PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Female Cantabrian bears and their young do not hibernate

Female Cantabrian bears and their young do not hibernate
2010-10-07
(Press-News.org) A team of Spanish scientists followed the brown bear population through the mountains of the Cantabrian Cordillera between 1998 and 2007 in order to find out about their hibernation habits, which had been questioned in historical documents. The results confirm that female bears with babies and independent young bears under the age of two do not usually hibernate, while the other bears follow normal hibernation patterns.

Brown bears (Ursus arctos) all over the world hibernate, but according to historical documents this is not always the case. The Libro de la Montería by King Alfonso XI, dating back to the 14th Century, mentions that female bears with young born during the previous year did not go to sleep in the winter, or at least not all of them. We have had to wait more than 400 years for new observations to demonstrate this phenomenon among two bear populations (east and west) in the Cordillera Cantábrica mountain chain.

"During our monitoring of female bears with young, which we did in the east of the Cordillera Cantábrica on the basis of footprints and tracks, we saw that some animals stayed active throughout the whole winter", Carlos Nores, lead author of the study and a researcher at the Natural Resources and Zoning Institute (INDUROT) of the University of Oviedo (UNIOVI) and vice president of the Brown Bear Foundation, tells SINC.

The study, which has been published in the journal Acta Theriologica, covers the period from 1998 to 2007, during which time female bears with young were monitored between December and March. "The winter track count showed that female bears with young cubs aged between 11 and 14 months show signs of continuous activity, as do young bears of two years of age that are starting to become independent, although they do hibernate more than when they were in the family group", says Nores.

The scientists showed that the seven family groups in the two bear populations did not stop eating or defecating over the period of observation, confirming that "they did not enter the physiological state of hibernation at any time", the biologist explains.

According to the researchers, the absence of hibernation seen in the Cordillera Cantábrica mountains "has nothing to do with the harshness of the weather conditions, or snow levels being above or below average".

Without young, bears hibernate

The other bears aged over two years old, including females about to give birth or without any young to care for, exhibited "a significant reduction in activity between January and February, corresponding with predictable hibernation behaviour", the Asturian researcher points out.

However, while counting footprints over the course of a decade has made it possible to prove habitual wintertime activity among family groups and young, recently-independent bears in the Cordillera Cantábrica, "it does not prove that they are truly not hibernating", says Nores.

"Bears may occasionally leave their caves during hibernation, but during true hibernation they do not eat, drink or defecate, although they may do so sporadically", the scientist says.



INFORMATION:

References:

Nores, Carlos; Ballesteros, Fernando; Blanco, Juan C.; García-Serrano, Alicia; Herrero, Juan; Palomero, Guillermo. "Evidence of non-hibernation in Cantabrian brown bears" Acta Theriologica 55(3): 203-209, julio de 2010.

More information: http://www.fundacionosopardo.org/ficha.cfm?idArticulo=184

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Female Cantabrian bears and their young do not hibernate

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Reviving the FDA: NEJM perspective

2010-10-07
Washington, DC – In a Perspective piece published online today in the New England Journal of Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine family medicine physician Susan Okie gives a comprehensive overview of change, and planned change, within the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The review comes as the FDA's commissioner, Margaret Hamburg, completes her first year as the agency's leader. Okie writes that the FDA's priorities over the past year have included "finding ways to make the FDA more nimble and proactive, restoring its credibility and refocusing staff ...

Vultures use face flushing technique for instant status updates

2010-10-07
Tech savvy humans who use social media sites to instantly update their 'statuses', may be behaving like vultures who use 'face flushing' as a visible way of instantly updating their own status when interacting with peers and rivals. Research, published in Ethology, reveals how the ability to rapidly change skin colour is a key form of interaction for vultures, especially for displays of dominance. The ability to rapidly change skin colour has been well documented in reptiles and fish, which use specialist cells to disperse and concentrate pigments. However, the ability ...

VISTA reveals the secret of the unicorn

VISTA reveals the secret of the unicorn
2010-10-07
An active stellar nursery lies hidden inside a massive dark cloud rich in molecules and dust in the constellation of Monoceros. Although it appears close in the sky to the more familiar Orion Nebula it is actually almost twice as far from Earth, at a distance of about 2700 light-years. In visible light a grouping of massive hot stars creates a beautiful collection of reflection nebulae where the bluish starlight is scattered from parts of the dark, foggy outer layers of the molecular cloud. However, most of the new-born massive stars remain hidden as the thick interstellar ...

Nano drugs

2010-10-07
Researchers in India have demonstrated that producing nanoscopic crystals of a pharmaceutical product can allow the medication to be absorbed by the gut even if the drug is not soluble in water. Research suggests that more than half of the medicinal drugs being developed by the pharmaceutical industry dissolve only very weakly in water, if at all. This is a major problem for administering such drugs as it means they are not effective if taken by mouth. The industry has developed many approaches to addressing this problem, such as adding a small quantity of an organic ...

