Tuesday, September 07, 2021

Goodbye Columbus: Mexico statue to be replaced by Indigenous


- In this Oct. 12, 2020 file photo, a pedestrian takes a photo of graffiti on a temporary metal barrier set up to protect the perimeter of the Christopher Columbus's statue which was removed by authorities on Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico Cito. Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced on Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021 that the statue will be replaced by a statue honoring Indigenous women. 
(AP Photo/Fernando Llano, File)


MEXICO CITY (AP) — Christopher Columbus is getting kicked off Mexico City’s most iconic boulevard.

Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced that the Columbus statue on the Paseo de la Reforma, often a focal point for Indigenous rights protests, would be replaced by a statue honoring Indigenous women.

“To them we owe ... the history of our country, of our fatherland,” she said.

She made the announcement on Sunday, which was International Day of the Indigenous Woman.

The Columbus statue, donated to the city many years ago, was a significant reference point on the 10-lane boulevard, and surrounding traffic circle is — so far — named for it.

That made it a favorite target of spray-paint-wielding protesters denouncing the European suppression of Mexico’s Indigenous civilizations.

It was removed last year supposedly for restoration, shortly before Oct. 12, which Americans know as Columbus Day but Mexicans call “Dia de la Raza,” or “Day of the Race” — the anniversary of Columbus’ arrival in the Americas in 1492.

When the statue was removed last year, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador noted that “it is a date that is very controversial and lends itself to conflicting ideas and political conflicts.”

This year is the 700th anniversary of the founding of Tenochtitlan — what is now Mexico City — as well as the 500th anniversary of its fall to the Spanish conquistadores, and the 200th anniversary of Mexico’s final independence from Spain.

Most Mexicans have some indigenous ancestry and are well aware that millions of Indigenous people died from violence and disease during and after the conquest .

SheInbaum said the new statue, “Tlali,” might be ready near the date of Dia de la Raza this year.

The Columbus statue isn’t being discarded, but will be moved to a less prominent location in a small park in the Polanco neighborhood. Sheinbaum referred to Columbus “a great international personage.”


 In this Sept. 28, 2020 file photo, a defaced statue of Christopher Columbus stands on Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City. Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum announced on Sunday, Sept. 5, 2021 that the statue will be replaced by a statue honoring Indigenous women. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte, File)
Hundreds pay their respects to Greek composer Theodorakis

"I want to depart this world as a communist,” 
Theodorakis wrote.

By ELENA BECATOROS
yesterday

1 of 8

People wait outside the Athens Cathedral to pay respects to the late Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis in Athens on Monday Sept. 6, 2021. Hundreds of people have gathered outside Athens Cathedral where Greek composer and politician Mikis Theodorakis is to lie in state in a chapel of the cathedral for three days ahead of his burial on the southern island of Crete.
(AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)


ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Hundreds of people, some carrying flowers, gathered Monday at Athens Cathedral to pay their final respects to Greek composer and politician Mikis Theodorakis, who was an integral part of the Greek political and musical scene for decades.

Theodorakis, who died Thursday at 96, is lying in state in a cathedral chapel for three days ahead of his burial on the southern island of Crete. His body arrived Monday after a nearly two-hour delay amid a dispute over burial details.

Over the weekend, his family reportedly lifted their objections to him being buried on Crete in accordance with his last wishes. A court had temporarily halted burial plans pending a resolution of the dispute.

Theodorakis’ daughter had said earlier that he would be buried near Corinth in the village of Vrahati, where he maintained a holiday home. But a 2013 letter Theodorakis had written to the mayor of the town of Chania in Crete was made public, in which the composer said he wanted to be buried in the nearby cemetery of Galatas, despite his family’s disagreement.

Theodorakis was as well-known in Greece for his political activism as for his musical career. He penned a wide range of work, from somber symphonies to popular TV and film scores, including for “Serpico” and “Zorba the Greek.”

He is also remembered for his opposition to the military junta that ruled Greece from 1967 to 1974, a time during which he was persecuted and jailed and his music outlawed.


Greece’s Communist Party said over the weekend that Theodorakis’ body will lie in state beginning Monday, and a “farewell ceremony” will be held Wednesday, before the late composer is flown to Crete. The church service and burial will be on Thursday.

