Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Air pollution affects life expectancy worse than smoking, terrorism

The effect of pollution on life expectancy in India is worse than that of HIV/AIDS, cigarette smoking, and even terrorism, according to a study which found that Indians would live 4.3 years longer if the country met the WHO guidelines.
According to the new Air Quality Life Index (AQLI), developed by researchers at University of Chicago in the US, particulate air pollution cuts global average life expectancy by 1.8 years per person.
The AQLI reveals that India and China, which make up 36 per cent of the world's population, account for 73 per cent of all years of life lost due to particulate pollution.
On average, people in India would live 4.3 years longer if the country met the WHO guideline -- expanding the average life expectancy at birth there from 69 to 73 years.

Extreme heat increasing in both summer and winter

The new study found both relative and absolute extreme heat events have increased across the US and Canada since 1980. This upward trend is greatest across the southern US, especially in the Ozarks and southern Arizona, as well as northern Quebec. That means there are more extremely hot days during the summer as well as more days that are considered extremely hot for the time of year, like abnormally warm days in the winter.
The new research also found both relative and absolute extreme cold events are decreasing, most notably in Alaska and Northern Canada, along with patches along the US Atlantic coast. In these areas, there are fewer instances of temperatures that are extremely cold either compared to the normal range, like in winter, or for the time of year, like unusually cold days in the summer.
Global mean surface temperature, the most frequently cited indicator of climate change, has been steadily increasing since the 1970s.

2°C rise ‘disastrous’ for poor

The 24th Conference of Parties (CoP) at Katowice, Poland, on climate change from December 2 to 14 will indicate whether or not the Paris Agreement (which entered into force in November 2016) will be relevant.
This was one of the key takeaways of a media briefing on climate change organised by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) here last week. The Paris Agreement prescribes an overarching temperature goal — to keep the increase in global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C.
The IPCC’s Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C establishes that the world has already warmed by 1°C since pre-industrial levels. Some regions have warmed even more. India, for instance, has warmed by about 1.2°C between 1901 and 2017, according to CSE research,
The impact at 2°C will be far higher than at 1.5°C and will be catastrophic for the poor and the vulnerable communities. This makes 2°C an anti-poor target.

Monday, November 26, 2018

Northwest China hit by sandstorm as Beijing is smothered in smog


BEIJING: A northwest Chinese city was engulfed by a massive sandstorm that sparked rural fires, forced traffic to slow down and prompted residents to cover their faces, according to state media.  vehicles were made to slow down and police in high visibility vests were seen directing traffic. Winds also sparked fires in  when heating kindle was blown onto haystacks. Authorities in the city also put out an advisory warning of dry weather and a risk of fire, telling residents to "take precautions". Such storms regularly occur in the dry season, when winds blow loose, dry soil and sand into  from the Gobi desert, coating cities in a layer of yellow grime. While the northwest faced a sandstorm, Beijing was on Monday shrouded in a thick smog that prompted many to wear protective face masks.

Could an anti-global warming atmospheric spraying program really work?

A program to reduce Earth's heat capture by injecting aerosols into the atmosphere from high-altitude aircraft is possible, inexpensive, and would be unlikely to remain secret.Those are the key findings of new research published today in Environmental Research Letters, which looked at the capabilities and costs of various methods of delivering sulphates into the lower stratosphere, known as stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI).
The researchers examined the costs and practicalities of a large scale, hypothetical 'solar geoengineering' project beginning 15 years from now. Its aim would be to halve the increase in anthropogenic radiative forcing, by deploying material to altitudes of around 20 kilometres.

Four ways our cities can cut transport emissions


The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently warned that global warming could reach 1.5℃ as early as 2030. The landmark report by leading scientists urged nations to do more to avert an impending crisis.We have 12 years, the report said, to contain greenhouse gas emissions. This includes serious efforts to reduce  emissions.
In Australia, transport is the third-largest source of greenhouse gases, accounting for around 17% of emissions. Passenger cars account for around half of our transport emissions.


Better wastewater treatment in India with Dutch expertise


India is facing extreme water scarcity. Urbanization increases the demand for clean drinking water, while the water supply is increasingly polluted. That is why Dutch researchers are working on new ways to manage wastewater within the Water for Health programme, a collaboration between NWO and the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) of the Indian government. The projects that started in July 2017 are promising.

The Arctic is turning brown because of weird weather – and it could accelerate climate change


Over the last few years Arctic scientists have reported a surprising finding: large areas of the Arctic are turning brown. This is in part due to extreme events linked to winter weather, such as sudden, short-lived periods of extreme warmth. These events are occurring as the climate warms, which is happening twice as fast in the Arctic compared with the rest of the planet. Extreme events are therefore happening more and more often, with increasingly severe effects – including widespread damage and death in Arctic plants.

Saturday, November 24, 2018

How whales became biggest animals on Earth

Blue whales have a maximum recorded weight of 173 tonnes and can grow up to 29.9 metres in length. However, until a few million years ago, whales rarely grew over 10 metres.

Evolutionary process

Researchers said that evolutionary shift, which took place at the beginning of the Ice Ages, corresponds to climatic changes that would have reshaped whales' food supply in the world's oceans.

