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Dos años de condena para el mayordomo del Elíseo que robó parte de la vajilla del palacio presidencial francés

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De la sequía al riesgo de extinción: el dramático descenso de abejorros en Baviera

Una sequía extrema ocurrida en 2022 en Franconia, una región de Baviera, redujo de forma drástica la capacidad reproductiva de las colonias de abejorros, lo que compromete la polinización de plantas silvestres y cultivos esenciales para la agricultura local ante futuros episodios de clima extremo, documentó el portal de noticias científicas Phys.org.
Los resultados de esta investigación, publicados en la revista Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, muestran que la disminución de polinizadores se agrava con la insuficiencia de hábitats resistentes a la sequía, un desafío que exige respuestas urgentes en la gestión del paisaje.
Las conclusiones del trabajo, realizado por el equipo del Departamento de Ecología Animal y Biología Tropical (Zoología 3) de la Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg (JMU) en Alta y Baja Franconia, revelaron que el peso medio de las colonias en el año de sequía apenas superó los 14 gramos, frente a los 140 gramos alcanzados en un año climáticamente promedio —una diferencia superior al 900%—.
Estos datos ilustran la magnitud del problema en un plano inédito: la reducción no solo implica menos individuos capaces de buscar recursos, sino un colapso en la función polinizadora durante los periodos críticos para los ecosistemas y la producción agrícola.

El equipo centró la investigación en la especie abejorro común cardador (Bombus pascuorum), un polinizador cuya biología lo hace especialmente vulnerable. A diferencia del popular abejorro terrestre (Bombus terrestris), la especie estudiada pertenece al grupo de los constructores de bolsillos, que almacenan polen en compartimentos junto a la cría, lo que condiciona su supervivencia ante la escasez de recursos.
En Baviera, el 82% de las especies de abejorro en peligro forman parte de este grupo, lo que convierte al abejorro cardador en un indicador relevante para monitorear la biodiversidad.
El peso reducido de las colonias fue solo el primer síntoma de una crisis reproductiva sin precedentes. Durante 2022, únicamente el 45% de las colonias lograron producir descendencia, frente al 91% registrado en condiciones promedio. El impacto resultó aún más severo en la producción de reinas, cuya supervivencia invernal es necesaria para fundar nuevas colonias al año siguiente. En las colonias sin alimentación suplementaria, la media pasó de 0,4 reinas en el año seco a 13,5 en el año normal, una disminución de más de treinta veces.
Hanno Korten, director principal del estudio, indicó que la insuficiencia de polen, vital para el desarrollo larval, fue el principal obstáculo. La suplementación con agua azucarada aumentó la producción de machos, pero no sustituyó el valor proteico del polen, clave para la formación de hembras fértiles.

El déficit alimenticio durante la sequía condenó a la población a un futuro incierto, lo que elevó el riesgo de extinción local y comprometió la fiabilidad de la polinización —con consecuencias directas sobre el rendimiento agrícola y la diversidad de la flora silvestre— de acuerdo con la información.
El estudio documentó que ni siquiera los hábitats tradicionalmente considerados de alta calidad ecológica, como los pastizales calcáreos, son refugio suficiente ante sequías intensas si no se aplican intervenciones activas de conservación.
Para aumentar la resiliencia de los polinizadores frente a fenómenos extremos, los autores recomiendan la plantación de árboles que proporcionen sombra en llanuras abiertas para crear microclimas más frescos, la restauración de humedales y la mejora a gran escala de la capacidad de retención de agua del suelo.
Sobre paisajes agrícolas, insisten en priorizar la siembra de especies vegetales floridas en verano y resistentes a la sequía para asegurar alimento constante, incluso en periodos secos. Todo ello, sostienen, sería necesario para mantener las funciones ecológicas y la seguridad alimentaria que dependen de la labor de los abejorros.
cambio climático,degradación ambiental,sequía,ecosistema,pastizal,biodiversidad,arroyo,suelo árido,medio ambiente,contraste
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Hillary Clinton rips Trump on migrant child detentions, but Bill Clinton’s own record cuts deep

