How does the COVID-19 vaccine work once it enters the body – Roadmap for kids and adults-Health News , FP

As soon as the vaccine is inside the tissue cells, it uses the instructions to create spike proteins. This process usually takes less than 12 hours. Pat Moore, with the…

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Red list status shows we’re on the cusp of the sixth extinction event, says IUCN head- Technology News, FP


Nearly 30 percent of the 138,374 species assessed by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List are at risk of extinction, the global conservation body reported Saturday.

Habitat loss, overexploitation and illegal trade have hammered global wildlife populations for decades, and climate change is now kicking in as a direct threat, the head of the IUCN’s Red List Unit told AFP in an interview.

Q. Are we in or on the cusp of the sixth mass extinction?
If we look at extinctions every 100 years since 1500, there is a marked inflection starting in the 1900s. The trend is showing that we are 100 to 1,000 times higher than the ‘background’, or normal, extinction rates. I would certainly say that the red list status shows that we’re on the cusp of the sixth extinction event [in the last 500 million years].

If the trends carry on going upward at that rate, we’ll be facing a major crisis soon.

Q: The Red List began in 1964. Has it changed much?
A: The initial list wasn’t really based on scientific criteria. It was more of a gut feel: ‘We think the species is under some degree of threat’. But as the list started to grow, we realised that we needed to make the list scientifically defensible. So we took a big step back and asked: ‘What is it we are trying to measure?’

The answer was quite simple: risk of extinction.

Q: Are there species that would have gone extinct without the Red List?
A: There are lots of species around the world that we would almost certainly have lost. The Red List process drew attention, for example, to the plight of the Arabian oryx and led to conservation efforts — taking the animals out of the wild, captive breeding, reintroductions. We’ve seen species very nearly extinct that are thriving now.

Q: Does the Red List make recommendations?
A: The Red List is not policy prescriptive, it’s really just a statement of fact –- this is what the status of the species is. Then it’s up to the decision makers to interpret that and decide what policies should be enacted.

Q: Do you ever come under pressure over the listings?
A: There is lots of lobbying. Surprisingly, it’s not so much about the up-listing to a higher threat level. For some high-profile charismatic species, if you want to down-list them because there has been successful conservation actions, we often get lobbied very, very hard to not do that.

There’s real concern that if a species goes down a category, that conservation investment will stop. This is where the ‘green status’ will really help.

Q. What is the green status?
A: After you’ve done the Red List assessment, what are you going to do about it? This is where we started talking about the green status. How do you measure whether your conservation actions are being successful? If we hadn’t done anything, where would it be now? If we stopped all conservation efforts now, what will happen to that species going forward? Those are the metrics in the green status process.

Q: Couldn’t that lead to species conservation triage?
A: There’s a limited amount of funding available and vast number of species. It does come down to some really harsh realities. You’re obligated to just let some species go extinct because we really can’t save them.

But it’s not something we tackle head on in the Red List process. We effectively pass the buck on to others to make those very hard decisions.

Q: Climate change is rarely cited as a driver of extinction. Why is that?
A: It is obvious for the polar bears because of the direct link between sea ice cover and global warming, but with other megafauna it’s a lot harder to detect the impacts of climate change.

There is evidence pointing to climate change for the increasing frequency and intensity of wildfires. But when experts record threats to a species they may put ‘increased fire frequency’, not climate change.

The chytrid fungus is wiping out amphibians all around the world, and we are pretty sure that its emergence is very much linked to climate change. But with the evidence we have now, the category of threat is invasive species, not climate change. (more…)

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NASA Ingenuity helicopter isn’t ready to retire, will continue to go on flying misions- Technology News, FP

Agence France-PresseSep 06, 2021 13:18:58 ISTIt was only supposed to fly five times. And yet NASA's helicopter on Mars, Ingenuity, has completed 12 flights and it isn't ready to retire.…

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Hunting Grounds available for free for PlayStation Plus players this month- Technology News, FP

FP TrendingSep 06, 2021 13:05:51 ISTPlayStation fans are up for a treat, as Sony announced three new games to be download for free till 4 October. In a blog post,…

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Realme Pad’s Flipkart teaser confirms 10.4-inch display, 6.9 mm thickness and more- Technology News, FP

tech2 News StaffSep 06, 2021 12:24:33 ISTRealme is set to launch its first tablet called Realme Pad in India on 9 September at 12.30 pm. The company has revealed that…

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Medical journals warn climate action cannot be put on hold while we deal with COVID- Technology News, FP

Agence France-PresseSep 06, 2021 11:40:22 ISTGlobal warming is already affecting people's health so much that emergency action on climate change cannot be put on hold while the world deals with…

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Maruti Suzuki hikes prices across its passenger vehicle range by up to 1.9 percent- Technology News, FP

tech2 News StaffSep 06, 2021 11:45:05 ISTMaruti Suzuki, India’s largest carmaker, has announced an increase in prices of its entire passenger vehicle portfolio, barring the Celerio, by as much as…

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Komodo dragon, two-in-five shark species lurch towards extinction, says IUCN Red List

A key message from the IUCN Congress, taking place in the French city of Marseille, is that disappearing species and the destruction of ecosystems are existential threats on a par…

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Twitter might soon allow users to receive Bitcoin, Ethereum via its Tip Jar feature- Technology News, FP

FP TrendingSep 06, 2021 11:03:38 ISTTwitter may soon allow its users to add Bitcoin and Ethereum to their profiles for receiving cryptocurrency tips. App developer Alessandro Paluzzi backed the claim…

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