Monday, September 30, 2019

Multifactor models reveal worse picture of climate change impact on marine life

Rising ocean temperatures have long been linked to negative impacts for marine life, but a Florida State University team has found that the long-term outlook for many marine species is much more complex -- and possibly bleaker -- than scientists previously believed.

FSU doctoral student Jennifer McHenry, Assistant Professor of Geography Sarah Lester and collaborators with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) investigated how marine species' habitats are likely to be affected by multiple factors associated with climate change such as ocean temperature, salinity and sea surface levels.

Their work is published in Global Change Biology.

"Most models have only considered the changing temperature of the ocean to make projections for sea life," McHenry said. "However, considering factors beyond temperature provide a more complete picture of how marine life will fare as the Earth warms and these factors change accordingly."

Using data on marine species from NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service and a high-resolution global climate model projection from the NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, McHenry and her team examined the expected habitat changes of more than 100 species living in the U.S Northeast Shelf -- a highly productive and economically important region that spans from Cape Hatteras, North Carolina to Nova Scotia, Canada. Researchers found that when using a multifactor model more than 50 percent of marine species in that region would experience a decline in habitat space.

"That spells serious trouble for certain species," McHenry said.

Researchers found a stark contrast after comparing temperature-based models with multifactor models. The latter revealed a more significant habitat decline for some species.

For example, the Atlantic cod had diminished habitat space when looking at temperature models, but the multifactor habitat suitability models rendered Atlantic cod essentially absent in the future.

"Atlantic cod was once an important fishery in the Northeast," McHenry said. "There are ongoing efforts to rebuild it, but these models indicate a less hopeful future for this species than originally suspected."

Forecast models spanned a total of 80 years into the future. Researchers said that gives ecologists and fishery managers time to plan and respond.

"We need to have responsive management approaches," Lester said. "A species that is going to have a much smaller range in the future and that's commercially harvested for seafood might need to have more conservative catch limits to account for the fact that it may be more vulnerable under future climate."

Researchers said their study could be duplicated in other geographic areas, such as the Gulf of Mexico and off the western coast of the United States.

"Climate change is not just about temperature," Lester said. "Unfortunately, it's going to affect a range of factors. When we try to predict what's going to happen in the future for marine species, we need to account for the full suite of factors that are going to change and be prepared for the fact that the impact on those species might be worse than what we'd predict just based on temperature."

Co-authors of the study are Vincent Saba of the NOAA NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center and Heather Welch of the NOAA NMFS Southwest Fisheries Science Center in Monterey, California.

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Santa Barbara coastline: Preparing for the future

Santa Barbara County residents love their coastline, from the small-town beaches of Carpinteria to Santa Barbara's waterfront to camping hotspots like Jalama Beach and dramatic Guadalupe Dunes. But drastic changes are in store in coming decades as temperatures and sea levels rise, bringing massive impacts to local ecology and human systems.

To help local coastal and land use managers prepare, a multidisciplinary team of researchers has synthesized projected changes to the Santa Barbara coast that are expected as a result of the warming climate, as well as options for adaptation. The new study is published in the journal Ocean and Coastal Management.

The paper specific to the Santa Barbara area is a joint effort between researchers at UC Santa Barbara, California Sea Grant, U.S. Geological Survey, UMass Amherst, Northeastern University and Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego.

Building on research conducted through the Santa Barbara Area Coastal Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment, which drew upon long term datasets collected by the Santa Barbara Coastal Long Term Ecological Research Program (National Science Foundation) and was incorporated into the Fourth California Climate Change Assessment, the new study specifically examined the impacts of climate change on watersheds, coastal hazards, wetlands and sandy beach ecosystems. It also includes specific recommendations for adaptation aimed at policymakers and managers.

"What's new about this study is its consideration of multi-faceted climate changes of physical and biological elements of the Santa Barbara coastal region," said lead author Monique Myers, a California Sea Grant extension specialist based in Santa Barbara, with appointments at both Scripps Institution of Oceanography and at UC Santa Barbara. "Further, we identify actions that local governments can take to balance the needs of ecosystems and human populations in the face of climate change. While climate change is a global problem, there is a lot we can do at the local level to protect our communities and natural environment."

Key impacts include:

Temperature: The number of extremely hot days will likely double by 2050|and could increase by a factor of 10 by 2090. More frequent and intense heat waves will be detrimental to both health and ecosystems, and increase demand for water and energy for air conditioning.

