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Public urged to join butterfly count in ‘rescue mission' for declining insects

Public urged to join butterfly count in ‘rescue mission' for declining insects

Independent3 days ago
People across the UK are being urged to take part in an annual butterfly count after nature experts declared an 'emergency' last year due to record low numbers.
The Big Butterfly Count, organised by wildlife charity Butterfly Conservation over three weeks in the summer, gets members of the public to spend 15 minutes recording the butterflies they see in their garden, park or countryside.
This year, the charity is urging people to take part in what it describes as a 'nationwide rescue mission' for the UK's ailing butterfly species, to provide data that helps scientists understand where butterflies are thriving, struggling or moving due to habitat loss or restoration.
Last year saw the lowest numbers spotted in the count's 14-year history, with a record number of counts logged as seeing no butterflies at all, and familiar species such as small whites, common blues and small tortoiseshells having their worst summer ever.
While 2024's lows were in part down to the wet spring and cool summer, and this year's warm sunny conditions are much better for butterflies, conservationists warn they come on top of long-term declines in the UK.
More than 80% of butterfly species have declined since the 1970s, with experts warning they have been hit by damage to their habitats, climate change and the use of pesticides.
They say that taking part in the Big Butterfly Count can be a small action that contributes to the larger effort to save butterfly species and the natural systems they support.
Dr Richard Fox, head of science at Butterfly Conservation told the PA news agency: 'Butterfly numbers fluctuate from year to year in response to the weather, and the warm, sunny conditions over recent weeks have been much better for butterflies than the wetter, cool conditions last year, which resulted in one of the worst years for UK butterflies on record.
'How much butterflies have bounced back will only become clear if people get out, in their thousands, to take part in the Big Butterfly Count.'
He also warned that while 'it's lovely' to see more butterflies around, one better summer would only go a little way to reversing the long-term declines, with numbers in peak years getting low and troughs when the weather is bad getting deeper.
'Also, although the recent sunshine is great for adult butterflies, the growing drought across many parts of Britain is bad news for their caterpillar offspring, which need growing plants to feed on,' he added.
He said the more information conservationists could gather on how butterflies respond to changes, including the weather, the better informed conservation decisions would be in the fight to protect wildlife.
'Ultimately, the more counts we get from all over the country, the better we are able to respond to the challenges, which certainly include extreme weather resulting from climate change,' he said.
To take part in the Big Butterfly Count, people can download the free app or visit www.bigbutterflycount.org, and between July 18 and August 10, spend 15 minutes in any outdoor space, counting the number and type of butterflies spotted, logging results on the website or app.
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Is this how the world will end? Scientists give terrifying glimpse into the 'Big Crunch' - and reveal the exact date it could happen
Is this how the world will end? Scientists give terrifying glimpse into the 'Big Crunch' - and reveal the exact date it could happen

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Is this how the world will end? Scientists give terrifying glimpse into the 'Big Crunch' - and reveal the exact date it could happen

