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Friday, October 23, 2020

Rainfall lashes Bengaluru, leads to waterlogging in several areas

Weather
Visuals showed bikes being swept away and inundation of a few roads particularly in southern Bengaluru and in Rajarajeshwari Nagar.
Bengaluru_Rain
Heavy rainfall lashed parts of Bengaluru on Friday disrupting traffic and causing water-logging in commercial and residential areas. Visuals showed bikes being swept away and inundation of a few roads particularly in southern Bengaluru and in Rajarajeshwari Nagar. According to the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC), over 50 mm rainfall was measured in several areas in southern Bengaluru including Lakkasandra (54 mm) Pattabhiramangara (50.5 mm), Koramangala (42 mm), VV Puram (71 mm), Vidyapeeta (94.5 mm) Basavanagudi (80 mm). Inundation was reported in Basavanagudi, Jayanagar and Koramangala after the spell of rain in the evening. Elsewhere, heavy rainfall was also reported in Rajarajeshwarinagar (101 mm) and Konanakunte (82.5 mm). Visuals from Hosakerehalli and Lalbagh Gate also showed heavy water-logging and even caused few vehicles to float. Both the KSNDMC and the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) forecast rains in Bengaluru this weekend. “We expect the rains to continue tomorrow and over the weekend especially in the evenings,” Sunil Gavaskar, a meteorologist with KSNDMC said. Earlier it was forecast that rainfall will continue in the areas under the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), Bengaluru’s civic body, until Monday. The IMD earlier stated that the rainfall activity was due to a depression over northwest Bay of Bengal off the Odisha coast which was moving north-east with a speed of 24 km/h. The Met Department also stated that the southwest monsoon was active in coastal and south interior Karnataka. The rainfall in Bengaluru comes at the end of a week marked by recurring rainfall especially in the coastal districts of Udupi, Dakshina Kannada and Uttara Kannada in the state. At the same time, four districts in northern Karnataka were left reeling under floods and flood-like condition after a heavy spell of rainfall lashed the state.


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Bengaluru doctor who did COVID-19 patient's autopsy says lungs were leathery

Coronavirus
Dr Dinesh Rao said he took up the autopsy to understand how the disease affects the human body.
A picture of Dr Dinesh Rao from Bengaluru in a blue suit, a book shelf behind him
The first autopsy conducted on a victim of coronavirus in Bengaluru, has revealed that the virus is active even 18 hours after death. The clinical autopsy was done after a 62-year-old patient in Bengaluru died after two weeks of treatment.  Forensic expert Dinesh Rao, who heads the Department of Forensic Medicine in Oxford Medical College and Research Institute, took the virus samples from the deceased’s nose, throat and mouth, lung surface, respiratory passages, face and neck. An RT-PCR test, which is the gold standard for COVID-19 testing, showed that the nose and throat samples tested positive for the novel coronavirus. Dr Rao said he took up the autopsy to understand how the disease affects the human body and to evaluate if there was a need to update the treatment protocol of patients. He said in the case of the 62-year-old patient, the lungs were majorly affected by bacterial infections. With the effect of the virus, Dr Rao said the patient’s lungs had turned leathery and gained in weight significantly. While lungs normally weigh around 700 grams, for the victim it weighed more than 2.1 kg and had turned into a leather ball which otherwise should be like a rubber balloon.  Dr Rao added that the deceased’s lungs had blood clots and the air sacs were damaged, which meant that the patient needed thrombolytic therapy before being put on a ventilator. He said that the lungs turning inconsistent and leathery was contrary to the usual effects of acute respiratory distress. “As a forensic expert, I have done more than 60,000 autopsies and I have seen shock lung features in around 300-400 cases. The damages in the areolar tissues in those cases and those in corona patients are very different. This is one of the most important findings. Even with this damage, the lung size has not increased in size but it has become hard. Other infections in the lungs will cause the lungs to increase in size but not hard,” Dr Rao told TNM. He added that there were many inflammatory changes in the heart. “The whole respiratory passage was also inflamed. Other than that the kidney had reduced in size, so there needs to be a study on this. The presence of the virus has to be done in a periodic analysis and that will also give us better understanding of how to handle the dead bodies,” he said. Dr Rao believes that such autopsies and greater research is needed to understand how the disease affects the human body and accordingly treatment protocols should be modified. “I can only say that merely giving antiviral drugs or connecting patients with respiratory distress to ventilator usage is of no use. We should always do CT scan and pinpoint where exactly is the thrombolysis and if there are plenty in number, then better to give thrombolytic drugs along with oxygen,” he said. The autopsy was done with the consent of the patient's family and all of his kin were in home isolation at that time. However, others from this department were skeptical to be a part of it. “We have a very small window period of getting permission from the family and setting up the facility. I had hardly 2-3 hours. The staff who were available in my department, they expressed fear and we can't really involve other specialists. It is also not possible to set up a panel of experts from different institutes in such a short period of time. The reason for fear is understandable,” he said. Dr Rao says that his findings are a bit different from studies in Italy and the US and wants to do more autopsies before coming to conclusions. “There they observed hyaline changes in the lungs but we did not observe that there. (Hyaline change is any change that results in a glassy, pink homogenous staining of the tissue) What we say was a lot of inflammatory cells in the interstitial space, the alveolar was raptured and there were small clots in the blood vessels of the lungs which led to destruction of the lung tissue. We call his coagulative necrosis,” he says. He adds that though results of one autopy cannot be deemed as conclusive evidence, the post-mortem has opened a big pandora’s box. “Any new disease can be understood better only through such post mortems. This is the only way to derive clinical modalities to treat patients. This has been done with all other diseases in the world,” he says. Dr Rao said that he wants to publish his findings in a peer-reviewed medical journal.  


