle.


Mr Kotzias — a former Piraeus university professor — has espoused increasingly nationalist positions, developing a relationship with Alexander Dugin, the Russian nationalist philosopher, during several visits to Moscow, according to a colleague who declined to be identified.


Mr Dugin, who is close to several figures in the Moscow security establishment and last August called for a "genocide" of Ukrainians...



Not quite. Dugin is certainly brutally blunt at times, but he's not really calling for genocide. Here's what he actually said:


"Ukraine should be cleared of the idiots. Genocide of the cretins is suggested. The evil cretins are closed to the Voice of the Logos, and deadly with all their incredible stupidity. I do not believe that these are Ukrainians. Ukrainians are beautiful Slavic people. This kind of appeared out of manholes as a bastard race."




... in reference to the cretins running the country in to the ground, and the Nazi thugs who have been running riot across the country, not just in the Donbass/Novorossiya.

...was invited by Mr Kotzias to speak at an event in the Piraeus campus in 2013, where he extolled the role of Orthodox Christianity in uniting Greeks and Russians.



He said much more than that: Geopolitics of Russia. Athenian lecture. Alexandr Dugin

Mr Kammenos [Greece's new Minister of Defence, and from among the right-wing independents who teamed up with Syriza to form the new government] has also been a frequent visitor to Moscow. A picture shows him in the Russian capital two weeks ago, meeting the chairman of the Russian Duma's foreign affairs committee and the deputy chairman of its defence committee.


Russian billionaire Konstantin Malofeyev, a sometime ally of Mr Dugin, and another pro-Kremlin figure who has developed close ties with radical European political movements, said he also knew Mr Kammenos.


Mr Malofeyev is subject to EU and US travel bans and wanted by Kiev for allegedly financing pro-Russia separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.


"I used to travel to Athens often — before the sanctions," he told the . He said Greece has lived " [of international lenders — the EU, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank]".


"It is in the interests of Greeks for relations with Russia to normalise . . . For the Greek economy, for the Greek people, friendship with Russia is necessary," he added.


Anton Shekhovtsov, a Vienna-based analyst of Europe's radical political movements, has studied links between Russia and populist parties such as Syriza. "," he said.


Figures such as Mr Dugin have become very active in developing ties with radical populist European movements, Mr Shekhovtsov added, from the National Front in France to Austria's FPÖ. "There is also the issue of Nato's information security."


Fears over the links of Greece's new political establishment with Moscow are part of a growing set of concerns among European security agencies.


"," said one British diplomat who declined to be named. "."


Syriza campaigned two years ago for Greece's exit from Nato but has since toned down its hostility towards the alliance.