In News: The Centre for Marine Living Resources and Ecology (CMLRE) has developed the Ocean Eyes mobile application to align with the Indian Ocean Biodiversity Information System (IndOBIS).
IndOBIS
➕ What is IndOBIS: The Indian node of the global Ocean Biodiversity Information System (OBIS), managed by CMLRE under the Ministry of Earth Sciences.
➕ Purpose: IndOBIS collects taxonomically resolved marine species occurrence data from the Indian Ocean.
➕ Data Types: Includes species occurrence, abundance records, and genomic profiles.
About OBIS
➕ What is OBIS: A global repository for marine species data, supporting marine science and conservation.
➕ Origin: Emerged from the Census of Marine Life (2000-2010).
➕ Agencies: Established by the IOC of UNESCO and part of the International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE).
➕ Global Data: Provides species distribution, habitat, and environmental information across oceans.
IndOBIS
➕ What is IndOBIS: The Indian node of the global Ocean Biodiversity Information System (OBIS), managed by CMLRE under the Ministry of Earth Sciences.
➕ Purpose: IndOBIS collects taxonomically resolved marine species occurrence data from the Indian Ocean.
➕ Data Types: Includes species occurrence, abundance records, and genomic profiles.
About OBIS
➕ What is OBIS: A global repository for marine species data, supporting marine science and conservation.
➕ Origin: Emerged from the Census of Marine Life (2000-2010).
➕ Agencies: Established by the IOC of UNESCO and part of the International Oceanographic Data and Information Exchange (IODE).
➕ Global Data: Provides species distribution, habitat, and environmental information across oceans.
👍7❤2😐2
Acid, Base and Salt
1. Acids:
- Sour taste
- Turn blue litmus paper red
- Donate protons (H+)
- Examples: Hydrochloric acid (HCl), Sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
2. Bases:
- Bitter taste
- Turn red litmus paper blue
- Accept protons
- Examples: Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
3. Salts:
- Ionic compounds
- Formed by the reaction between an acid and a base
- Examples: Sodium chloride (NaCl), Calcium carbonate (CaCO3)
4. Neutralization Reaction:
- Acid + Base → Water + Salt
- pH of 7 is neutral
5. pH Scale:
- Measures acidity or basicity
- pH < 7 is acidic, pH > 7 is basic
6. Common Applications:
- Acids used in food preservation, cleaning agents
- Bases used in household cleaning products, medicine
- Salts used in soap, glass production
7. Environmental Impact:
- Acid rain from sulfur and nitrogen oxides
1. Acids:
- Sour taste
- Turn blue litmus paper red
- Donate protons (H+)
- Examples: Hydrochloric acid (HCl), Sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
2. Bases:
- Bitter taste
- Turn red litmus paper blue
- Accept protons
- Examples: Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
3. Salts:
- Ionic compounds
- Formed by the reaction between an acid and a base
- Examples: Sodium chloride (NaCl), Calcium carbonate (CaCO3)
4. Neutralization Reaction:
- Acid + Base → Water + Salt
- pH of 7 is neutral
5. pH Scale:
- Measures acidity or basicity
- pH < 7 is acidic, pH > 7 is basic
6. Common Applications:
- Acids used in food preservation, cleaning agents
- Bases used in household cleaning products, medicine
- Salts used in soap, glass production
7. Environmental Impact:
- Acid rain from sulfur and nitrogen oxides
👍9❤1
Digital Agriculture Mission
➕ Launch: Approved by the Union Cabinet in September 2023, with a budget of Rs 2,817 crore.
➕Purpose: To create Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) in the agriculture sector, similar to the government's e-governance initiatives like Aadhaar and UPI.
➕ Key Components:
- AgriStack: A farmer-centric DPI consisting of:
- Farmers’ Registry: Digital identities (Farmer ID) linked to land records, crops sown, and benefits availed.
- Crop Sown Registry: Digital Crop Surveys for recording crops planted by farmers.
- Geo-Referenced Village Maps: Linking geographic information to land records.
- Krishi Decision Support System (DSS): A geospatial system unifying data on crops, soil, weather, and water resources for better decision-making and crop insurance claims.
- Soil Profile Maps: Detailed soil maps (1:10,000 scale) covering 142 million hectares of agricultural land.
➕ Launch: Approved by the Union Cabinet in September 2023, with a budget of Rs 2,817 crore.
➕Purpose: To create Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) in the agriculture sector, similar to the government's e-governance initiatives like Aadhaar and UPI.
➕ Key Components:
- AgriStack: A farmer-centric DPI consisting of:
- Farmers’ Registry: Digital identities (Farmer ID) linked to land records, crops sown, and benefits availed.
- Crop Sown Registry: Digital Crop Surveys for recording crops planted by farmers.
- Geo-Referenced Village Maps: Linking geographic information to land records.