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IMD predicts thunderstorms in Bengaluru, nine other Karnataka districts

Weather
The predicted rain is a result of a depression crossing over the Bay of Bengal, says the Indian Meteorological Department.
More rains expected in Bengaluru and other districts
On Friday afternoon, the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) issued a ‘thunderstorm with lightning’ alert for Bengaluru and nine other districts in Karnataka. The Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC), too, had predicted widespread light to moderate rains. Heavy rains and thunder in isolated areas is also expected over the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) area. For the next two days, including Monday morning, isolated heavy rainfall is predicted, along with scattered to widespread, light to moderate rains. A forecast issued by the IMD Bengaluru office at 3:10 pm said, “Thunderstorm with lightning accompanied with light to moderate  spells of rain/showers is likely over Bengaluru rural/Bengaluru urban/ Tumkur/ Kolar/ Chikkaballapur/ Ramanagar/ Hassan/ Chikmagalur/ Kodagu/ Dakshina Kannada districts in next 03 hours.” The KSNDMC on Friday predicted that scattered to widespread, light to moderate rains with isolated heavy to very heavy rains are likely over south-interior and coastal regions of Karnataka. Isolated to scattered, light to moderate rains are likely over north-interior Karnataka and widespread light to moderate rains with isolated heavy to very heavy rains are likely over the Malnad region. The IMD said that the predicted rainfall activity is due to a depression formed over northwest Bay of Bengal, off the Odisha coast, which is moving north-east onwards with a speed of 24 km/h. The depression is likely to have crossed West Bengal and the adjoining Bangladesh coasts between Sagar Islands (West Bengal) and Khepupara (Bangladesh) over the Sundarbans, around Friday noon. The upcoming rains in Karnataka will come at the tail-end of a rainy few weeks across the state, with four districts in north Karnataka reeling under floods and flood-like conditions. The IMD said that the southwest monsoon was active over coastal Karnataka and South Interior Karnataka on Thursday, as rainfall occurred in most of coastal Karnataka. South-interior Karnataka and isolated places over north-interior Karnataka saw scattered rainfall. Siddapura in Udupi and Nuggehalli in Hassan received the highest rainfall in the state within the last 24 hours, with both recording 80 mm of rainfall each.


