From the Andaman Sea/Indian Ocean with a Ba
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Village Contingency Plan
Village Contingency Plan 1 Andaman and Nicobar Administration Rescue 2012 Shelter Management Psychosocial Care NDMA SCR Early Warning Rescue First Aid Mock Drill A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 I N D E X SL. NO. CONTENTS PAGE NO. 1 Map of A&N Islands 07 CHAPTER CONTENTS PAGE NO. I Introduction 08 II Hazard Analysis 11 III Union Territory Disaster Management System 24 IV UT Disaster Management Executive Committee 32 V District Disaster Management 35 VI Directorate of Disaster Management 52 VII Incident Response System 64 VIII Village Contingency Plan 90 IX Disaster Mitigation 104 X Preparedness Plan 128 XI Response Plan 133 XII Rehabilitation 140 XIII Appraisal, Documentation and Reporting 141 XIV Standard Operating Procedures 143 XV Glossary of Terms 150 XVI Explanations 155 XVII Abbreviations 160 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 1 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 2 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 3 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 4 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 5 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 6 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Directorate of Disaster Management | Andaman and Nicobar Administration 7 A&N Islands Disaster Management Plan 2012 Chapter-I INTRODUCTION ISLANDS AT A GLANCE 1.1 LOCATION 1.1.1 The Union Territory of Andaman and Nicobar Islands stretches over 700 kms from North to South with 37 inhabited Islands. -
Recommendations on Improving Telecom Services in Andaman
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Recommendations on Improving Telecom Services in Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Lakshadweep 22 nd July, 2014 Mahanagar Doorsanchar Bhawan Jawahar Lal Nehru Marg, New Delhi – 110002 CONTENTS CHAPTER-I: INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER- II: METHODOLOGY FOLLOWED FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF THE TELECOM INFRASTRUCTURE REQUIRED 10 CHAPTER- III: TELECOM PLAN FOR ANDAMAN & NICOBAR ISLANDS 36 CHAPTER- IV: COMPREHENSIVE TELECOM PLAN FOR LAKSHADWEEP 60 CHAPTER- V: SUPPORTING POLICY INITIATIVES 74 CHAPTER- VI: SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS 84 ANNEXURE 1.1 88 ANNEXURE 1.2 90 ANNEXURE 2.1 95 ANNEXURE 2.2 98 ANNEXURE 3.1 100 ANNEXURE 3.2 101 ANNEXURE 5.1 106 ANNEXURE 5.2 110 ANNEXURE 5.3 113 ABBREVIATIONS USED 115 i CHAPTER-I: INTRODUCTION Reference from Department of Telecommunication 1.1. Over the last decade, the growth of telecom infrastructure has become closely linked with the economic development of a country, especially the development of rural and remote areas. The challenge for developing countries is to ensure that telecommunication services, and the resulting benefits of economic, social and cultural development which these services promote, are extended effectively and efficiently throughout the rural and remote areas - those areas which in the past have often been disadvantaged, with few or no telecommunication services. 1.2. The Role of telecommunication connectivity is vital for delivery of e- Governance services at the doorstep of citizens, promotion of tourism in an area, educational development in terms of tele-education, in health care in terms of telemedicine facilities. In respect of safety and security too telecommunication connectivity plays a vital role. -
Taxonomy and Diversity of the Sponge Fauna from Walters Shoal, a Shallow Seamount in the Western Indian Ocean Region
Taxonomy and diversity of the sponge fauna from Walters Shoal, a shallow seamount in the Western Indian Ocean region By Robyn Pauline Payne A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Magister Scientiae in the Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape. Supervisors: Dr Toufiek Samaai Prof. Mark J. Gibbons Dr Wayne K. Florence The financial assistance of the National Research Foundation (NRF) towards this research is hereby acknowledged. Opinions expressed and conclusions arrived at, are those of the author and are not necessarily to be attributed to the NRF. December 2015 Taxonomy and diversity of the sponge fauna from Walters Shoal, a shallow seamount in the Western Indian Ocean region Robyn Pauline Payne