30) Logging Company is Accused of 'misleading public' with Carbon Conservation Project


A report released by Indonesian activist group Greenomics has accused Asia pulp and Paper (APP) of making false claims of 'going green'. According to the report, logging giant APP were obliged to set aside 12,640 ha of Sumatran rainforest in accordance with Indonesian law following the assessment of the area by subsidiary company PT. The campaign group claims APP is 'deliberately misleading the public by claiming to be voluntarily setting the area aside in 'an attempt to dupe the public into believing that the company is going green'. In a press release APP heralded the Kampar Carbon Reserve project, under which the area has been set aside as a carbon reserve, as the 'world's first pulpwood plantation concession to be carbon reserve REDD+initiative'. However, Greenomics have questioned the reliability of the MOF's assessment claiming it was hurriedly carried out on a quick visit from Jakarta. Later, a more reliable assessment by PRP found the area was unsuitable and fulfilled requirements for lehal protection. 'APP must convey their deep apology to the public and withdraw their misleading press release because that press release has manipulated the legal facts'. Greenomics further says that APP is doing the same again, 'attempting to establish its green credentials' in the face of mounting international criticism of the Sinar Mas Group's notorious forestry practices which continue to destroy Indonesia's forests at an alarming rate. I think its great that this activist group has pointed out the lies and deceiving that APP has been doing with the public so hopefuly after an apology they can revindicate themselves by doing good to the environment and the Indonesian forests.

Link to site: http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/687853/logging_company_accused_of_misleading_public_with_carbon_conservation_project.html

29) Environmental Footprint of Nanotechnology


Nanotechnology- which enables the manipulation of matter at an atomic of molecular level, has been heralded as an innovative approach to improving energy and resource efficiency. However, in a recently released report, Friends of the Earth scrutinized the nanotechnology industry's claims that it can deliver energy efficient, inexpensive and environmentally sound solutions to problems such as climate change, resource depletion and pollution. The environmental group criticized the energy-intensive manufacture of nanomaterials such as carbon nanofibers which require up to 360 times more energy than smelting aluminum on an equal mass basis-saying that this will come with a higher overall energy cost where the goal is supposedly increased energy efficiency. People working in the nanotechnology industry have criticized this report saying that the new technology will bring environmental benefits as it develops. 'Nanotechnology is still an emerging area of science and innovation and as such one cannot expect it to be panacea to all ills including global warming and pollution. But it shows promise' said Professor Richard Owen, program coordinator for the UK Environmental Nanoscience Initiative. I agree with this last comment, it is a fairly new technology and granted not everything that comes out of new technology will be good, there will be surely some effect on the environment but I do think the benefits are bigger than the problems it can cause. The world is already incredibly reliable on oil, gas, and dangerous chemicals so this new nanotechnology won't really do much to help us lower our use of the three listed above, but like I said, it can prove to be helpful in the long run.

Link to site: http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/687110/industry_and_activists_clash_over_environmental_footprint_of_nanotechnology.html

28) Shell-sponsored Climate Change Exhibition causes anger


Oil companies should be banned from partnering with public institutions like Tate Modern and the Science Museum, say environmental campaigners. Shell's 1 million pound funding for a new exhibition on climate change at the Science Museum was 'ludicrious' given the company's role as one of the world's biggest carmon emitters. Shell used sponsorship of cultural institutions like the Science Museum to link its brand to good and progressive organizations and to help lobby government officials and business leaders. The company's sponsorship of 'The Natural History Museum's Wildlife Photographer of the Year' exhibition ended after strong opposition from the direct action group Rising Tide and Art not Oil. A spokesperson said Shell was one of a number of sponsors of the exhibition, which cost 4.5 million pounds and that the Museum had 'full editorial control over the exhibition content'.While I agree that Shell was probably just trying to get publicity and be seen in a better light, I also think it is good that this company was sponsoring an exhibition like that because, although it is one of the biggest carbon emitters, everyone depends on oil particularly Shell and there is nothing we can do about that. Since we can't stop carbon emissions, might as well use some money to sponsor a few environmentally friendly exhibitions. I think.

