A growing body of evidence indicates that the continuing destruction of tropical forests is disrupting the movement of water in the atmosphere, causing major shifts in precipitation that could lead to drought in key agricultural areas in China, India, and the U.S. Midwest. Story here.
Thursday, July 26, 2018
How TransAlta used a university-sanctioned research project to lobby for the coal industry
CBC news
Energy giant TransAlta paid the University of Alberta $54,000 to hand-pick one of its researchers to produce a study and other materials it used to lobby the provincial government to try to protect the coal industry, documents obtained by CBC News reveal. Story here.
Monday, July 23, 2018
‘Powerful Evidence’ of Global Warming’s Effect on Seasons Found in Troposphere
EcoWatch
Scientists studying the troposphere—the lowest level of the atmosphere—have found "powerful evidence" that climate change is altering seasonal temperatures. More here.
Sunday, July 22, 2018
Sahara dust may make you cough, but it's a storm killer
Texas A&M University
The bad news: Dust from the Sahara Desert in Africa -- totaling a
staggering 2 to 9 trillion pounds worldwide -- has been almost a biblical
plague on Texas and much of the Southern United States in recent weeks. The
good news: the same dust appears to be a severe storm killer. More here.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Wildfires rage in Arctic Circle as Sweden calls for help
The Guardian
Sweden worst hit as hot, dry summer sparks unusual number of fires, with at least 11 in the far north. More here.
Is B.C. headed for another devastating summer of wildfires?
Canada’s
National
Observer
With warm weather, a high snowpack and floodwaters rising throughout the province, it may seem like B.C. is set to repeat last year’s weather patterns, which led to a catastrophic summer of fires. But it’s still too early to reliably predict…. More here.
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Mercury linked to dramatic decline of migratory songbirds: study
RCI Radio Canada International
The Cape May warbler, while not named in this story, also migrates from the
West Indies to the Boreal forests of Canada. A PinP photo.
Examination of tail feathers suggests that mercury is one of the determining factors for the steep declines of many songbird populations that migrate long distances to and from North America. More here.
Sunday, July 15, 2018
Historic Floods in Japan Kill More Than 100, Force Millions to Flee
ECOWATCH
At least 109 people have died in Japan following historic flooding and mudslides over the weekend that prompted evacuation orders covering about five million people, The Guardian reported Monday.
New research confirms the common house fly spreads serious hog diseases. Is Manitoba's factory hog industry dragging its heels?
by Larry Powell
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| The house fly. Photo by USDA |
A veterinarian at the Walcott Veterinary Clinic in Iowa, Grant Allison, captured flies at swine operations which had tested positive for both diseases in Iowa and Minnesota. In his words, "Flies replicate in moist conditions that could involve manure. So there's an intimate relationship between manure and viruses and flies. The idea that flies might be a possible vector was immediately obvious. We came up with a plan and started by finding an outbreak and trapping flies to see if the flies were positive."
They were.
Not only were they carrying live viruses for both diseases, they were spreading them to healthy pigs and making them sick. What's more, the flies were even found to be infectious in January, usually considered the off-season for such harmful vectors.
Dr. Allison recommends putting a larvicide in the hog feed as one tool in a program to achieve effective fly-control. He believes an extensive program of spraying or fogging would pose too many dangers to the health and safety of workers.
What he does not mention is using anaerobic digesters (ADs) as a possible means of tackling this very problem. These complex pollution control devices use microbes in the absence of oxygen to break down pathogens in slurry, the liquid waste of hogs. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency confirms that, not only do ADs drastically reduce offensive slurry odour (making slurry less of an attractant), they "lower pesticide expenses because of reduced fly hatching."
Trouble is, at the behest of the hog industry that ADs are too expensive, the Manitoba Government last year removed a requirement that they be built along with any new barns. As a result, there is said to be not a single AD in operation anywhere in the province. And it's not believed there are any plans for any in the future, either.
Meanwhile, PEDv has ravaged Manitoba's hog population since a serious outbreak began over a year ago. While mortalities, especially among piglets, were obviously high, the industry won't give numbers. And the province says it doesn't know, because it doesn't keep track.
The U.S. study was published in "Farm Journal's Pork" earlier this year.
Please also read: "In Hogs We Trust, Part 111"
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Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Nights Are Warming Faster Than Days. Here’s Why That’s Dangerous.
The New York Times
A Canadian prairie sunset. PinP photo.
July kicked off with searingly hot temperatures for most
Americans (& many Canadians) this year. More here.
More bad news for the world’s oceans - out of Canada!
by Larry Powell
Pacific oysters - with salt and lime. By Guido - Flickr.
A team of Canadian researchers has found that BC’s premier oyster-growing region off the east coast of Vancouver Island, is “highly contaminated” with micro plastics. The team, from Simon Fraser University, says it is now important to find out if the oysters themselves are ingesting the plastics. If they are, it could have implications for the health and quality of the product itself, Canada’s oyster-farmers, in general and the entire industry, worldwide.
The scientists found micro-plastics at all 16 sites sampled within Lambert Channel and Baynes Sound, indicating "widespread contamination of these regions with these particles." That is Canada's prime growing area for the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas).
It is also feared the microplastics could accumulate trace metals which, in turn, could harm the oysters and other organisms on the sea-bottom.
Three types of micro-plastics were recovered and identified, with microbeads being the most common.
The scientists found micro-plastics at all 16 sites sampled within Lambert Channel and Baynes Sound, indicating "widespread contamination of these regions with these particles." That is Canada's prime growing area for the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas).
It is also feared the microplastics could accumulate trace metals which, in turn, could harm the oysters and other organisms on the sea-bottom.
Dynabeads, a magnetic form of microbead,
similar to the ones referenced here.Photo by Kunnskap.
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THE PRICE WE'LL PAY FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666389925002788
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