- Krishi Decision Support System (DSS): A geospatial system unifying data on crops, soil, weather, and water resources for better decision-making and crop insurance claims.
- Soil Profile Maps: Detailed soil maps (1:10,000 scale) covering 142 million hectares of agricultural land.
👍9❤1
☘️ Exercise VINBAX - India & Vietnam
☘️ Exercise Vajra prahar - India & USA
☘️ Exercise Mitra Shakti - India & Srilanka
☘️ Exercise Kazind - India & Kazakhstan
☘️ Exercise Sagar kavach - Indian coastal security exercise
☘️ Exercise Ekatha - India & Maldives
☘️ Exercise Ekuverin - India & Maldives
☘️ Exercise Nomadic elephant - India & Mongolia
☘️ Harimua Shakti - India & Malaysia
☘️ Exercise Vajra prahar - India & USA
☘️ Exercise Mitra Shakti - India & Srilanka
☘️ Exercise Kazind - India & Kazakhstan
☘️ Exercise Sagar kavach - Indian coastal security exercise
☘️ Exercise Ekatha - India & Maldives
☘️ Exercise Ekuverin - India & Maldives
☘️ Exercise Nomadic elephant - India & Mongolia
☘️ Harimua Shakti - India & Malaysia
👍11❤1
☘️ Kashi Vishwanath temple - Varanasi
☘️ Somnath temple - Gujarat
☘️ Ramanatha Swami temple - Rameswaram, Tamilnadu
☘️ Nataraja Temple - Tamilnadu
☘️ Sabarimala Temple - Kerala
☘️ Sanchi Stupa - Madhyapradesh
☘️ Somnath temple - Gujarat
☘️ Ramanatha Swami temple - Rameswaram, Tamilnadu
☘️ Nataraja Temple - Tamilnadu
☘️ Sabarimala Temple - Kerala
☘️ Sanchi Stupa - Madhyapradesh
👍5❤1
☘️ Phad Painting 🎨🖌- Rajasthan
☘️ Thangka Painting 🖌- Sikkim/Ladakh
☘️ Miniature Painting 🖌- Himachal Pradesh
☘️ Gond art🎭 - Madhyapradesh
☘️ Tanjore Painting 🖌- Tamilnadu
☘️ Kalamkari art🎭 - Andhrapradesh
☘️ Alpona art🎭 - West Bengal
☘️ Cheriyal Painting 🖌- Telangana
☘️ Pichhwai Painting 🖌- Rajasthan
☘️ Lanjia Saura - Odisha
☘️ Pattachitra painting 🖌- West Bengal
☘️ Bani Thani Painting 🖌- Rajasthan
☘️ Warli painting 🖌- Maharashtra
☘️ Pithora art🎭 - Gujarat
☘️ Aipan art 🎭 - Uttarakhand
☘️ Kerala murals - Kerala
☘️ Alpana art 🎭 - Tripura
☘️Pattachitra painting - Odisha & West Bengal
☘️ Warli painting - Maharashtra
☘️ Kalamkari art form - Andhrapradesh
☘️ Madhubani painting - Bihar
☘️ Chikankari art form - Lucknow,UP
☘️ Basholi painting - J&K
☘️ Gond painting - MP
☘️ Thangka Painting 🖌- Sikkim/Ladakh
☘️ Miniature Painting 🖌- Himachal Pradesh
☘️ Gond art🎭 - Madhyapradesh
☘️ Tanjore Painting 🖌- Tamilnadu
☘️ Kalamkari art🎭 - Andhrapradesh
☘️ Alpona art🎭 - West Bengal
☘️ Cheriyal Painting 🖌- Telangana
☘️ Pichhwai Painting 🖌- Rajasthan
☘️ Lanjia Saura - Odisha
☘️ Pattachitra painting 🖌- West Bengal
☘️ Bani Thani Painting 🖌- Rajasthan
☘️ Warli painting 🖌- Maharashtra
☘️ Pithora art🎭 - Gujarat
☘️ Aipan art 🎭 - Uttarakhand
☘️ Kerala murals - Kerala
☘️ Alpana art 🎭 - Tripura
☘️Pattachitra painting - Odisha & West Bengal
☘️ Warli painting - Maharashtra
☘️ Kalamkari art form - Andhrapradesh
☘️ Madhubani painting - Bihar
☘️ Chikankari art form - Lucknow,UP
☘️ Basholi painting - J&K
☘️ Gond painting - MP
👍6❤1
☘️ Laki laki volcano🌋 - Indonesia
☘️ Ibu volcano 🌋- Indonesia
☘️ Etna volcano 🌋 - Italy
☘️ Starmboli volcano 🌋 - Italy
☘️ Barren Volcano 🌋 - Andaman & Nicobar, India's only active volcano
☘️ Ibu volcano 🌋- Indonesia
☘️ Etna volcano 🌋 - Italy
☘️ Starmboli volcano 🌋 - Italy
☘️ Barren Volcano 🌋 - Andaman & Nicobar, India's only active volcano
👍7❤1
🍀 COP 27 - Egypt - 2022
☘️ COP 28 - UAE - 2023
☘️ COP 29 - Baku, Azerbaijan - 2024
☘️ COP 30 - Brazil - 2025
☘️ COP 28 - UAE - 2023
☘️ COP 29 - Baku, Azerbaijan - 2024
☘️ COP 30 - Brazil - 2025
👍9😐2❤1
☘️ Kokborok language - Tripura
☘️ Bodo language - Assam
☘️ Konkani language - Goa
☘️ Khadi boli language - UP/Bihar/Haryana
☘️ Bodo language - Assam
☘️ Konkani language - Goa
☘️ Khadi boli language - UP/Bihar/Haryana
👍7❤1
Hollongapar Gibbon Wildlife Sanctuary
➕ In News:
● Assam Govt recommended forest clearance for Vedanta’s oil and gas exploration project in the eco-sensitive zone of the Hollongapar Gibbon Wildlife Sanctuary
➕ About Hollongapar Gibbon Sanctuary:
● Location: Jorhat, Assam
● Established: 1997
● Flora:
- Upper canopy: hollong trees
- Middle canopy: nahar trees
● Fauna:
Home to India’s only ape, the hoolock gibbons and Northeastern India’s only nocturnal primate, Bengal slow loris.