From alien invasions to robot uprisings, there is no shortage of terrifying ways that the world might end. But scientists have now worked out exactly when one terrifying scenario could bring the universe to a close. According to the 'Big Crunch' theory, the universe will eventually collapse in on itself in a final climactic implosion. As space itself contracts, the temperatures will soar until everything is destroyed in the 'furnace of this cosmic hell'. Finally, the entire cosmos will find itself packed back into an infinitely dense singularity just like it was before the Big Bang. While this was once just a terrifying possibility, new measurements of 'Dark Energy' suggest the Big Crunch is the most likely outcome for the Universe. In a recent study, scientists from Cornell University calculated exactly when the 'Big Crunch' could begin. Thankfully, their calculations suggest we can relax for the time being... that is if something else doesn't cause our demise. What is the Big Crunch? The Big Crunch is essentially the opposite of the Big Bang which started the universe 13.8 billion years ago. After the Big Bang, the universe rapidly expanded as a sea of superheated matter cooled into the familiar particles which make up the cosmos today. During the Big Crunch, this process will run in reverse - compacting space back into a hot, dense state. Scientists believe the current outward expansion of the universe is due to a mysterious force called Dark Energy. If the pushing force of Dark Energy was constant, the universe would keep on expanding and cooling for ever. But now, astronomers are beginning to question whether this really is the case. Based on the latest data, some scientists believe that Dark Energy is weakening, leaving an inward force called the cosmological constant to pull the universe back together. The latest map of the known universe suggests that dark energy is getting weaker, which means the universe will one day fall back in on itself like a ball falling back to Earth under the influence of gravity What is the Big Crunch? The Big Crunch is essentially the reversal of the Big Bang. In the first few moments of the universe, space and time expanded rapidly and cooled to form the matter we now see around us. In the Big Crunch, all this matter will once again contract inwards towards that same infinitely dense point. As it collapses, space will become hot, and matter will be torn into a soup of fundamental particles. Eventually, the cosmos will be compressed into a singularity, just as it was before the Big Bang. Dr Ethan Yu–Cheng, of Shanghai Jiao Tong University, told MailOnline: 'It is just like throwing a basketball vertically upwards in daily life. 'The negative cosmological constant acts like the Earth's gravity, which pulls the basketball downward. The basketball will de–accelerate until reaching the maximum height and start to fall.' Would we notice the Big Crunch starting? If it's difficult to imagine what life during the Big Crunch would be like, think about the universe as a balloon with lots of little dots drawn on its surface. As you blow air in, the balloon expands, the surface stretches, and the distance between all the dots grows larger. The Big Crunch is like letting all the air out of the balloon at once, bringing those distant points back together in a rush. However, the process would start very slowly. Dr Hoang Nhan Luu, a researcher at the Donostia International Physics Center, told MailOnline: 'Intelligent civilisations at the scales of solar systems or even galactic scales would not notice any obvious phenomenon because these changes happen at much larger cosmological scales. 'Civilisations like us typically exist on time scales of hundreds to thousands of years while the changes happen on billion–year time scales, so we wouldn't notice any obvious day–to–day phenomenon until the very last moment.' But Dr Luu says that any observant humans still alive in the universe would be able to spot the warning signs. Just as we can look at distant galaxies to see that the universe is expanding, astronomers of the future would be able to see that the galaxies are now rushing towards them. What would the first signs of the Big Crunch be? The first obvious sign that the universe was changing would be that the cosmic temperature would start to increase. Professor Avi Loeb, a theoretical physicist from Cornell University, told MailOnline: 'It is the reverse history of our expanding universe.' The universe has been getting colder as it expands, like gas escaping from a pressurised container. During the Big Crunch, this process will play out in reverse and raise the temperature of space. Why will the Big Crunch happen? Some scientists believe that the universe's current expansion is determined by two factors. A negative 'cosmological constant' pulling the universe inwards and an outward force from Dark Energy. If Dark Energy were constant, the universe would keep on expanding forever. However, researchers think that Dark Energy is getting weaker. When it gets weak enough, the cosmological constant will overpower Dark Energy and pull the universe inwards. About 13 billion years from now, Professor Loeb predicts the density of energy in the universe will be about 1,000 times higher than it is now. Just half a billion years after that, it would be another 1,000 times higher, making the universe room temperature. Professor Loeb says: 'At this point it wouldn't be the sun warming that is warming us, but the equivalent of the Cosmic Microwave Background.' Within a few million years, the entire universe would be as hot as the surface of the sun. Eventually, the universe would reach the 'Planck temperature', the highest possible temperature according to our models of physics. Professor Loeb says: 'Needless to say, all humans will burn up in the furnace of this cosmic hell. What will happen to the solar system during the Big Crunch? During the Big Crunch, the universe will eventually become so dense that the planets and stars will be pushed together by the collapse. The only thing that will survive the collapse at first will be black holes. Black holes will actually thrive during the Big Crunch as they feed on a soup of ultra–dense matter That means the planets of the solar system will come closer and closer together until they are crushed together. As space approaches the final moments of the crunch, Professor Loeb says that the universe will be even denser than space inside an atom. As the universe becomes even denser than an atomic nucleus, all matter in the cosmos will once again be squeezed back into this primordial state. The only things in the universe to survive this transition would be black holes, which would thrive as they feed on the dense matter all around them. Finally, this boiling mess of black holes and elementary particles would be crushed into a single infinitely dense point known as the singularity, bringing the universe to an end. When will the Big Crunch happen? Thankfully, scientists believe that the Big Crunch is still far off in the impossibly distant future. Professor Henry Tye, a leading cosmologist from Cornell University, 'We calculate that this will lead to a big crunch about 19.5 billion years from now. 'Knowing that the age of the universe is 13.8 billion years, one obtains that the lifespan is 33.3 billion years. In their pre–print paper, Professor Tye and his co–authors, Dr Luu and Dr Yu–Cheng, say that the Big Crunch will begin about 11 billion years from now. The crunching phase would then last around 8.5 billion years before the universe completely collapses into a singularity. Given that Homo sapiens have only been around for at most 300,000 years, that gives us plenty of time to relax. Likewise, while it might not necessarily be a comforting thought, it is almost certain that humanity will have been wiped out long before then in any case. Professor Tye says: 'Before the big crunch, at about 5 billion years from now, the sun will use up its fuel and start growing dramatically. 'Its outer layers will expand until they engulf much of the solar system, as it becomes what astronomers call a red giant. Eventually, it fades to a tiny white dwarf. 'To survive, human beings have to move to the edge of our solar system or beyond. We have a few billion years' time to prepare for that trip.' THE BIG BANG THEORY DESCRIBES THE BEGINNING AND EVOLUTION OF THE UNIVERSE The Big Bang Theory is a cosmological model, a theory used to describe the beginning and the evolution of our universe. It says that the universe was in a very hot and dense state before it started to expand 13,7 billion years ago. This theory is based on fundamental observations. In 1920, Hubble observed that the distance between galaxies was increasing everywhere in the universe. This means that galaxies had to be closer to each other in the past. In 1964, Wilson and Penzias discovered the cosmic background radiation, which is a like a fossil of radiation emitted during the beginning of the universe, when it was hot and dense. The cosmic background radiation is observable everywhere in the universe. The composition of the universe - that is, the the number of atoms of different elements - is consistent with the Big Bang Theory. So far, this theory is the only one that can explain why we observe an abundance of primordial elements in the universe.

