Category: Science &Technology

  • Study: Plants Communicate Via Underground Fungi

    {{A new study has demonstrated that plants can use an underground network of fungi to warn each other about incoming insect attacks.}}

    Carried out by researchers from the University of Aberdeen, the James Hutton Institute and Rothamsted Research, the study demonstrated that the plants are able to send warnings of incoming aphids to other plants connected to their network.

    The plants then send out a chemical signal that repels aphids and attracts wasps, a natural aphid predator.

    The research follows previous findings that have shown plants can communicate similar chemical warnings through the air.

    The new study says plants can connect with other via a common fungus known as mycorrhizae. “Mycorrhizal fungi need to get [products of photosynthesis] from the plant, and they have to do something for the plant,” John Pickett of Rothamsted Research told media.

    “In the past, we thought of them making nutrients available from the [roots and soil], but now we see another evolutionary role for them in which they pay the plant back by transmitting the signal efficiently,” he said.

    University of Aberdeen’s David Johnson added, “Our understanding of ecological systems has not considered the fact that plants are interconnected in this way. It could have major implications for our understanding of how one organism affects another.”

    Conversely, the plants in the study not connected to the fungal network did not send out warning signals to other plants after coming under attack. The in-network plants were also covered with bags to ensure that they were not actually sending the signals through the air.

    Pickett said the discovery could lead to farms using the fungi as an advance warning system for their crops. In theory, one “sacrificial” plant would be kept at a distance from the crops. If it fell under attack from insects, it would warn the rest of the plants, giving them time to mount a viable defense.

    {agencies}

  • Rwanda Scoops International Award in ICT from ITU

    {{Rwanda received an award from WSIS Project Prizes 2013 organized by International Telecommunication Union (ITU) where the Africa Digital Media Academy was voted as the best project in media category. }}

    This has been revealed on the 13th May 2013, in Geneva during the WSIS Forum focusing on post-2015 development agenda.

    The WSIS Project Prizes is an annual contest which recognizes excellence in the implementation of projects and initiatives which further the WSIS goals of improving connectivity to information and communication technologies (ICTs).

    Africa Digital media Academy (ADMA), located in the city of Kigali, , a vocational training program initiated in March 2012 by Workforce Development Authority (WDA) together with Pixel Corps Ltd, provides students with skills necessary to work in all areas of the digital media industry.

    This center prepares its students for production work needed in digital media. Through live, hands-on learning in the computer lab and production studio, with distance learning from television experts in the U.S, students are given instructions to proceed at their own pace with support from the instructors.

    The emphasis is on student collaboration with the community as the foundation for effective learning.

    After the announcement of this award, the Minister of Youth and ICT, Jean Philbert Nsengimana said that ADMA is the first of its kind in Africa to provide students with the skills necessary to work in all areas of the digital media industry.

    He added that this will add on another step for Rwanda to be on the forefront in using ICT, especially for edutainment and infotainment to create jobs, especially for Rwanda youth.

    More than 280 projects from 64 countries have participated in the contest. During the voting phase, more than 3500 registered users appreciated/voted for the projects according to the rules and instruction of the contest.

    18 winners announced and awarded a prize at the WSIS Prize Ceremony 2013.

    According to Jerome Gasana, the Director General of the Workforce Development Authority (WDA), “The school will provide up to 5 levels of professionalism which if covered continuously can last for a period of 3 years”.

    Current intakes are mainly of level 1 trainees who are those individuals that have been in the multimedia business for some time. A total of 100 students are expected to be enrolled in a given academic year.

    Gasana noted that “For the past years, the government of Rwanda has invested in well-targeted development of ICT. Such a thrust of growth is evidenced by fibre optic cables inter-linking all Rwandan districts.

    With such a poise of the ICT infrastructure and ADMA’s experts, this school guarantees high quality multimedia skills.”

    The Africa Digital Media Academy is remarkable opportunity for Rwanda. With it Rwanda has effectively embraced information technology and its entire related infrastructure.

    It enables the country to embark on the phase of tremendously increasing innovation through content and application development.

    Such a drive relies a lot on the elected development a workforce with every capacity to complement the efforts of the Government of Rwanda to bridge the digital divide and empower Rwandans to participate in promoting and ensuring good governance.