Link to site: http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/689703/anger_at_opening_of_shellsponsored_climate_change_exhibition.html

27) Google Earth Technology Allows Tracking of Environmental Changes


Google has unveiled an online technology that allows scientists and researchers to track and measure changes to the environment using 25 years worth of satellite data. It utilizes "trillions" of scientific measurements" collected by NASA's LANDSAT satellite. Google is already working on applications for tracking deforestation and mapping land use trends, including the creation of the most comprehensive scale map of Mexico's forest and water resources. Google will offer 20 million CPU hours free to developing nations and scientific organizations to utilize the platform, which could emerge as a critical tool in the enforcement of such land management initiatives as the UN's REDD program in which wealthier nations pay developing nations to preserve rain forests. Technology is not always a good thing as it tends to create more problems environmentally when trying to dispose of artifacts such as computers, cellphones, etc, but this new technology that google has developed seems to be a great step towards keeping track of environmental changes and seeing what areas are most affected, if our efforts to help the environment are creating a positive effect and the time it takes to do so.

Link to site:http://www.enn.com/ecosystems/article/42080

26) Israeli Electric Cars on Fast Track


Israel Corporation is now the head of one of the country's largest holding companies in Israel, contrary to reservations being made about the Better Place electric car company. CEO Nir Gilad said he expects these electric cars to be "commercially on the roads" by the year 2012. He also believes this cars are the trend for the future; and that every leading car maker has announced plans to offer their versions of electric cars. A consumer giant like China is agreeing to work with Better Place. Besides Better Place, other car automakers include Ford and the American auto giant General Motors. The year 2011 will be one involving extensive testing of the Better Place cards in Israel and other countries like Denmark. According to Gilad, Better Place has picked up the pace of its research and development causing company to lose some $32 million for the third quarter of 2010. The Israel Corporation is one of the major investors in Better Place. A market for electric cars in Israel will open new doors to bigger technology there and in other countries such as China. I think this is a positive step towards bettering the automobile industry in the world.

Link to site: http://www.greenprophet.com/2010/11/israel-electric-cars-2/

25) Global Temp Up 7.2F degrees by 2060s


World temperatures could soar by 4 degrees Celsius by the 2060s in the worst care of global climate change and would require an annual investment of $270 billion just to contain rising sea levels. Such a rapid rise is double the 2 degrees set by 140 governments at a U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen last year and would disrupt food and water supplies in many parts of the globe. "Across many sectors, coastal cities, farming, water stress, ecosystems or migration, the impacts will be greater" than at 2 degrees. Other scenarios showed the threshold breached later in the century or not at all by 2100, raising risks of abrupt changes such as a loss of Arctic sea ice in summer, a thaw in permafrost or a drying out of the Amazon rainforest. This is of course terrible news if they are predicting the water temperatures to be higher than they had previously predicted and it must mean we are doing a lot of damage to our environment. Hopefully, people realize this and start making some changes in the way they live their lives.

Link to site: http://www.enn.com/climate/article/42051

24) "Stop Robbing Land From the Poorest"


Indigenous peoples and smallholders are losing their livelihoods as 30 million hectares of land is being lost every year to soil degradation, urbanization and conversion to real estate development and industrial use, according to the UN. Report author and UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier de Schutter says the consequences for millions of smallholder farmers, fishermen and indigenous people, who depended on the land for their subsistence and livelihoods, was in many cases dramatic. His report argues that the key to safeguarding their rights was land tenure laws. He suggested the reinforcement of tenancy laws could significantly protect the rights of land users, as well as redressing the balance in the unequal distribution of land in rural areas. Speaking at the recent Committee on Food Security in Rome, Schutter said: "You won't solve world hunger by robbing the poorest from the land on which they depend: you will solve it by strengthening security of tenure and by ensuring a more equitable access to land and natural resources". Schutter has previously argued that decision-makers were ignoring the contribution that low-input agro-ecological farming methods employed by many smallholders could make to safeguarding food production in the long-term.

Link to site: http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/653063/stop_robbing_land_from_the_poorest_urges_un_food_expert.html

23) Oil Companies under Fire over Peruvian tribes

A coalition of more than fifty NGOs has called for three major oil companies: Perenco, Repsol-YPF and ConocoPhillips, to withdraw from an area of Peruvian Amazon containing two uncontacted tribes. A letter sent by the Survival International and co-signed by more than fifty other NGOs states that "Uncontacted Indians are extremely vulnerable as they lack immunity to outsiders' diseases and they face the very real threat of extinction if they are contacted". The work planned by the oil companies could also breach international law which requires indigenous peoples to be consulted about projects that affect them. According to the letter, Perenco have applied to the Peruvian government for permission to build a 207km pipeline which would impact upon a tract of rainforest 500m either side along its length. Meanwhile companies Repsol-YPF and ConocoPhillips plan to cut 454km of seismic lines in a bid to find oil in 'block 39' one of most biologically diverse areas on the planet, a process which involved clearing paths through the forest and detonating explosives. The fact that the oil companies are withdrawing from this area is a huge accomplishment for these uncontacted tribes. Hopefully more companies learn to respect the land of others and not interfere with their lifestyle.

