A new species of gecko (Cnemaspis neangthyi) has been described from Cambodia.

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Monthly Archives: March 2010
HEALTHCARE REFORM BILL is an important step
The United States is moving in the right direction. For more information on the healthcare reform bill and its impacts, please see the collection of links below. More via James Fallows:
For now, the significance of the vote is moving the United States FROM a system in which people can assume they will have health coverage IF they are old enough (Medicare), poor enough (Medicaid), fortunate enough (working for an employer that offers coverage, or able themselves to bear expenses), or in some other way specially positioned (veterans; elected officials)… TOWARD a system in which people can assume they will have health-care coverage. Period.
That is how the entire rest of the developed world operates, as noted yesterday. It is the way the United States operates in most realms other than health coverage. Of course all older people are eligible for Medicare. Of course all drivers must have auto insurance. Of course all children must have a public school they can attend. Etc. Such “of course” rules offer protection for individuals but even more important, they reduce the overall costs to society, compared with one in which extreme risks are uncontained. The simplest proof is, again, Medicare: Does anyone think American life would be better now, on an individual or a collective level, if we were in an environment in which older people might have to beg for treatment as charity cases when they ran out of cash? And in which everyone had to spend the preceding years worried about that fate?
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Despite everything that is wrong with this bill and the thousand adjustments that will be necessary in the years to come, this is a very important step.
How will the health care bill affect you?
- What does the health care bill mean to me?
- 10 Things Every American Should Know About Health Care Reform
- Health Care Legislation: A Timeline
- Health Reform Bill Summary: The Top 18 Immediate Effects
- Health Care, Reformed: America, here’s what you’ve won (and all of this stuff kicks in this year)
- How the Health Care Overhaul Could Affect You: Major ways the overhaul will affect those who currently have health insurance and those who do not
More links (updated 23 March 2010):
- Sunlight Is Good Medicine: “[H]ospitals will have to post prices. Insurance products will be presented with standardized information, consumer ratings and quality measures.”
- What Does The Health Care Bill Mean For Start Ups?
- How Health Care Reform Could Affect You, Ctd
- Obama’s Moderate Health Care Plan
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HEALTHCARE REFORM: Congressional Budget Office: Health reform bill to cut deficit, Republicans still critical
Image: The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the current health reform bill “would cost $940 billion and reduce the deficit by $130 billion during the first ten years[, and] in the second 10 years, it would reduce the deficit by $1.2 trillion.” It’s no surprise that Republicans are still criticizing the current health reform bill over costs, despite the fact that Republicans have voted for more expensive programs under the Bush II Administration.
NASA discovers life … on Earth
NASA researchers were surprised to film a living creature—or a Lyssianasid amphipod, which looks somewhat like a shrimp—600 feet beneath an Antarctic ice sheet and 12.5 miles from open water. The discovery might not be of life on Mars, but it illustrates how complex forms of life can survive in extreme environments. More from NASA.gov:
At a depth of 600 feet beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet, a small shrimp-like creature managed to brighten up an otherwise gray polar day in November 2009. Bob Bindschadler of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., remembers the day well. He and his team were on a joint NASA-National Science Foundation expedition to examine the underside of the ice sheet when they found the pinkish-orange creature swimming beneath the ice.
“We were like little kids huddling around, just oohing and aahing at this little creature swimming around and giving us a little show,” said Bindschadler. “It was the thrill of discovery that made us giddy; just totally unexpected.”
The complex critter was identified as a Lyssianasid amphipod, about 3 inches in length. It was found beneath the 180-meter (590-foot) thick Ross Ice Shelf in Windless Bight, 20 miles northeast of McMurdo Station. Bindschadler and his team drilled an 8-inch diameter hole through the ice so that Alberto Behar of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., could submerge a small camera to obtain what are believed to be the first images of the underbelly of an ice shelf.
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It’s not unusual to find amphipods and other marine life in Antarctic waters. The complex circulatory system of the surrounding ocean brings warm, salty, nutrient-rich water towards the Antarctic continent, helping to sustain life even in the cold, dark winter. When the Larsen B ice shelf collapsed in 2002, scientists discovered clams and bacterial mats, or large aggregations of bacteria, half a mile below the ocean surface. Even within their average temperature range of -1.8 to 1 degree Celsius (28.7 to 33.8 Fahrenheit), Antarctic waters are teeming with life.
“The ocean flows under ice sheets, and where there is exchange of water with the open ocean, there will be microbes and other food resources for larger animals such as jellyfish and amphipods,” according to Peter Wiebe, a biologist from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Mass., who studies marine life in the waters around West Antarctica.
But for a group of glaciologists, a familiar face was the last thing they expected to see below the ice and so far from the open ocean. “We thought we were just going into a deep, dark cold water hole and never anticipated we’d see any life,” Bindshadler added. “The color was what caught our eyes.”
The science team — with members from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks; the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Calif.; and Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, Monterey — is now analyzing temperature, salinity and current data from the sub-glacial watering hole to understand if the comfortable conditions for this shrimp-like creature are typical.
NASA-funded scientists have long studied life in extreme environments. From astrobiology to extremeophiles and survivophiles, the search for life in harsh places has led to a smorgasbord of discoveries seemingly ripped from the pages of science fiction. The Antarctic amphipod has gotten scientists talking again: if life-forms as complex as these can survive deep within sub-glacial waters could they survive in other unusual and unfriendly environments in space?
CAN YOU SEE ME? | ANIMAL CAMOUFLAGE
See more animal camouflage here on The Conservation Report.
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