  • Analysts Question Tanzania’s Rail Project

    {{Tanzania is facing stiff criticism over its railway system that is considered outdated.}}

    Railways development stakeholders have engaged in a heated debated on the country’s continued use of the Metre Gauge (MG) rail over the approved Standard Gauge (SG) system for projects undertaken in the country.

    The tense debate occurred here last week during a seminar which discussed presentations of the final draft for implementing phase II of the Dar es Salaam-Kigali/Keza-Gitega-Musongati Railway project.

    Stakeholders were concerned by recommendations made by project consultants Canarail,a Canadian Company, and GIBB International who had earlier proposed that the current Metre Gauge rail infrastructure be renovated.

    Consultants believe that the capitation expenses (Capex) and operation expenses (Opex) required for the project is higher than the traffic, in terms of passengers and goods, that the region can provide for project viability.

    Instead, they proposed the continual use of the Metre Gauge for the next thirty years while building capacity to increase traffic of both passengers and goods.

    But stakeholders, including government officials, said the consultants’ opinion was contradictory and was aimed at hindering regional strategies to interconnect the East African countries with a reliable means of transport that would stimulate economic growth.

    The deputy Transport minister, Dr Charles Tizeba, told reporters at the seminar’s official opening that the Tanzanian government resolved to transform its railways to the Standard Gauge and that there was no room for a u-turn.

    “The current rail system with meter gauge infrastructure is worse. The government has decided to adopt the standard gauge rail specifications and no reverse is expected,” he said.

    Generally, the consultant showed in his presentation that Tanzania and member countries were not in a position to implement the $4 billion worth project, proposing that the Tanzania government secures renovation facilitation funds from the World Bank (WB).

    The early generation of revenue through the established Joint Project Implementation Unit (JPIU) – according to consultants – was another commendable measure being fronted by professionals.

    But the ministry of Transport permanent secretary, Eng Omari Chambo, blamed government officials responsible for supervising the consultant for laxity which led to a failure to implement the project draft that took into account the interests of the region.

    “You people must really be committed to ensuring this project meets the government’s expectations through preparation of genuine and a marketable draft,” he said.

    {NMG}

  • Scientist Develops Website tool to track Insecticide Resistance

    {{A Kenya-based scientist has developed a website tool to track insecticide resistance.}}

    The aggressive push for use of insecticide-treated nets and indoor spraying has resulted in considerable reduction in malaria cases, with experts reporting that over 700,000 lives were saved in 34 countries between 2001 and 2010.

    Those gains are now at risk due to the rapid spread of insecticide resistance, which threatens to render the life-saving tools ineffective.

    In an effort to track the worrying trend, scientists from KEMRI/CDC and Vestergaard Frandsen have developed the world’s first Online mapping tool that will track insecticide resistance in mosquitoes.

    {{IR Mapper}}

    The interactive website, called IR Mapper, identifies locations in more than 50 malaria-endemic countries where mosquitoes have developed resistance to the insecticides used in bed nets and indoor residual sprays.

    “Deployment of the most appropriate insecticide based vector control interventions including nets and IRS needs to be informed by up-to-date data on insecticide resistance in the malaria vector species,” says Dr Nabie Bayoh, an entomologist at KEMRI/CDC in Kisumu, Kenya.

    Dr Bayoh says that prior to the development of the tool, insecticide resistance data has been scattered throughout different databases and has come from a variety of sources, making prompt decision-making difficult.

    Earlier this year, the World Health Organisation ( WHO) published fresh criteria for reporting insecticide resistance. The criteria, which are incorporated in the IR Mapper, are aimed at detecting resistance earlier.

    The tool provides comprehensive and up-to-date information on which vector control tools should be deployed in areas of high resistance.

    Resistance among Anopheles malaria vectors has been reported in 64 countries, with Sub-Saharan Africa being of greatest concern.

    The aggregated IR Mapper gives data on insecticide susceptibility and resistance mechanisms from as far back as 1959 to 2012. To measure resistance, researchers put mosquitoes in a tube lined with insecticide-treated paper.

    If 80 per cent die as a result of absorbing the insecticide, it was considered that they are resistant. The new guidelines by WHO have revised this threshold 90 per cent, meaning that resistance will be reported earlier.

