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Important Daily Facts of the Day

3Apr
2023

ISRO’s Reusable Launch Vehicle landing test successful (GS Paper 3, Science and Tech)

ISRO’s Reusable Launch Vehicle landing test successful (GS Paper 3, Science and Tech)

Why in news?

 

Details:

Achievements:

 

What is RLV?

 

India has registered a global first of a plant fungus infecting humans

 (GS Paper 2, Health)

Why in news?

  • The first case of a plant fungus called Chondrostereum purpureum infecting human beings has been reported from Kolkata.
  • A 61-year-old man suffering from a hoarse voice, cough, fatigue and difficulties swallowing was hospitalised and was detected as having been infected by the fungal species Chondrostereum purpureum. 
  • This is worrisome and may be the first instance of a new danger that the human race may face in near future.

Chondrostereum purpureum:

 

Vulnerable:

 

How fungi can invade humans?

  • Rising temperature due to global warming is thought of as one of the major reasons for this new threat to human beings. Most fungi thrive in the range of 12°C to 30°C. However, many species are thermotolerant and can withstand high temperatures.
  • In order to invade human cells, fungi, on one hand, have to be able to evade the phagocytosis pathway and, on the other hand, should have the ability to grow at 35-37 °C temperature. Global warming could have a significant effect on fungal populations.

 

Role of global warming:

  • Global warming can change the distribution of heat-tolerant and susceptible species by favouring those that are more thermotolerant.
  • This will facilitate fungi to spread and enter into closer contact with human populations and a few of those having pathogenic potential can acquire the ability to survive at body temperatures.
  • This threat is magnified as some fungi can take the benefit of a natural selection-adaptation strategy, and therefore adapt to a higher temperature by thermal selection.
  • Global warming means the narrowing of the thermal difference between the human body and its surroundings. Every degree increase in the global average temperature reduces this gradient by about five per cent. This increases the chance of the prevalence of fungal diseases.

 

Conclusion:

  • Fungal infections are expected to pose a greater threat to human beings in the years to come due to rising temperatures, caused by climate change and other reasons such as growing resistance to the small number of treatments available.

 

ICCR to build ambassador programme among foreign students in India

(GS Paper 1, Culture)

Why in news?

  • The Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) is aiming to expand the country’s artistic and creative footprint globally, by tapping into the experiences of foreign students studying in India.
  • It hopes that more than 48,000 foreign students in India will be brand ambassadors of the national heritage, tourist destinations, textiles, yoga, ayurveda and craft.

 

E-3:

  • Beginning in 2023, the ICCR will start E-3 or ‘exit engagement evenings’ with foreign students, beginning three or four months before they finish their courses in various Central and State universities, institutes such as the National Institutes of Technology and agricultural colleges.
  • The engagements will include visits to places of national importance. This “soft diplomacy” is meant to spread the India story when students go back to their home countries.
  • At present, the ICCR has zeroed in on the Khadi Commission, the Indian Tourism Development Corporation and the Department of Ayush to hold these evenings with the students.
  • There are plans to rope in the Tribal Cooperative Marketing Development Federation of India (TRIFED), which promotes produce and products of tribes.
  • As a pilot project, the Ministry of Tourism wants to take foreign students to Parliament and the Pradhanmantri Sangrahalaya.

 

India Alumni Portal:

  • In April 2022, the ICCR launched a website, called the India Alumni Portal, as a platform to connect with the foreign students around the world who have studied in India.
  • The portal is envisaged to be a single platform for all foreign scholars to register, interact, and maintain their Indian links.

 

Foreign students in India:

  • According to the latest All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) brought out by the Ministry of Education, the number of foreign students enrolled in Indian higher education institutions was 48,035 in 2020-21, a marginal dip from 49,348 in 2019-20.