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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criticized the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement practices, warning that the detention of thousands of migrant children is causing «terrible damage» – but data from former President Bill Clinton’s tenure shows a similar trend.
«Terrible damage to children is being done in our name,» Clinton shared in an X post on Wednesday, along with data showing the Trump administration has so far detained 6,200 children, with an average of 226 children held a day.
Clinton’s criticism lands against a historical record that complicates the attack, because federal data from the 1990s showed hundreds of juveniles in custody on an average day under former President Clinton as immigration enforcement toughened.
IGNORED ICE DETAINERS ‘PUT LIVES AT RISK,’ DHS SAYS, TARGETING NEWSOM, PRITZKER, HEALEY
Hillary Clinton speaks to members of the media outside the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center in Chappaqua, N.Y., on Feb. 26, 2026. (Adam Gray/Bloomberg)
The Clinton administration’s Immigration and Naturalization Service, a former agency within the Department of Justice, detained 4,136 unaccompanied illegal juveniles in fiscal year 2000 for longer than a 72-hour period, according to a Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General (OIG) report published in 2001. About 400 to 500 children were held in custody on an average day that same year, the report continued.
In 1996, former President Clinton signed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act and the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, two laws that expanded immigration enforcement by broadening mandatory detention and speeding up removals.
The data Clinton referenced in her tweet came from the Marshall Project, a nonprofit news outlet that reports on the criminal justice system, and outlined detainee figures during the second Trump administration.
«ICE does not target children or separate families,» a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson told Fox News Digital on Wednesday when asked about Clinton’s post. «Parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children, or ICE will place the children with a safe person the parent designates. This is consistent with past administrations’ immigration enforcement.»

A group of undocumented migrants is deported by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents across the McAllen–Hidalgo–Reynosa International Bridge in McAllen, Texas, Friday, March 13, 2026. Dozens of migrants from countries including Cuba, Venezuela, Haiti, China, Guatemala and El Salvador were handed over to Mexican authorities. (Felix Marquez/AP Photo)
Clinton’s tweet followed her appearance at the Munich Security Conference in February, when she said there’s a «legitimate reason» to have a debate on immigration policies, adding that it «went too far.»
«It’s been disruptive and destabilizing, and it needs to be fixed in a humane way with secure borders that don’t torture and kill people, and with a strong family structure, because that is at the base of civilization,» said the former 2016 presidential candidate.
Following the influx of over 18 million illegal immigrants under the Biden administration, according to the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), DHS says it has stopped the exploitation of 450,000 unaccompanied children.
«Many of the children who came across the border unaccompanied were allowed to be placed with sponsors who were smugglers and sex traffickers,» the DHS spokesperson said. «The Trump administration has located more than 145,000 of these children in person in the United States through visits and door knocks.»
HILLARY CLINTON SAYS MIGRATION ‘WENT TOO FAR’ AND ‘NEEDS TO BE FIXED IN A HUMANE WAY’

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at work. A federal judge in Delaware ordered state officials to turn over labor data to ICE as part of an immigration investigation. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
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Fox News Digital reached out to the offices of Bill and Hillary Clinton.
homeland security, immigration, migrant crime, illegal immigrants, hillary clinton
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Missing general, scientist deaths tied to secret US work prompt White House probe