Link to site: http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_round_up/686968/oil_companies_perenco_repsolypf_and_conocophillips_under_fire_over_peruvian_tribes.html

22) Saturn Moon Has Oxygen Atmosphere


An oxygen atmosphere has been found on Saturn's second largest moon, Rhea, astronomers announced Thursday. The 932-mile-wide ice-covered moon is more than 932 million miles from Earth and the average surface temperature is -292 degrees Fahrenheit. At less than 62 miles thick, the newfound oxygen layer is so thin that, at Earthlike temperatures and pressure, Rhea's entire atmosphere would fit in a single midsize building. Still, the discovery implies that worlds with oxygen-filled air may not be so unusual in the cosmos. Rhea's oxygen atmosphere is believed to be maintained by the ongoing chemical breakdown of water ice on the moon's surface, driven by radiation from Saturn's magnetosphere. Knowing where and how oxygen exists in the universe may in turn help scientists plan future robotic and manned missions. NASA's Cassini spacecraft also identified the distinctive chemical fingerprint of carbon dioxide in Rhea's atmosphere, indicating the presence of carbon on the moon's surface. The combination of carbon and oxygen holds implications for finding possible life on ice moons, such as Europa, thought to harbor subsurface liquid oceans. This discovery is extremely useful when thinking ahead into the future because frozen reservoirs of oxygen on moons such as Rhea may one day become pivotal for deep-space exploration involving human missions. And in some very distant future, one can imagine that the ices on these moons might be heated or melted to extract oxygen and carbon dioxide, both of which are necessities for the survival of plant and animal life.

Link to site: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101125-saturn-moon-oxygen-atmosphere-discovered-science-space/

21) Shark Scales Give Predators Deadly Speed


The teeth covering a shark's body is what makes this fish such a good hunter, new research shows. Sharks are covered in flexible scales, nearly invisible to the human eye, that are made of the same material as teeth. Previous research had suggested that a shark can "bristle" or manipulate its scales to change its direction mid-sprint-agility that's crucial for capturing fast-moving prey such as tuna. A recent experiment shows that sharks don't actively move their scales which are loosely embedded in the skin via rubber band-like tendons. Instead, the structures bristle when water flowing around the shark "detaches" from the fish's aerodynamic body. The way the scales turn helps reduce the water's drag on the speeding shark. Overall, sharks' 400 million years of evolution for strength and speed may someday inspire better designs for machines that are prone to drag, such as aircrafts. I think studying the mechanism of species such as sharks can later on be incredibly helpful towards making other man made artifacts have the same speed and strength such as mentioned, aircrafts but also trains, rockets, boats, etc.

Link to site: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101123-shark-scales-speed-animals-environment/

20) Polar Bears Get Thanksgiving Present this Year


More than 187,000 square miles along the north coast of Alaska were designated today as "critical habitat" for the polar bear as a result of a partial settlement in an ongoing lawsuit brought by the Center for Biological Diversity, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Greenpeace against the Department of the Interior. This designation under the Endangered Species Act is intended to safeguard those coastal lands and waters under U.S. jurisdiction that are vital to the polar bears' survival and recovery. "The critical habitat designation clearly identifies the areas that need to be protected if the polar bear is to survive in a rapidly melting Arctic". Federal agencies are prohibited from taking any actions that may harm or damage critical habitat. Species that have critical habitat designated are more than twice as likely to be recovering, and less than half as likely to be declining, as those without it. "Polar bears are slipping away" said Andrew Wetzler, Director of NRDC's Land and Wildlife Program "but we know that there are crucial protections that can keep them around. Today's designation is a start, especially in warding off ill-considered oil and gas development in America's most important polar bear habitat."

As with other species, it is really great to see laws passed to be able to protect these endangered animals. There is still the question of wether to allow oil companies to drill for oil in this newly designated critical habitat and I really hope that they don't, and that they consider this area as an area that shouldn't be touched by man and should be left just for the polar bears recovery.

