Posts

Showing posts from January, 2023

Featured Post

EXTRA: NKE NKE ENYI IZUOGU'S MOTHER TO BE BURIED ON DECEMBER 29TH 2023

Image
BURIAL OF NKE NKE ENYI IZUOGU'S MOTHER HOLD ON FRIDAY DECEMBER 29TH 2023. The President and Founder of Nke Nke Enyi izuogu foundation for the Needy and the Aged High Chief Dr Sir Ikenna Chiedozie Aniche has officially announced final burial programme for his late beautiful mother Dame Ezinne Nneoma Catherine Chinyere Aniche who passed on recently and will be interred on Friday the 29th of December 2023. Nke Nke Enyi Izuogu Gburu Gburu 1 - 12  disclosed this in a statement he personally authored and signed, said that the burial of his late mother has since commenced with a service of songs which took place at RCCG - New creation assembly of all nations South Norwood  in the United Kingdom on the 11th of November 2023 and another which took place at the mother's Federal Housing Estate Owerri residence on the 15th of November 2023.  Watch on YouTube According to the statement, her body will leave  Aladimma Hospital Mortuary owerri with a brief stop at her Federal Housing Estate o

DISCOVERY: FISH WITH HORN DISCOVERED IN CHINA

Image
New Fish Species Has Mysterious Horn-Like Structure on the Back of Its Head Sinocyclocheilus longicornus inhabits a completely dark cave in southwestern Guizhou province in China. Live adult male paratype of Sinocyclocheilus longicornus. Image credit: Xu et al., doi: 10.3897/zookeys.1141.91501. Live adult male paratype of Sinocyclocheilus longicornus. Image credit: Xu et al., doi: 10.3897/zookeys.1141.91501. Sinocyclocheilus is a genus of freshwater fish in the family Cyprinidae endemic to China. First described in 1936, it comprises 76 valid species, of which 71 species are grouped into five species groups. Almost members of the genus live in or around caves and most of these have adaptations typical of cavefish such as a lack of scales, lack of pigmentation and reduced eyes. Several species have a ‘horn’ on the back of their head, the function of which is unclear. In contrast, species that live aboveground, as well as a few found underground, show no clear cavefish adaptations. “The