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Cadbury dropped from royal warrant list after 170 years

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Cadbury dropped from royal warrant list after 170 years


grey placeholderMatt Cardy/Getty Images A large slab of several squares of Cadbury chocolate.Matt Cardy/Getty Images

Cadbury was granted its first royal warrant under Queen Victoria in 1854

Chocolate maker Cadbury has been dropped from the list of royal warrants for the first time in 170 years.

The Birmingham-based chocolatier was awarded its first royal warrant as chocolate and cocoa manufacturers by Queen Victoria in 1854, but it has lost its royal endorsement under King Charles.

Cadbury’s US owners, Mondelez International, said it was disappointed to have been stripped of its warrant.

The King has granted royal warrants to 386 companies that previously held warrants from Queen Elizabeth II, including John Lewis, Heinz and Nestle.

Companies holding the Royal Warrant of Appointment, granted for up to five years, are recognised for providing goods or services to the monarchy.

Among the King’s new list of warrant holders are many firms selling food and drink, such as Moet and Chandon, Weetabix and chocolate makers Bendicks and Prestat Ltd.

Warrant holders are allowed to use the coat of arms of the royal they are associated with on packaging, as part of advertising or on stationery.

Earlier this year, the King was urged by campaign group B4Ukraine to withdraw warrants from companies “still operating in Russia” after the invasion of Ukraine, naming Mondelez and consumer goods firm Unilever, which has also been stripped of the endorsement.

“Whilst we are disappointed to be one of hundreds of other businesses and brands in the UK to not have a new warrant awarded, we are proud to have previously held one, and we fully respect the decision.” a Mondelez spokesperson said.

Unilever added it was “very proud” of the long history its brands had supplying the royal household, most recently receiving a warrant from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

grey placeholderGetty Images The front of the Cadbury headquarters in Bournville. A large purple sign with the word Cadbury sits at the front of the grass lawn, with a large building behind.Getty Images

Cadbury is among the brands and products that have had their warrants withdrawn under the King in a new list

Prof David Bailey, from Birmingham Business School, said the decision to strip the chocolate manufacturer of its warrant would affect its costs, as the brand would have to remove it from all packaging.

A royal warrant was a “kind of seal of approval,” which was thought to bring significant benefits to the UK economy, he added.

Speaking to BBC Radio WM, Prof Bailey said British companies also benefited from being awarded the royal endorsement.

“What is a royal warrant for, if it isn’t to help British jobs and British production?” he asked.

grey placeholderSeveral posters and images advertising Cadbury brands throughout the years.

The chocolate giant marked its 200th anniversary in March

The British chocolate giant celebrated its 200th anniversary earlier this year, after founder John Cadbury opened a grocer’s shop selling cocoa and drinking chocolate in Birmingham on 4 March 1824.

The brand expanded when his sons took over the business, eventually building the Bournville factory which became the biggest cocoa manufacturer in the world.

US food company Kraft took over the brand in a controversial takeover in 2010, with Cadbury going on to become part of its Mondelez division in 2012.



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Royal Papworth Hospital ‘lungs in a box’ could boost transplants

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Royal Papworth Hospital ‘lungs in a box’ could boost transplants


grey placeholderRoyal Papworth Hospital Donated lungs inside a special dome shaped incubator. The dome is plastic and you can see the tubes carrying liquid oxygen and nitrates going into the trachea of the lungs. They are being inflated by a ventilatorRoyal Papworth Hospital

The machine, nicknamed “lungs in a box”, is designed to mimic the human body

A new machine which keeps lungs alive outside of the body could “transform” the number of people receiving transplants, surgeons hope.

The breakthrough has come at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire after it became the first in the UK to pilot the use of the XPS system.

The machine, nicknamed “lungs in a box”, mimics the human body and surgeon Marius Berman said it could increase the number of transplants by 30%.

Daniel Evans-Smith, a 49-year-old event manager from Northampton, was the first to receive a double lung transplant using the system on the NHS and said he was “immensely grateful”.

grey placeholderRoyal Papworth Hospital Daniel Evans-Smith looks at the camera from his hospital bed. He is dressed in a hospital gown with a blanket over his shoulders. He had a beard and greying hair. You can see oxygen pipes in the background which are not attached to Mr Evans-SmithRoyal Papworth Hospital

David Evans-Smith had the double lung transplant in the summer and is hoping to return to work in three to six months

Some 81% of lungs are rejected for transplantation because they are inflamed or in poor condition.