Keywords Indian Ocean Seamount Walters Shoal Sponges Taxonomy Systematics Diversity Biogeography ii Abstract Taxonomy and diversity of the sponge fauna from Walters Shoal, a shallow seamount in the Western Indian Ocean region R. P. Payne MSc Thesis, Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape. Seamounts are poorly understood ubiquitous undersea features, with less than 4% sampled for scientific purposes globally. Consequently, the fauna associated with seamounts in the Indian Ocean remains largely unknown, with less than 300 species recorded. One such feature within this region is Walters Shoal, a shallow seamount located on the South Madagascar Ridge, which is situated approximately 400 nautical miles south of Madagascar and 600 nautical miles east of South Africa. Even though it penetrates the euphotic zone (summit is 15 m below the sea surface) and is protected by the Southern Indian Ocean Deep- Sea Fishers Association, there is a paucity of biodiversity and oceanographic data. -
November 17-2
Tuesday 2 Daily Telegrams November 17, 2020 GOVT. PRIMARY SCHOOL No. TN/DB/PHED/2020/1277 27 SUBHASGRAM - 2 HALDER PARA, SARDAR TIKREY DO OFFICE OF THE EXECUTIVE ENGINEER NSV, SUBHASHGRAM GOVT. PRIMARY SCHOOL PUBLIC HEALTH ENGINEERING DIVISION 28 SUBHASGRAM - 3 DAS PARA, DAKHAIYA PARA DO A.P.W.D., PORT BLAIR NSV, SUBHASHGRAM th SCHOOL TIKREY, SUB CENTER Prothrapur, dated the 13 November 2020. COMMUNITY HALL, 29 KHUDIRAMPUR AREA, STEEL BRIDGE, AAGA DO KHUDIRAMPUR TENDER NOTICE NALLAH, DAM AREA (F) The Executive Engineer, PHED, APWD, Prothrapur invites on behalf of President of India, online Item Rate e- BANGLADESH QUARTER, MEDICAL RAMAKRISHNAG GOVT. PRIMARY SCHOOL tenders (in form of CPWD-8) from the vehicle owners / approved and eligible contractors of APWD and Non APWD 30 COLONY AREA, SAJJAL PARA, R K DO RAM - 1 RAMKRISHNAGRAM Contractors irrespective of their enlistment subject to the condition that they have experience of having successfully GRAM HOUSE SITE completed similar nature of work in terms of cost in any of the government department in A&N Islands and they should GOVT. PRIMARY SCHOOL RAMAKRISHNAG BAIRAGI PARA, MALO PARA, 31 VV PITH, DO not have any adverse remarks for following work RAM - 2 PAHAR KANDA NIT No. Earnest RAMKRISHNAGRAM Sl. Estimated cost Time of Name of work Money RAMAKRISHNAG COMMUNITY HALL, NEAR MAGAR NALLAH WATER TANK No. put to Tender Completion 32 DO Deposit RAM - 3 VKV, RAMKRISHNAGRAM AREA, POLICE TIKREY, DAS PARA VIDYASAGARPAL GOVT. PRIMARY SCHOOL SAITAN TIKRI, PANDEY BAZAAR, 1 NIT NO- R&M of different water pump sets under 33 DO 15/DB/ PHED/ E & M Sub Division attached with EE LI VS PALLY HELIPAD AREA GOVT. -
A Soft Spot for Chemistry–Current Taxonomic and Evolutionary Implications of Sponge Secondary Metabolite Distribution
marine drugs Review A Soft Spot for Chemistry–Current Taxonomic and Evolutionary Implications of Sponge Secondary Metabolite Distribution Adrian Galitz 1 , Yoichi Nakao 2 , Peter J. Schupp 3,4 , Gert Wörheide 1,5,6 and Dirk Erpenbeck 1,5,* 1 Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Palaeontology & Geobiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 80333 Munich, Germany; [email protected] (A.G.); [email protected] (G.W.) 2 Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan; [email protected] 3 Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM), Carl-von-Ossietzky University Oldenburg, 26111 Wilhelmshaven, Germany; [email protected] 4 Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity, University of Oldenburg (HIFMB), 26129 Oldenburg, Germany 5 GeoBio-Center, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, 80333 Munich, Germany 6 SNSB-Bavarian State Collection of Palaeontology and Geology, 80333 Munich, Germany * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: Marine sponges are the most prolific marine sources for discovery of novel bioactive compounds. Sponge secondary metabolites are sought-after for their potential in pharmaceutical applications, and in the past, they were also used as taxonomic markers alongside the difficult and homoplasy-prone sponge morphology for species delineation (chemotaxonomy). The understanding Citation: Galitz, A.; Nakao, Y.; of phylogenetic distribution and distinctiveness of metabolites to sponge lineages is pivotal to reveal Schupp, P.J.; Wörheide, G.; pathways and evolution of compound production in sponges. This benefits the discovery rate and Erpenbeck, D. A Soft Spot for yield of bioprospecting for novel marine natural products by identifying lineages with high potential Chemistry–Current Taxonomic and Evolutionary Implications of Sponge of being new sources of valuable sponge compounds. -
The Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Part I, II, Vol-II
CENSUS OF INDIA 1921 VOLUME II THE ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS Part I--REPORT Part II-TABLES BY R. F. LQWIS, Superintendent of Census Operations ( • OALOUTTA SUPERINTENDENT GOVERNMENT PRINTING, INDIA , 1923 [ Price Rs. 5 or English 68, 8d. ] - Agents for the Sale of Books published by the Superintendent of Government Printing India, Calcutta. IN EUROPE. Constable & Co., 10, Orange Street, Leicester Square, W. Thacker & Co., 2, Creed Lane, London, E.C. T. Fisher Unwin, Ltd., 1, Adelphi Terrace, London, London, W.O. W.C. Ke"an Paul, Trench, Trlibner & Co., 68-74, Carter Lane, Wheldon. and Wesley Ltd., 2, 3 & 4, Arthur Street, ,New o B.C., and 39, New Oxford Street, London, w.e. I Oxford Street, London, W.O. 2. , Ilernard Quaritch, 11, Grafton Street, New Bond Strcet, B. H. Blackwell, 50 &: 51, Broad Stree·~bx!ord. London, W. Deighton Bell & Co., Ltd., Cambridge .. " 1'. S. King & Sons, 2 & 4, Great Smith Street, West. Oliver and Boyd, Tweeddale Court, Edfhburgh. minster, London, S.W. E. POIlSonby, Ltd., 116, Grafton Street, Dublin. 11. S. King & Co., 65, Comhlll, E.C., and 9, Pall Mall, Ernest Leroux, 28, RUIl Bonaparte, Parla. London, W. Martinns Nijhoff, The Hague, Holland. Grlndla17 & Co., 54, Parliament Street, London, S.W. otto Harra.s.sowitz, Leipzig. Lnzac & Co., 46, Great Russeli Strect, London, W. C. Friedlander and Sohn, Berlin. llf INDIA AID. CEYLON. Thacker, Spink & Co., Calcutta and Simla. Mangaldas Harkisandas, Surat.• Newman & Co., Ltd.. Calcutta. ,Karsandas Narandas & Sons, Surat. R. Cambray & Co., Calcutta. A. H. Wheeler & Co., Allahabad, Calcutta and S. K. Lahiri & Co., Calcutta. -
An Daman N I Co Bar Islands
IMPERIAL GAZETfEER OF INDIA PROVINCIAL SERIES AN DAMAN AND N I CO BAR ISLANDS • SUPERINTENDENT OF GOVERNMENT PRINTING CALCUTTA . ,. • 1909 Price Rs:·~:_s, or 2s. 3d.] PREFACE THE articles in this volume were written by Lieut.-Colonel Sir Richard C. Temple, Bart., C.I.E., formerly Chid Com- • missioner, and have been brought up to date by the present officers of the Penal Settlement at Port Blair. · As regards the Andamans, the sections on Geology, Botany, and Fauna are based on notes supplied respectively by Mr. T. H. Holland, Director of the Geological Survey of India; Lieut.-Colonel Prain, I. M.S., formerly Superintendent of the Royal Botanical Gardens, Calcutta; and Major A. R. S. Anderson, I.M.S., formerly Senior Medical Officer, Port Blair. · Am~ng the printed works chiefly used ~ay be mentioned those of Mr. E. H. Man, C.I.E., and Mr. M. V. Portman, both formerly officers of the Penal Settlement. As regards the Nicobars, the sections on Geology, Botany, and Zoology are chiefly based on the notes of Dr. Rink of the Danish Ga!athea expedition, of Dr. von lfochstetter of the Austrian Novara expedition, and of the late Dr. Valentine Ball. The other printed works chiefly 11sed are those of Mr. E. H. Man, C.I.E., and the late Mr. de Roepstorff, an officer of the Penal Settlement. In both accounts. official reports have been freely used, while the article on the Penal Settlement at Port Blair is entirely based on them. For the remarks on the languages of the native population Sir Richard Temple is responsible. -
Sharania Anthony
CHAPTER-I INTRODUCTION Andaman and Nicobar Islands is situated in the Bay of Bengal. The Nicobar archipelago in the Bay of Bengal as well as a part of it in the Indian Ocean is the abode of the Nicobarese a scheduled tribe of India.It is separated by the turbulent ten degree channel from the Andamans and spread over 300 kilometres.The Archipelago comprises nineteen islands namely Car Nicobar, Batti Malv, Chowra, Tillangchong, Teressa, Bompoka, Kamorta, Trinkat, Nancowry, Kachal, Meroe, Trak, Treis, Menchal, Pulo Milo, Little Nicobar, Cobra, Kondul, And Great Nicobar. These geographical names, given by the foreigners, are not used by the indigenous people of the islands. The native names of the islands as well as their dimensions are set out in descending order from north to