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ఒక్కరోజులో రూ.2.87 లక్షల కోట్ల సంపద వృద్ధి - బీఎస్ఈ

ఎన్నికల ఫలితాల నేపథ్యంలో స్టాక్ మార్కెట్లు నేడు లాభాల్లో దూసుకెళ్తున్నాయి. భారీ లాభాలతో ఏకంగా సెన్సెక్స్ 40వేల మార్క్ దాటింది. బీఎస్ఈ మదుపరుల సంపద గురువారం ఒక్కరోజులోనే రూ.2.87 లక్షల కోట్లు పెరిగింది.

సంపద వృద్ధి
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Published : May 23, 2019, 12:08 PM IST

సార్వత్రిక ఎన్నికల ఫలితాలు ఎన్డీఏ కూటమికి సానుకూలంగా వస్తున్నట్లు లెక్కింపు సరళి స్పష్టం చేస్తోంది. ఈ నేపథ్యంలో స్టాక్ మార్కెట్లు భారీ లాభాల్లో ట్రేడవుతున్నాయి.

ఓ దశలో సెన్సెక్స్ తొలిసారి 40 వేల మార్కును దాటగా.. రికార్డు స్థాయిలో నిఫ్టీ 12 వేలకు పైగా ట్రేడయింది.

భారీ లాభాల కారణంగా బీఎస్​ఈలో మదుపరుల సంపద సెషన్ ప్రారంభమైన కొద్ది సేపటికే... రూ. 2,87,028.8 కోట్లు పెరిగింది. ఫలితంగా మొత్తం సంపద రూ.1,53,56,153.14 కోట్లకు చేరింది.

సార్వత్రిక ఎన్నికల ఫలితాలు ఎన్డీఏ కూటమికి సానుకూలంగా వస్తున్నట్లు లెక్కింపు సరళి స్పష్టం చేస్తోంది. ఈ నేపథ్యంలో స్టాక్ మార్కెట్లు భారీ లాభాల్లో ట్రేడవుతున్నాయి.

ఓ దశలో సెన్సెక్స్ తొలిసారి 40 వేల మార్కును దాటగా.. రికార్డు స్థాయిలో నిఫ్టీ 12 వేలకు పైగా ట్రేడయింది.

భారీ లాభాల కారణంగా బీఎస్​ఈలో మదుపరుల సంపద సెషన్ ప్రారంభమైన కొద్ది సేపటికే... రూ. 2,87,028.8 కోట్లు పెరిగింది. ఫలితంగా మొత్తం సంపద రూ.1,53,56,153.14 కోట్లకు చేరింది.