Goa may go Kerala way, warns ecologist Madhav Gadgil

Representative photo. (PTI)


PANAJI: Noted ecologist Madhav Gadgil has warned Goa may face the same fate as the flood-battered Kerala if it does not take precautions on the environmental front.


Not cool: ACs will make world 0.5 degree Celsius warmer by 2100

NEW DELHI: Increasing incomes and urbanisation will see increase in room air conditioning units from 1.2 billion to 4.5 billion in the world by 2050 when Indiaalone may account for one billion units, posing a serious challenge to the global community which is fighting climate change and rising temperatures.

India will, in fact, see a phenomenal growth during the period - from 26.3 million installed stock of room air conditioner (RAC) units in 2016 to over 1 billion in 2050.

Dead sperm whale in Indonesia found with 6 kg of plastic in stomach


JAKARTA: A sperm whale has been found dead in Indonesia with 115 plastic cups and 25 plastic bags in its stomach, raising concern among environmentalists and throwing the spotlight on the country's rubbish problem. The items were part of nearly six kilograms (13 pounds) of plastic waste discovered in the 9.5-metre (31-foot) carcass when it washed ashore in Wakatobi National Park, in Southeast Sulawesi province, on Monday.

Booze delivery


Mumbaikars take home delivery for granted .Almost anything can be delivered home and most would assume that alcohol is another such item but it is still illegal.
The sale goes pretty high on days when there are cricket matches ,most wine shops still provide delivery personnel who even buy cigarettes and snacks for their customers .

Now ,the excise is pretty strict these days they impose heafty penalties on the violators .Remember the Duzo app in Bangalore which offered similar services .
Liberalizing alcohol sales has many things in its favour from preventing dangerous drinking and at the most basic level -  treating citizens like adults.

Post in your views in the comments below

Friday, November 23, 2018

Current climate models underestimate warming by black carbon aerosol

Soot belches out of diesel engines, rises from wood and dung burning cook stoves and shoots out of oil refinery stacks. According to recent research, air pollution including soot is linked to heart disease some cancers and in the US as many as 150000 cases of diabetes every year.

Is Antarctica becoming more like Greenland?

Antarctica is high and dry and mostly bitterly cold, and its easy to think of its ice and snow as locked away in a freezer, protected from melt expected around its low- lying coasts and floating ice shelves. But that view may be wrong.

Presence of textile microfibers from washing machines in marine floors

A study quantifies the presence of textile microfibers in south European marine floors. Researchers analyzed the amount of these colored fibers, which vary between 3 to 8 mm but are extremely fine, with less than a .1 mm diameter, and which come mainly from washing machines. The results show the dominance of cellulose fibers over synthetic polymers, and highlight several oceanographic process pile and transport microfibers to marine hollow. 

Evolution: South Africa's hominin record is a fair-weather friend

The fossil record of early hominins in South Africa is biased towards periods of drier climate, suggests a study of cave deposits. This finding suggests there are gaps in the fossil recors, potentially obscuring evolutionary patterns and affecting our understanding of both the habitats and dietary behaviors of early hominins in this region. South Africa highest concentration of early hominin fossils comes from the cradle of humankind caves northwest of Johannesburg.

Thursday, November 22, 2018

HYDERABAD HIGH COURT URGES PLASTIC BAN IN TELGANA,ANDHRA PRADESH SHRINES

The Hyderabad High court on Tuesday urged that both the Ap and Telangana states should take initiation on the ban of plastic usage at shrines in their respective states. The bench asked that both state governments should immediately issue necessary directions to the Endowment Department as per the Acts and also suggested that guidelines should be made so that people can co-operate within the framework of law. The bench was hearing suo-motto cases in connection with difficulties to pilgrims and deficiencies in the management of hygiene at various shrines following a request from the Supreme court with regard to conditions at temples and shrines in the states .

The bench felt that similar enactments were required in AP and Telangana states and said the Environment Protection Act provide delegation to enable them to ban usage of plastic.

                                      

Green light to thermal power plants only after 'human risk' evaluation

New thermal power plants in India will now have to comply with 'human health and environment ' criteria as part of their mandatory environmental clearance procedures. The Union environment ministry has notified a new list of standard conditions, bringing for the first time an exclusive health assessment as an essential point to give green nod to such plants.
Under its new order, issued on Monday, the company will have to take into account chronic exposure to air and noise pollution which may adversely affect health of not only workers but also of people living in its vicinity. This baseline health status within the study area will be part of the company's application, seeking environment clearances for setting up new thermal power plants anywhere in the country.

                                                                                                                    (TOI)

First Organised census for Indian Dolphins to be carried out in India


  • For the conservation of Indus dolphins - one of the world’s rarest mammals - the Punjab government along with WWF-India are conducting the first organised census on their population.
  • Found only in India and Pakistan, the Indus dolphins are confined to only a 185 km stretch between Talwara and Harike Barrage in India’s Beas river in Punjab.
  • the most flourishing population of the Indus dolphin, platanista gangetica minor, is found across Pakistan where their numbers are estimated to be around 1,800 over a stretch of 1,500 km of the Indus river.
  • According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), construction of critical barrage is associated with the large-scale decline in the area of occupancy, “which have not ceased”. IUCN suspects the population size of the Indus river dolphins has reduced by more than 50% since 1944.



