Santa Barbara County News and Events

Scientists newly identify species of tiny, blue octopus that fits in the palm of your hand

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating
Using a CT scanner

By Avni Trivedi, CNN

(CNN) — Scientists have announced the discovery of a previously unidentified species of octopus found in the Galápagos Islands — and it’s sure to turn heads. The creature, which sports blue flesh and large eyes, can fit between the bottom of your palm and the first knuckle of your middle finger.

In 2015, a remotely operated underwater robot captured the little, blue animal moving around in the sediment about 5,800 feet (1,773 meters) beneath the surface.

From the ship above, one crew member compared the creature to a plush toy.

“Is that a cute little guy, or what?” said another crew member, who can be heard in video footage documenting the researchers’ discovery.

Paperwork and logistics delayed the research process for the animal — a female cephalopod — though a crew aboard the E/V Nautilus discovered it more than a decade ago in collaboration with the Charles Darwin Foundation and the Galápagos National Park Directorate. The octopus didn’t arrive at the Field Museum in Chicago until 2022.

In a study published May 24 in the journal Zootaxa, Janet Voight, curator emerita of invertebrates at the Field Museum, identified the octopus as a previously unknown species: Microeledone galapagensis.

Voight was hesitant to do much dissection when she began studying the tiny animal.

The octopus had been preserved in formaldehyde, which halts decomposition. However, because the specimen had large eggs in its ovaries, the formaldehyde could not fully penetrate the entire animal, leaving its flesh relatively delicate.

“If you make the wrong cut or tear something, it’s gone forever,” Voight said. “The cost of going to sea is just astronomical, and the chances of finding another one and successfully collecting it are just not high.”

After consulting with other experts, she decided to use the Field Museum’s newly acquired CT scanner to get a better look into the animal’s anatomy while keeping the specimen intact.

Thousands of X-rayed images were digitally compiled to create a 3D model that allowed Voight to determine where the animal fits in the phylogenetic tree.

Not your average octopus

Octopuses are enchanting creatures, said Jim Barry, senior scientist at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California, who was not involved with the study.

“They’re so different than most other organisms,” Barry said. “The nervous system of octopuses are more complex than any invertebrate animal on earth, so maybe that’s why they’re able to perform in ways or have behaviors that are so captivating for us.”

There are more than 300 species of varying size, shape and color.

“When you think about octopus, you think of an animal with long arms,” Voight said. “Not this guy.”

Voight identified the octopus as a member of the Microeledone genus, which only has one other species: Microeledone mangoldi. They both come from the octopus family Megaleledonidae. M. mangoldi was first described in 2004 after its discovery in the southwest Pacific Ocean near New Caledonia, an island east of Australia.

M. galapagensis shares many characteristics with its family member such as smooth skin; large funnel organs; lack of pigment in the mantle area, which is the large sac behind the head; and similar arm sucker and gill lamellae counts. Gill lamellae are thin plates of tissue inside the gills that allow organisms to take in more oxygen.

Scientists newly identify species of tiny, blue octopus that fits in the palm of your hand

Kraig Pakulski 0 9 Article rating: No rating
Using a CT scanner


CNN, CHARLES DARWIN FOUNDATION

By Avni Trivedi, CNN

(CNN) — Scientists have announced the discovery of a previously unidentified species of octopus found in the Galápagos Islands — and it’s sure to turn heads. The creature, which sports blue flesh and large eyes, can fit between the bottom of your palm and the first knuckle of your middle finger.

In 2015, a remotely operated underwater robot captured the little, blue animal moving around in the sediment about 5,800 feet (1,773 meters) beneath the surface.

From the ship above, one crew member compared the creature to a plush toy.

“Is that a cute little guy, or what?” said another crew member, who can be heard in video footage documenting the researchers’ discovery.

Paperwork and logistics delayed the research process for the animal — a female cephalopod — though a crew aboard the E/V Nautilus discovered it more than a decade ago in collaboration with the Charles Darwin Foundation and the Galápagos National Park Directorate. The octopus didn’t arrive at the Field Museum in Chicago until 2022.

In a study published May 24 in the journal Zootaxa, Janet Voight, curator emerita of invertebrates at the Field Museum, identified the octopus as a previously unknown species: Microeledone galapagensis.

Voight was hesitant to do much dissection when she began studying the tiny animal.

The octopus had been preserved in formaldehyde, which halts decomposition. However, because the specimen had large eggs in its ovaries, the formaldehyde could not fully penetrate the entire animal, leaving its flesh relatively delicate.

“If you make the wrong cut or tear something, it’s gone forever,” Voight said. “The cost of going to sea is just astronomical, and the chances of finding another one and successfully collecting it are just not high.”

After consulting with other experts, she decided to use the Field Museum’s newly acquired CT scanner to get a better look into the animal’s anatomy while keeping the specimen intact.

Thousands of X-rayed images were digitally compiled to create a 3D model that allowed Voight to determine where the animal fits in the phylogenetic tree.

Not your average octopus

Octopuses are enchanting creatures, said Jim Barry, senior scientist at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California, who was not involved with the study.

“They’re so different than most other organisms,” Barry said. “The nervous system of octopuses are more complex than any invertebrate animal on earth, so maybe that’s why they’re able to perform in ways or have behaviors that are so captivating for us.”

There are more than 300 species of varying size, shape and color.

“When you think about octopus, you think of an animal with long arms,” Voight said. “Not this guy.”

Voight identified the octopus as a member of the Microeledone genus, which only has one other species: Microeledone mangoldi. They both come from the octopus family Megaleledonidae. M. mangoldi was first described in 2004 after its discovery in the southwest Pacific Ocean near New Caledonia, an island east of Australia.