    With the new IR Mapper tool, users can examine the resistance status of single or multiple Anopheles species to one or more insecticides within their region of interest.

    It means countries can make independent decisions regarding the deployment of a particular insecticide.

    Variations in deployment can also be made depending on specified time periods and the existing trends in resistance.

    The new tool responds to malaria control policy makers and researchers’ quest for a user-friendly approach to visualising and exploring up-to-date information on insecticide resistance.

    In most countries, pyrethroids are the insecticides of choice for malaria vector control. This is because they are less toxic to mammals, have longer residual periods and are also less costly. All approved long-lasting insecticidal nets use pyrethroids.

    Their popularity though is also the biggest cause for the increasing problem of resistance to insecticides in malaria vectors. Two months ago, researchers reported that mosquitoes have developed variations that make them resist a compound known as DEET, which is used in most household mosquito repellents.

    {{Mosquitoes have developed variants for resistance}}

    Two months ago, researchers reported that mosquitoes have developed variations that make them resist a compound known as DEET, which is used in most household mosquito repellents.

    They said that it takes only about three hours for the repellents to be rendered useless as the mosquitoes become insensitive to the smell. For years, DEET has been used in sprays, lotions, liquids and wristbands to repel insects.

    A slight exposure to DEET was reported to be enough to make some mosquitoes less sensitive to the repellent, meaning that three hours after exposure, the mosquitoes can go back to seeking out human skin to bite.

    “We think that the mosquitoes are habituating to the repellent, similar to a phenomenon seen with the human sense of smell also,” adds one of the researchers.

    In Africa, recent findings have suggested that the genetic structure of the Anopheles gambiae, which is responsible for most malaria cases in Africa, is evolving, explaining the difficulties in bringing the disease under control.

    The genetic changes are thought to be due to inter-mating between the species, resulting in hybrids that may bring about insecticide resistance and malaria parasite infectivity.

    The study that was released last month says that the inter-mating and subsequent hybrids were found in four countries in West Africa.

  • Ghana’s First Solar Power Plant Starts Production

    {{Ghana’s President John Mahama is expected to inaugurate the country’s first solar power plant, Thursday, to be integrated into the national grid in Navrongo in the Upper East Region.}}

    A statement issued from the presidency said the inauguration of the 2MW solar power plant is the first large scale power plant, constructed by the VRA, to be fed into the national grid.

    In his State of the Nation Address in February this year, President Mahama announced that “we are progressing steadily in the area of renewable energy”.

    Government has also deployed some 10,000 units of solar home systems to off-grid homes in deprived communities and some national security and basic schools.

    Thursday’s inauguration of the 2MW solar power plant is however the first large scale power plant, constructed by the VRA to be fed into the national grid.

    Ghana has a target of 5000MW of generated capacity by 2016.

    {Myjoyonline}

  • US. Labeled ‘Real Hacking Empire’

    China on Wednesday accused the United States of sowing discord between China and its neighbors after the Pentagon said Beijing is using espionage to fuel its military modernization, branding Washington the “real hacking empire”.

    The latest salvo came a day after China’s foreign ministry dismissed as groundless a Pentagon report which accused China for the first time of trying to break into U.S. defense computer networks.

    The Pentagon also cited progress in Beijing’s effort to develop advanced-technology stealth aircraft and build an aircraft carrier fleet to project power further offshore.

    The People’s Liberation Army Daily called the report a “gross interference in China’s internal affairs”.

    “Promoting the ‘China military threat theory’ can sow discord between China and other countries, especially its relationship with its neighboring countries, to contain China and profit from it,” the newspaper said in a commentary that was carried on China’s Defense Ministry’s website.

    The United States is “trumpeting China’s military threat to promote its domestic interests groups and arms dealers”, the newspaper said, adding that it expects “U.S. arms manufacturers are gearing up to start counting their money”.

    The remarks in the newspaper underscore the escalating mistrust between China and the United States over hacking, now a top point of contention between Washington and Beijing.

    {reuters}

  • Tanzania to Introduce New Weighbridges

    {{Tanzania government has announced plans to introduce modern weighbridges, known as ‘multi deck and weigh in motion,’ in a move to address the problem of delays by vehicles on major roads.}}

    The ministry of Transport revealed this in Parliament over the weekend, noting that the first such modern weighbridge would be constructed at Vigwaza area.