Times of India May 3 2018

Early warning system to aver human elephant conflict


  • A research team from Bannari Amman Institute of Technology, Sathyamangalam, had designed the “smart fence for early elephant warning”. It was recently installed at Ammapalayam village on the Bhavani Sagar – Mettupalayam Highway where elephants frequently cross the road.
  • The team headed by Sanjoy Deb, and comprising L. Rajasekar, R. Ramkumar and S. Selvakumar, designed the system that would send an SMS (short messaging service) to farmers and forest officials upon detecting elephants.
  • The new smart fence is composed of a detection module, warning module and a drive-away module. The detection module is a long distance laser fence indigenously designed by the team and can be operated up to 400 metres.



The Hindu - November 21 2018

Unpredictable weather fallout on climate change


  • After the 2004 tsunami, many scientists believed that the possibility of a tidal wave could be predicted with the help of technology in the future. But, nobody could predict the recent tsunami in Indonesia.
  • “For the first time in history, a cyclonic storm crossed over the Western Ghats this year. Gaja, the result of a depression over the Bay of Bengal, crossed over to Kerala over the Western Ghats and entered the Arabian Sea.
  • This time, as many as three cyclones were found when Gaja was making a landfall.
  • He claimed that the burning of fossil fuels — petrol, diesel, etc. — was the main reason for climate change as it had affected the greenhouse gas cover around the earth, leading to a rise in atmospheric temperature.
  • “People living on islands such as Maldives and Andaman and Nicobar have reportedly purchased land in Srilanka.
  • “Conserving the existing ecosystem is the best way to counter climate change. 




The Hindu November 21 2018

Centre's polthene ban in nurseries  puzzles Jharkhand forest department

Jharkhand forest department is finding itself in a fix after receiving a letter from Union ministry of environment, forests and climate change asking all the states to immediately ban the use of polythene for raising seedlings of saplings in their nurseries for afforestation or other purposes. The letter titled 'ban on polythene bags in nurseries', dated November 12,which was reached the forest department has decided to make the country plastic free by2022.

The government of India has formally announced to ban the use of polythene in nurseries, they will have to abide by it. But at the same time, there must be some alternatives to raise seedlings. 
       
                                                                                                                                    (TOI)

Navi Mumbai buildings to get cash for being eco - friendly

The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) waste segregation & composting, rainwater harvesting and solar power generation. The motivation for NMMC is to improve its ranking in the 2019 Swachh Surveskshan survey conducted to rank India's cities on various sanitation and cleanliness parameters. The annual incentives will range from Rs 10,000 to 25,000 per category for two years, beginning from January 2019. The plan has been chalked out to involve housing societies in clean and green city drive by encouraging them to adopt environment - friendly measures.

NMMC, ranked first in the country last year for solid waste management, is gearing up to turn the city into a zero - garbage area before the next survey. Its aim is to boost its 85% waste segregation record to 100%.

                                                                                                             (TOI)

WCCB,enforcement officer to get UN environment officer award on Wednesday

The selection panel of united Nations Environment Program has selected the wildlife crime control bureau of India and its enforcement officer RS Sharath for Asia Environment Enforcement Awards under the organisation and individual categories respectively for their outstanding contributions in combating the transboundary environmental crimes.
The awards will be presented to them at the United Nations Conference Centre in Bangkok Wednesday between 5 to 8 pm. The UN environment program has selected a total of ten award winners from Asia, of which 3 institutions and individuals hail from Thailand, one each from Vietnam, Korea,Nepal Malaysia and china while 2 winners from India.

                                                                                                                  (TOI)

EU says plastics recycling pledges fall short

More action will be needed for the European Union to boost the market for recycled plastics after pledges from companies fell short.

EU says plastics recycling pledges fall short

More action will be needed for the European Union to boost the market for recycled plastics after pledges from companies fell short. Over 60 pledges were made under the European plastics strategy unveiled in January, which called on companies to voluntarily increase their use of recycled plastics in lieu of regulation after China stopped taking the world’s waste due to pollution concerns.

Tito Mboweni introduces Carbon Tax Bill

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni introduced the Carbon Tax Bill in the National Assembly on Tuesday, marking the culmination of an eight-year process of preparation and consultation with stakeholders.The tax is due to take effect from June 1 2019, and while parliament’s finance committee expects to process the bill before the end of the year, it does not envisage voting on it before parliament rises in early December for the recess.

Pollution has Ahmedabad in a killer choke-hold

Suspended particles come from waste burning and industrial activities. As the world marks Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Day on Wednesday, to raise awareness about the risks one faces on a daily basis, experts stress on the rising burden of COPD.n Gujarat, the percentage of citizens facing danger from ambient particulate matter (PM 1, PM2.5 and PM 10) is higher than the number of citizens smoking in Gujarat.

Hyderabad High Court urges plastic ban in Telangana, Andhra Pradesh shrines

Ban on plastic is necessary for future generations to sustain. Hyderabad: The Hyderabad High Court on Tuesday urged that both the AP and Telangana states should take initiation on the ban of plastic. The bench asked that both state governments should immediately issue necessary directions to the Endowment Department as per the Acts and also suggested that guidelines should be made so that people can co-operate within the framework of law.

Household emissions adding to air pollution in India.

