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 Rowan Hooper

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Rowan Hooper
Rowan Hooper has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from Sheffield University, UK, and he worked as an insect biologist in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, for five years before spending a two-year period at The Japan Times in Tokyo. He is now news editor for New Scientist magazine, based in London.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Jul 28, 2005
Oriental long-headed locust
* Japanese name: Shouryou-batta * Scientific name: Acrida cinerea antennata * Description: Although it is called the long-headed locust, this member of the grasshopper family of insects has a stranger appearance than the more familiar swarming locust. "Shouryou" refers (bafflingly) to the Buddhist...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Jul 14, 2005
Japanese littleneck clam
* Japanese name: Asari * Scientific name: Ruditapes philippinarum * Description: Clams are bivalve mollusks, meaning that they are shellfish, like mussels and oysters. The shells are elongated and pinched together in the center where they join. There are both radial and concentric ribs on the shell....
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Jul 14, 2005
No need to blush if you become red-faced after a few
Whatever your job and background, drunken conversations between work colleagues have much in common. However, a phrase that I often heard in Japan but have heard nowhere else is, "I have an inactive form of aldehyde dehydrogenase."
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Jun 30, 2005
Changing values pose problems for terminal care in Japan
Several years ago, I read cancer surgeon Fumio Yamazaki's unforgettable book titled "Dying in a Japanese Hospital." Through case studies of his patients, he describes the final moments in the lives of terminal cancer sufferers. Invariably, just as a patient is slipping away, doctors battle to resuscitate...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Jun 23, 2005
Yellow-browed bunting
* Japanese name: Kimayuhojiro * Scientific name: Emberiza chrysophrys * Description: Buntings are related to finches and sparrows, but the Yellow-browed bunting -- whose Japanese name means "yellow eyebrow white cheek" -- is distinguished from them by its rather large head, brown-streaked upperparts...
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Jun 9, 2005
TM bolsters notion of a Japanese mind-set over mortality
As we heard in a government white paper on the elderly last week, the number of people aged 90 or over topped 1 million in Japan for the first time in 2004. Japan has long held the record for its citizens having the longest life expectancy in the world. And the government is only too aware of the graying...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Jun 9, 2005
Four-lined rat snake
* Japanese name: Shimahebi * Scientific name: Elaphe quadrivirgata * Description: Unfortunately, despite the name, this snake does not always have four lines running down its length. Often it has black lines running down a light-brown body (as in the photo), or sometimes lighter, dashed lines that...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
May 26, 2005
Butterfly dragonfly
* Japanese name: Choutonbo * Scientific name: Rhyothemis fuliginosa * Description: With huge wings colored a beautiful deep blue, this dragonfly is unmistakable. Its body is fairly short and stout, at 32-41 mm long, while its hind wings are 30-40 mm across. The name "butterfly dragonfly" refers...
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
May 12, 2005
Fetuses found to inherit mother's trauma
Stress can motivate us, but it can also get us down. And though it might just make us feel blue, it can also kill us. It depresses levels of sex hormones and people stressed by deadlines are more likely to suffer heart attacks.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
May 12, 2005
Brown-eared bulbul
* Japanese name: Hiyodori * Scientific name: Ixos amaurotis * Description: These are medium-size songbirds that grow to about 28 cm long. They are mainly olive brown with a white face and eyebrow, throat and belly; they have a small crest. The bill, feet and eyes are black. Males and females look...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Apr 28, 2005
Gray-headed Lapwing
* Japanese name: Keri * Scientific name: Vanellus cinereus * Description: Lapwings are attractive, plump, medium-size birds (body length 30 cm; wingspan about 85 cm) with large orange eyes, yellow legs and a yellow bill with a black tip. The head and neck are gray, as are the tops of the wings, but...
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Apr 14, 2005
Could change be the only constant in the cosmos?
In David Mitchell's compelling novel "Cloud Atlas," two of the characters climb the dormant Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii, and find giant domes -- observatories -- at the peak of the great mountain. The novel -- published last year -- is comprised of six interweaved strands, starting in the 1800s and moving...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Apr 14, 2005
Azure-winged magpie
* Japanese name: Onaga * Scientific name: Cyanopica cyana * Description: Magpies are in the Corvid family, that is, they are related to crows and jackdaws. But Azure-winged magpies are more elegant, with long, light-blue tails and wings, gray backs, white throats and black caps on the top of their...
Japan Times
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Mar 31, 2005
Boning up on a Man much maligned
Quarry workers in the Neander Valley in Germany dug up more than limestone when, in 1856, they came across parts of an old skull and skeleton. By 1864, other similar specimens had been found and studied, and the archaic human was recognized as a new species: Homo neanderthalensis. (Neander Tal means...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Mar 24, 2005
Japanese wagtail
* Japanese name: Segurosekirei * Scientific name: Motacilla grandis * Description: Wagtails are easily identified by the way their tails wag frenetically when they walk. Even their flight pattern seems to wag -- they fly in an undulating wave. The head, throat and the top of the back and the wings...
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Mar 10, 2005
Glimpsing the 'big picture' at the heart of gray matter
It is a commonly held belief that we don't tap into the full power of our brains. Self-help gurus make millions by exploiting this belief, separating people from their money by making them think there is a secret to tapping mysterious, unused reserves of brain power.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Mar 10, 2005
Mandarin duck
* Japanese name: Oshidori * Scientific name: Aix galericulata * Description: The male Mandarin duck is the last word in avian cuteness. With a wingspan of 68-74 cm, and a body that's 41-49 cm long, he has highly elaborate plumage, with long orange feathers on the "cheeks" of his face, swished-back...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Feb 24, 2005
Spotted nutcracker
* Japanese name: Hoshigarasu * Scientific name: Nucifraga caryocatactes * Description: Nutcrackers are members of the Corvid (crow) family. An adult bird is approximately the size of a jackdaw, with a wingspan of 17.5-19 cm and a body length of 32 cm. They weigh 155-215 grams. Like other crows, their...
JAPAN / Science & Health / NATURAL SELECTIONS
Feb 10, 2005
DNA 'flip' highlights our ongoing evolution
Stung by the phenomenal success of the "Harry Potter" books, some people like to preach about the infantilization of culture, and some critics worry that adults are wallowing in childhood.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / ANIMAL TRACKER
Feb 10, 2005
Jungle crow
* Japanese name: Hashibuto-garasu * Scientific name: Corvus macrorhynchos * Description: The Jungle crow is a large, black, fearsome-looking bird with a wingspan of up to 104 cm and a body length of 50 cm. It weighs up to 650 grams and lives up to 19 years. It has a close relative, the Carrion...

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