Link to site: http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2010/polar-bear-11-24-2010.html

19) Fishing Nations Agree to Reduction in Tuna Quota


Fishing nations agreed on Saturday to a slim reduction in quotas for catching giant Atlantic bluefin tuna, whose stocks have plunged as fishermen strive to meet demand from sushi lovers. The quota set for 2011 is of 12,900 tones, down 600 from this year. An Atlantic bluefin can grow to the size of a horse and fetch as much as $100,000 in markets such as Japan, but stocks have plunged by more than 80 percent since 1970s according to Western scientists. "Greed and mismanagement have taken priority over sustainability and common sense" WWF said "This measly quota reduction is insufficient to ensure the recovery of bluefin tuna in the Mediterranean Sea". France, Italy, and Spain catch most of the Atlantic bluefin consumed in the world and 80% of the haul goes to Japan. Environmental groups lamented the cut as too little while the fishing industry said it was too much. I think this is a great step towards the recovery of the bluefin tuna but of course it is to be expected that the fishing industry would complain. Those greedy people cannot see into the future and how, what they are doing, is going to end with the fish in the sea. Let them keep fishing as much as they do right now and in 10-20 years let's watch them complain of how there is no more tuna to fish. But of course nobody wants to listen to the environmental groups now but in 20 years time people are gonna regret not hearing them out. Hopefully, other endangered fish will also get some sort of protection soon before they go extinct.

Link to site: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AQ1HK20101127

18) Sea Turtles on Cape Cod


More than two dozen rare sea turtles who were cold, hungry and lost were rescued over the Thanksgiving holiday after having washed ashore on Cape Cod. The Kemp's ridley species of turtles are being treated at an animal care center south of Boston for hypothermia, dehydration, and malnourishment, aquarium spokesman Tony LaCasse said. He noted that at least half of them are suffering from pneumonia and all have bacterial infections. Thanks to strong northwest winds earlier this week, the charcoal black turtles weighing between two and eight pounds were washed onto beaches along the upper arm of the Cape, a favorite seaside vacation spot in Massachusetts. The turtles' body temperatures are normally in the low to mid 70s Fahrenheit, but these turtles had temperatures only in the low 50s. They will now spend three to nine months at the animal center where their body temperatures will be raised slowly and they will be treated with medicine before released back into the ocean.

The big question that I get from this article is why was their body temperature so low? Does it have to go with global warming and temperatures in the oceans being really cold? Even so, I read about reptiles being able to regulate their temperature and how most of them like the cold water anyway with turtles being able to stay underwater for days at a time. I am sure there is more to this article and to these turtles than we know of right now but I would definitively like to hear more about it later as they find out more and as these turtles get better.

Link to site: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AP34W20101126

17) Dolphins See Themselves in Mirror


There is a video I watched on CNN.com about how dolphins' intelligence rivals that of humans. The reporter, Randi Kaye, climbed down into a small underwater lab with a window into the aquarium where scientist put a two way mirror on the glass. Dolphins figure out its their reflection and they show interest to look at themselves. Some dolphins open their mouth and stick their tongue out, others swim upside down and some others get really up close to look into their eyes. Dolphins aren't the only mammals that recognize themselves, elephants do it too. They do this by marking the elephants with a small mark above their eyes and then the elephants try to look at this mark and figure out what has been done to them by looking into the mirror. By the end of the video, the scientist explains that we need to look at this animals in a new light and in return protect this animals and not believe we are the only intelligent creatures in this planet because we are not alone. I completely agree with this, just as we have in recent years discovered how intelligent chimps are, other animals start to show that their brains work very similarly to ours. I think it is fascinating and I hope to hear more about the dolphin research in coming years.

Link to video: http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2010/11/22/ctw.kaye.dolphin.intelligence.cnn?hpt=C2

16) General Electric Will Buy 25,000 Electric Vehicles by 2015


General Electric announced the world's largest-ever single electric vehicle commitment. The company will purchase 25,000 electric vehicles by 2015 for its own fleet and through its Capital Fleet Services business. GE Chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt said the company will convert at least half of its 30,000 global fleet to electrics and will partner with fleet customers to deploy a total of 25,000 electric vehicles by 2015. GE will initially purchase 12,000 GM vehicles, beginning with the Chevrolet Volt 2011, and will add other vehicles as manufacturers expand their electric vehicle portfolios. GE manufactures an electric vehicle charger the GE WattStation, which is designed to cut the time needed for vehicle charging from 12-18 hours to as little as 4-8 hours compares to standard charging. GE businesses including Capital Fleet Services, Energy and Licensing and Trading will benefit from an emerging electric vehicle market that could deliver up to $500 million in GE revenue over the next three years. GE also announced two electric vehicle customer experience and learning centers to provide customers, employees, and researchers first-hand access to electric vehicles and developing technologies. The centers will monitor and evaluate vehicle performance and charging behaviors, driver experiences, service requirements, and operational efficiencies, while also affording the opportunity to experience a variety of manufacturers and models, and gain insights on electric vehicle deployment. I think its great that the electric car industry is expanding and more people are becoming interested in it. I've never owned a car but if I were to choose a car to be my first car I would be definitively looking into electric cars. They seem much more convenient and in the long run, more beneficial for us and the environment.