Theodorakis had a tumultuous relationship with the Communist Party, known by its Greek accronym KKE, leaving it in the late 1960s, rejoining in the late 1970s and getting elected as a lawmaker with the conservative New Democracy party in 1990.


But he wrote a letter in October to Communist Party Secretary-General Dimitris Koutsoumbas, essentially entrusting him with the funeral arrangements.


“Now, at the end of my life, at the time of taking stock, details are erased from my mind and the ‘Big Things’ remain. So, I see that I spent my most crucial, forceful and mature years under KKE’s banner. For this reason, I want to depart this world as a communist,” Theodorakis wrote.
Myanmar resistance movement calls for nationwide uprising
By GRANT PECK
today


This image made from video by National Unity Government (NUG) via Facebook, shows Duwa Lashi La, the acting president of the National Unity Government (NUG), posted on Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2021 in Myanmar. Myanmar’s NUG, an underground body coordinating resistance to the military regime, on Tuesday called for a nationwide uprising. The shadow government's acting president Duwa Lashi La called for revolt “in every village, town and city in the entire country at the same time” against the military-installed government and declared a so-called ”state of emergency."
 (National Unity Government via Facebook via AP)


BANGKOK (AP) — The main underground group coordinating resistance to Myanmar’s military government called for a nationwide uprising on Tuesday.

The National Unity Government views itself as a shadow government composed of elected legislators who were barred from taking their seats when the military seized power in February.

The group’s acting president Duwa Lashi La called for revolt “in every village, town and city in the entire country at the same time” and declared what he called a ”state of emergency.” A video of his speech was posted on Facebook.

The country has been wracked by unrest since the military ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, with a low-level insurrection in many urban areas. There has been more serious combat in rural areas, especially in border regions where ethnic minority militias have been engaging in serious clashes with the government’s troops.



The shadow government’s prime minister, Mahn Winn Khaing Thann, said in a separate statement posted online that the move was taken due to “changing circumstances” that required the complete abolition of the ruling military government. He did not elaborate.

There were no immediate signs of heightened resistance activity, although some student groups and ethnic armed organizations expressed solidarity.

The National Unity Government is popular inside Myanmar, but its actual power and influence is hard to measure. It has frequently issued sweeping proclamations and policy statements declaring the military government and its actions invalid and illegal, but they’ve had little real-world effect. It controls no territory, does not directly control any armed force and has won no diplomatic recognition from foreign countries. Members of its shadow Cabinet are in hiding inside Myanmar and in exile.

Duwa Lashi La called on the ethnic militias, some of whom have declared themselves in alliance with the resistance, to “immediately attack” government forces and “fully control your lands.” The ethnic armed forces, which have been fighting for decades for greater autonomy from Myanmar’s central government, operate independently of the National Unity Government.

Duwa Lashi La called for a “people’s revolution” and asked for all soldiers and police to join the “people’s defense forces.” He also warned civil servants against going to their offices.

He advised people to heed their personal safety and not travel unnecessarily, as well as to stock up on food and medicine, guidance it has offered on at least one past occasion when it warned of trouble ahead. He said people should help the defense forces where they can, including with information about government military forces.

The resistance movement against the military takeover had established “people’s defense forces” in many areas, but they mostly operate locally and when active, carry out small-scale hit-and-run guerrilla operations


'My saviour': Hanoi's tiny balconies a refuge in lockdown

Issued on: 07/09/2021 -
With outdoor exercise banned, it's not uncommon to see people in Hanoi linger for hours in their limited outside space 
Nhac NGUYEN AFP

Hanoi (AFP)

Overlooking deserted streets, Hanoi's tiny balconies have become places of refuge as the city's locked-down residents squeeze desks, yoga mats and comfy seats for coffee drinking into their share of fresh air.

Eight million people living in the Vietnamese capital have been under a strict stay-at-home order since late July, allowed out only for trips to get food or hospital visits.

Although the lockdown is beginning to ease in some parts of the city, most residents must stay home for at least another two weeks as the nationwide death toll from Covid-19 continues to climb.