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A holiday amid the pandemic: How we travelled from Hyderabad to Hampi

Travel
As we made plans for the road trip, we had a formidable array of COVID defences.
Vidya and Navin Sigamany traveling from Hyderabad to Hampi in a red car
Navin Sigamany
Ever since the first lockdown was announced by the government at the end of March, we have been homebound, with minimal trips for groceries and essentials. It wasn’t until five different stages of unlock were announced that we plucked up the courage to venture out for non-essential activities. A quick trip to a restaurant. A visit to the spa. An exploration of our favourite mall. All the while fully masked, gloved, sanitised and maintaining physical distance. And then we planned a trip - we can’t remember the last time we let an 8-month period pass without a trip! We were encouraged to do this by the fact that we did not have significant COVID panic when we ventured out of home, and had confidence in the safety protocols we followed. We decided to take a driving holiday — we were uncomfortable with the unavoidable contact with multiple people that would be inevitable in any other mode of travel. This was a huge step for us for two reasons — I haven’t driven long distances, and my wife is not fond of driving long distances. We were pushing ourselves well outside our comfort zones. Once this was decided, we set about looking for a destination that was within driving distance, and also had a place to stay which we were confident would adhere to COVID protocols. We settled on Hampi; it was a drivable distance, and there was a Club Mahindra property there, which we were confident would have strict COVID protocols in place. This was confirmed by a couple of phone conversations we had with them, and we were satisfied that we would be safe and comfortable in our stay there. Club Mahindra in Hampi As we made plans for the trip, we had a formidable array of COVID defences — surface disinfectant sprays, sanitisers for our hands, disposable as well as reusable masks and disposable gloves. Since the car was a safe zone, all entries were preceded by a thorough sanitisation. We also packed what we called a “toilet bag” — a small backpack with gloves, sprays and sanitisers that could be carried handsfree into any strange toilets we may need to use. The drive itself was quite a learning journey for us, pun very much intended! It was an 8.5-hour journey according to Google Maps, and we factored in about an hour for a couple of stops. However, on the way, we took a detour to a particular coffee shop — where we assumed, correctly, that we would find a usable toilet — but lost an entire hour. This made the last couple of hours of the journey the 10th and 11th hours, which also were the worst driving stretches. Between rain-damaged highways and interminable stretches with speed bumps every hundred metres, these last two hours were really terrible. It also made us irritable and we just couldn’t wait for the journey to end. Once we reached the resort in the evening, things settled down very quickly. We got a comfortable room and were well-fed. The next day was spent just in the room, lazing around, reading, ordering room service — avoiding human contact as much as we could. A driving holiday The next couple of days, we explored different parts of Hampi at our own leisure. We drove everywhere, explored near-empty ruins on our own, took pictures — again, avoiding all human contact. One evening, we walked along the river to the spectacular ruins of the Achyutaraya temple and the bazaar in front of it. The setting sun, the beautiful views on the river and the isolated walk were one of the highlights of the trip! Snapshots from Hampi Most places we went to were empty or had very few people. We were able to be by ourselves and far away from any others. The Archaeological Survey of India has made all tickets available online -— which meant we didn’t have to stand in lines or wait at counters. Some of the staff at the monuments seemed quite lackadaisical with their mask-wearing, but usually a request seemed to work to make them wear one. We mostly avoided eating in restaurants other than the place where we were staying. For lunch, we went to a restaurant at one of the bigger hotels in Hosapete, the nearest town to Hampi. We were the only people eating there, and we received excellent service, very tasty food, and most importantly, a fully COVID-safe experience. For dinners, we returned to the resort, where we either did room service, or went to the in-house restaurant. There too the experience was good — personalised service — not too much to expect since we were usually the only patrons — good food and a totally shielded experience. On the drive back, we put our learnings from the previous drive to good use. We avoided any detours and stuck to the route, and made it back in about 8.5 hours including a breakfast stop. Overall, we found that sticking rigidly to a sanitisation protocol, not compromising on physical distancing, and unashamedly prioritising safety gave us a confidence that allowed us to travel without worry, both for our safety as well as for the safety of those around us.