Link to site: http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/nov2010/2010-11-11-092.html

15) Carbon-eating Microbes Discovered Deep in Oceanic Crust


Deep in the Earth's oceanic crust, scientists have found bacteria that can eat hydrocarbons and natural gas, and have the genetic potential to store carbon. Increasing levels of carbon dioxide also raise the levels of carbon dioxide in the oceans, making sea water too acidic to support healthy reefs. Now, the findings by researchers from Oregon State University reveal a possible role for the deep ocean crust in carbon dioxide storage and fixation by pumping carbon dioxide into deep subsea layers where it might be sequestered permanently. Oceanic crust covers about 70 percent of the Earth's surface and its geology has been explored, but practically nothing is known about its biology. At a site in the Atlantic Ocean near an undersea mountain, scientists from Oregon State University drilled more than 4,600 feet into rock that was both very deep and very old and found a wide range of biological activity. Microbes were degrading hydrocarbons and there were genes active in the process of fixing or converting from a gas both nitrogen and carbon.

The ocean floor is generally composed of three levels, a shallow layer of sediment, basalt formed from solidified magma and an even deeper level of basalt that cooled more slowly and is called the gabbro layer, which forms the majority of ocean crust.The gabbro layer begins under a two mile thick layer of crust. But on the Atlantis Massif, core samples were obtained from gabbro rock formations that were closer to the surface than usual because they had been uplifted and exposed by faulting. This allowed the researchers to investigate for the first time the microbiology of these rocks. The researchers also noted that methane found on Mars could be derived from geological sources, and concluded that subsurface environments on Mars where methane is produced could support bacteria like those found in this study."These findings don't offer any easy or simple solutions to some of the environmental issues that are of interest to us on Earth, such as greenhouse warming or oil spill pollution," Fisk said. "However, they do indicate there's a whole world of biological activity deep beneath the ocean that we don't know much about, and we need to study."

Link to site: http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/nov2010/2010-11-22-091.html

EPA: Three Letters to be Thankful For


The Environmental Protection Agency celebrates its 40th anniversary next week. Time magazine's 1969 cover story on the combustible, polluted river, Ohio's Cuyahoga River, led to creation of the EPA. Since then, the agency has been on the job to protect all of America's rivers, lakes, streams and, most importantly, drinking water. We also have the EPA to thank for cleaner air, and solving problems with acid rain and the ozone layer. The EPA regulates chlorofuorocarbons and sulfur emissions respectively. The lead additives that used to be in gasoline are just one of the carcinogens the EPA has taken out of our daily lives. Our refrigerators and appliances cost less to run thanks to the Energy Star program. You can take a hot shower using less water, which you spent less to heat up. And you can choose a car with better gas mileage because the EPA practically invented fuel efficiency. We are grateful and continue to count on the EPA's engineers, scientists, and environmental-protection specialists to be our advocates by regulating greenhouse-gas emissions, stopping the destruction of Appalachian watersheds rom mountaintop-removal coal mining, or ensuring that we don't poison our drinking water with fracking chemicals and toxic coal ash.

Thank you EPA and Happy 40th Birthday!!

Link to site: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/mbrune/detail?entry_id=77727

13) Water Emergency Declared in California


Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency Saturday in Barstow after samples of the city's water supply were found to be contaminated with a chemical used in rocket fuel and defense manufacturing. The water samples showed levels of perchlorate above the maximum level of 6 parts per billion. Golden State Water identified and shit down three wells out of 20 that show elevated levels of the chemical. One of the wells was located near the Marine Corps Logistics Base in Barstow. The base's Nebo Annex Thursday showed levels of perchlorate up to three times the normal amount. Officials asked residents and employees at the base to refrain from drinking tap water. About 40,000 people were affected and hotels, cafes and restaurants had closed a a result. Bottled water was being distributed around the clock at Barstow Community College.

