Save The Deers Off The Road !

Hanover, Germany - A motorists' group in Germany on Monday demanded greater use of repulsive odours to keep deer off roads. Deer are scared by the smell of humans and wolves, so the decade-old German technology requires a foam containing those odours to be stuck to trees every 5 metres along the side of the road.



The noise of traffic combined with the scent deters deer from crossing the road and being killed in collisions with cars. When the road is quiet, the deer pluck up courage to run across. The Lower Saxony branch of the ADAC appealed for hunters to create more of the odour barriers, saying 2,300 people were injured or killed last year in 220,000 collisions with wild animals. A much higher number of the deer and boar perished in the crashes. The group said animal-car collisions had been reduced 80 per cent in places in Lower Saxony where the virtual barrier was employed. The blobs of polyurethane foam about the size of tennis balls have to have fresh scent repeatedly added to them.
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Supermassive black hole batters adjacent galaxy with powerful jets

A massive black hole present at the center of a galaxy is battering a nearby galaxy with powerful jets of particles, according to latest images released by NASA.



While there have been instances of two galaxies colliding with each other, this is the first time that a destruction on such a huge scale has been witnessed by the astronomers. NASA said that the phenomenon has been occurring in a galaxy system called 3C321, which is located around 1.4 billion light years away from Earth.

The two galaxies are in the process of merging with each other but the smaller one has unfortunately come in the way of the jet's line that is powerful enough to destroy any planets that is positioned in its way.

Lead researcher, Dan Evans from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics said that it was the first time that such a spectacle has been witnessed. "We've seen many jets produced by black holes, but this is the first time we've seen one punch into another galaxy like we're seeing here. This jet could be causing all sorts of problems for the smaller galaxy it is pummeling", he added.

The images of these powerful jets were obtained courtesy of the Chandra X-ray Observatory owned by NASA. Latest observations show there may be supermassive black holes at the center of the two galaxies that are on the verge of merging.

Jets of particles from supermassive black holes are known to produce X-rays, gamma rays and electrons in huge quantities. These particles travel with the speed of light as well. Evans said that the so-called "Death Star" galaxy began blasting the nearby galaxy about 1 million years ago, which meant they could learn a lot from this event.

The details of this study are due to appear in a forthcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal.

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Cheep thrills at annual Audubon bird countCheep thrills at annual Audubon bird count

By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer
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A few dozen bird watchers swooped into the Valley on Saturday, peering into trees and into the blue sky above, on the lookout for the winged and the feathery.

The excursion by bird watchers with the San Fernando Valley chapter of the National Audubon Society makes the local group one of the first in the country to participate in the 108th annual Christmas Bird Count.

Audubon groups started the count Friday, and it runs to Jan. 5. The goal is to document numbers and types of birds and keep tabs on how birds are faring in a changing environment.

"We have records going back more than 100 years, and it's proven to be extremely valuable ... to track the impacts of developments and global warming," said Garrison Frost, spokesman for Audubon California.

Bird watchers get to engage in a favorite pastime and contribute to science at the same time.

Arthur Langton of West Hills, who has taken part in almost every Christmas Bird Count since its inception in the late 1950s, said what keeps him coming back is the thrill of seeing the usual collection of birds, along with those that are total surprises.

But he has noticed certain species that populated the Valley years ago are nowhere to be seen - which he attributes to development, drought and changes in the environment.

"Now you see other birds that are new, or birds that have disappeared completely because of loss of habitat," Langton said.

"Some things surprise you when they show up, and some things surprise you because they're not around."

The local bird count in the Valley divides the community into eight sections, all within a 15-mile diameter from the corner of Nordhoff Street and Balboa Boulevard. Bird enthusiasts spend all day scouring the area.

The day offers bird watchers a good test of their skills, having to identify some winged creatures by sight and others by sound.

Kris Ohlenkamp of Topanga said the highlight of his day was seeing a few unusual birds: the red-naped sapsucker, Cassin's kingbird and a marsh wren.

He caught sight of 75 species Saturday, bringing the total number of bird species he's seen this year in the United States to 486.

"It's a wow moment," Ohlenkamp said. "You see a bird you've never seen before or something you don't expect and it's really exciting. And you study up on their habitat and you go out and see it and it's a real feeling of accomplishment."

The regional bird counts done throughout the country help the Audubon Society compile data to document significant changes - not just in bird populations but also in the environment.

The society released a report last year showing steep declines in the birds people see every day - pigeons, doves and swallows.

The group also released a watch list of hundreds of birds in danger of extinction - research based on the Christmas Bird Count, Frost said.

"Birds are one of the early indicators of significant environmental change, so the bird count is about birds, but it's about more than that," Frost said.

"It's about habitat, other forms of wildlife, and ... (with) global warming, birds are among the first wildlife species that you'll start to see changes in - migration patterns change, populations rise or decline, or they move."

The Santa Clarita Valley will hold its bird count on Dec. 29. For more information, visit www.sfvaudubon.org.