Latest News
Swimming mouse among 27 new species discovered in Peru
An amphibious mouse with webbed feet and a blob-headed fish are among 27 new species scientists have discovered in Peru.
They were found in an expedition to Alto Mayo – which includes the Amazon rainforest – by scientists from the non-profit organisation Conservation International and members of local indigenous groups.
Up to 48 other new species may also have been found, although further study will be needed to determine whether they are new, Conservation International says.
“Discovering so many new species of mammals and vertebrates is really incredible, especially in such a human-influenced landscape,” said Trond Larsen, senior director at Conservation International
Alto Mayo is a protected area in northern Peru with multiple ecosystems and Indigenous territories.
It has a relatively high population density, putting pressure on environmentalism through deforestation and agricultural expansion, Conservation International said.
Yulisa Tuwi, an Awajún woman who assisted with the research, said the report “allows the Awajún to protect our culture, natural resources and our territory”, as it gives them a better understanding of the ecosystems.
“The Awajún have extensive traditional knowledge about the forests, animals and plants they live side-by-side with,” Mr Larsen said.
The expedition also found a new species of dwarf squirrel. eight types of fish, three amphibians and 10 types of butterfly.

This “blob-headed” fish is a new discovery to science, but the Indigenous Awajún people who helped with the expedition were already aware of its existence.
The fish scientists were particularly shocked by its enlarged head – something they had never seen before.Ronald Diaz/ Conservation International
A new species of dwarf squirrel will also belong to a new genus, giving it a higher level of distinction
This dwarf squirrel measures just 14cm (5.5in), half the length of an average grey squirrel in the UK, which ranges from 24 to 29cm, according to the UK Squirrel Accord.
“It fits so easily in the palm of your hand. Adorable and beautiful chestnut-brown colour, very fast,” Larsen said. “It jumps quickly and hides in the trees.”

Scientists discovered a new species of spiny mouse – named after the especially stiff guard hairs found on their coats, which function similar to the spines of a hedgehog.
They also found a new “amphibious mouse”, which has partially webbed feet and eats aquatic insects.
It belongs to a group of semi-aquatic rodents considered to be among the rarest in the world, with the few species known to exist only spotted a handful of times by scientists.



(BBC)
Foreign News
Three dead in suspected virus outbreak on Atlantic cruise ship
Three people have died and a UK national is seriously ill in hospital after a suspected hantavirus outbreak on a small cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean.
The operator of the MV Hondius ship, tour company Oceanwide Expeditions, said a Dutch husband and wife, as well as a German national, had died but the cause has not yet been established.
However, the Dutch company said hantavirus has been confirmed in the case of the 69-year-old UK national who is in intensive care in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Hantavirus is usually passed to humans from rodents via their faeces, saliva or urine. It can cause severe respiratory illness. Rarely, it can be transmitted between people.
The MV Hondius vessel is currently off the coast of Cape Verde and has 149 people onboard.
Oceanwide Expeditions said there were also two crew members on board “with acute respiratory symptoms, one mild and one severe”.
They were of British and Dutch nationality and both required urgent medical care, it said. It said it had not been established that hantavirus had been confirmed in the pair. And it added that no other persons with symptoms had been identified.
Negotiations are in progress with local authorities following what Oceanwide Expeditions described as “a serious medical situation”.
Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, South Africa’s minister of health, said of the British patient that he was critical and had been admitted to a private facility.
“He’s being taken care of. As you know, hantavirus, like all viruses, don’t have any specific treatment, so they are giving symptomatic treatment and support as much as they could.”
He said health workers and anyone who had contact with the patient would now be traced and tested.
Outlining a timeline, the company said a passenger had become unwell while onboard and died on 11 April.
His cause of death could not be determined, and his body was taken off the ship after it docked at St Helena on 24 April.
The passenger’s wife also disembarked on St Helena and the firm said it was told she had become unwell during the return journey and later died.
“At this time, it has not been confirmed that these two deaths are connected to the current medical situation on board,” it added.
On 27 April, the firm said, another passenger – the British national – became seriously ill and was “medically evacuated” to South Africa.
The 69-year-old remains in a critical but stable condition in Johannesburg after it was confirmed a variant of hantavirus had been identified.
The firm added that on Saturday, a third passenger onboard MV Hondius died.
The cause of death has not been established, Oceanwide Expeditions said. It confirmed the passenger was German.
Oceanwide Expeditions said the cause of the deaths were being investigated.
“The disembarkation of passengers, medical evacuation and medical screening require permission from, and co-ordination with, the local health authorities,” it said. “Local health authorities have visited the vessel and assessed the situation.
“The medical transfer of the two ill persons on board has not yet taken place.”