The contribution of indoor air pollution to overall air pollution to overall air pollution in India varies between 22% and 52%, urging people to reduce household emissions if they want to tackle air pollution. Use of clean fuels, electricity, natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in cities, and LPG and advanced biomass cooking and heating stoves in rural areas, promoting the use of electric vehicles, encouraging a shift from private passenger vehicles to public transport are among the methods suggested by the UNEP in its report. 

Air pollution may up autism risk in children

Exposure to sources of outdoor pollution such as vehicle exhausts, and industrial emissions can increase a child's risk of developing autism spectrum disorder by up to 78 per cent. The study included 124 ASD children and 1,240 healthy children in stages over a nine-year period, examining the association between air pollution and ASD. 

Climate change may turn carbon sinks into emission source:

Natural carbon sinks such as oceans and forests - that suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere - may soon start emitting the greenhouse gas instead, if climate change remains unchecked, scientists warn. 

Removing toxic mercury from contaminated water Date:


According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), mercury is one the most harmful substances for human health. It can influence the nervous system, the development of the brain, and more. It is particularly harmful for children and can also be transmitted from a mother to a child during pregnancy. Furthermore, mercury spreads very easily through nature, and can enter the food chain. Freshwater fish, for example, often contain high levels of mercury.
Water which has been contaminated with mercury and other toxic heavy metals is a major cause of environmental damage and health problems worldwide. Now, researchers present a totally new way to clean contaminated water, through an electrochemical process.

Modeling echidna forelimbs to shed new light on mammal evolution

Using a highly-detailed musculoskeletal model of an echidna forelimb, scientists are not only shedding new light on how the little-studied echidna's forelimb works, but are also opening a window into understanding how extinct mammals might have used their forelimbs.

Cubs of Tigress Avni, shot for killing 13, spotted

Days after T1 was shot dead on November 2, her cubs sighted after a gap of 14 days by monitoring teams in the wee hours of Thursday at Vihirgaon.  They were later spotted near the Anji dam. the two elusive cubs were lured by playing a voice recorder of a tigress calling her cubs. 

How do flying bees make perfect turns?

Bees maintain constant centrifugal force while turning
The study by PhD student Mr Mahadeeswara Mandiyam and Professor Srinivasan at the Queensland Brain Institute, UQ, used a high-speed-multi-camera system to capture video footage of bees loitering outside their hive when the entrance was temporarily blocked, creating a 'bee cloud' outside the hive.
This type of semi-outdoor, 'bee cloud' experiment is the first of its kind, and is significantly closer to reality than previous experiments used for studying collision avoidance behaviour in bees.
The high speed videos were analysed mathematically to study the flight behaviour of bees in the cloud.
Professor Srinivasan and Mr Mandiyam hoped to better understand the complex manoeuvre of maintaining a desired flight trajectory while turning without disruption from centrifugal force.
The bees' speed, acceleration, and sharpness of turn were all computed using vector calculus to investigate how bees maintain control while turning.
The scientists found that bees' speed decreases when entering a turn, and increases when exiting. This mathematically confirms observations of turning behaviour of other animals such as fruit flies, bats, and horses.
Significantly, bees were able to maintain a largely constant centripetal acceleration while turning, regardless of how sharp the turns were or how fast the bees were travelling, which minimised the effects of centrifugal force on their flight path. Centripetal force pulls an object towards the centre of the turn, while centrifugal force pushes it away from the centre.
Bees slow their speed to keep forces constant
The researchers hypothesised this constant centripetal acceleration was the result of active efforts by the bees to reduce 'sideslips', or the loss of control caused by excess centrifugal force (like when a bus turns too quickly and you fall over) by managing their speed.
"When a bee is making a turn, it cleverly reduces its speed in an appropriate way so that the centrifugal force that it experiences is always constant," Mr Mandiyam said.
"The sharper a turn is and the faster the bee is going, the greater the centrifugal force that the bee will experience; the bee deals with this problem by slowing down when it makes sharper turns," he said.
Interestingly, the bees showed no preference for left or right turns, which can be an important aspect of collision avoidance in animals.
The researchers also found that bees held about the same amount of acceleration during both loitering turns and close encounters with other bees, meaning the bees' turning dynamics were the same, regardless of the context.
The researchers are now exploring the sensory information used to guide collision avoidance manoeuvres during these close-encounter turns.
Towards creating better flight control
Bee flight patterns have long been of interest to Professor Srinivasan and his lab. They hope to use a greater understanding of bee flight behaviour to incorporate in aerial robots and ground vehicles with advanced flight control and navigational abilities.
"Our main goal is to see how bees avoid collisions, which is the central aim of my PhD," Mr Mandiyam said.
"This understanding can be used in robotics, and also applies to aircraft, as well as ground vehicles.
"If the vehicle needs to negotiate a sharp turn, it has to do so in such a way that the centrifugal force is within certain manageable limits, otherwise it can shoot off in what's called a sideslip."
"We can apply our knowledge of how bees perform coordinated turns to these situations to avoid sideslips in aerial and ground vehicles."

Study uncovers link between air pollution and intellectual disabilities in children

The findings come from an analysis of data extracted from the UK's Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative sample of more than 18,000 UK children born in 2000 to 2002.
Averaging across ages, children with intellectual disabilities were 33 percent more likely to live in areas with high levels of diesel particulate matter, 30 percent more likely to live in areas with high levels of nitrogen dioxide, 30 percent more likely to live in areas with high levels of carbon monoxide, and 17 percent more likely to live in areas with high levels of sulphur dioxide.
The authors note that intellectual disability is more common among children living in more socio-economically deprived areas, which tend to have higher levels of air pollution; however, exposure to outdoor air pollution may impede cognitive development, thereby increasing the risk of intellectual disability.