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Overlooking deserted streets, Hanoi's tiny balconies have become places of refuge for the city's locked-down residents 
Nhac NGUYEN AFP

"My only connection to the outside world has been through my tiny balcony," said Nguyen Xuan Anh, an office worker who lives in a high-rise residential block.

Anh has squeezed a desk onto her three-square-metre (32-square-foot) balcony, once home to ornamental trees.

Several of Vietnam's cities and provinces have been under lockdown for months
 Nhac NGUYEN AFP

It's small, but large enough for her to work there on a laptop and drink her morning coffee while surveying the silence of a street once jam-packed with motorbikes and cars.

"Before, I had no time to even stand for five minutes on my balcony. Now, it's become my saviour," Anh told AFP.

With outdoor exercise banned, it's not uncommon to see people linger for hours in their limited outside space.

With outdoor exercise banned, it's not uncommon to see people linger for hours in their limited outside space in Hanoi 
Nhac NGUYEN AFP

"I hide on my balcony, my corner, almost the whole day," said Tran Trung Quan, an IT engineer.

"It's not nice to stay indoors all day, with the kids causing so much trouble that you cannot concentrate on your work".

Vietnam, widely praised last year for its handling of the pandemic, has been badly hit by Covid-19 since a fourth wave began in April.

The country has reported more than 500,000 infections and over 13,000 deaths.

Vietnam, widely praised last year for its handling of the pandemic, has been badly hit by Covid-19 since a fourth wave began in April
 Nhac NGUYEN AFP

Several cities and provinces, including the southern business hub Ho Chi Minh City, have been under lockdown for months.

"My only wish now is the lockdown order be removed, so that I can go back to work," Trung said.

"It's just too much for me to handle from this tiny balcony."

© 2021 AFP
Afghan art activist defiant as Taliban erase Kabul murals

Issued on: 07/09/2021 - 
Within weeks of capturing Kabul, the Taliban have started 
replacing many of the city's murals with propaganda slogans 
Aamir QURESHI AFP

Seoul (AFP)

Afghan activist Omaid Sharifi's art collective spent seven years transforming stretches of Kabul's labyrinthine concrete blast walls with colourful murals -- then the Taliban marched in.

Within weeks of the Islamists taking the capital, many of the street art pieces have been painted over, replaced by drab propaganda slogans as the Taliban reimpose their austere vision on Afghanistan.

The images of workers rolling white paint over the art were deeply foreboding for Sharifi, whose ArtLords collective has created more than 2,200 murals across the country since 2014.


"The image that comes to my mind is (the Taliban) putting a 'kaffan' over the city," he told AFP in a phone interview from the UAE on Monday, referring to the white shroud used to cover bodies for Islamic burials.

Omaid Sharifi co-founded ArtLords in 2014, and the collective went on to make more than 2,200 murals across Afghanistan 
Shah MARAI AFP/File

But even as the Taliban erase the work of the ArtLords and despite being forced to flee for his safety, Sharifi said he would continue his campaign.

"We will never stay silent," said the 34-year-old, speaking from a facility housing Afghan refugees.

"We will make sure the world hears us. We will make sure that the Taliban are shamed every single day."

Among the erased murals was one showing US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad and Taliban co-founder Abdul Ghani Baradar shaking hands after signing the 2020 deal to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan.

- 'Everybody was running' -


Sharifi co-founded ArtLords in 2014, using art to campaign for peace, social justice and accountability.

The prolific group often shamed the powerful in Afghanistan with street art, including warlords and allegedly corrupt government officials.

The ArtLords mural showing a handshake between a US envoy and a Taliban leader is among the pieces painted over in recent days 
WAKIL KOHSAR AFP/File

Their murals honoured Afghan heroes, called for dialogue instead of violence, and demanded rights for women.

ArtLords members braved death threats and were branded infidels by Islamist extremists.

They remained unrepentant, and kept at it until the end.

On the morning of August 15, with the Taliban at the gates of Kabul, Sharifi and five of his colleagues went to work on a mural outside a government building.

Within hours, they saw panicked people rushing out of government offices and decided to return to the ArtLords gallery.

