An ecological oratorio

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A blog which seeks to provide an increased awareness and appreciation of our fragile planet. We generally believe in conservation and prudent utilisation of the environment through sustainable development. We aim at encouraging healthy discourses which could be eventually translated into feasible policies.

Sarah Stephen
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  • August 28, 2011
  • 08:27 AM
  • 1,250 views

Mr Wolf, I presume?

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Those of us who have a long-standing interest in Egyptian mythology would remember Anubis, the jackal-headed god of the dead, who held the unappealing portfolio of funerals, afterlife, mummification, fate of souls, and protection of the dead and their tombs. This was presumably because Anubis’ animal counterpart, the Egyptian Jackal (Canis aureus lupaster; Hemprich and Ehrenberg, 1833), preferred to occupy burial grounds. C.a.lupaster was considered to be a large, rare subspecies of the gold........ Read more »

  • June 2, 2011
  • 06:51 PM
  • 1,053 views

Super bugs and Super sleuths

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Earlier this week on Monday came reports from Germany that 6 people who consumed raw vegetables were killed and hundreds rendered ill . Initial investigations pointed towards consumptions of raw cucumber, lettuce and tomatoes. The fatalities were attributed to hemolytic-uremic syndrome, or HUS, from E. Coli. Since then, more people have died and the infection has spread to different parts of Europe . Cases have been reported from Sweden, Austria, Denmark, France, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Swit........ Read more »

Kumarasamy KK, Toleman MA, Walsh TR, Bagaria J, Butt F, Balakrishnan R, Chaudhary U, Doumith M, Giske CG, Irfan S.... (2010) Emergence of a new antibiotic resistance mechanism in India, Pakistan, and the UK: a molecular, biological, and epidemiological study. The Lancet infectious diseases, 10(9), 597-602. PMID: 20705517  

Poirel L, Hombrouck-Alet C, Freneaux C, Bernabeu S, & Nordmann P. (2010) Global spread of New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase 1. The Lancet infectious diseases, 10(12), 832. PMID: 21109172  

  • September 11, 2011
  • 05:26 PM
  • 986 views

Marine mammals and their future

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Marine mammals have borne the brunt of mankind’s unsustainable overexploitation, resulting in population decline and species extinction. Hunting for fur, blubber, and meat in the 19th and 20th centuries resulted in the extinction of three species – the Caribbean monk seal (Monachus tropicalis), Atlantic gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus), and the Steller’s sea cow (Hydrodamalis gigas). The most recent extinction, due to its use in traditional medicine, was that of the Baiji (Li........ Read more »

Pompa S, Ehrlich PR, & Ceballos G. (2011) Global distribution and conservation of marine mammals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(33), 13600-5. PMID: 21808012  

  • August 23, 2011
  • 12:29 PM
  • 980 views

More scientific grub on migration

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio



A previous post presented how those characteristic summer chorus of the English countryside may be soon an event of the past. This rapid decrease in the population of migratory birds in the UK was attributed to habitat destruction and other such anthropogenic factors, probably somewhere along the migration corridor. So what does habitat destruction and other anthropogenic influences bode for migrating organisms? Vishwesha Guttal and Iain Couzin, of Princeton University, try to predict this (am........ Read more »

Guttal V, & Couzin ID. (2010) Social interactions, information use, and the evolution of collective migration. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(37), 16172-7. PMID: 20713700  

  • January 29, 2011
  • 01:12 PM
  • 721 views

Waste lands

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Modern cities generate huge amounts of rubbish, and disposing of this is one of the most pressing environmental problems. One can bury it of course, or burn it in incinerators, or just dump it in a big pile just outside the city. This is the approach chosen for the Jardim Gramacho in Rio, Brazil, one of the worlds largest rubbish dumps, which is the subject of the Oscar nominated film, Waste Land.*Seventy percent of Rio's rubbish arrives at Jardim Gramacho, which is an astonishing 7,0........ Read more »

Porto MF, Juncá DC, Gonçalves Rde S, & Filhote MI. (2004) [Garbage, work, and health: a case study of garbage pickers at the metropolitan landfill in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil]. Cadernos de saude publica / Ministerio da Saude, Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz, Escola Nacional de Saude Publica, 20(6), 1503-14. PMID: 15608851  

  • June 27, 2011
  • 03:43 PM
  • 706 views

Yellow gold : Turmeric and its promise

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Growing up in Southern India, we cultivated several vegetables and spices in our backyard, one of which was turmeric. Turmeric (Curcuma longa) belongs to the same family as ginger. It is rhizomatous herb and normally pieces of the rhizome are planted in the rainy months of July. In our hands, the plants did not require much care at all. No artificial fertilizers were used nor wwere the plants watered but only left to the mercy of nature. But our part of South India is blessed with rains anyway........ Read more »