Scientists study puncture performance of cactus spines

The same traits that allow barbed cactus spines to readily penetrate animal flesh also make the spines more difficult to dislodge, a new study finds. The microscopic barbs on the spines are layered like shingles and sized perfectly to snag muscle and collagen fibers. When testing the anchoring power of various spines, the researchers discovered that a single cholla spine could hoist a half-pound hank of pork shoulder.

Dust from Middle East affects Indian summer monsoon

Dust and soot transported from the deserts of the Middle East settle on the snow cover of the Himalaya mountain range and affect the intensity of the summer monsoon in India.Dark aerosols cause the snow to absorb more sunlight and melt.




Wild coffee plants, Christmas trees and chocolate's tree are surprisingly poorly protected

An indicator to measure plant conservation shows a wide range of wild plants used for food, medicine, shelter, fuel, livestock forage and other valuable purposes are at risk. These include wild populations of firs used for Christmas trees, the original types of kitchen-cupboard staples like vanilla, chamomile, cacao and cinnamon, wild relatives of crops like coffee, and non-cultivated plants used by bees to make honey.

How Chile accomplished its renewable energy boom

Chile is currently undergoing a renewable energy boom. Today, it's the second largest market for renewable energies in Latin America, and in 2016 Chile was the top-scoring renewable energy producer in the Americas and second in the world, beaten only by China. Two decades ago, when this process started, this transformation was unthinkable.

Snails become risk-takers when hungry

n a paper published in the Science Advances journal, Professor George Kemenes, Professor Kevin Staras and Dr Michael Crossley showed that pond-snails have the ability to alter their food preferences in the face of extreme hunger.
The team demonstrated that in order to maximise food intake and aid their survival, hungry animals were prepared to risk ingesting a potentially harmful substance that their fully-fed counterparts would always reject.
Using brain recording techniques, they determined that this was due to central dopaminergic interneurons which act like a sophisticated control switch increasing risky decision-making as hunger levels rise.

Source of 2015 Southeast Asia smoke cloud found

During the prolonged conflagration, which was triggered by an El Nino-driven drought, scientists collected smoke particles on the campus of the National University of Singapore and sent the samples to their colleagues at the University of California, Irvine. UCI's researchers dated the isotopes of the particles' carbon atoms, finding them to have an average age of 800 years.
Combining this analysis with atmospheric modeling of the wind-driven movement of smoke plumes in fall 2015, the team sleuthed out the source of the harmful cloud: smoldering peat on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. The findings were published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"Our research shows that almost all of the smoke emissions originated from the burning of Holocene-aged peat," said first author Elizabeth Wiggins, a postdoctoral research fellow at NASA's Langley Research Center who led the study as a Ph.D. candidate in Earth system science at UCI, graduating in 2018. "Although this peat has functioned as a massive terrestrial carbon storage reservoir over the last several thousand years, it is now a significant source of carbon to the atmosphere."
The scientists' work provides independent confirmation that Indonesian peats were the flashpoint of the blazes, highlighting the role of humans in the environmental catastrophe.

Lake Erie algal blooms 'seeded' internally by overwintering cells in lake-bottom sediments

The findings advance scientists' understanding of the basic biology driving the annual summer blooms, which are both an unsightly nuisance and a potential public health hazard. In addition, the work identifies a mechanism to explain the rapid increase in Lake Erie bloom size and spatial extent in early summer.
"The study suggests that the initial buildup of blooms can happen at a much higher rate and over a larger spatial extent than would otherwise be possible, due to the broad presence of viable cells in sediments throughout the lake," said study lead author Christine Kitchens, a research technician at the Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research (CIGLR) at U-M.

Earth overshoot day: Today the planet runs out of natural resources

This year, August 1 marks the Earth Overshoot Day, the day when humanity would have used up all the natural resources that can be replenished by the Earth within a year. This year, the day arrives one day earlier than last year and is the earliest since the overshoot began in the 1970s. The growing needs of the humanity means that this date has been moving up the calendar - from late September in 1997 to its earliest yet this year. Next year, if actions are not taken to reverse the trend, the date will be in July, just seven months into the year. The rate at which the overshoot date is moving up the calendar, however, has slowed. Over the last five years, on average, the day has moved less than a day a year, compared to three days a year on average since overshoot began in 1970s. Last year, the day came on August 2. In the context of India, if we continue to use our resources at the current rate, we would need 2.5 countries to satisfy the needs of our population. We face a unique challenge in the imperative to lift millions of people out of poverty and at the same time ensure that the natural resources required to sustain development are not depleted. The future lies in development trajectories that are not as resource intensive. While India has put in place some ambitious targets for renewable energy and afforestation, much more needs to be done to translate policy into practice.
So, what can be done?
The Global Footprints Network, a think tank that calculates the overshoot date, proposes four solutions.
Cities: With populations moving towards urban settings, smart city planning to make buildings more energy efficient and public transport more accessible is needed. If driving is reduced by 5% across the world and one-third of it with public transport and rest by walking or cycling, the overshoot day would be pushed back by 12 days.
Energy: Phasing out fossil fuels and sticking to the Paris Accord would help in reducing the carbon footprint. Reducing the carbon component of humanity’s Ecological Footprint by 50% would move the date by 93 days.
Food: If everyone in the world cut food waste in half, reduced the food items whose production is carbon dense such as meat in their diets, and consumed world-average calories, overshoot would be pushed by 38 days.
Population: If every other family in the world had one less child, the Overshoot Day will move back by 30 days by 2050.