It added that the option of sailing on to Las Palmas or Tenerife was being considered “to be the gateway for disembarkation, where further medical screening and handling could take place”.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said it was “acting with urgency” to support the MV Hondius, and thanked South African authorities for taking care of the British patient.
WHO’s regional director for Europe, Dr Hans Henri P Kluge, said: “I am in close contact with our teams to ensure a co-ordinated, science-based response.
“Hantavirus infections are uncommon and usually linked to exposure to infected rodents.
“While severe in some cases, it is not easily transmitted between people. The risk to the wider public remains low. There is no need for panic or travel restrictions.”
According to the South African government, MV Hondius departed from Ushuaia in southern Argentina about three weeks ago, before it completed its journey to Cape Verde, where it is anchored outside the capital, Praia.
It is described as a 107.6m (353ft) polar cruise ship, with space for 170 passengers in 80 cabins, along with 57 crew members, 13 guides and one doctor.
One passenger onboard the MV Hondius, who asked to remain anonymous, told the BBC: “The latest word is that a plane is on its way and once it gets here three people will be evacuated from the ship and flown straight to Europe.
“Then the rest of us will almost certainly sail to the Canary Islands.
“The Cape Verde authorities clearly want nothing to do with us. This is what we’re hearing from the captain and staff. From what I can see the mood (on the ship) is pretty good.
“Only one person has been tested (the one now in South Africa) and he tested positive for hantavirus. So, we don’t actually know yet if the other cases are that or something unrelated.
“If they are all hantavirus then the transmission is a bit mysterious. We’ve been informed that there are no rodents on board, and person-to-person transmission is difficult/rare.
“Hopefully the other patients on board will be tested soon and then we’ll know better what’s going on.”
President of the Cape Verdean Public Health Institute, Maria Da Luz, said passengers would not be disembarking in Cape Verde in order to protect the local population, Cape Verde’s media outlet A Nacao reports.
Oceanwide Expeditions said strict precautionary measures were in process on board, including isolation measures, hygiene protocols and medical monitoring.
“All passengers have been informed and are being supported,” it said.
“Oceanwide Expeditions is in close contact with those directly involved and their families, and is providing support where possible.”
Microbiologist Siouxsie Wiles told the BBC the time between people being exposed to hantavirus and showing symptoms could be anywhere from one to eight weeks.
“With this incubation period are we going to see more people coming down with the disease in the next days and weeks?”
The UK Foreign Office told the BBC it was monitoring reports, and ready to support British nationals.
Hantavirus was in the headlines last year after the wife of Oscar-winning actor Gene Hackman died from a respiratory illness linked to hantavirus in March 2025.
[BBC]
Latest News
US strikes seven Iranian boats, Trump says, as tensions spike in Strait of Hormuz
President Donald Trump says the US struck seven Iranian “fast boats” after vowing to help stranded vessels out of the Strait of Hormuz.
US Central Command (Centcom) says it has used helicopters to destroy Iranian small boats. “Earlier today, Sea Hawk and U.S. Army AH-64 Apache helicopters were used to eliminate Iranian small boats threatening commercial shipping”, Centcom writes in a social media update.
Iran’s military said it fired warning shots at American warships. The US Central Command denies a claim in Iranian state media that Iranian missiles hit a US destroyer.
Meanwhile, the US says Navy destroyers and US-flagged merchant ships have sailed through the waterway, with Iran claiming this is “entirely false”.
Shipping company Maersk has told the BBC that one of its US-flagged commercial vessels has successfully exited the Strait of Hormuz under US military protection.
In a statement, Maersk says the transit was “completed without incident, and all crew members are safe and unharmed”.
The ‘Alliance Fairfax’, it says, had been unable to leave the Gulf since February 2026, when conflict between Iran and the US began. Maersk says it was contacted by the US military and offered support. After the “development of a comprehensive security plan”, the vessel was cleared to leave, according to the statement.
The shipping company says the ship then exited the Gulf “accompanied by US military assets” and thanks them for their “professionalism and effective coordination” in making the operation possible.
Elsewhere, the UAE says it is defending itself against “missile and drone attacks originating from Iran” – Tehran has yet to comment
[BBC]
Latest News
Rohit and Rickelton power Mumbai Indians to crucial win over rock-bottom Lucknow Super Giants
There were smiles at last for Mumbai Imdians (MI) on a night that hadn’t looked promising when Nicholas Pooran’s fireworks – 63 off 21 – threatened to run them down.
From looking set to concede 250, MI limited the damage, conceding just one boundary in the last three overs – to restrict Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) to 228. Then, Ryan Rickelton and the returning Rohit Sharma – fit again after five games on the sidelines due to a hamstring injury – turned in an exhilarating batting display to help MI raze their target down in just 18.4 overs.
This was the highest successful chase at the Wankhede Stadium, bettering the 220 MI had chased down against Kolkata Knight Riders to win their season-opener.