An Afghan worker cleans a road next to a mural in Kabul 
HOSHANG HASHIMI AFP

"All roads were blocked," Sharifi said.

"The army, the police were coming from all sides, abandoning their cars and everybody was running."

When the group finally made it to the gallery, they learned that Kabul had fallen.

- 'It never goes away' -

Sharifi was 10 years old in 1996 when the Islamists first came to power, and he witnessed their harsh rule until US-led forces toppled them five years later.

This time around, he said, "I expect that not a lot has changed."

Omaid Sharifi's collective covered many of Kabul's blast walls with colourful murals Wakil KOHSAR AFP/File

Like Sharifi, many Afghans are sceptical of Taliban claims of a softer government.

Few have forgotten the public executions, and the blanket ban on entertainment -- including on TVs and video cassette players.

Sharifi told AFP he "vividly remembers" the public punishments at a football stadium in Kabul, including beheadings and amputations for various crimes.

"When I was riding my bicycle to go to the central market... (I) would see a lot of broken TVs, broken cassette recorders and all these tapes," he added.

"That is always in my mind. It never goes away."

There was no local media to speak of during the Taliban's first stint in power, and images of humans and animals were banned.

- 'This is not the end' -


Tens of thousands of Afghans rushed to Kabul airport as the capital fell, fearful of life under the Taliban, among them scores of artists and activists such as Sharifi.

"It's a very difficult choice (to leave), and I just hope nobody ever experiences what we went through," he said.

Many of Kabul's blast walls are now covered with Taliban propaganda slogans 
Aamir QURESHI AFP

"Afghanistan is my home, it's my identity... I cannot take out all my roots and plant myself in another part of the world."

Sharifi's primary concern was not violence, as he had lived with death threats for years.

"The scary part was that I will not have a voice," he said.

"What really forced me was that I want my voice... I want my freedom of expression."

The chaotic airlift from Kabul airport ended with the last US troops leaving by August 31, and Western governments admitted most Afghans identified as vulnerable to Taliban reprisals were left behind.

"All of them are in hiding, all of them are fearful... They're just trying to find a way to get out of Afghanistan."

And he vowed to continue campaigning and creating art.

"I left (everything) behind," Sharifi said.

"The only thing that keeps me going is that I think this is not the end."

© 2021 AFP
PATRIARCHY IS RAPE
Syrian refugees tortured, raped and missing after returning home, Amnesty says



Issued on: 07/09/2021 - 
Syrians, displaced from Ras al-Ain, a border town controlled by Turkey and its Syrian proxies, in the camp of Washukanni in the northeastern Syrian al-Hasakeh governorate, on June 28, 2021. 
© Delil Souleiman, AFP/ File picture

A number of Syrian refugees who returned home have been subjected to detention, disappearance and torture at the hands of Syrian security forces, proving that it still isn’t safe to return to any part of the country, Amnesty International said Tuesday.

In a report entitled “You’re going to your death,” the rights group documented what it said were violations committed by Syrian intelligence officers against 66 returnees, including 13 children between mid-2017 and spring 2021. Among those were five cases in which detainees had died in custody after returning to the country torn by civil war, while the fate of 17 forcibly disappeared people remains unknown.

The report strongly counters claims by a number of states that parts of Syria were now safe to return to. It criticizes Denmark, Sweden and Turkey specifically for restricting protection and putting pressure on refugees from Syria to go home. It also criticizes Lebanon and Jordan, who have some of the highest number of Syrian refugees per capita.

In Lebanon and Turkey, where many refugees face dire living conditions and discrimination, governments have put increasing pressure on Syrians to return. Turkey has reportedly forcibly deported many Syrians in the last two years - expulsions that reflect rising anti-refugee sentiment in a country that once flung open its borders to millions of Syrians fleeing civil war.

Denmark and Sweden earlier this year started revoking the residency permits of some Syrian refugees, arguing that the Syrian capital, Damascus, and neighboring regions were now safe.

Few experts agree with that assessment. While the security situation has stabilized in government-controlled areas and many parts of central Syria previously held by opposition rebels, forced conscription, indiscriminate detentions and forced disappearances continue to be reported. Moreover, entire neighborhoods are destroyed, and many people have no houses to return to. Basic services such as water and electricity are poor to nonexistent.