Perchlorate is an inorganic chemical used in solid rocket propellant, fireworks, and explosives. It has been shown to interfere with the uptake of iodine by the thyroid gland, reducing the production of thyroid hormones which could lead to adverse effects associated with inadequate hormone levels. Boiling, freezing, filtering or letting the water stand, does not reduce the perchlorate level. This news comes after watching in class the movie "Flow" which I found very interesting. The beginning of this article states that perchlorate was found above the maximum contaminant level of 6 parts per billion. The movie mentions that water is never really free from contaminants so it makes me wonder how much perchlorate is in the water that we don't know of and only when all these contaminants rise above the maximum level do we get alarmed. What can we do as a society though? Even bottled water seems to be contaminated and boiling the water doesn't do a thing to get rid of contaminants. We need water to survive so for now we will continue to drink it and ingest all the chemicals and hope that no long-term effects will be visible in the next 30-50 years.

Link to site: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40291658/ns/us_news-environment/

12) Tiger and Elephant Killers face 12 years in prison in Bangladesh



Bangladesh has approved a law that sets jail terms of up to 12 years for deliberately killing tigers and other wild animals endangered in the South Asian country. A recent cabinet also agreed to provide reparations to the families of victims killed or maimed by the animals that range between 100,000 taka and 50,000 taka. Each family will also get 25,000 taka if wild animals destroy assets such as houses and crops. The minimum jail term for killing pythons and crocodiles will be two years and a maximum of 12 years for killing tigers and elephants. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina will also attend a conference on tigers in St.Petersburg Russia to discuss ways and means to protect the animals. This news comes after last week' shocking revelation of just how many tigers are left on this Earth and how long it will take for them to become extinct. I applaud the decision to pass this new law so that people pay for their crimes and stop hurting animals and also the world's reaction to the endangered tiger's and the wanting to protect them. Hopefully more countries start passing more severe laws for poachers.

Link to site: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40287437/ns/world_news-world_environment/

11) Deadly Pesticide Endosulfan Finally Banned in the United States


Here is a background on Endosulfan to better understand this article. Endosulfan is highly toxic to terrestrial and aquatic organisms, birds, amphibians and fish, and its use has been documented to poison numerous nontarget species. It travels great distances from where it is applied and has been detected in stream sediments and biota nationwide. The Center for Biological Diversity has filed several suits over the use of the pesticide and its effects on wildlife in California and earlier this year won an agreement restricting Endosulfan's use in endangered species habitats in the San Francisco Bay Area. It is a chemical also known to be dangerous for people and severely affects human health. While browsing through photos of Endosulfan's effects, I stumbled upon many disfigured children from India where Endosulfan is still believed to be a safe pesticide.

Here in the U.S., Endosulfan is an antiquated, dangerous insecticide used on tomatoes, cotton, and other crops and it has been linked to endocrine disruption, reproductive disorders and other severe effects on human health. Conservationists, public health officials, farmworkers and indigenous groups have been calling for a U.S. ban on this DDT-era pesticide for years. Most currently approved Endosulfan crop uses will end in two years and all uses will be phased out by 2016. The EPA estimated that 1.3 million pounds of Endosulfan were used annually from 1987 to 1997.

Link to site: http://www.enn.com/press_releases/3559

10) Better Access to Contraception Could Slow Global Warming


Here was a very interesting article. Apparently, I thought there was no connection between contraception and global warming but once I started reading this article it made more sense and became clear. If contraception is available to women this will slow the population down through better family planning which would mean huge reductions in carbon dioxide emissions. If the world's population leveled off at 8 billion by 2050 instead of reaching the projected 9 billion, this would reduce C02 emissions by more than if global deforestation were completely eliminated! Of course, is it realistic to think that contraception will be available to all women? Population is associated with sensitive issues like sexuality, contraception, abortion, migration, and religion. Increasing women's reproductive rights should be at the heart of the climate discussion as the role of women is largely ignored in the political and public debates that address the challenge. I think it is an interesting proposal and I can see how the population can benefit from it.

Link to site: http://www.worldwatch.org/Better+Access+to+Contraception+Could+Slow+Global+Warming

9) Airlift Saves Turtles from Certain Death


Fifty Yellow-Headed Temple Turtles have arrived in Florida to begin a new life after being rescued from an illegal shipment into Hong Kong. Turtles are a delicacy to eat and for medicinal purposes so there is a high demand for turtle meat and turtle parts. These particular turtles get their names from the tradition of releasing the species into Buddhist temple ponds. Because of concerns about genetic and disease transfer, the turtles could not find a permanent home in Hong Kong so the Texas-based Turtle Survival Alliance (TSA) raised funds for a turtle airlift into the USA and house the turtles in Florida :) I think this is absolutely wonderful, the killing of endangered species has to stop just because people enjoy eating their meat and believe their parts will cure them.