Rickelton, who struck 123 not out in his previous innings at the Wankhede last week against Sunrisers Hyderabad, made 83 off 32 in a 143-run opening stand. Rohit, who raised his half-century in 27 balls, made 84 off 44. By the time he was out mistiming an attempted pick-up shot over short fine leg, MI’s equation had come down to 52 off 36.
In the end, MI overturned a sequence of three straight losses; LSG, meanwhile, slumped to their sixth straight loss, which left them firmly rooted to the bottom of the points table.
He got off the mark with a streaky slash over the leaping slip fielder. Then, he was beaten off consecutive Mohsin Khan deliveries in the fourth over. It didn’t get any easier when he just about managed to squeeze out a pinpoint yorker from Prince Yadav in an excellent fifth over that went for just six. And then the floodgates opened.
A frazzled Avesh Khan disappeared for 4, 4, 6, 6 in a poor first over as MI ended the powerplay 71 for 0. By then, Rohit was imperiously flicking full-tosses, backing away and dispatching length balls over cover and slicing them wide of point.
M Siddharth, LSG’s impact sub, then came under Rohit’s wheel – feeding him deliveries into his swinging arc. He launched one of these over long-on to bring up his half-century off 27 balls. The landmark was merely incidental because, by now, Rohit was in his zone.
Even Mohammed Shami wasn’t spared; at one point he was left staring at the pitch, wondering what he’d done wrong. A well-executed bumper was mercilessly pulled to the backward square leg boundary. And then he went full and straight and ended up bowling a low full toss – almost yorker-length – that was shovelled for a leg-side six. Rohit’s knock ended when he swept Siddharth straight to short fine leg in the 14th over.
Rickelton’s first six came in the second over, a no-fuss, no-look pick-up six over square leg, and the big hits just kept coming. He lofted Shami through the line over long-off, and put away full-tosses from Avesh and Siddharth, depositing them behind square on the leg side. Rickelton charged to his half-century off just 22 balls, with 40 of those runs coming in boundaries.
Rickelton took a particular liking to Siddharth, who kept floating them up in trying to swerve his arm ball away from his hitting arc. His second over, the ninth of the innings, got picked away for 23. Rickelton’s party ended a couple of overs later when he fell to Mohsin after having hit him for two sixes in the same over. An attempt to go over cover was hit flat to the man at the edge of the ring. By then, the openers had added 143.
That this was a big chase was primarily down to Pooran. Promoted to No. 3, from where he had scored a majority of his 524 runs last season, he hit three sixes off Will Jacks in the fifth over – all on the leg side – to kickstart his innings.
The ferocity of his ball-striking made you wonder if this was the same batter who had struggled for any kind of batting rhythm through this season – coming into this game, his strike rate of 81.18 was the lowest among all batters who had faced at least 50 balls this season.
He had hit four sixes combined in eight games. He hit twice as many on Monday alone, in an incredible exhibition of clean, fearless hitting. He raised his fifty off 16 balls – with a strike over long-off off Deepak Chahar – and looked good for plenty more until a Corbin Bosch bouncer got big on him. One brought two as Bosch also had the set Mitch Marsh pull one straight to deep midwicket.
Reprieved even before he was off the mark – an inside-edge didn’t carry to Rickelton – Rishabh Pant couldn’t capitalise as he was soon dismissed for 15. Then, debutant Akshat Raghuwanshi – who replaced Mukul Choudhary in LSG’s XI – walloped his first ball for six before being dismissed by Raghu Sharma for his first IPL wicket.
At one point, LSG were staring at the possibility of having to summon a batter as their Impact Player because they kept losing wickets. Himmat Singh was reprieved on 2 when Jasprit Bumrah got him to edge to the keeper off a no-ball. He went on to finish unbeaten on 40 off 31, and Aiden Markram, pushed back to No. 5, on 31 off 25.
Yet, with the last five overs going for just 53, there was a sense LSG left a few runs out there. As it turned out, it’s possible even those extra runs may have not been enough against a rampant MI line-up.
Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians 229 for 4 in 18.4 overs (Ryan Rickelton 83, Rohit Sharma 84, Tilak Varma 11, Suryakumar Yadav 12, Naman Dhir 23*, Will Jacks 10*; Mohammed Shami 1-53, Moshin Khan 1-47, Manimaran Siddharth 2-47) beat Lucknow Super Giants 228 for 5 in 20 overs (Mitchell Marsh 44, Josh Inglis 13, Nicholas Pooran 63, Rishabh Pant 15, Aiden Markram 31*, Akshat Raguwanshi 11, Himmat Singh 40*; AM Ghazanfar 1-50, Will Jacks 1-34, Corbin Bosch 2-20, Bosch 2-20, Raghu Sharma 1-36) by six wickets
[Cricinfo]
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