“Any government claiming Syria is now safe is willfully ignoring the horrific reality on the ground, leaving refugees once again fearing for their lives,” said Marie Forestier, researcher on refugee and migrant rights at Amnesty International. She said that while military hostilities may have subsided in most parts of Syria, the Syrian government’s “propensity for egregious human rights violations has not.”

The Syrian government and its chief international backer, Russia, have publicly called on refugees to return home and accused Western countries of discouraging it with claims that Syria is still unsafe.

In its report, Amnesty International urged European governments to immediately halt any practice directly or indirectly forcing people to return home. It also called on neighboring countries Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan, who host the bulk of the Syrian refugee population, to protect them from deportation or any other forcible return, in line with their international obligations.

It said Syrian authorities in some cases have targeted returnees to Syria simply for having fled, accusing them of treason or supporting “terrorism.”

The Syrian government routinely dismisses accusations of human rights abuses as lies.

The report documents serious violations committed by the Syrian government against refugees who returned to Syria from Lebanon, Rukban (an informal settlement between the Jordanian and Syrian borders), France, Germany, Turkey, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates between mid-2017 and spring 2021. They were based on interviews with 41 Syrians, including returnees and their relatives and friends, as well as lawyers, humanitarian workers and Syria experts.

In some cases, the human rights violations included rape or other forms of sexual violence, arbitrary or unlawful detention, and torture or other ill-treatment, the report said.

Syria’s 10-year war has killed about half a million people and forced about 5.6 million to flee abroad as refugees, mostly to neighboring countries.

(AP)
Egypt tries prominent activist for critical elections tweet


Issued on: 07/09/2021 - 
Egyptian human rights activist Hossam Bahgat looks on at a courtroom in the capital Cairo during a judicial session in April 2016 
Mohamed el-Shahed AFP/File

Cairo (AFP)

Egypt is set to start Tuesday trial proceedings against Hossam Bahgat, one of the country's most prominent human rights advocates, for a tweet criticising alleged electoral fraud.

Bahgat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), is already banned from travelling and his assets have been frozen due to another case in which he remains indicted.

Authorities have in recent years particularly targeted the group he founded.

Three EIPR staff members were jailed last year, sparking an international campaign supported by celebrities including Scarlett Johansson that resulted in their release.

Another EIPR researcher, Patrick Zaki, remains in detention since February 2020 facing charges of "spreading false news" after he returned to Egypt for a visit from Italy, where he was studying at Bologna University.

In July, the US State Department condemned Cairo for specifically indicting Bahgat saying dissidents "should not be targeted for expressing their views peacefully".

Bahgat is accused of "insulting" Egypt's electoral commission, after he alleged that incidents of electoral fraud and vote rigging took place during last year's parliamentary elections.

Parliament is mostly comprised of loyalists of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and is viewed by critics as a "rubber-stamp" body.

Bahgat is also being prosecuted for "spreading false news", which can carry hefty fines and jail time.

"We will present evidence to the court of reports and information published by people involved in the elections," to support his allegations, Hoda Nasralla, one of Baghat's lawyers, told AFP.

Tuesday's hearing is the first and a verdict is not expected to come immediately.

Sisi, a former army chief, took power in 2014 and has launched a sweeping crackdown on dissent, with rights groups estimating that Egypt holds about 60,000 political prisoners.

Former US president Donald Trump forged a particularly strong relationship with Sisi.

His successor, President Joe Biden, vowed on the campaign trail that there would be no more "blank checks" for Egypt's president.

But Secretary of State Antony Blinken in May visited and praised Sisi for helping bring a truce that halted bloodshed between Israel and Palestinian militants Hamas.

© 2021 AFP
Extinct Tasmanian tiger brought to life in colour footage

Issued on: 07/09/2021 - 
The Tasmanian tiger roamed in Australia and on the island of New Guinea before dying out about 85 years ago
 Handout The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia/AFP

Sydney (AFP)

Century-old footage of the last known Tasmanian tiger in captivity has been brought to life by colourisation, offering a tantalising glimpse of the now-extinct creature.