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Karnataka to open colleges from Nov 17, students can opt for online classes

COVID-19
This announcement comes at a time when the state is reporting around 7500+ new COVID-19 cases daily
Colleges to reopen in Karnataka from Nov 17
Representational image/PTI
The Karnataka government, on Friday, decided that all colleges in the state including degree, engineering and diploma will open for normal classes starting from November 17. This decision came with Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa chairing a meeting with Deputy Chief Minister Dr CN Ashwath Narayan who holds the Higher Education portfolio along with concerned officials. However, students can choose to attend the online or offline classes as part of a blended learning process mode. A detailed standard operating procedure (SOP) of testing, screening and sanitisation for the same will be issued for the same purpose. There has been no such announcement for the commencement of primary, secondary school and pre-university (PU) colleges in the state. This announcement comes at a time when the state is reporting around 7500+ new COVID-19 cases daily for the past 10 days out of which 3400 are from Bengaluru alone. All educational institutions in the state were closed since mid-March when the state government had announced a lockdown in wake of the pandemic followed by more stringent lockdowns announced by the union government. Even the last Class 10 or SSLC (Secondary School Leaving Certificate)  board exams which was due to be held in the last week of March was postponed along with the last paper  for PU-II board exams. The government had decided that all examinations for students in Classes 7, 8 and 9 in the state be also cancelled. The English paper for PU-II students which had to be postponed was held only in June with six lakh people writing the exams. Similarly the SSLC exams were also held between June 25 to July 3 under strict observation of the health department. As many as 8 lakh+ students appeared for the exam held at 2,879 exam centres with only 18 to 20 students per exam hall. A decision to partially reopen schools for 9-12 standard students earlier this month was deferred due to a spurt of cases among students and teachers in northern Karnataka.


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Protecting Karnataka’s Myristica swamps key to survival of rare lion-tailed macaque