  • February 21, 2010
  • 12:39 PM
  • 665 views

Paper of the week: What ocean acidification means for the plankton

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

It appears that we humans had taken oceans for granted for too long. A widely known fact is that most of what we discard makes its way to oceans. Oceans are sinks for all things including 1/3 of the carbon dioxide that has been released in the last 200 years. This has resulted in the acidification of the oceans. The science behind is that carbonic acid is formed when carbon dioxide dissolves in sea water. This raises the hydrogen ion concentration and bicarbonate ions, but limits carbonate ions......... Read more »

  • June 11, 2011
  • 11:25 AM
  • 661 views

Dams on the Xingu

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

On June 1st Dilma Rousseff, the President of Brazil, controversially gave permission for the company Norte Energia to begin building a hydroelectric dam on the Xingu river in the northern state of Para. This follows the granting of a provisional licence in January by the previous president, Lula da Silva, to begin land clearance and road construction, and years of court cases. A total of eleven cases have been filed against the project by the Federal Public Prosecutor, over various irregularitie........ Read more »

  • August 27, 2010
  • 02:55 AM
  • 621 views

Effect of climate change on human morbidity and mortality and sea levels

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Climate change has been resulting in quite a many detrimental manifestations which tend to have a domino effect: fluctuations in temperature and precipitation (resulting in climate variability), as well as extreme manifestations such as drought, storms, rise in sea levels, and frequent severe weather events.Consider the research by Grinsted et al (2009) who used a ‘physically plausible four parameter linear response equation’ to relate nearly 2,000 years of global temperatures and sea level......... Read more »

Patz, J., Campbell-Lendrum, D., Holloway, T., & Foley, J. (2005) Impact of regional climate change on human health. Nature, 438(7066), 310-317. DOI: 10.1038/nature04188  

  • August 9, 2011
  • 07:06 PM
  • 596 views

Stuck in traffic

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio


As you sit in the rush hour queues, pity the poor guy or girl directing the traffic, and imagine the fumes they are breathing in. In Brazil, with rapidly expanding car ownership, but not necessarily expanding road space, this is an increasing problem.

A recent study* in the city of Santo Andre, part of the metropolitan region of Sao Paulo, focused on traffic controllers. The study focused on male, non smoking, traffic controllers who had been exposed for over 3 years. As the authors note, one........ Read more »

Sérgio Chiarelli P, Amador Pereira LA, Nascimento Saldiva PH, Ferreira Filho C, Bueno Garcia ML, Ferreira Braga AL, & Conceição Martins L. (2011) The association between air pollution and blood pressure in traffic controllers in Santo André, São Paulo, Brazil. Environmental research, 111(5), 650-5. PMID: 21570068  

  • February 27, 2012
  • 03:09 AM
  • 573 views

In pursuit of a fox

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

"The English country gentleman galloping after a fox - the unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable."- Oscar Wilde in A Woman of No Importance.An overcast Boxing Day in a quintessentially English village/town in South Gloucestershire. The place is typically peaceful, although not so that morning. In fact, it looked like a scene from John Constable’s paintings: an excited throng at the village centre; huntsmen and women on their powerful hunters and invigorated hounds prancing at the sound ........ Read more »

  • May 31, 2010
  • 05:26 AM
  • 538 views

Paper of the Week: Humans and Biodiversity

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

A new study interestingly implies that human activities may not always be bad for biodiversity. Long before the colonizers arrived in South America, indigenous farmers, belonging to the Arauquinoid cultures, had already interfered with the Amazonian biodiversity. Their novel agricultural engineering methods had changed the savannah ecosystem, resulting in increased biodiversity. Thus states the solid paper, on 'Pre-Columbian agricultural landscapes, ecosystem engineers, and self-organized patchi........ Read more »

McKey D, Rostain S, Iriarte J, Glaser B, Birk JJ, Holst I, & Renard D. (2010) Pre-Columbian agricultural landscapes, ecosystem engineers, and self-organized patchiness in Amazonia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(17), 7823-8. PMID: 20385814  

  • April 10, 2012
  • 02:04 PM
  • 530 views

Controversial, Bt very common

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Probably the most controversial issue in agriculture today is the use of transgenic crops. What does this mean exactly? Well, basically, it is the addition of genetic material from one species into another. Mules, for example, are technically transgenic as they are the offspring of different species, horses and donkeys. The Soviets developed a hybrid of radishes and cabbages, though unfortunately it had the leaves iof radish and the roots of cabbage (*). But what people generally mean these days........ Read more »