Study sheds new light on how the sun affects the Earth's climate

2010-10-07
The Sun's activity has recently affected the Earth's atmosphere and climate in unexpected ways, according to a new study published today in the journal Nature. The study, by researchers from Imperial College London and the University of Colorado, shows that a decline in the Sun's activity does not always mean that the Earth becomes cooler. It is well established that the Sun's activity waxes and wanes over an 11-year cycle and that as its activity wanes, the overall amount of radiation reaching the Earth decreases. Today's study looked at the Sun's activity over the period ...

Provocative new Montreal study probes link between breast cancer and air pollution

2010-10-07
Air pollution has already been linked to a range of health problems. Now, a ground-breaking new study suggests pollution from traffic may put women at risk for another deadly disease. The study, published in the prestigious journal Environmental Health Perspectives, by researchers from The Research Institute of the MUHC (RI MUHC; Dr. Mark Goldberg), McGill University (Drs. Goldberg, Dan Crouse and Nancy Ross), and Université de Montréal (Dr. France Labrèche), links the risk of breast cancer – the second leading cause of death from cancer in women – to traffic-related air ...

VTT printed hemoglobin test on paper

2010-10-07
VTT printed the paper with antibodies that react to the sample. The test result can be read in the form of a line, for example, which either does or does not appear depending on the sample – just like in the pregnancy tests already familiar to consumers. It is also possible to print instructional images or text, for example, either on or alongside the test. Printed paper test can be used to test quickly and easily for the presence of a given substance. The test can be adapted to different purposes by exchanging the identifying antibody printed on the paper for another, ...

First clinical trial of gene therapy for muscular dystrophy lends insight into the disease

First clinical trial of gene therapy for muscular dystrophy lends insight into the disease
2010-10-07
CHAPEL HILL – A clinical trial designed to replace the genetic defect causing the most common form of muscular dystrophy has uncovered an unexpected aspect of the disease. The trial, based on therapy designed by scientists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, showed that some patients mount an immune response to the dystrophin protein even before they have received the gene therapy. The puzzling results, which came from trials at Columbus Children's Hospital in Ohio, suggest that the immune systems of a number of patients -- once thought ...

BLADE software eliminates 'drive-by downloads' from malicious websites

2010-10-07
Insecure Web browsers and the growing number of complex applets and browser plug-in applications are allowing malicious software to spread faster than ever on the Internet. Some websites are installing malicious code, such as spyware, on computers without the user's knowledge or consent. These so-called "drive-by downloads" signal a shift away from using spam and malicious e-mail attachments to infect computers. Approximately 560,000 websites -- and 5.5 million Web pages on those sites -- were infected with malware during the fourth quarter of 2009. A new tool that ...

Psychologist finds 'shocking' impact on name recall

2010-10-07
It's an experience shared by everyone: You run into someone you know, but his or her name escapes you. Now, Temple psychologist Ingrid Olson has found a way to improve the recall of proper names. Olson dedicates her research to understanding human memory. In a recent study, she found that electric stimulation of the right anterior temporal lobe of the brain improved the recall of proper names in young adults by 11 percent. Her study appears this month in the journal Neuropsychologia. "We know a lot about how to make people's memory worse, but we don't know very ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Lancet: Single daily pill shows promise as replacement for complex, multi-tablet HIV treatment regimens

Single daily pill shows promise as replacement for complex, multi-tablet HIV treatment regimens

Black Americans face increasingly higher risk of gun homicide death than White Americans

Flagging claims about cancer treatment on social media as potentially false might help reduce spreading of misinformation, per online experiment with 1,051 US adults

Yawns in healthy fetuses might indicate mild distress

Conservation agriculture, including no-dig, crop-rotation and mulching methods, reduces water runoff and soil loss and boosts crop yield by as much as 122%, in Ethiopian trial

Tropical flowers are blooming weeks later than they used to through climate change

Risk of whale entanglement in fishing gear tied to size of cool-water habitat

Climate change could fragment habitat for monarch butterflies, disrupting mass migration

Neurosurgeons are really good at removing brain tumors, and they’re about to get even better

Almost 1-in-3 American adolescents has diabetes or prediabetes, with waist-to-height ratio the strongest independent predictor of prediabetes/diabetes, reveals survey of 1,998 adolescents (10-19 years

Researchers sharpen understanding of how the body responds to energy demands from exercise

New “lock-and-key” chemistry

Benzodiazepine use declines across the U.S., led by reductions in older adults

How recycled sewage could make the moon or Mars suitable for growing crops

Don’t Panic: ‘Humanity’s Last Exam’ has begun

A robust new telecom qubit in silicon

Vertebrate paleontology has a numbers problem. Computer vision can help

Reinforced enzyme expression drives high production of durable lactate-based polyester

In Rett syndrome, leaky brain blood vessels traced to microRNA

Scientists sharpen genetic maps to help pinpoint DNA changes that influence human health traits and disease risk

AI, monkey brains, and the virtue of small thinking

Firearm mortality and equitable access to trauma care in Chicago

Worldwide radiation dose in coronary artery disease diagnostic imaging

Heat and pregnancy

Superagers’ brains have a ‘resilience signature,’ and it’s all about neuron growth

New research sheds light on why eczema so often begins in childhood

Small models, big insights into vision

Finding new ways to kill bacteria

An endangered natural pharmacy hidden in coral reefs

[Press-News.org] Female Cantabrian bears and their young do not hibernate