How plants and animals are teaching scientists to fight climate change

The immensity of a program to reforest large swaths of the Amazon is hard to conceive — it aims to plant millions of trees over a remote area of Brazil roughly the size of Pennsylvania. If that wasn’t a big enough challenge, there’s also the threat seedlings face from dry spells, non-native plants, and the voracious leaf-cutter ant. Enter a Brazilian industrial engineer and his partners, who think they have a solution. The team calls their invention Nucleario — a circular device that creates a safe oasis for a young tree, complete with mulchy ground cover, a water cistern to conserve rainfall and a wall to keep out invasive plants and creatures. The invention was recently awarded a $100,000 prize in a worldwide design challenge, sponsored by the Biomimicry Institute, a Missoula, Montana-based nonprofit that supports scientists and inventors who find solutions to man-made problems with designs inspired by the natural world. The concept of biomimicry has been around for years. Designers have replicated the skin of the octopus to invent a camouflaged surface that could help robots change color and texture. They have studied squid and jellyfish to look for a better propulsion system for submarines. And a Boston research hospital mimicked the behavior of underwater worms to develop a glue that knits together fragile heart muscles. Now, advocates of such bio-inspired engineering are urging inventors to apply nature’s lessons to the challenge of global warming. Along with Nucleario’s forest-restoration device, finalists in the global design challenge have included a window-mounted device, designed like the rose-shaped frailejon plant, to cool buildings with less electricity, and a roadside filter that mimics the straining properties of baleen whales to clean fine particulate pollution from the air. Some of the most promising biomimicry designs have already been deployed, including several that capture carbon dioxide that would otherwise spew into the air and use it to make everything from plastics to a key element of concrete. Janine Benyus, co-founder of the Biomimcry Institute, said the Nucleario concept is emblematic of solutions drawn from nature. “Learning about the natural world is one thing. Learning from the natural world — that’s the profound switch,” said Benyus, author of the 1997 book, “Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature.” “We need to restore the rainforest quickly, so it makes perfect sense to study the surrounding ecosystem — how the forest floor and local plants create conditions that nurture new trees — and borrow those strategies to do the same."

LEARNING FROM THE FOREST

Nucleario grew out of the profound love three Brazilians had for the rainforest that covers much of their country, but that has been degraded by logging and clear-cutting for new farms and development. The World Wildlife Fund estimates the Amazon lost nearly 3.5 million acres of forest a year in the dozen years after 2000. That’s an area the size of Connecticut stripped annually of oxygen-producing and carbon-absorbing forest. Nucleario co-founder Bruno Rutman was drawn to the problem of deforestation because of a youth spent kayaking, paragliding and climbing in Brazil’s coastal rainforest. In his day job as an industrial designer he worked on products like furniture, but after hours he thought about how his country might meet its commitment, under the Paris climate accord, to replant nearly 30 million acres of forest by 2030. The Nucleario is still a prototype, with some 500 installed with seedlings in several test patches around Brazil, according to the Biomimicry Institute. The test groves have been funded by grants from universities and the World Wildlife Fund. The $100,000 prize taken by the brothers was sponsored by the Ray C. Anderson Foundation, named for the founder of Interface Carpets, an Atlanta-based company that has promoted biomimicry solutions for industry.



Climate change may be dissolving the ocean floor. Here's why we should be worried.

From heat waves to severe storms and wildfires, the effects of climate change are visible all around us — and new research suggests that the impact of a warming world extends all the way to the bottom of the ocean. A study published Oct. 29 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that high levels of carbon dioxide — the heat-trapping greenhouse gas that is a key contributor to Earth's warming climate — have made parts of the North Atlantic Ocean and the Southern Ocean so acidic that the chalky white mineral that makes up the seafloor is dissolving. No one ventured to the seafloor to conduct the study. Instead, researchers led by Olivier Sulpis, a graduate student at McGill University in Montreal, simulated seafloor conditions in a laboratory. The simulations showed that the mineral, a form of calcium carbonate known as calcite, is being replaced by murky brown sediments. Calcite is made of the skeletons and shells of marine organisms laid down over millions of years, and its loss would represent more than an aesthetic matter. The mineral acts as a chemical buffer, neutralizing the carbonic acid that forms when carbon dioxide seeps from the atmosphere into the ocean. The reaction helps prevent runaway acidification of seawater. But with cars and factories spewing so much carbon dioxide spewing into the atmosphere, the scientists say, the calcite can't keep up. As a result, the oceans are becoming more acidic. Ocean acidification is bad news for sea creatures. Roughly 250 million years ago, during the Permian-Triassic Extinction Event, unusually acidic oceans drove more than 90 percent of marine species to extinction. “It seems that we are at the dawn of one of these catastrophic events, and we don’t need to look far to find the cause of it,” Sulpis told NBC News MACH in an email. Not everyone is particularly worried about the depletion of calcite. Sulpis said the slow depletion of calcite matters, in part because it's unlikely to end anytime soon. Even if emissions of carbon dioxide ended today, he said, it would take centuries for the excess CO2 to stop dissolving the seafloor. Then there's the stark realization that humanity's effect on our environment is disturbingly pervasive.