    Transport minister Gerson Lwenge said the decision was part of the government’s efforts to add efficiency in reducing traffic congestion on roads.

    She said for a long time stakeholders and businesspeople from neighbouring countries who use the Dar es Salaam port have complained of delays.

    However, the country’s Road Traffic Act of 1973 and the Road Traffic Maximum Weight of Vehicles Regulations of 2001, requires all vehicles carrying cargo of 3.5 tonnes and above should pass through weighbridges.

  • Afghan Father Shoots Daughter over ‘love affair’

    In front of 300 villagers, Halima’s father shot her in the head, stomach and waist — a public execution overseen by local religious leaders in Afghanistan to punish her for an alleged affair.

    Halima, aged between 18 and 20 and a mother of two children, was killed for bringing “dishonour” on her family in a case that underlines how the country is still struggling to protect women more than 11 years after the fall of Taliban regime.

    Police in the northwestern province of Badghis said Halima was accused of running away with a male cousin while her husband was in Iran, and her father sought advice from Taliban-backed clerics on how to punish her.

    “People in the mosque and village started taunting him about her escape with the cousin,” Badghis provincial police chief Sharafuddin Sharaf told media.

    “A local cleric who runs a madrassa told him that she must be punished with death, and the mullahs said she should be executed in public.

    “The father killed his daughter with three shots as instructed by religious elders and in front of villagers. We went there two days later but he and his entire family had fled.”

    Amnesty International said the killing, which occurred on April 22 in the village of Kookchaheel in Badghis province, was damning evidence of how little control Afghan police have over many areas of the country.

    “Violence against women continues to be endemic in Afghanistan and those responsible very rarely face justice,” Amnesty’s Afghanistan researcher Horia Mosadiq said.

    “Not only do women face violence at the hands of family members for reasons of preserving so-called ‘honour’, but frequently women face human rights abuses resulting from verdicts issued by traditional, informal justice systems.”

    Police in Baghdis, a remote and impoverished province that borders Turkmenistan, said Halima had run away with her cousin to a village 30 kilometres (20 miles) away.

    Her father found her after 10 days and brought her back home, where clerics told him he must kill her in front of the villagers to assuage his family’s humiliation.

    A Badghis-based women’s rights activist said he had seen video footage of Hamila’s execution, which AFP was not able to obtain.

    “On the video, she is shot three times in front of 300-400 people. Her brother witnesses her death and breaks down in tears,” said the activist, who declined to be named to avoid reprisals.

    AFP

  • Makerere University to Manufacture Electric Bus

    East Africa’s oldest universtiy Makerere University is scheduled to launch an electric powered 30-seater bus in October.

    The Project engineering team says in addition to using Lithium ion batteries, they were going to add an internal combustion engine to extend the range of drive.

    Local media reported that the team is in advanced stages of procuring components for their second electronic vehicle, Kayoola bus, ahead of its launch in October.

    According to the key principal investigator and deputy director for Centre for Research in Transportation Technology, Prof Sandy Stevens Tickodri-Togboa, they had designed and started to procure the components before they could start construction.

    The innovation is expected to reduce traffic jam and carbon emissions in Kampala city popular with traffic jams.

    {agencies}

  • Cyber Security Awareness Week Launched

    {{A new initiative code named ‘Cyber Security Awareness Week’ has been launched aimed at senstistising public and private organizations using ICT services to ensure safety of their data online.}}

    The ‘Cyber Security Awareness Week’ has been launched by the Rwanda Development Board (RDB).

    Patrick Nyirishema the Head of RDB-ICT noted, “its our(RDB) duty to senstise ICT users about the problems they could face and ensuring cyber security to guard vital information of users.

    Nyirishema noted that ICT users could face a problem of information diversion and or leakages to unknown destinations.Being safer and more secure online is a shared responsibility.

    The Cyber Security Awareness Week seeks to engage and educate public and private sector partners through events and initiatives with the goal of raising awareness about cybersecurity and increasing the resiliency of the nation in the event of a cyber incident.

    Increased connectivity brings increased risk of crime – thus making cybersecurity one of our country’s most important national security priorities.

    Emerging cyber threats require engagement from the entire Rwandan Community from government and law enforcement to the private sector and most importantly, members of the public – to create a safer cyber environment.