US ENDANGERED WOLVES
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS/VNR: Copyright of Yellowstone National Park
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 4.22
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis, Missouri, US - 20 May 2019
1. Various of Mexican gray wolves at sanctury in St. Louis
2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Regina Mossotti, Director of Conservation, Endangered Wolf Centre
"So the Mexican wolf and the American red wolf are the two most endangered wolves in the world. The Mexican wolf has about one hundred and fifty individuals out in the wild mostly found in the United States and Arizona and New Mexico. The red wolf is unfortunately worse. They have about thirty individuals left in the wild."
3. Red wolves and their five week old pups
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina Mossotti, Director of Conservation, Endangered Wolf Centre
"Their numbers were down so low in the wild that the USFWS ( United States Fish and Wildlife) Service actually went out and captured the few remaining of those species and brought them into captivity into zoos to start a breeding program. And once those numbers were up in the zoological community they actually started the reintroduction back into the wild. The red wolf was released in nineteen eighty seven. It was a first time in history anybody had released a large carnivore back onto the landscape to try and save an endangered species. And for many decades it was going really well."
5. Wide of adult gray wolves walking in forest
6. Mid of adult gray wolf disappearing into shrubs
7. Wide of adult grays and their pups running through trees
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina Mossotti, Director of Conservation, Endangered Wolf Centre
"Poaching's still an issue and with the Mexican wolf we have seen almost 70 percent of the wolves that have been released since the recovery program started in 1998,have died because of human related causes."
9. Gray wolves and pups
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina Mossotti, Director of Conservation, Endangered Wolf Centre
"We actually take puppies that are born at our centre, that are just maybe one to two weeks old. So itsy bity they can fit in the palm of your hand. We fly them down to the recovery area in New Mexico and Arizona. And based on the G.P.S. collar of the wild wolves we can tell where the wild wolf mother's den is and we sneak our puppies into that wild wolf den. She raises them as her own. So it gives them a greater chance of surviving. She teaches them how to stay away from people how to hunt dinner, how to protect their territory. Gives them all that knowledge that makes them successful, but also we snuck new genetics out there. So when they grow up and breed they're getting those vital new genetics to keep the population healthy."
VNR: Copyright of Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone National Park, US - date not available
11. Various wide of western gray wolves
ASSOCIATED PRESS
St. Louis, Missouri, US - 20 May 2019
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina Mossotti, Director of Conservation, Endangered Wolf Centre
"We  need to find new locations to be able to release them that has big green space, plenty of food for them to hunt for dinner. And that's one of the things that the USFW Service is working on right now, is identifying areas in the southeastern United States that we can hopefully reintroduce the American red wolf and help save literally the most endangered wolf in the world."
13. Wide of female red wolf nursing her pubs
LEADIN:
In the US the illegal killing of endangered wolves is continuing depsite the government's $80 million (USD) plan to ensure their survival.
Officials warn the red wolves of North Carolina could disappear from the wild within a decade. While in the Southwest,  Mexican gray wolves continue to struggle.
STORYLINE:
These are Mexican gray wolves.
This male and female and their young pups are enjoying the safety of the Endangered Wolf Centre in Missouri.
Wolves are predators which are vital to harmonising and keeping balance in ecosystems.
Scientists who've published studies on wolves in Yellowstone National Park say their reintroduction encouraged a regrowth in plants which had died out through overgrazing.
The new vegetation reduced soil erosion in streams which helped restore the habitats of fish, birds other species.
Biologists say poaching is having a deep impact on wolf populations.
The Associated Press found that over the last two decades, more than half of Mexican wolf deaths and about one in four red wolf deaths resulted from gunshots or were otherwise deemed illegal.
According to the Director of Conservation, at the Endangered Wolf Centre, Regina Mossotti: "The Mexican wolf and the American Red Wolf are the two most endangered wolves in the world. The Mexican wolf has about one hundred and fifty individuals out in the wild mostly found in the United States and Arizona and New Mexico. The red wolf is unfortunately worse. They have about 30 individuals left in the wild".
Another major obstacle to the restoration of wild wolves is opposition from the public according to biologists here at this sanctuary.
They claim opponents are often fed missinformation about attacks by wolves and there are longstanding arguments over whether the wolves should be treated as a distinct species which warrants protection.
In the Southwest, a record number of Mexican gray wolves turned up dead in 2018, tempering an increase in the overall population to 131 animals, but Mossotti says the greatest concern is for the red wolf.
"Their numbers were down so low in the wild that the US Fish and Wildlife service actually went out and captured the few remaining of those species and brought them into captivity into zoos to start a breeding program. And once those numbers were up in the zoological community they actually started the reintroduction back into the wild. The red wolf was released in nineteen eighty seven. It was a first time in history anybody had released a large carnivore back onto the landscape to try and save an endangered species. And for many decades it was going really well," she says.
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service says shootings are a particular problem when the hunting season collides with wolf breeding season.
If the situation continues unchecked the wild population of red wolves is likely to be lost within the next decade.
"Poaching still an issue and with the Mexican wolf we have seen almost 70 percent of the wolves that have been released since the recovery program started in 1998 have died because of human related causes," says Mossotti.
Western gray wolves now number around 6,000 in the Northern Rockies, Pacific Northwest and Western Great Lakes.
They're legal to hunt in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming, and in March U.S. officials announced plans to end federal protection in forty-eight further states.
The reason western gray wolves have been successful is because they were reintroduced to areas with expansive public lands and plenty of deer, elk and other prey according to scientists.
They say this means they didn't come into confrontation with people.
By contrast, Mexican wolves live in isolated desert mountain ranges, where year-round livestock grazing increases their odds of running into trouble. Red wolves are in an area dominated by farms and private land.
At least 96 red wolves died of gunshot wounds over nearly three decades. For Mexican wolves, 83 deaths were classified as "illegal" over 20 years and that doesn't include the 21 deaths in 2018 still under investigation.
Other programs have faced stiff resistance from rural communities.
"We  need to find new locations to be able to release them that has big green space, plenty of food for them to hunt for dinner. And that's one of the things that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working on right now, is identifying areas in the southeastern United States that we can hopefully reintroduce the American red wolf and help save literally the most endangered wolf in the world," Mossotti.
Since 1977, more than $44.2 million has been spent on the Mexican wolf, according to federal reports. At least $39.4 million has been spent on red wolves over the past three decades.
The community antipathy to wolves has a long history. European settlers arriving in the US paid bounties to have wolved killed, later government extermination programs took over.
In the long term centres like this one are hoping to convince people that the wolves are not their enemies, but help to balance the environment to the benefit of all of us.
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