The machine improves the health of the organs, by using a ventilator to inflate and deflate the lungs. A liquid containing nutrients and oxygen is also pumped through them.

The technique is called ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP). It means donated lungs which are considered “borderline” for use can be reconditioned and used, instead of being discarded.

The organs are kept at body temperature, for up to six hours.

The one-year pilot has been funded by NHS England and the Royal Papworth charity.

The machine was only previously used in UK research trials.

grey placeholderRoyal Papworth Hospital Daniel Evans-Smith lying on a bed in the operating theatre at Royal Papworth hospital. He has his eyes open and a wristband on and is looking up at the ceiling. A surgeon stands behind him wearing a hair net and scrubs. Two nurses are checking equipment to his left and are wearing scrubs and apronsRoyal Papworth Hospital

Mr Evans-Smith waited eight weeks for a transplant using the machine. The average wait in the UK is 18 months

Prof Derek Manas, NHS blood and transplant medical director, said there was “mounting evidence” the technology could “enable more transplants by improving organ function”.

Despite the law change on organ donation consent in 2019, the hospital said there was a shortage of donated lungs, so the machine was making the most of those available.

Prof Manas said more than 200 people were waiting for a lung transplant which “significantly” outweighed the number of suitable donor organs.

Having the lungs “alive” outside the body also allows surgeons to test the organs, which means the transplants have a better chance of success.

grey placeholderRoyal Papworth Hospital Daniel Evans-Smith sitting in a wheelchair outside Royal Papworth hospital. He is looking at the camera and has two female staff members standing behind him in white uniform. They are wearing face masks. Mr Evans-Smith has an oxygen tube going into his nose and taped to the side of his face. He is wearing a black t shirt and grey jogging bottoms.Royal Papworth Hospital

Mr Evans-Smith spent three weeks in the critical care department after his transplant and takes drugs to prevent his body from rejecting the lungs

Mr Evans-Smith quit smoking 12 years ago, but developed chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a lung condition that causes breathing difficulties.

He suffered a collapsed lung on five occasions and spent a total of six months in hospital before the transplant.

He was about to be discharged when he was woken by nurses who told him donor lungs had been found.

The organs were put on ice and transported to Cambridge, where they were placed in the machine to be “reconditioned” before transplant.

grey placeholderDAWID WOJTOWICZ/BBC Daniel Evans-Smith walking up the stairs to his flat in Northampton. He is holding onto a cream banister and is wearing a green wool jumper and navy cordroy trousers. His beard his slightly plaited and his hair is greying.DAWID WOJTOWICZ/BBC

Mr Evans-Smith can now walk up the stairs to his flat thanks to his new lungs

Mr Evans-Smith said it was a “privilege to be chosen”.

He said: “There were conversations this time last year, with some of the hospitals saying I needed to talk about palliative care, because if I didn’t get the transplant under way very soon, the likelihood was I wouldn’t survive.”

He is now hoping to fundraise for the team that saved his life.

“I can now do hills without having to think about it, I don’t have to rest when I’m out and about around town,” he said. “I can’t thank them enough”.

grey placeholderNIKKI FOX/BBC Surgeon Marius Berman standing in the critical care department at Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire. There are blue curtains either side of him and some monitoring computers in the background which are blurred. he is wearing blue scrubs and has metal rimmed glasses on. He is looking directly at the camera with short greying hair.NIKKI FOX/BBC

Surgeon Marius Berman hopes the positive results of the 12-month pilot will mean funding is continued

Marius Berman, surgical lead for transplantation at Royal Papworth Hospital, said they were “very proud to have become the first UK hospital to use this machine” outside of clinical trials.

Other technology exists, but surgeons said the simplicity of the machine allows people to be trained quickly and some alternatives require a surgical team to travel to the donor, which can be expensive.

He said 30% of people on the lung transplant list died and Mr Evans-Smith had “had a very small window of opportunity”.

“Daniel would not have been with us today without a lung transplant, and we couldn’t have done the lung transplant without EVLP,” he added.

