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![]() by Staff Writers Quito (AFP) Dec 4, 2020
Conservationists in Ecuador have found a nest of endangered leatherback sea turtles, a whopper of a species that can weigh up to a tonne and be three meters (10 feet) long. Also known as the lute turtle (Dermochelys coriacea), it is the world's largest species of sea turtle. The Environment Ministry said the nest was found in Manabi province but did not say how many eggs were in it. They should hatch in about 60 days, it said. A protective perimeter has been set up around the nest and a thermometer was installed. This is the third time a nest of these creatures has been found since 2015 on the coast of Ecuador. Its status is listed as "vulnerable," and in the eastern Pacific experts say it in danger of disappearing altogether. The leatherback lives in tropical, subtropical and subarctic waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans. "If we manage to hatch these eggs, this would be a historic event because this species is very special due to its vulnerability," said Paco Castro, the Environment Ministry director in the region where the nest was found. In the earlier finds in 2015 and 2017 the eggs in those nests did not hatch.
![]() ![]() AI untangles one of biology's great challenges Paris (AFP) Dec 1, 2020 For decades scientists have been trying to figure out how to swiftly predict the twisting, tangled shape of proteins - and from there unravel a greater understanding of the machinery of life itself. This week an Artificial Intelligence program created by Google sister firm DeepMind was shown to have virtually cracked the challenge, forecasting the way in which proteins contort into three dimensional structures in the results of a biannual competition that judges hailed as a game changer. ... read more
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