Karpechenko GD. (1927) Polyploid hybrids of Raphanus sativus L. X Brassica oleracea. L Bull Appl Bot, 305-410. info:other/

Yang, W., & Wan, J. (2011) Transgenic Crops: An Option for Future Agriculture. Journal of Integrative Plant Biology, 53(7), 510-511. DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7909.2011.01064.x  

  • October 9, 2011
  • 07:17 PM
  • 482 views

A matter of the heart

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Some years ago, I accompanied a young relative, a very eager science graduate working on particulate matter, as she conducted her research survey on public perception of particulate matter and its effects in a certain borough of London Particulate matter (PM) is used to describe solid matter suspended in a gas or liquid phase. In the environment, particulates may occur naturally (as consequence of forest fires, volcanoes, dust storm, sea sprays etc) or via anthropogenic activities, such as the b........ Read more »

  • May 31, 2010
  • 05:23 AM
  • 479 views

Paper of the week: Effects of prenatal exposure of pthalates

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Pthalates are esters of pthalic acid that are commonly added to plastics but also are found in diverse products ranging from cosmetics to pharmaceutical pills. As could be expected, studies that monitor phthalate metabolites in human populations have shown that they are widely present. Over the years, there have been many concerns over their effect on human health notably as hormonal disrupting agents. This has led to the regulation of some phthalates in consumer products in Europe and the Unite........ Read more »

Engel SM, Miodovnik A, Canfield RL, Zhu C, Silva MJ, Calafat AM, & Wolff MS. (2010) Prenatal phthalate exposure is associated with childhood behavior and executive functioning. Environmental health perspectives, 118(4), 565-71. PMID: 20106747  

  • August 19, 2010
  • 10:04 AM
  • 418 views

Where did the oil go?

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

The recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico released, as we have all seen on tv, a lot of oil. Quite how much is a "lot" is a bit of a guess, but roughly 4.9 million barrels, or 784 million litres*. What actually happened to this oil was reviewed recently in an article in Science (Kerr 2010). Only about 0.1% was recovered from beaches and marshes (that´s still an awful lot of oil!). About 17% was siphoned away at the well head, 5% burned off at the surface, and only 3% skimmed off........ Read more »

  • May 29, 2010
  • 01:27 PM
  • 404 views

Paper of the Week: Beware the Lead

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

Staunch supporters of game will find little to be pleased with the research published by Deborah Pain (of Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, Gloucestershire) and colleagues, on Potential Hazard to Human Health from Exposure to Fragments of Lead Bullets and Shot in the Tissues of Game Animals in PLoS. The findings would also shock those who happily dig into the cooked game, seldom pondering about how much lead is ingested in the process.Lead ammunition (pellets/bullets) is often used to shoot down game........ Read more »

  • February 26, 2010
  • 02:38 PM
  • 402 views

Sunlight on the sea

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

In this last week the Brazilian cities of Sao Paulo and Recife have experienced records levels of UV exposure. While a UV index of 6-7 is ¨high risk", and "very high risk" is 8-10, Sao Paulo was scorched with an index of 14. As the sun burns us it also beats down on the ocean surface and the algae that live there. What happens next is the subject of the CLAW hypothesis, which proposes a negative feedback loop, as follows.....Dimethylsulphide produced by phytoplankton is oxidised by bacteria to ........ Read more »

  • May 29, 2012
  • 05:40 PM
  • 395 views

Four continents and a fish

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

As a child in the seventies, I remember clutching my grandfather’s arm and marvelling at Tilapia being reared in a shallow pond in his land in a South Indian village. Many years later, one summer in the late nineties, in an oriental store in Ohio, USA, I was introduced to a packet of frozen fish which turned out to be Tilapia. Needless to say, I enjoyed it much and felt that it was one of the most delicious fishes I had ever eaten. Fast forward to 2010… in a lakeside restaurant by the S........ Read more »

  • May 25, 2012
  • 09:09 AM
  • 371 views

When introductions go bad

by Sarah Stephen in An ecological oratorio

My first sighting of the red squirrel was in Camperdown Park in Dundee in 2003. I remember that scene vividly. I had since tried desperately to see this elusive animal again but to no avail, save a brief sighting, again in Camperdown Park, in Autumn 2010. This is because although red squirrel, which is native to UK and  is  protected in Europe, is outnumbered by its foreign relative, the grey squirrel that was introduced to the UK from America. G........ Read more »

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