Wildlife
The endangered lion-tailed macaques, concentrated in the dense evergreen rainforests of the Western Ghats, live in the upper canopy, rarely descending to the ground.
Myristica swamps in Karnataka, with a small stream flowing between plenty of tall trees
Pic by G Ravikanth
In June last year, the Sharavathi Wildlife Sanctuary, established in 1978, and the Aghanashini LTM Conservation Reserve, spread over 20,000 hectares of reserve forest in Shivamogga and Uttara Kannada districts, were merged to create the Sharavathi Valley LTM Sanctuary. The Myristica swamps of Uttara Kannada district, located within the forests of the Sharavathi river basin, are some of the rarest ecosystems in India. Conserving a patch of this sacred forest may be the key to the survival of a species on the brink. While freshwater swamps are found in pockets across India – in the foothills of the western Himalayas, in the Terai belt, in Meghalaya, in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and in the Western Ghats – few swamps are known to host species in the Myristicaceae family. This is perhaps the oldest, most primitive flowering plant family in the world, with four genera and 15 species found in the Western Ghats. Yet these relic forests are few and often isolated by swaths of alternate land use, namely rice cultivation. Cue the forests of the Sharavathi. The district of Uttara Kannada has 110 recorded freshwater swamps containing Myristicaceae members, i.e. Myristica fatua, M. arborea, or Gynmacranthera canarica. Other species thought to be extinct before their subsequent discovery in the swamps of the Western Ghats include Semecarpus kathalekanensis and Syzygium travancoricum, discovered in 2000 and 2014, respectively. One of the best-known Myristica swamps in this forested region, Kathalekan, is revered by local communities and is the site of long-sustained religious practices. Such sites, designated as the home of indigenous deities, are known as sacred groves, or devara kaadu in Kannada. Swamps in the district are jointly managed by the state forest department and local communities, leading to a sense of ownership and responsibility for the maintenance of these relic forests. They are also protected for their ecosystem services – they allow for groundwater replenishment, prevent downstream flooding by retaining excess water, and purify the water supply downstream. Myristica swamps | Pic by G Ravikanth Protecting these sacred swamps has a bottom-up effect on other endangered residents of this landscape. The Western Ghats is home to a rare monkey, the lion-tailed macaque (LTM), locally known as the singalika. The LTM is listed on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as endangered, and the remaining populations are concentrated in the dense evergreen rainforests of the Western Ghats. They live their lives in the upper rainforest canopy, rarely descending to the ground. Given their primary diet of fruit, seeds and insects, they are restricted to rainforests, where resources are still plentiful. Habitat degradation is the main threat to their survival. A mere 3,500 of these macaques, fragmented into 49 separate sub-populations, are thought to exist in the Western Ghats. Myristica swamps receiving protection from local communities provide a sanctuary for LTMs in these forests. While all swamps in Uttara Kannada district are not sacred, they serve as relic patches of forest with old-growth canopies for LTMs to reside. These primates feed on the fruit of the Myristica species, which fall within the nutmeg family. They discard the seeds when eating the flesh of the fruit, thus playing a key role as dispersers in this ecosystem. This behaviour allows for the reproduction of swampy species. Apart from the LTM, swamps are home to 15 species of mammals, 59 species of birds, 22 species of reptiles, 29 species of amphibians, six species of fishes, 109 species of butterflies, and six species of damselflies, according to a study in 2006. Two genera of amphibians, Micrixalus and Nyctibatrachus, are endemic to these swamps and virtually unknown to researchers, making the conservation of these isolated patches a priority for conservation. Micrixalus | Pic by Pradeep Hegde Numerous Myristica swamps fall within the Sharavathi sanctuary. This adds weight to existing local protection on the valley and the swamps that exist here. Notification of the sanctuary also relieves the region of human extractive activities, including logging, collection of non-timber forest products, agriculture, hunting, fishing and poaching, among others. Perhaps this is the key to the survival of a rare monkey and its equally rare habitat. LTMs and Myristica swamps both have specific climate and ecological requirements. Ecologically, they are changemakers in their larger landscape. Found nowhere else on our planet, both swamp and macaque are throwbacks to a greener time in India’s past. Priya Ranganathan is a wetland ecologist and geologist studying the inland wetlands of the Western Ghats.


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BMTC starts trial run of electric buses in Bengaluru again

Transport
A release by the Transport Minister’s office said that the buses can run 200-250 km on a single charge of 2-3 hours.
CM BSY with Dy CM Savadi
The Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) on Thursday started a trial run of electric buses. Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa was present along with Transport Minister and Deputy CM Laxman Savadi for the inauguration of the trial run. However, according to officials, full-fledged electric bus services won’t start any time soon as the BMTC will try out different manufacturers before deciding on the private contractor. As part of this trial, 90 buses will run in the city on a daily basis.  These buses provided by Hyderabad-based Olectra Greentech are 12-metre-long and air-conditioned with a seating capacity of 34 passengers. A release by the Transport Minister’s office said that the buses can run 200-250 km on a single charge of 2-3 hours and has a fast-charging option of 15-20 minutes. While many Indian cities including neighbouring Chennai are already running e-buses, Bengaluru is lagging behind even though the first trial run of an e-bus by a government body was carried out in Bengaluru in 2014. Subsequently, BMTC had missed the first part of the union government’s FAME (‘Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of (Hybrid and) Electric vehicles (FAME)’ ) subsidy scheme. Although delayed, the state government is likely to induct 300 such e-buses as part of the FAME-II scheme by end of 2020. Under this scheme, the state government will spend Rs 33 lakh per bus while the Union government will pay Rs 55 lakh. However, due to drop in revenue collection, the state government has proposed no expenditure be incurred in the current year. “The GoK has approved and informed to prepare action plan with the condition of not to incur any expenditure in the current year. The DHI, Gol has informed that the supply order for operation of electric buses shall be issued before 31st December 2020,” Savadi said in a statement.


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