Climate change, not overfishing, is devastating shellfish environments

Valuable species of shellfish have become harder to find on the East Coast because of degraded habitats caused by a warming environment, according to a pair of scientists that sought to find out whether environmental factors or overfishing was the source of the decline. The scientists reached the conclusion in studying the decline in the harvest of four commercially important species of shellfish in coastal areas from Maine to North Carolina — eastern oysters, northern quahogs, softshell clams, and northern bay scallops. They reported that their findings came down squarely on the side of a warming ocean environment and a changing climate, and not excessive harvest by fishermen. One of the ways warming has negatively impacted shellfish is by making them more susceptible to predators, said the lead author of the study, Clyde MacKenzie, a shellfish researcher for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The scientists observed that the harvest of eastern oysters from Connecticut to Virginia fell from around 600,000 bushels in 1960 to less than 100,000 in 2005. The harvest of the four species declined from 1980 to 2010 after enjoying years of stability from 1950 to 1980, they found. The scientists reported that a positive shift in the North Atlantic Oscillation led to the degradation of shellfish habitat. The oscillation is an irregular fluctuation of atmospheric pressure that impacts weather and climate, which in turn affects things like reproduction and food availability for shellfish. The study mirrors what Maine clam harvesters are seeing on the state's tidal flats, said Chad Coffin, a clammer and the president of the Maine Clammers Association. Maine's harvest of softshell clams — the clams used to make fried clams and clam chowder — dwindled to its lowest point since 1930 last year. Some near-shore shellfish harvests in the U.S. remain consistently productive, such as the Maine sea scallop fishery, which takes place in bays and coastal areas in the winter. The state's scallop fishery bottomed out at about 33,000 pounds in 2005 but has climbed in recent years, and its 2017 total of almost 800,000 pounds was the most since 1997.

Earth's ozone layer is finally healing, UN says

 Earth’s protective ozone layer is finally healing from damage caused by aerosol sprays and coolants, a new United Nations report said. The ozone layer had been thinning since the late 1970s. Scientist raised the alarm and ozone-depleting chemicals were phased out worldwide. As a result, the upper ozone layer above the Northern Hemisphere should be completely repaired in the 2030s and the gaping Antarctic ozone hole should disappear in the 2060s, according to a scientific assessment released Monday at a conference in Quito, Ecuador. The Southern Hemisphere lags a bit and its ozone layer should be healed by mid-century. High in the atmosphere, ozone shields Earth from ultraviolet rays that cause skin cancer, crop damage and other problems. Use of man-made chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which release chlorine and bromine, began eating away at the ozone. In 1987, countries around the world agreed in the Montreal Protocol to phase out CFCs and businesses came up with replacements for spray cans and other uses. At its worst in the late 1990s, about 10 percent of the upper ozone layer was depleted, said Newman. Since 2000, it has increased by about 1 to 3 percent per decade, the report said. This year, the ozone hole over the South Pole peaked at nearly 9.6 million square miles (24.8 million square kilometers). That’s about 16 percent smaller than the biggest hole recorded — 11.4 million square miles (29.6 million square kilometers) in 2006. The hole reaches its peak in September and October and disappears by late December until the next Southern Hemisphere spring. The ozone layer starts at about 6 miles (10 kilometers) above Earth and stretches for nearly 25 miles (40 kilometers); ozone is a colorless combination of three oxygen atoms. If nothing had been done to stop the thinning, the world would have destroyed two-thirds of its ozone layer by 2065. Another problem is that new technology has found an increase in emissions of a banned CFC out of East Asia. An amendment to the Montreal Protocol that goes into effect next year would cut use of some of those gases.






Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Amazon forests failing to keep up with climate change



A team of more than 100 scientists has assessed the impact of global warming on thousands of tree species across the Amazon to discover the winners and losers from 30 years of climate change. Their analysis found the effects of climate change are altering the rainforest's composition of tree species but not quickly enough to keep up with the changing environment.

The team, led by University of Leeds in collaboration with more than 30 institutions around the world, used long-term records from more than a hundred plots as part of the Amazon Forest Inventory Network (RAINFOR) to track the lives of individual trees across the Amazon region. Their results found that since the 1980s, the effects of global environmental change -- stronger droughts, increased temperatures and higher levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere -- has slowly impacted specific tree species' growth and mortality.

The ecosystem's response is lagging behind the rate of climate change. The data showed us that the droughts that hit the Amazon basin in the last decades had serious consequences for the make-up of the forest, with higher mortality in tree species most vulnerable to droughts and not enough compensatory growth in species better equipped to survive drier conditions."

The team also found that bigger trees -- predominantly canopy species in the upper levels of the forests -- are outcompeting smaller plants. The team's observations confirms the belief that canopy species would be climate change "winners" as they benefit from increased carbon dioxide, which can allow them to grow more quickly. This further suggests that higher carbon dioxide concentrations also have a direct impact on rainforest composition and forest dynamics -- the way forests grow, die and change.