➕Hoolock Gibbon
● Population: ~ 12,000,Northeast India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Southern China.
● Gibbon Species in India:
Two distinct species in India’s northeast:
- Eastern Hoolock Gibbon (Hoolock leuconedys)
- Western Hoolock Gibbon (Hoolock hoolock).
● Conservation Status:
IUCN Red List:
- Western Hoolock Gibbon: Endangered
- Eastern Hoolock Gibbon: Vulnerable
Listed: Schedule 1 of the Indian (Wildlife) Protection Act 1972 (Both Species)
➕ In News:
● Assam Govt recommended forest clearance for Vedanta’s oil and gas exploration project in the eco-sensitive zone of the Hollongapar Gibbon Wildlife Sanctuary
➕ About Hollongapar Gibbon Sanctuary:
● Location: Jorhat, Assam
● Established: 1997
● Flora:
- Upper canopy: hollong trees
- Middle canopy: nahar trees
● Fauna:
Home to India’s only ape, the hoolock gibbons and Northeastern India’s only nocturnal primate, Bengal slow loris.
➕Hoolock Gibbon
● Population: ~ 12,000,Northeast India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, and Southern China.
● Gibbon Species in India:
Two distinct species in India’s northeast:
- Eastern Hoolock Gibbon (Hoolock leuconedys)
- Western Hoolock Gibbon (Hoolock hoolock).
● Conservation Status:
IUCN Red List:
- Western Hoolock Gibbon: Endangered
- Eastern Hoolock Gibbon: Vulnerable
Listed: Schedule 1 of the Indian (Wildlife) Protection Act 1972 (Both Species)
👍4❤1
International Court of Justice (ICJ)
➕ Type: Principal judicial organ of the UN.
➕ Purpose: Resolves legal disputes between states and provides advisory opinions.
➕ Headquarters: Peace Palace, The Hague, Netherlands.
➕ Established: 1945, operational since 1946.
➕ Composition:
- Judges: 15 judges, elected for nine-year terms.
- Regional Representation: 3 from Africa, 2 from Latin America/Caribbean, 3 from Asia, 5 from Western Europe/others, 2 from Eastern Europe.
- President: Elected every three years from among the judges.
➕ Functions:
- Dispute Resolution: Includes territorial, maritime, diplomatic, and treaty issues.
- Advisory Opinions: For UN bodies.
➕ Indian Judges at ICJ:
- Dalveer Bhandari: Since 2012
- R.S. Pathak: 1989-1991
- Nagendra Singh: 1973-1988
- Sir Benegal Rau: 1952-1953
➕ Type: Principal judicial organ of the UN.
➕ Purpose: Resolves legal disputes between states and provides advisory opinions.
➕ Headquarters: Peace Palace, The Hague, Netherlands.
➕ Established: 1945, operational since 1946.
➕ Composition:
- Judges: 15 judges, elected for nine-year terms.
- Regional Representation: 3 from Africa, 2 from Latin America/Caribbean, 3 from Asia, 5 from Western Europe/others, 2 from Eastern Europe.
- President: Elected every three years from among the judges.
➕ Functions:
- Dispute Resolution: Includes territorial, maritime, diplomatic, and treaty issues.
- Advisory Opinions: For UN bodies.
➕ Indian Judges at ICJ:
- Dalveer Bhandari: Since 2012
- R.S. Pathak: 1989-1991
- Nagendra Singh: 1973-1988
- Sir Benegal Rau: 1952-1953
👍8❤1