You're washing your towels wrong! Microbiologist reveals how often you should really clean your bath towels - so, are you doing it enough?
You're washing your towels wrong! Microbiologist reveals how often you should really clean your bath towels - so, are you doing it enough?

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

You're washing your towels wrong! Microbiologist reveals how often you should really clean your bath towels - so, are you doing it enough?

With so many distractions around the home, forgetting to clean your towels is an easy thing to do. So it's little surprise that some Brits go a whole year before finally bunging them in the washing machine. But according to a scientist, you may want to start doing it every day if you don't want to jeopardize your personal hygiene. Dr Primrose Freestone, professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Leicester, says you should be laundering towels after two uses at the very most. That's once every two days for people who shower or bathe once a day. However, for those with infections or a weakened immune system, towels should be washed after every single use, the expert claims. 'Clean towels are no longer clean after drying skin,' Professor Freestone told MailOnline. 'Dirty towels will make freshly washed skin dirty again, negating the point of washing.' When we dry ourselves with a towel, we deposit thousands of skin cells and millions of microbes like bacteria and fungi onto it. And then when we reuse the towel, we shed yet another layer of these invisible cells and organisms, eventually creating a thriving community. One study analysing repeated use of bath towels by a single user in a hostel revealed high levels of several bacteria species that can cause dangerous infections in humans, including E. coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella. Exposure to these microbes in your towels can cause fever, asthma, allergic skin irritations, other skin infections and many more symptoms. A towel is also regularly damp, not only because we use them every day after we bathe and shower, but because towel fabric is much thicker than something like bed linen. Unfortunately, bacteria and fungi thrive in damp environments, which in turn make it harder for towels to dry – further encouraging their growth. 'Bath towels are particularly good at accumulating microorganisms as they contact all areas of a body,' said Professor Freestone. 'If the towels are repeatedly used without laundering, sweat, skin cells and bodily fluids will build up and provide a nutritious, moist and warm environment for bacteria and fungi to grow.' Towels quickly pick up an unpleasant musty or sour smell, similar to wet dog fur, and the reason for this is rather hard to stomach. 'The musty smell from overused under-washed towels is thought to be due to residual detergent or clothes conditioner which trap body sweat or fluids which is then fed upon by bacteria and fungi which are making volatile organic compounds,' Professor Freestone said. 'In other words it is bacteria and fungal waste products making the smell.' According to Professor Freestone, we should 'never ever' share a bath towel to minimize the risk of spreading infections. Viral infections such as monkey pox – which causes fever, headache and blisters – can be spread by doing so. And not just bath towels we should be laundering regularly; hand towels may not be used all over the body like bath towels, but the contact with the skin still transfers microbes and skin cells from the hands. 'Bath towels need more frequent laundering than hand towels due them having a higher microbial content,' said the expert. 'But hand towels will still from repeat use accumulate bacteria and fungi – so do a hot detergent wash every three to five days.' Hand and bath towels should be washed with laundry detergent at 140°F (60°C) and be left to dry completely before they are used. 'This hot wash kills most bacteria and fungi, inactivates viruses and stops towels smelling unpleasant; it also ensures towels do not pose an infections risk,' she said. 'For storing the towels make sure they are thoroughly dried before stacking in a cool, dry environment.' According to Rietie Venter, associate professor of clinical health at the University of South Australia, towels need to be washed even more often than bed linen. Towels are best washed every few days, she said in a piece for The Conversation last year, while facecloths should be cleaned after every use. If towels still smell after being laundered, they may have been left in the washing machine for too long once the cycle had finished. 'If possible, hang your towels and bedding out in the sun,' Professor Venter said. 'That will dry them quickly and thoroughly and will foster that lovely fresh, clean cotton smell. 'Using a dryer is a good alternative if the weather is bad, but outdoors in the sun is always better if possible.' Why do towels get so smelly so quickly? Towels are the perfect home for a swarming community of bacteria and fungi. They hold many of the key ingredients for hosting microbial life - water, warm temperatures, oxygen, a neutral pH, and even food in the dead skin people leave behind after a thorough dry. The human body also boasts these ideal living conditions, which is why our bodies are host to trillions of bacteria throughout our lives. As a towel is used to dry the body, microbes sitting on the surface of the skin are deposited onto its damp, warm surface. When we smell towels, we often perceive a musty or sour odour, which is from the waste products deposited by growing communities of mould and bacteria. Don't throw a wet towel into the laundry basket, as the damp and dirt will still be an ideal place for microbes to breed. By the time you get to doing your washing, the towel and the other laundry around it may have acquired a bad smell. And it can be difficult to get your towels smelling fresh again. Instead, put the damp towel straight into the washing machine, or, if it's a while before it's getting laundered, hang it to dry first.