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Susan Wilkerson was gone for just more than one hour when her husband, retired Air Force Maj. Gen. William «Neil» McCasland — who once oversaw some of the military’s most advanced and highly classified research programs — reportedly vanished from their Albuquerque home.
McCasland, 68, left his phone behind, but his wallet and a .38-caliber revolver were missing, according to the Bernalillo County, New Mexico, Sheriff’s Office.
The general previously had said he was experiencing what he described as a «mental fog,» according to investigators, but authorities stressed there was no indication he was disoriented at the time of his disappearance.
«Arguably, he would still be the most intelligent person in the room,» Albuquerque police Lt. Kyle Wood said March 16.
McCasland’s disappearance is one of 10 recent cases involving scientists tied to U.S. military and government research that have drawn attention, including at the White House, where officials said they are looking into the matter after being asked about a potential pattern.
«I hope it’s random, but we’re going to know in the next week and a half,» Trump told reporters Thursday. «I just left a meeting on that subject.»
Here’s what we know about the scientists who have disappeared or died under a range of circumstances over the past three years.
Neil McCasland: Disappeared Feb. 27, 2026
Ret. Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, 68, was reported missing in New Mexico in February. (Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office)
McCasland disappeared Feb. 27 and police have found no trace of him since. His phone, prescription glasses and wearable devices were found at home, but his hiking boots, wallet and a .38‑caliber revolver were reported missing, according to the Bernalillo County, New Mexico, Sheriff’s Office.
McCasland held senior roles in space research and acquisition, including leadership positions at the Air Force Research Laboratory and the National Reconnaissance Office, according to the Air Force. He held senior roles at the Pentagon and commanded the Phillips Research Site of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico, and the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, according to the Air Force.
McCasland’s name also surfaced in an unexpected place years earlier — the 2016 WikiLeaks release of emails from Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta. In those messages, musician and UFO enthusiast Tom DeLonge described working with McCasland on discussions related to unidentified aerial phenomena, noting that the general had previously led the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — a facility long tied in UFO lore to the alleged 1947 Roswell crash.
«Neil does not have any special knowledge about the ET bodies and debris from the Roswell crash stored at Wright-Patt,» his wife, Susan, wrote on Facebook shortly after his February disappearance.
The 1947 Roswell incident involved debris later identified by the U.S. government as part of a classified military balloon program, though it has long been the subject of UFO and extraterrestrial conspiracy theories.
Susan Wilkerson also noted that her husband retired in 2013.
«It seems quite unlikely that he was taken to extract very dated secrets from him,» she said on Facebook.

An undated photo of missing retired Air Force Gen. William «Neil» McCasland in hiking gear. The 68-year-old was last seen near his Albuquerque, New Mexico, home on Feb. 26. (Susan McCasland Wilkerson/Facebook)
Monica Jacinto Reza: Disappeared June 22, 2025
Reza, 60, was hiking with a friend in the Angeles National Forest near Los Angeles on a well-traveled trail around 9 a.m. on the morning of her disappearance, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
The friend was about 30 feet ahead, and told police he turned around to check on her and she smiled and waved, indicating she was doing fine. The friend turned back to continue hiking, and when he looked back again moments later, she was gone, according to, according to case details released during the search.
He immediately alerted authorities who sent out a search party. Since then, there have been no sightings or any trace of Reza or her belongings.
Reza, an aerospace engineer, was the co-creator of Mondaloy, a nickel-based alloy capable of withstanding the extreme heat of rocket engines. At the time of her disappearance, she was the Director of Materials Processing at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