south. Of the nineteen islands only twelve are inhabited while seven remain uninhabited. The inhabitants of these twelve, Teressa, Bompoka, Nancowry, Kamorta, Trinkat and Kachal, Great Nicobar, Little islands are divided into five groups again, depending on language differentiation among the Nicobarese living in different islands. Accordingly, the groups are located in Car Nicobar, Chowra Nicobar, Pulo Milo and Kondul Islands. Broadly the Nicobars can be divided into three groups: 1. Car Nicobar: The Island of Car Nicobar popularly known as Carnic, the headquarters of the Nicobar Islands, is a flat piece of land with an area of 24 sq.kms. It has an airfield which receives a Boeing 737 every Monday from Calcutta, via, Port Blair. In fact, this is the only airlink with the rest of the world. 2. -
Marine Spongin: Naturally Prefabricated 3D Scaffold-Based Biomaterial
marine drugs Review Marine Spongin: Naturally Prefabricated 3D Scaffold-Based Biomaterial Teofil Jesionowski 1,*, Małgorzata Norman 1, Sonia Z˙ ółtowska-Aksamitowska 1, Iaroslav Petrenko 2, Yvonne Joseph 3 ID and Hermann Ehrlich 2,* 1 Institute of Chemical Technology and Engineering, Faculty of Chemical Technology, Poznan University of Technology, Berdychowo 4, 60965 Poznan, Poland; [email protected] (M.N.); [email protected] (S.Z.-A.)˙ 2 Institute of Experimental Physics, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Leipziger str. 23, 09559 Freiberg, Germany; [email protected] 3 Institute of Electronics and Sensor Materials, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Gustav-Zeuner-Str. 3, 09599 Freiberg, Germany; [email protected] * Correspondence: teofi[email protected] (T.J.); [email protected] (H.E.); Tel.: +48-61-665-3720 (T.J.); +49-3731-39-2867 (H.E.) Received: 30 January 2018; Accepted: 6 March 2018; Published: 9 March 2018 Abstract: The biosynthesis, chemistry, structural features and functionality of spongin as a halogenated scleroprotein of keratosan demosponges are still paradigms. This review has the principal goal of providing thorough and comprehensive coverage of spongin as a naturally prefabricated 3D biomaterial with multifaceted applications. The history of spongin’s discovery and use in the form of commercial sponges, including their marine farming strategies, have been analyzed and are discussed here. Physicochemical and material properties of spongin-based scaffolds are also presented. The review also focuses on prospects and trends in applications of spongin for technology, materials science and biomedicine. Special attention is paid to applications in tissue engineering, adsorption of dyes and extreme biomimetics. -
An Annotated Checklist of the Marine Macroinvertebrates of Alaska David T
NOAA Professional Paper NMFS 19 An annotated checklist of the marine macroinvertebrates of Alaska David T. Drumm • Katherine P. Maslenikov Robert Van Syoc • James W. Orr • Robert R. Lauth Duane E. Stevenson • Theodore W. Pietsch November 2016 U.S. Department of Commerce NOAA Professional Penny Pritzker Secretary of Commerce National Oceanic Papers NMFS and Atmospheric Administration Kathryn D. Sullivan Scientific Editor* Administrator Richard Langton National Marine National Marine Fisheries Service Fisheries Service Northeast Fisheries Science Center Maine Field Station Eileen Sobeck 17 Godfrey Drive, Suite 1 Assistant Administrator Orono, Maine 04473 for Fisheries Associate Editor Kathryn Dennis National Marine Fisheries Service Office of Science and Technology Economics and Social Analysis Division 1845 Wasp Blvd., Bldg. 178 Honolulu, Hawaii 96818 Managing Editor Shelley Arenas National Marine Fisheries Service Scientific Publications Office 7600 Sand Point Way NE Seattle, Washington 98115 Editorial Committee Ann C. Matarese National Marine Fisheries Service James W. Orr National Marine Fisheries Service The NOAA Professional Paper NMFS (ISSN 1931-4590) series is pub- lished by the Scientific Publications Of- *Bruce Mundy (PIFSC) was Scientific Editor during the fice, National Marine Fisheries Service, scientific editing and preparation of this report. NOAA, 7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115. The Secretary of Commerce has The NOAA Professional Paper NMFS series carries peer-reviewed, lengthy original determined that the publication of research reports, taxonomic keys, species synopses, flora and fauna studies, and data- this series is necessary in the transac- intensive reports on investigations in fishery science, engineering, and economics. tion of the public business required by law of this Department. -