Bats halt research plans at ‘nationally important' Neolithic mound
Bats halt research plans at ‘nationally important' Neolithic mound

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Bats halt research plans at ‘nationally important' Neolithic mound

Plans to cut into a 4,000-year-old mound to allow further research on its history could be stopped by the presence of bats. The Castle Mound, also known as Marlborough Mound, in Wiltshire, is the second largest Neolithic mound in Europe at 62ft high. Marlborough College has applied for planning permission to try to 'enhance its setting' by demolishing school buildings that 'cut into' the west side of it. The aim is to carry out further archaeological research when the buildings are gone – and eventually put a new curved stone-faced revetment in to support the mound. But the presence of bats, which are protected, could halt the project. History and artistic significance In documents to support the application, the college said the mound was a 'nationally important scheduled monument' with significance including its prehistoric use, artistic interest and historic links to the Seymours, the family of Henry VIII's third wife Jane, the mother of Edward VI. The mound has been carbon dated to 2,400BC, and features part of a medieval castle as well as some 17th and 18th-century garden features. Wiltshire council has not yet made a decision on the application. But the council's ecology team has raised concerns that the buildings being earmarked for removal could be a haven for bats. It said in a report: 'The buildings on site appear to have some potential for roosting bats and there are records of bats, including roosting bats, in the local area. 'A preliminary roost assessment report has been submitted. The assessment found the buildings on site to be of moderate and high potential for roosting bats and recommended further surveys are carried out to determine the roosting status of each building and the requirement for mitigation (if any). 'The ecology team should be reconsulted once the results for all the surveys are available. 'Any compensation/mitigation measures required as a result of the surveys must be incorporated into the proposals. 'In carrying out its statutory function, the LPA must be reasonably sure that the proposal will not result in significant adverse effects on protected habitats or species.' The works are intended to enhance the visitor experience of the new Mound Information Centre being completed in the college grounds. The buildings imbedded into the mound include a decommissioned plant room, disused toilet block and a carpentry workshop which all have very little or no heritage value, according to the school. 'A great opportunity for surveys' Its supporting statement to the council said: 'It is proposed to demolish these buildings which partially block the viewing of the Mound as they are either redundant or, in the case of the workshop, relocate the activities to elsewhere in the college. 'By razing these buildings the setting of the Mound will be enhanced with 360 [degree] visibility.' The application stressed that special care will be taken not to dig into the Mound's bank or pull earth away, while green foliage between to Mound and the redundant buildings will be carefully removed. The supporting statement added: 'The demolition work will provide a great opportunity for further archaeological surveys to be carried out and provide more insight into the Mound build-up and its history.' The proposed works will be carried out on behalf of the Marlborough Mound Trust – set up in 2000 with a vision to restore, conserve, preserve and maintain the structure. The Marlborough Mound has been celebrated throughout the history of the college, where former pupils include the Princess of Wales. Wiltshire council is expected to decide on the application in August.

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