Royal Papworth hospital carries out more lung transplants than any other UK centre, completing 41 in the last year.



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Scientists unveil 50,000-year-old baby mammoth carcass

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Scientists unveil 50,000-year-old baby mammoth carcass


Russian scientists have unveiled the remains of a 50,000-year-old baby mammoth found in thawing permafrost in the remote Yakutia region of Siberia during the summer.

They say “Yana” – who has been named after the river basin where she was discovered – is the world’s best-preserved mammoth carcass.

Weighing in at over 100kg (15st 10lb), and measuring 120cm (4ft) tall and 200cm long, Yana is estimated to have been only about one-year-old when she died.

Before this find, only six similar discoveries had been found in the world – five in Russia and one in Canada.

Yana was found in the Batagaika crater, the world’s largest permafrost (ground that is permanently frozen) crater, by people living nearby.

The residents “were in the right place at the right time”, the head of the Lazarev Mammoth Museum Laboratory said.

“They saw that the mammoth had almost completely thawed out” and decided to build a make-shift stretcher to lift the mammoth to the surface, said Maxim Cherpasov.

“As a rule, the part that thaws out first, especially the trunk, is often eaten by modern predators or birds,” he told the Reuters news agency.

But “even though the forelimbs have already been eaten, the head is remarkably well preserved”, he added.

A researcher at the museum, Gavril Novgorodov, told Reuters the mammoth “probably got trapped” in a swamp, and was “thus preserved for several tens of thousands of years”.

Yana is being studied at the North-Eastern Federal University in the region’s capital Yakutsk.

Scientists are now conducting tests to confirm when it died.

It is not the only pre-historic discovery to have been found in Russia’s vast permafrost in recent years – as long-frozen ground starts to thaw because of climate change.

Just last month, scientists in the same region showed off the remains of a partial, mummified body of a sabre-tooth cat, thought to be just under 32,000-years-old.

And earlier this year the remains of a 44,000-year-old wolf were also uncovered.



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Walmart illegally opened costly deposit accounts for one million delivery drivers, lawsuit claims

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Walmart illegally opened costly deposit accounts for one million delivery drivers, lawsuit claims


More than one million delivery drivers collectively paid more than $10 million in fees after Walmart and Branch Messenger illegally opened costly deposit accounts in their names without consent, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau alleges in a lawsuit filed Monday against the retailer and payments platform.

The federal agency claims drivers were forced to use the accounts to get paid and were deceived about how to access their earnings, with Walmart threatening to fire workers who did not comply. Drivers had to follow a complicated process to get their pay, and then faced further delays or fees if they needed to transfer the money into another account. 

As a result, workers forked over more than $10 million in fees to transfer their earnings into accounts of their choosing, the CFPB claims.

“Walmart made false promises, illegally opened accounts and took advantage of more than a million delivery drivers,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in a news release. “Companies cannot force workers into getting paid through accounts that drain their earnings with junk fees.”

Both Walmart and Branch vowed a vigorous defense.

“The CFPB’s rushed lawsuit is riddled with factual errors and contains exaggerations and blatant misstatements of settled principles of law. The CFPB never allowed Walmart a fair opportunity to present its case during their rushed investigation,” the retailing giant said in a statement emailed to CBS MoneyWatch.

Branch echoed Walmart’s stance, accusing the CFPB of misstating “the law and facts.” The CFPB’s suit “includes intentional omissions” to cover what the company called the bureau’s “overreach, it said in an email.

“Branch has provided Walmart and their driver partners valuable services allowing quick and easy access to funds via their business accounts — a key fact the bureau’s press release omits,” it said.  

The CFPB alleges in its suit that the two firms violated federal law for two years starting in 2021. The company and Branch are accused of using drivers’ information, including their Social Security numbers, to open accounts without permission. Drivers’ pay was then deposited into the accounts without their authorization, resulting in drivers paying more than $10 million in fees to Branch to instantly transfer their earnings into accounts of their choosing, the agency alleges. 

The allegations involved the Spark Driver Program operated by Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart in which gig economy workers signed up to make “last-mile” deliveries from Walmart stores nationwide. Branch is a financial technology company that offers deposit accounts at Evolve Bank & Trust. 