Embryonic Development of Verongid Demosponges Supports the Independent Acquisition of Spongin Skeletons As an Alternative to the Siliceous Skeleton
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 97, 427–447. With 14 figures Embryonic development of verongid demosponges supports the independent acquisition of spongin skeletons as an alternative to the siliceous skeleton of spongesbij_1202 427..446 MANUEL MALDONADO* Department of Marine Ecology, Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Blanes, Acceso Cala St Francesc 14, Blanes 17300, Girona, Spain Received 26 June 2008; accepted for publication 29 October 2008 Approximately 85% of extant sponges (phylum Porifera) belong to the class Demospongiae, which contains 14 taxonomic orders. In the orders Verongida, Dictyoceratida, and Dendroceratida, jointly referred to as ‘keratose demosponges’, the skeleton does not contain siliceous spicules but only spongin fibres. This shared trait has encouraged placement of these orders together within Demospongiae, although their relationships remain uncer- tain. The present study documents for the first time embryo development in the order Verongida (Aplysina aerophoba), providing some clues for phylogenetic inference. Spawned eggs were enveloped by a follicle of maternal cells. Embryos and larvae were chimeric organisms, the blastocoel of which was filled with symbionts and maternal cells migrated from the follicle. The ultrastructure of epithelial larval cells revealed: (1) a basal apparatus characterized by a peculiar, angling accessory centriole; (2) a pear-shaped nucleus with a protruding beak connected to the rootlets of the basal body; and (3) a distinctive Golgi apparatus encircling the nuclear apex. Developmental and ultrastructural findings support the concept, in congruence with recent molecular studies, that Verongida are more closely related to Halisarcida (askeletal sponges) and Chondrosida (askeletal sponges + sponges with spongin + spiculate sponges) than to the remaining ‘keratose’ orders, making a monophyletic ‘supra-ordinal unit’ equivalent to a subclass (Myxospongia, new subclass). -
Checklist of Sponges (Porifera) of the South China Sea Region
Micronesica 35-36:100-120. 2003 Taxonomic inventory of the sponges (Porifera) of the Mariana Islands MICHELLE KELLY National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA) Ltd Private Bag 109-695 Newmarket, Auckland, New Zealand JOHN HOOPER Queensland Museum P.O. Box 3300 South Brisbane, Queensland 4101, Australia VALERIE PAUL1 AND GUSTAV PAULAY2 Marine Laboratory University of Guam Mangilao, Guam 96923 USA ROB VAN SOEST AND WALLIE DE WEERDT Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics Zoologisch Museum University of Amsterdam P. O. Box 94766, 1090 GT Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract—We review the sponge fauna of the Mariana Islands based on new and existing collections, and literature records. 124 species of siliceous sponges (Class Demospongiae) and 4 species of calcareous sponges (Class Calcarea) have been identified to date, representing 73 genera, 44 families, within 16 orders. Several species are adventive. Approximately 30% (40) of the species encountered are undescribed, but not all are endemics, as the authors know them from other locations. Approximately 30% (38) of the species are known from diverse locations within the Indo West Pacific, but several well-known, widespread species are absent. The actual diversity of sponge fauna of the Marianas is considerably higher, as many species, especially cryptic and encrusting taxa, remain to be collected and studied. Introduction Our knowledge of the sponge fauna of the tropical Pacific has increased substantially in recent years, as a result of enhanced collecting effort driven in 1 current address: Smithsonian Marine Station at Fort Pierce, Fort Pierce FL 34949 2 corresponding author; current address: Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville FL 32611-7800, USA; email: [email protected] Kelly et al.: Sponges of the Marianas 101 part by pharmaceutical interests, and by the attention of a larger number of systematists working on Pacific sponges than ever before.