Link to site: http://www.enn.com/press_releases/3547

8) Indonesia hit by earthquake


Indonesia's Mount Merapi volcano erupted several times on Wednesday Nov 3rd while an earthquake struck off of the coast of Papua, far east of the volcano. The ash sent by the volcano forced thousands to evacuate and seek shelter. The Mount's lava and ash have killed at least 39 people since it began erupting on October 26, an additional 74 have been injured and more than 71,000 have been evacuated. Mount Merapi is famously unpredictable; an eruption killed 2 people in 2006, 60 people n 1994 and 1,300 in 1930. The earthquake had a magnitude of 6.1 off the eastern Indonesian coast and it did not prompt tsunami warnings from Indonesia's Bureau of Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics.

Link to site: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/11/03/indonesia.earthquake/index.html?hpt=T2

7) 'Human-induced global warming' killing corals


Coral reefs around the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia are dying at rates that may be the worst ever recorded. Since 1998 this has been the worst coral die-off with an alarming 80% of species dead. The coral triangle has been named the "Amazon rainforest of the seas" due to the diversity of the marine ecosystem found. The bleaching of the coral could possibly be due to a mass of abnormally hot water which moved into the Indian Ocean several months ago. When algae is gone, corals starve and appear white/bleached. Scientist believe the affected areas could end up hurting fish and tourist industries over the long term as dead reefs support less marine life than live ones.

Human-induced global warming for the decline of the corals and said action must be taken to reduce carbon emissions that help retain heat in the atmosphere. In the end, everything in an ecosystem is connected so the corals being affected will end up affecting the stability of a region. It is sad to see more and more examples every day of how global warming is starting to affect our environment, it is only a matter of time until it starts affecting us directly.

Link to site: http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/10/20/scientist-human-induced-global-warming-killing-corals/?hpt=Sbin

6) Typhoon Megi strikes the Philippines


Typhoon Megi has been named the strongest storm of the year by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council in the Philippines. So far two people have died. Philippines is a part of the world where infrastructure is fragile and people live in very basic houses so the damage is much greater for them. Just a year ago, tens of thousands of people were in evacuation centers due to four consecutive typhoons that drenched the Philippines with about 500 reported dead. The weather agency warned that the Typhoon Megi could move across the Philippines by midnight and its expected to intensify when it reaches the South China Sea.
After doing some research I learned that a typhoon is a region-specific term given to a tropical cyclone. Typhoons occur when a rough weather wave begins to rotate. The potential of generating a pressure system increases if this wave spins into a complete circle; with higher pressure on the outside and a low-pressure center. If the system maintains its rotation and begins to spiral at a rate greater than 65 knots it is referred to as a tropical cyclone.

Link to site: http://www.ehow.com/how-does_5187631_do-typhoons-occur_.html

5) Seafood crisis?


Mr. Rumage mention in our first class that by the year 2048 (or was it 2058?) there would be no fish left in the sea. After this I remember calling up my mom and saying I would eat as much seafood as I could because we never know how much we will have left and seafood is my absolute favorite food. With the news of genetically modified salmon come to light in recent weeks it makes me thoroughly disgusted to think this is what we have come to and how the future of seafood is uncertain and its replacement is already in the works. An article I found on nationalgeographic.com talks about there being too many hooks in the water. Fishermen remove more than 170 billion pounds of wildlife a year from the seas and a recent study by Daniel Pauly suggests that the world catch is neither stable nor fairly divided among the nations of the world. Japan catches less than 5 million metric tons of fish a year, which is a 29% drop from 1996 to 2006, but it consumes 582 million metric tons. China's massive population gives it the world's biggest seafood print although the average Chinese consumer eats smaller fish than the average Japanese.

A study notes that in the 1950s much less of the ocean was being fished to meet our needs but nations increasing demands exceed the capacities of their zones. As a result, more of the world's oceans had to be fished to keep supplies constant or growing. A report by the World Bank and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations recently concluded that the ocean doesn't have nearly enough fish left to support the current onslaught.

The solution? Perhaps to reduce the world's fishing fleets by 50 percent, establish no catch zones, and eat more farmed fish than wild catch. I think regardless of the many solutions that people can come up with, for no catch zones and protected ocean areas, it would take years for fish to reproduce and increase in numbers and us humans are too used to our diet to change it or give it up. In my case I love seafood and will continue to eat it because no matter if I stop or don't stop, there will be no more fish to catch at some point, so why not enjoy it while we have it?