The CFPB in May filed a lawsuit against SoLo Funds, another of Evolve’s partners, accusing it of deceiving borrowers about the total costs of loans. The Federal Reserve in June issued an enforcement action against West Memphis, Arkansas-based Evolve, finding it failed to properly police its fintech partners.



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Leopards can be identified by their unique roar, bioacoustics study finds

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Leopards can be identified by their unique roar, bioacoustics study finds


Leopards can be identified by their roar
Leopard in Selous Game Reserve, Namkongo. Credit: Dr. Charlotte Searle

Each leopard has its own unique roar through which it can be identified, a new study finds. In the first large-scale paired camera trap and autonomous recording survey for large African carnivores, researchers were able to identify individual leopards by their vocalizations with 93% accuracy. It has been hailed as an important first step towards using bioacoustics in the conservation of leopards.

Leopards are listed as “vulnerable” to extinction according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species mainly due to habitat loss and human-wildlife conflict.

But because leopards are solitary, nocturnal creatures that live across huge expanses of terrain, scientists struggle to gather reliable data that would help them reverse population declines.

There is little scientific research about the “sawing roar” of a leopard—a repeated low-frequency pattern of strokes, often audible from at least a kilometer away, used primarily to attract mates and for territorial defense.

But studying leopards through the sounds they make—a technique known as bioacoustics and more typically used to monitor birds and marine species—would have the advantage of allowing researchers to monitor much larger areas.







Video summary of the study. Credit: Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), University of Oxford

It could lead to more complex studies such as population estimates, a key metric for helping policymakers and conservation practitioners understand how to manage landscapes and mitigate human-wildlife conflicts.

“The secret acoustic world of leopards: A paired camera trap and bioacoustics survey facilitates the individual identification of leopards via their roars” is published in Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation.

The research team conducted their study across a 450 km2 expanse of the Nyerere National Park in Tanzania, where they attached 50 pairs of cameras to trees along roads and trails.

They placed microphones next to each camera so that they could identify the leopard from the camera and then extract the roaring bouts from the audio.

They then used a modeling system to analyze the temporal pattern of a leopard‘s roar, and found individual identification was possible, with an overall accuracy of 93.1%.

The study shows that using multiple forms of technology to record complementary data can exploit a wider variety of species traits than single technology studies alone.

  • Leopards can be identified by their roar
    Deploying camera traps and microphones in the Nyerere National Park, Tanzania. Credit: Dr. Charlotte Searle
  • Leopards can be identified by their roar
    Paired camera traps and microphones. Credit: Jonathan Growcott

Lead author Jonathan Growcott, a Ph.D. student at the University of Exeter, said, “Discovering that leopards have unique roars is an important but fundamentally quite basic finding that shows how little we know about leopards, and large carnivores in general.

“We hope it will allow leopards to become the focus of more acoustically complex science such as population density studies and open the door to more work on how large carnivores use vocalizations as a tool.

“Importantly, our success in using a combination of different types of technology could hopefully lead others to think about how to integrate different types of technology into their research, as the rich data this provides could really push science ahead and help us understand ecosystems and landscapes in a much more holistic way.”

The research was a collaborative effort between the University of Exeter, the Wildlife Conservation Unit at the University of Oxford, Lion Landscapes, Frankfurt Zoological Society, TAWIRI (Tanzania Wildlife Institute for Research) and TANAPA (Tanzania National Parks Authority), as well as computer scientists from Exeter and Oxford.

It was presented by Growcott at the British Ecological Society Annual Meeting in Liverpool earlier this month, an event which brought together 1,500 ecologists.

Hazel Norman, CEO of the British Ecological Society said, “This study showing that individual leopards can be identified and monitored just through their roars is a brilliant example of how ecologists are applying novel ideas and technologies to uncover fascinating new insights into our natural world.”

More information:
Jonathan Growcott et al, The secret acoustic world of leopards: A paired camera trap and bioacoustics survey facilitates the individual identification of leopards via their roars, Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation (2024). DOI: 10.1002/rse2.429

Citation:
Leopards can be identified by their unique roar, bioacoustics study finds (2024, December 23)
retrieved 23 December 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-12-leopards-unique-roar-bioacoustics.html

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