The wolf-like thylacine, known as the Tasmanian tiger because of its striped coat, roamed in Australia and on the island of New Guinea before dying out about 85 years ago.

Fewer than a dozen snippets of footage -- totalling about three minutes of silent, black-and-white film -- are known to have survived of the elusive beast.

The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia said the longest of these rare clips, an 80-second film of the last known Tasmanian tiger, called Benjamin, has now been colourised.

The government agency handed the footage to Paris-based Samuel Francois-Steininger, of Composite Films, who completed the painstaking colourisation process over 200 hours.

The footage was "stunning" for its age but "very challenging to colourise because, apart from the animal, there were few elements in the frame", Francois-Steininger said in a post on the archive's website.

Century-old footage of the last known Tasmanian tiger in captivity has been brought to life by colourisation 
Handout The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia/AFP

"And because of the resolution and quality of the picture, there were a lot of details -– the fur was dense and a lot of hair had to be detailed and animated," he added.

The clip shows the carnivorous marsupial pacing around a small enclosure, lying down, sniffing and scratching -- its sandy brown coat punctuated by thick dark stripes.

It was released Tuesday to mark National Threatened Species Day in Australia, which is held each year on September 7 to commemorate Benjamin's death on the same date in 1936.

The footage was shot by David Fleay in December 1933 at the city of Hobart's now-defunct Beaumaris Zoo, where the naturalist was reportedly bitten on the buttocks while filming.

© 2021 AFP
Hong Kong's Tiananmen vigil organiser defies police probe


Issued on: 07/09/2021 -
The Hong Kong Alliance organised three decades of annual vigils commemorating the victims of Beijing's 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown 
Mike FIALA AF


Hong Kong (AFP)

The pro-democracy group behind Hong Kong's annual Tiananmen Square vigils set up a showdown with authorities on Tuesday as they defied a police deadline to cooperate with a "national security" investigation into their activities.

The Hong Kong Alliance organised three decades of vigils commemorating the victims of Beijing's Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989.

It is now being investigated under a powerful national security law that China imposed on Hong Kong to stamp out dissent after huge and often violent democracy protests broke out two years ago.


Last month police ordered the group to hand over financial and operational details, accusing it of working as a "foreign agent".

The request included the personal details of all members since its founding in 1989, all meeting minutes, financial records and any exchanges with other NGOs advocating democracy and human rights in China.

On Tuesday, the deadline for the request, members of the alliance handed a letter explaining their refusal to cooperate.

"We are going to respond, to say that we feel you have no legal grounds for your demands, so we are just going to ignore you," Chow Hang-tung, a barrister and alliance member, told AFP on her way to the police station.

Tsui Hon-kwong, one of the alliance's directors, also filed a judicial review in the courts arguing that the police request for information was illegal.

"The Commissioner... provides no explanation on why he reasonably believes that the Alliance is a foreign agent, thus hampering the Alliance from making any concrete rebuttal or clarification," Tsui argued in his application.

"This offends the rules of natural justice."

Hong Kong authorities had previously warned that alliance leaders faced jail or fines if they refused to cooperate with their probe.

"To avoid bearing the legal risk, the organisation concerned should immediately turn back before it is too late," the Security Bureau said on Monday.

China is currently remoulding Hong Kong in its own authoritarian image.

Dozens of democracy figures have been arrested and an official campaign has been launched to purge the city of anyone deemed "unpatriotic".

The alliance, officially titled the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, was once one of the most visible symbols of the city's political plurality.

Each June 4 it organised large candlelight vigils in Hong Kong's Victoria Park that were routinely attended by tens of thousands of residents, the crowds swelling in recent years as anger over how Beijing was running the city intensified.

Slogans at the vigils often called for democracy in China and an end to one-party rule.

Tolerance for such political defiance has since ended.

The last two Tiananmen vigils were banned by the police and earlier this year city officials shuttered a museum operated by the alliance.

Authorities in China and Hong Kong have also said that future vigils would likely break the new security law.