Link to site: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2010/10/seafood-crisis/greenberg-text/1

4) Flood of Red Toxic Sludge in Hungary


The Danube River in Budapest is flooded with red toxic sludge spilled from an aluminum plant in Western Hungary. Four people have lost their lives, six remain missing, 123 were injured, 280 homes are flooded and inhabitable. This toxic sludge causes burns or blindness when in contact with skin or eyes. As of Monday, the spill was covering 40 square kilometers causing the government to declare a state of emergency. WWF-Hungary is warning that the environmental impacts could be longer lasting, but others assure the contaminated water will pass through the Danube and cause no ecological harm. The cause of the spill is still under investigation and because the disaster had no natural causes people are believed to be at fault.

This news sounds very similar to what happened with the Gulf oil spill at a much smaller scale and perhaps not as harmful to the environment. Who really is at fault with this things? What measures were taken by the aluminum plant to discard of toxic materials properly or keep them contained and under control? I believe this to be a human accident that could affect the environment long term, but for one that we should all be blamed thanks to our needs for industrial and chemical plants.

Link to site: http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/oct2010/2010-10-06-01.html

3) Giant Penguin Fossil Found


This week I read about researchers unearthing the remains of a nearly 5-foot-tall penguin in Peru! This fossil is thought to be about 36 million years and whats interesting about it is that these penguins lacked the dashing tuxedo that they have nowadays.

This fossil however, showed that penguins didn't have that natural ability to swim and be in the water as they were twice as heavy as the average Emperor penguin today. Modern penguins have melanosomes packed into grape-like cluster unlike any other bird wile the extinct penguins's melanosomes resembles that of other birds. Melanin inside the melanosomes helps feathers resist breakage. One possible theory is that melanosomes got bigger during the penguins evolution as the birds became better underwater swimmers.

Knowing that scientists are constantly digging out fossils of animals that are twice as big as modern day animals makes me wonder how come animals got smaller or if this was beneficiary to them? If they are bigger, that helps them as predators but depending on environment changes maybe being big they would starve, couldn't reach high enough trees. Either way it's interesting that they found the fossils and that questions arise from the pigmentation of the penguins.

Link to site: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100930/ap_on_sc/us_sci_giant_penguin

2) 74 Whales beached in northern New Zealand


Tonight I came across the news that 74 whales had beached themselves in northern New Zealand, the second mass stranding in the area in two months. While this behavior is surprising, scientist don't have a clue of why the whales get stranded. Some possible theories include: herd behavior, fleeing predators, beach formations that confuse the whales echo-location senses, and possible interference from human sonar. A month ago, CNN published the news that 58 whales had died on Karikari Beach when they came ashore overnight. Many died before being discovered and many more were disoriented when put back in the water.

I also read in a past article that New Zealand's Far North region is experiencing heavy rain and wind which could have something to do with the whales disorientation. After our class on tuesday, I can also point out that maybe overall global warming might have something to do with this. I know every organism in the planet is interconnected, by affecting their environment, we affect them directly. It is definitively something to look out for, maybe some changes are going on in the New Zealand's water that is messing with the whales sensors. Other than that, this is a very sad loss and hopefully after seeing this event happen for a second time in two months, there will be rescue teams more efficient to get the whales back in the water before they die.

Link to site: http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/22/74-whales-beached-in-northern-new-zealand/?hpt=T2

1) Rare Asian unicorn dies in captivity


I stumbled upon the news of an Asian unicorn that unfortunately died in captivity. The Saola is a rare creature that resembles the antelope in North Africa and hasn't been seen since 1999. This particular species is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red list of Threatened Species. It was great news to the world when the Lao government announced in August that villagers in the central province of Bolikhamxay had captured an Asian unicorn, despite having two, and not just one horn.

What were the measures taken to ensure that the specieswould survive and why was it taken in captivity in the first place? While I understand that perhaps they wanted to perform some studies of the Saola, understand it's behavior, and try to preserve the species, if it has lived without being seen for 10 years, well then wouldn't it just be better off on its own?

The death of the Saola makes me wonder why, despite taking animals into captivity to "preserve" their species when they are critically endangered, animals still continue to die. Yes, it is true that there are some successful stories where animals are able to breed and raise the number of the species left, I just don't agree with keeping animals in captivity. Zoo's are wonderful opportunities for people to go see the animals, study them, and have a good time overall, but no animal should be locked up in a cage for people's pleasure and entertainment. We destroy their environment, and then we lock them up to preserve their species? After the death of this Saola, hopefully not the last of its species, I hope some measures are taken to ensure that IF animals are to be taken in captivity, it is done so to preserve them, and not just carelessly lock
them up.

Link to site: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39231503/ns/technology_and_s
cience-science/