In addition, the study shows that pioneer trees -- trees that quickly spring up and grow in gaps left behind when trees die -- are benefiting from the acceleration of forest dynamics.
In particular, the study found the most moisture-loving tree species are dying more frequently than other species and those suited to drier climates were unable to replace them.

Animal populations are shrinking due to their high-risk food-finding strategies



A study using animal-attached technology to measure food consumption in four very different wild vertebrates has revealed that animals using a high-risk strategy to find rarer food are particularly susceptible to becoming extinct, as they fail to gather food for their young before they starve.

In the first study of its kind, a team of researchers led by Swansea University used thumbnail-sized electronic tags to record the movement of a number of individual condors, cheetahs, penguins and sheep in Argentina, South Africa and Northern Ireland over a six-year period.

Nicknamed the "Daily Diary," the tags record a mass of data -- everything from the animal's minute movements through space and time, to the temperature of its environment and light levels.
The results from the tags were used to measure:
  • The probability that each animal finds food items.
  • The size of the food items.
  • The effort used to find the food.
  • The effort used for all other activities such as rest, play etc.
Professor Rory Wilson of Swansea University, a world-leading expert on animal movement and lead author of the study, said: "We know that animal populations across the world are taking a hit, with the most charismatic animals like lions and cheetahs being among the worst affected, but up until now it hasn't been clear why.
"Our study has revealed that animals that use a high-risk gambling strategy to find food, like lions and tigers, which have to search for long periods before they get lucky and find prey, are more likely to fail to accrue the energy they need to breed, compared to animals that adopt a low-risk gambling strategy, like herbivores such as zebras."
The average time the young of each species can survive without food depends on their size (larger young can survive for longer) but newly hatched or newly born young of none of the species studied can live without food for more than a few days.

Climate change/biodiversity loss: Inseparable threats to humanity that must be addressed together


Demand for bioenergy to reduce CO2 emissions from fossil fuels could cause a 10- to 30-fold increase in green energy-related land use in years to come, adding crushing pressure on habitat for plants and animals and undermining the essential diversity of species on Earth.

Speaking to government ministers and other high level representatives at a major UN biodiversity meeting in Egypt, Anne Larigauderie, Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, said climate scientists foresee far more land needed for corn and other crops for bioenergy to mitigate climate change in decades to come.

Citing the latest report from the Intergovernmental Platform on Climate Change (on limiting climate warming to 1.5C), Dr. Larigauderie noted that most IPCC scenarios foresee a major increase in land area for cultivating bioenergy crops by 2050 -- up to 724 million hectares in all, an area almost the size of Australia.

"The key issue here is: where would this huge amount of new land come from?" she asked. "Is there currently such a large amount of 'marginal land' available or would this compete with biodiversity? Some scientists argue that there is very little marginal land left."She said this important issue needs to be clarified, but the demand for land for energy will almost certainly increase, with negative consequences for biodiversity.

Climate, life and the movement of continents: New connections



A new study by The University of Texas at Austin has demonstrated a possible link between life on Earth and the movement of continents. The findings show that sediment, which is often composed of pieces of dead organisms, could play a key role in determining the speed of continental drift. In addition to challenging existing ideas about how plates interact, the findings are important because they describe potential feedback mechanisms between tectonic movement, climate and life on Earth.
Sediment is created when wind, water and ice erode existing rock or when the shells and skeletons of microscopic organisms like plankton accumulate on the seafloor. Sediment entering subduction zones has long been known to influence geological activity such as the frequency of earthquakes, but until now it was thought to have little influence on continental movement. That's because the speed of subduction was believed to be dependent on the strength of the subducting plate as it bends and slides into the viscous mantle, the semi molten layer of rock beneath Earth's crust. Continental movement is driven by one plate sinking under another so, in this scenario, the strength of the portion of the plate being pulled into Earth's mantle (and the energy required to bend it) would be the primary control for the speed of the plate movement, with sediment having little effect.
However, prior research  had shown the subducting plates may be weaker and more sensitive to other influences than previously thought. This led researchers to look for other mechanisms that might impact plate velocity. They estimated how different types of rock might affect the plate interface - the boundary where subducting plates meet. Subsequent modelling showed that rock made of sediment can create a lubricating effect between plates, accelerating subduction and increasing plate velocity.
Researchers said this new model also offers a compelling explanation for variations found in plate speed, such as India's dramatic northward acceleration some 70 million years ago. The authors propose that as India moved through equatorial seas teeming with life, an abundance of sedimentary rock formed by organic matter settling on the seafloor created a lubricating effect in the subducting plate. India's march north accelerated from a stately 5 centimeters per year (about 2 inches) to an eye-watering 16 centimeters per year (about 6 inches). As the continent accelerated the amount of sediment being subducted decreased and India slowed before finally colliding with Asia.
Researchers also suggest these feedback mechanisms would have been very different in the early Earth before the formation of continents and the emergence of life. Although their model does not examine the origins of these feedback mechanisms, it does raise compelling questions about the interaction between continental movement and life on Earth.

Bengal chemicals keen on resuming anti-snake venom serum production

Bengal chemicals and pharmaceuticals ltd(BCPL). which had forayed into anti-snake venom serum(ASVS) manufacturing India nearly half a ce...