© 2021 AFP

Females sing more than thought: about the structure of the brain of birds – the science

The more birds that sing, the more their brains change.

Birds sing more in the spring than in the rest of the year. Before the breeding season, they must attract a mate and defend the area. Neurobiologist Anemi van der Linden (UAntwerp) and her colleagues demonstrate that the structure of songbirds’ brains changes over the course of a year. in the magazine eLife They reported that the more animals sing, the more their brains changed.

Moreover, this occurs not only in the areas of the brain associated with singing, but also in the areas responsible for sight and hearing. Changes occur very quickly until spring.

It was intriguing to discover that female birds sing more than many biologists assume. Their brains change, too, but differently than the brains of males. In male starlings, the hemisphere responsible for the song is denser than in the other, but in females there are stronger connections between the two hemispheres. A similar difference also occurs in humans.

Biologist Erich Matessen (UAntwerp) records with a number of colleagues Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The nature of birds is determined in part by place and time. Some great boobs are bold, others are wary. The distinction is hereditary, but the balance between both types in the population changes due to local conditions. In years or places where there is less food, daredevils have an advantage, because they will find new food sources more easily. If there is enough food, it is enough to be routine – this is more suitable for energy.

The nature of the birds is determined in part by local conditions.

Birds sing more in the spring than in the rest of the year. Before the breeding season, they must attract a mate and defend the area. Neurobiologist Anemi van der Linden (UAntwerp) and her colleagues demonstrate that the structure of songbirds’ brains changes over the course of a year. In the trade journal eLife, they report that the more the animals sang, the more their brains changed. Moreover, this occurs not only in the areas of the brain associated with singing, but also in the areas responsible for sight and hearing. Changes occur very quickly until spring. It was intriguing to discover that female birds sing more than many biologists assume. Their brains change, too, but differently than the brains of males. In male starlings, the hemisphere responsible for the song is denser than in the other, but in females there are stronger connections between the two hemispheres. A similar difference also occurs in humans. Biologist Eric Matissen (UAntwerp) and several colleagues write in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that bird personality is determined in part by space and time. Some big boobs are bold, others are wary. The distinction is hereditary, but the balance between both types in the population changes due to local conditions. In years or places where there is less food, daredevils have an advantage, because they will find new food sources more easily. If there is enough food, it is enough to be routine – this is more suitable for energy.


09-06-2021

Baby birds can learn sounds before birth

A new study led by the BirdLab research group at Flinders University discovered evidence of prenatal auditory learning in embryos of five bird species. Using non-invasive techniques, researchers found fluctuations in heartbeat responses to their parents’ calls in the embryos of three vocal learning species (the superb fairy-wren, the red-winged fairy-wren, and Darwin’s small ground finch), as well as two vocal non-learning species (the little penguin and the Japanese quail). 

“By studying the capacity for sound learning in embryos, we are paving the way to new inroads into evolutionary and developmental timescales,” said study first author Dr. Diane Colombelli-Négrel. “Long before actual vocalization, we found that these tiny songbirds were also discriminating towards non-specific sounds and capable of ‘non-associative’ (not from parents) sounds, building on the complexity of vocal learning in songbirds.”  

According to study co-author Professor Sonia Kleindorfer, vocal production learning is believed to occur in just seven lineages of birds and mammals: songbirds, hummingbirds, parrots, cetaceans, pinnipeds, bats, and, among primates, only humans. 

“As a result of the rarity of vocal production learning, animals have been grouped into so-called ‘vocal learners’ (those that learn to imitate a vocalisation from a vocal tutor) and ‘vocal non-learners’ (animals that produce vocalisations without imitating a vocal tutor),” explained Professor Kleindorfer.

Surprisingly though, this new study found that embryos could grow accustomed to another bird’s call in both vocal learning and non-learning species, and may thus point to a phenomenon more widespread than initially thought.

“This research will hopefully inspire more study into the remarkable capacity of animals to learn sound,” said Professor Kleindorfer. “By moving the time window for sound learning to the prenatal stage, this research direction opens pathways to measure neurobiological downstream effects of early auditory experience on behaviour and information processing.”

The research is published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

By Andrei IonescuEarth.com Staff Writer