M

Renuncia Arreola a Mesa Directiva del Distrito Escolar de Somerton, busca puesto en el Consejo de San Luis

Kraig Pakulski 0 4 Article rating: No rating

Abigahil Padilla

SOMERTON, Ariz. (KYMA) – Una silla quedará vacante en la Mesa Directiva del Distrito Escolar de Somerton al concluir el actual ciclo escolar, luego de que Luisa Arreola presentara oficialmente su renuncia durante una sesión realizada.

Durante la reunión, Arreola dio lectura a un comunicado en el que explicó los motivos de su salida y destacó el trabajo realizado durante su gestión dentro del distrito.

Entre las principales razones de su decisión, Arreola mencionó su participación en una iniciativa que busca promover una redistritación para que el este de San Luis pase a formar parte del Distrito Escolar de Gadsden y deje de pertenecer al Distrito Escolar de Somerton.

Además, expresó su desacuerdo con el paquete de bonos que el Distrito Escolar de Somerton pretende someter a votación, el cual implicaría un incremento en los impuestos para los residentes del distrito.

Actualmente, el Distrito Escolar de Somerton opera la escuela primaria Sun Valley en el este de San Luis y contempla la construcción de un nuevo plantel.

Sin embargo, Arreola considera que la distribución propuesta de los recursos provenientes del nuevo impuesto no beneficiaría de manera equitativa tanto a Somerton como a San Luis.

La ahora exintegrante de la Mesa Directiva fue electa en 2022 y su período concluía este mismo año. Durante su tiempo en el cargo aseguró haber impulsado apoyos para maestros y estudiantes, además de gestionar donaciones y recursos para el distrito.

Arreola también figura actualmente como candidata al City Council de San Luis, Arizona, en las próximas elecciones municipales, donde busca continuar trabajando en representación de la comunidad.

Por su parte, el superintendente Omar Durón afirmó que el Distrito Escolar de Somerton continúa fortalecido tanto en Somerton como en San Luis. Asimismo, aclaró que hasta el momento no existe una propuesta formal de redistritación y recordó que cualquier modificación territorial tendría que ser aprobada por los distritos escolares de Somerton y Gadsden.

En relación con el llamado a elección aprobado recientemente para la emisión de bonos de deuda, Durón explicó que el distrito busca obtener alrededor de 20 millones de dólares destinados a nueva construcción, mantenimiento, mejoras tecnológicas y seguridad escolar.

Añadió que un Comité Consultivo de Padres será el encargado de informar a la comunidad sobre los proyectos específicos y el impacto fiscal que tendría la propuesta.

El puesto que deja Arreola permanecerá en la boleta electoral de noviembre, mientras que la Oficina del Superintendente Escolar del Condado será la responsable de designar a una persona interina que concluya el período restante en la Mesa Directiva.

The

Ex-judges mount bid to upend ‘unprecedentedly fraudulent’ Trump ‘anti-weaponization’ fund

Kraig Pakulski 0 8 Article rating: No rating
A banner depicting President Donald Trump is put up on the Department of Justice building in Washington

By Devan Cole, CNN

(CNN) — Nearly three dozen former federal judges appointed by presidents from both parties have joined a growing legal effort to upend the Trump administration’s newly created $1.776 billion fund for people who say they were wrongly targeted by the government in the past.

The retired jurists are asking a judge in Miami to reverse her decision last week dismissing an extraordinary lawsuit brought by President Donald Trump, one of his adult sons and the Trump Organization against the Internal Revenue Service that resulted in a settlement through which the controversial fund was created.

The 35 judges say the lawsuit, which had raised questions about whether it was legally sound given the fact that Trump was both a plaintiff and, as president, the head of the Executive Branch, in which the IRS defendants exists, “is itself a fraud on the court.”

The settlement in the case, the former judges say, “was not, and never will be, legally justified.” They pointed to the fact that the laws invoked by acting Attorney General Todd Blanche to establish the “Anti-Weaponization Fund” require “the existence of a legitimate litigation and not, as here, one that is collusive, feigned, or fraudulent.”

By reopening the case, the judges told US District Judge Kathleen Williams, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, that she can look into whether she “was deceived, including with respect to the existence of an underlying case or controversy and any purported arms-length negotiations undertaken to resolve it.”

Williams was set to look closely at whether had she the authority to oversee the lawsuit at all before she was abruptly informed last week that Trump no longer wanted to pursue it. As she agreed to formally close the case, the judge criticized the way in which the litigation had come to an end, zeroing in on the fact that such issues remained unresolved.

The Justice Department, she said at the time, had not “filed any documents ensuring that settlement was appropriate where there was an outstanding question as to whether an actual case or controversy existed.”

The coalition of judges accused Trump and the Justice Department, which represents the government in court, of using “a collusive lawsuit” to reach the settlement, which also includes a provision shielding Trump, his family and his business from being investigated by the government in the future over potential civil wrongdoing.

Among the group of judges are former members of the federal bench from across the ideological spectrum who served on both trial-level courts and appeals courts. One of them, former George H. W. Bush appointee Ursula Mancusi Ungaro, served for a time alongside Williams.

Also included is former Judge John Tinder, who was succeeded on a Chicago-based federal appeals court by now-Justice Amy Coney Barrett, and retired Judge Michael Luttig, a vocal Trump critic who was appointed to a Richmond-based appeals court by Bush.

“The unprecedentedly fraudulent scheme here more than warrants voiding the dismissal,” the judges wrote.

The judges’ request on Wednesday adds to a

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