The entrance to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California is seen on February 7, 2024. (Robyn Beck/AFP)
Reza’s work in advanced rocket materials was funded in part by the Air Force Research Laboratory — the same organization McCasland later led — placing the two in overlapping corners of the U.S. defense research ecosystem, though no direct relationship between them has been publicly confirmed.
Steven Garcia: Disappeared Aug. 28, 2025
Garcia, 48, was last seen leaving his home in Albuquerque around 9 a.m., captured on surveillance footage walking away on foot while carrying a handgun. He left behind his phone, wallet, keys and car, and has not been seen since, according to Albuquerque police.
Garcia was a government contractor tied to the Kansas City National Security Campus, a key facility responsible for producing the vast majority of non-nuclear components used in the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal. His role reportedly gave him high-level security clearance and oversight of sensitive assets.
Authorities initially warned Garcia «may be a danger to himself,» raising concerns about his mental state. But an anonymous source familiar with the case pushed back on that assessment to the Daily Mail, describing him as «a very stable person» and disputing suggestions that he was suicidal or experiencing mental health issues.
Both Garcia and McCasland lived in the same region of New Mexico, a hub for U.S. nuclear and defense research, though authorities have not confirmed any connection between the cases.
Carl Grillmair: Killed Feb. 16, 2026
Grillmair, 67, a California Institute of Technology astrophysicist known for his work on exoplanets and the discovery of water on distant worlds, was shot and killed outside his home in Llano, California, early in the morning. Deputies responding to a call found him on his front porch with a gunshot wound; he was pronounced dead at the scene.
Authorities later arrested a 29-year-old suspect in connection with the killing, charging him with murder as well as carjacking and burglary in separate incidents. Investigators said the suspect had previously been reported for trespassing on Grillmair’s property in the weeks leading up to the shooting.
Grillmair had spent decades working on major NASA-backed missions, including the Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes, contributing to research on galactic structure, dark matter and the search for habitable planets.
Nuno Loureiro: Killed Dec. 15, 2025
Loureiro, 47, a renowned MIT physicist and director of the university’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center, was shot at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts, and died from his injuries the following day.
His killing came within months of both the disappearance of McCasland and the fatal shooting of Grillmair, adding to growing attention around a series of cases involving scientists tied to defense and aerospace research.
Loureiro was a leading figure in fusion energy research, studying plasma physics and working on technologies aimed at harnessing near-limitless clean energy.
Authorities later linked his killing to a suspect connected to a separate mass shooting at Brown University days earlier. Investigators said the suspect, who had previously attended university with Loureiro in Portugal, died by suicide after the attacks, effectively closing the case.
Despite early speculation online, officials have not indicated Loureiro’s death was connected to his research or to any broader pattern.
Frank Maiwald: Died July 4, 2024
Maiwald, 61, a longtime engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, died in Los Angeles on Independence Day.
The only widely available public record of Maiwald’s death is a brief online obituary. No cause of death has been publicly disclosed, and reporting indicates no autopsy was performed.
Maiwald spent decades at JPL developing advanced instruments used to study Earth and distant planetary environments, including tools capable of detecting chemical signatures such as water and organic molecules.
His work focused on building instruments capable of detecting chemical signatures including water, organic molecules and other indicators scientists use to assess whether environments beyond Earth could support life.
Melissa Casias: Disappeared June 26, 2025
Casias, 53, was last seen on June 26, 2025, in Taos County, New Mexico, walking alone along State Road 518 near the community of Talpa.
Earlier that day, Casias, an administrative employee with security clearance at Los Alamos National Laboratory, had left work and spent time in Taos. At one point, her niece told local media, she picked up a Subway sandwich and dropped it off for her daughter, who was working at a coffee shop in the Taos Plaza area.
When family members returned home, they found her car, purse, keys and both her personal and work-issued phones inside. The phones had been factory reset, wiping recent data and communications.
Family members have strongly pushed back on the idea that she left voluntarily. «All of her friends keep telling us this is not like her… she wouldn’t leave her daughter,» her sister, Trudy Najera, said. The family added that Casias had been preparing to care for their mother during an upcoming surgery.
Despite multiple searches, no confirmed trace of Casias has been found since that afternoon.

A sign greets visitors as they arrive on the Los Alamos National Laboratory campus June 14, 1999 in Los Alamos, New Mexico. (Joe Raedle/Newsmakers)
Anthony Chavez: Reported missing May 8, 2025
Chavez, 78, a retired Los Alamos National Laboratory employee, is believed to have last been seen around May 4, 2025, at his home in Los Alamos, New Mexico. He was reported missing four days later, May 8.
When authorities and family members searched his home, they found his wallet, keys and other personal items left behind inside, while his car remained locked in the driveway. There were no signs of forced entry or a struggle, according to the Los Alamos Reporter.
Investigators reviewed hours of surveillance footage from nearby homes and businesses but have not publicly identified any confirmed footage showing Chavez after he left his residence.
Chavez had worked for decades at Los Alamos National Laboratory before retiring in 2017, placing him within the same northern New Mexico defense corridor as others who later vanished.
Jason Thomas: Missing Dec. 13, 2025, found deceased March 17, 2026
Thomas, 45, an associate director of chemical biology at pharmaceutical company Novartis, was reported missing in December 2025 after leaving his home in Wakefield, Massachusetts, late at night. Surveillance footage captured him walking near train tracks shortly after midnight, and he left behind his phone and wallet.
Thomas worked in chemical biology, a field at the intersection of chemistry and biology that uses small molecules to study and manipulate biological systems — work that plays a central role in modern drug discovery and the development of new treatments.
At Novartis, he focused on identifying and testing compounds that could target disease-related proteins, part of a broader effort to develop new medicines for complex conditions.
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In the months after his disappearance, authorities conducted extensive searches but found no trace of him. On March 17, 2026, a body believed to be Thomas was recovered from Lake Quannapowitt after the ice thawed. Officials said no foul play was suspected, though the cause and manner of death have not been publicly disclosed.
The overlap in timing and profession has fueled questions about whether something more is at play. But investigators have not identified any evidence of a broader pattern, and the cases themselves, ranging from confirmed homicides to disappearances and natural deaths, point in different directions.
missing persons, ufos, pentagon, us air force, nasa
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