Vitamin D
A recent report highlights a deepening Vitamin D deficiency crisis in India, with one in five Indians affected.
- Factors such as urban lifestyles, high air pollution, indoor work culture etc. are contributing to reduced synthesis of Vitamin D in body.
About Vitamin D
- Vitamin D, also known as calciferol, is a fat-soluble vitamin that plays a crucial role in maintaining health.
- It is naturally present in a limited number of foods, can be added to others, and is available as a dietary supplement.
- Sources of Vitamin D
- Natural: The body makes Vitamin D naturally from sunlight
- Foods: Oily fish (salmon, sardines, herring, mackerel),Red meat and liver (avoid liver if pregnant),Egg yolks etc.
- Importance: plays a vital role in regulating calcium and phosphate levels in the body, essential for keeping bones, teeth, and muscles healthy.
- Deficiency: Causes bone density loss, leading to osteoporosis and fractures. In children, it can result in rickets, a condition that softens and weakens bones.
- Tags :
- Nutrient Deficiency
- Vitamin D
- Ricket
Blue Washing
To counter ‘greenwashing’ allegations against it, Waste to energy (WTE) industry seems to have adapted ‘bluewashing’.
About Blue Washing
- It is a deceptive marketing tactic that overstates a company's commitment to responsible and sustainable social and ethical business practices.
- Other related terms:
- Greenwashing:Making false or misleading claims about a company’s environmental efforts to appear eco-friendly.
- Pinkwashing: Using LGBTQ+ rights as a marketing tool while ignoring or failing to improve conditions for LGBTQ+ employees.
- Tags :
- Greenwashing
- Bluewashing
- Pinkwashing
Diatom
Diatoms like Pseudo-nitzschia produce domoic acid, a marine toxin that enters the food chain and causes aggressive behavior in sea lions.
About Diatoms
- Diatoms are photosynthetic algae with silica-based shells, found in nearly all aquatic and moist environments from oceans and rivers to soil.
- Significance
- Photosynthesis: Use chlorophyll a and c to convert sunlight into energy.
- Oxygen Production: Produce 20-25% of Earth’s oxygen.
- Carbon Fixation: Remove CO₂, release O₂.
- Food Web Base: Source of long-chain fatty acids—feed zooplankton, insects, fish, whales.
- Water Quality Indicators: Sensitive to pH, salinity, nutrients, sediment, and human impact
- Tags :
- Diatom
- Algae
PM POSHAN (POshan SHAkti Nirman) Scheme
The material cost for providing midday meals to schoolchildren under the PM-POSHAN scheme has been enhanced by 9.5%.
About PM-POSHAN
- Ministry: Implemented by Ministry of Education.
- Objective: To address hunger and education by improving nutritional status of eligible children.
- It is a centrally sponsored scheme under which hot cooked meals are served to over eleven crore students studying in Balvatika and classes 1 to 8 in government and government-aided schools.
- Tenure: 2021-22 to 2025-26.
- Bal Vatika: There is provision of hot cooked meals to children of pre-schools or (before class I).
- Tithi Bhojan: It is a community participation programme in which people provide special food to children on special occasions/festivals.
- Special provision is made for providing supplementary nutrition items to children in aspirational districts and districts with high prevalence of Anemia.
- Tags :
- Nutrition
- PM Poshan
- Midday Meal Scheme
Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry
CERN’s Large Hadron Collider beauty (LHCb) experiment has confirmed Charge-Parity (CP) violation in baryons - particles that make up atomic nuclei, including protons and neutrons.
- Particles and anti-particles are like perfect mirror images of one another but some particles disobey this symmetry in a phenomenon known as CP violation.
- Matter and antimatter particles (same mass as matter but opposite electric charge) are always produced as a pair.
- If they come in contact, they annihilate one another, leaving behind pure energy.
- After the Big Bang, a tiny portion of matter survived, creating all visible matter in today’s universe.
- Tags :
- Matter
- Antimatter
- Particles
Arctic Biome
According to a study, Arctic Tundra Biome is losing its capacity to absorb carbon from the atmosphere due to wildfires around the globe.
About Arctic Tundra Biome
- Location: North of the Arctic Circle (66° 33’N) and includes areas of Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Russia.
- Features:
- Climate: Extremely cold temperatures (with mean temperatures below 0°C for six to 10 months), low amounts of precipitation, making it similar to desert.
- Permafrost is a defining characteristic of the tundra biome.
- Vegetation: With no deep root systems, flora includes mosses, lichens, dwarf shrubs, grasses, and sedges.
- Wildlife: Lemmings, Arctic Wolves, Polar Bears, Falcons, etc.
- Tags :
- Carbon Sequestration
- Arctic Biome
- Tundra
Tsunami Zones
As per INCOIS, all Indian coastal Union Territories and states are prone to tsunamis emanating from the two major subduction zones: Andaman-Nicobar-Sumatra Island Arc and Makran Subduction Zone.
About Andaman-Nicobar-Sumatra Island Arc
- It is a 5,000 km long chain of islands and mountains from Myanmar in the north to Indonesian archipelago in the south.
- It is a major subduction zone, where the Indian plate is subducting beneath the Eurasian plate.
About Makran Subduction Zone
- It is a tectonic plate boundary where the Arabian Sea Plate is subducting beneath the Eurasian Plate, primarily in southeastern Iran and southwestern Pakistan.
- Tags :
- Subduction Zones
- Tsunami
- Plate Tectonics
Carbon Rights
A report by Rights and Resources Initiative provided a snapshot of carbon rights.
About Carbon Rights
- Currently, there is no internationally accepted definition of carbon rights.
- Some organizations define carbon rights as legal claim or entitlement to the benefits generated by activities that sequester or remove carbon from the atmosphere.
- The term carbon rights comprises two fundamental concepts:
- Property rights to sequester and store carbon, contained in land, trees, soil, etc. and
- The right to benefits that arise from the transfer of these property rights (i.e. through emissions trading schemes).
- Tags :
- Carbon Sequestration
- Carbon Rights