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BRAZIL: Chagas Disease
Alters DNA
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RIO DE JANEIRO - Chagas disease,
which affects 18 million people in Latin America,
can be lethal because it causes genetic alterations,
according to the findings of scientists at the University
of Brasilia.
In Brazil there are some six million people infected
with the Trypanosoma cruzi parasite, which causes
this disease and is transmitted by the Triatoma infestans,
an insect known here as 'barbeiro', and 'vinchuca',
'chipo' or 'chupón' in Latin America's Spanish-speaking
countries.
Chagas disease (American trypanosomiasis) kills an
average of 33,000 Brazilians each year, through damage
to the heart or other organs. The parasite adds its
own DNA to that of the infected cells and the body's
immune system attacks the altered tissue as if it
were foreign, explained Antonio Teixeira, research
coordinator.
This discovery opens the way to search for a cure
for the disease, but even so, it is likely to take
decades, he said.
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CHILE: Save the Native
Trees!
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SANTIAGO - The Chilean environmental
group Fiscalía del Medio Ambiente presented a case
before the capital's Court of Appeals to overturn
a decree from Agriculture Minister Jaime Campos that
authorizes the logging of native tree species, which
have been declared national monuments.
The decree, according to the activists, threatens
autochthonous species like the 'alerce' (Fitzroya
cupressoides), 'araucaria' or monkey puzzle (Araucaria
araucana) and the 'belloto' (Beilschmiedia mierssi).
The group argues that the decree is illegal and unconstitutional
and also violates the international Convention on
Nature Protection and Wildlife Preservation in the
Americas.
According to the decree, under exceptional circumstances
the cutting or removal of the national monument species
may be authorized when it is necessary for carrying
out ''projects or activities of national or regional
interest.''
The environmentalists' claim is backed by Chilean
Forest Defenders, the National Ecological Action Network
and Greenpeace.
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VENEZUELA: Two Children
Die from Bat Bites
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CARACAS - Two Venezuelan children
died of rabies last week after being bitten by blood-sucking
bats in a settlement on the coast of the northeastern
state of Sucre.
The boys, ages three and 10, were bitten while they
slept, and their parents took them to a health center
for treatment ''too late''. The minors were already
suffering convulsions, fever and limb numbness, said
Ninoska Lozada, head of the Health Ministry's regional
epidemiology department.
The health authorities have not determined the exact
species of bat that bit the children, but Lozada believes
it is probably not native to the area. Bats are the
most biodiverse mammal species in the country, with
more than 150 types.
Rabies is the oldest known animal virus in Sucre,
and its mortality rate is ''almost 100 percent,''
said the expert.
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CUBA: Warning on Forest
Fire Risks
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HAVANA - Hurricane Ivan's passage
through Cuba's Guanahacabibes Peninsula in September
left a danger of forest fire, which would be disastrous
for the strategic biosphere reserve located there.
Experts warned that a mere spark could be enough to
set fire to the great number of trees, branches and
leaves that accumulated on the ground as a result
of the hurricane's winds on the peninsula, located
some 200 km west of Havana.
The forest service corps from the area drew up a program
for prevention and surveillance, which includes air
patrols and ground clean-up.
Forest service staff will also receive training to
fight forest fires, which are normally very rare in
the region.
They should be ready by Feb. 1, when the high-risk
period begins, says Jesús Cabrera, a forest protection
expert.
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HONDURAS: To the Rescue
of Chismuyo Bay
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TEGUCIGALPA - Local officials
and residents of the Honduran department of Valle,
on the southern border with El Salvador, this month
launched a project to save Chisjuyo Bay, in the Gulf
of Fonseca.
Soraya Reyes, governor of Valle, told Tierramérica
that with funds from the European Union they are working
to preserve mangrove forests and marine and land-based
nature preserves.
Along the bay there are 32,500 hectares of mangroves
and some 40 communities, mostly fishing villages.
The project aims to control the use of dynamite in
fishing and to protect endangered fish species, said
Reyes.
The wetlands system in the area serves as an important
regulator of water flow, preventing floods and the
salinization of freshwater, said Jorge Varela, of
the non-governmental Committee for the Defense and
Protection of Flora and Fauna in the Gulf of Fonseca.
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GUATEMALA: Reproducing
Endangered Fish
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GUATEMALA CITY - A technical
mission from Taiwan is helping Guatemalan officials
in an effort to boost the population of the Petenia
splendida, or red bay snook, typical of this country
but in danger of extinction from overfishing, officials
from the Taiwanese embassy told Tierramérica.
The meat of this fish is particularly tender and tasty,
and local demand continues to rise.
The center of snook reproduction is Petén lake, in
northern Guatemala, according to the Fund for International
Development and Cooperation, overseen by the Guatemalan
Foreign Ministry.
The Taiwanese technical experts are helping to set
up and finance a new fish hatchery. From March to
May, they successfully produced 3,500 fish.
The Taiwanese embassy says the success ''has not only
helped overcome the crisis of potential extinction
of the fish, but has set a new landmark in the development
of fish farming.''
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