Precipitation: Longer dry spells and more frequent drought will impact water supplies and increase fire vulnerability. Heavy precipitation, when it does occur, will produce floods and erosion.

Sea-level rise: More frequent and higher extreme sea levels will lead to flooding, coastal erosion and transformation and/or loss of beach and wetland ecosystems -- these vulnerable and diverse coastal ecosystems could suffer great losses by 2050. The study finds that upper beach zones and high marsh habitats disappear first.

An ecosystems view brings new ideas for adaptation

While climate adaptation planning often focuses on impacts to the environment people have built for themselves -- homes, businesses, roads and other infrastructure -- the new study shows that expanding climate adaptation planning to natural ecosystems can identify not just the impacts on these environments, but also creative solutions that could simultaneously preserve central California's unique natural environments as well as our built communities.

"Revising current management regimes could provide new opportunities for local adaptation that conserves sandy beach ecosystems and the vital functions and services they provide to coastal communities in the face of climate change," said UCSB researcher Jenny Dugan, also a coauthor.

Action items for local governments

The researchers say their study highlights many opportunities for local government to make a big difference. It also could be used as a model for other communities in California and beyond as they plan for the local impacts of climate change.

"With climate changes projected to increasingly add to existing stresses that affect the Santa Barbara coast, ongoing community adaptive measures will need to account for emerging climate drivers and emerging information," said Scripps Institution of Oceanography researcher Dan Cayan.

While the study provides a pragmatic framework of adaptation options, the researchers emphasize that taking steps to adapt cannot replace the need to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the first place. Recent reports show that neither California nor the world as a whole are yet on track to meeting greenhouse gas reduction targets, and that the next few years are critical in turning the tide. Even under optimistic mitigation scenarios, a large body of scientific evidence indicates that substantial warming, sea level rise and other climate changes are inevitable in future decades, underscoring the need for local actions.

"We are already seeing the fingerprint of climate change in events like the Montecito fire and mudslides. If we don't act as a society to deal with climate change swiftly, I'm afraid disasters will become more and more common," said Myers. "The good news for our region is that Santa Barbara government agencies are acting now to plan to avert extreme climate impacts in future decades."



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Saturday, September 28, 2019

'Ridiculous': $1.8m proposal for 380m boardwalk through ecologically sensitive mangroves - New Zealand Herald

'Ridiculous': $1.8m proposal for 380m boardwalk through ecologically sensitive mangroves  New Zealand Herald

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Bio-restoring degraded patches of Sunderbans - The Hindu

Bio-restoring degraded patches of Sunderbans  The Hindu

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Dreaming of a Tsunami Barrier - engteco_news Tempo.co - En Tempo.co

Dreaming of a Tsunami Barrier - engteco_news Tempo.co  En Tempo.co

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Endangered beauty of Rufiji Delta - The Citizen

Endangered beauty of Rufiji Delta  The Citizen

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Pinellas news briefs - Tampa Bay Times

Pinellas news briefs  Tampa Bay Times

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VIDEO: Giant Burmese Python Captured Swimming In Biscayne Bay - CBS Miami

VIDEO: Giant Burmese Python Captured Swimming In Biscayne Bay  CBS Miami

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Southeast Asia faces harsher dry seasons as El Niño effects worsen, warn climate scientists - Eco-Business

Southeast Asia faces harsher dry seasons as El Niño effects worsen, warn climate scientists  Eco-Business

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Profepa closes devastated mangrove site at Chiquilá - Riviera Maya News

Profepa closes devastated mangrove site at Chiquilá  Riviera Maya News

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Good Catch: Grouper action better in deepest near shore waters - FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

Good Catch: Grouper action better in deepest near shore waters  FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

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Photo: Mangrove trees still standing tall after storm - Jakarta Post

Photo: Mangrove trees still standing tall after storm  Jakarta Post

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The Art of Drinking Guanacaste in a Cocktail - Voice of Guanacaste

The Art of Drinking Guanacaste in a Cocktail  Voice of Guanacaste

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Spanish startup Elma gets $3.2M for a digital-first health insurance play - TechCrunch

Spanish startup Elma gets $3.2M for a digital-first health insurance play  TechCrunch

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Granville Ritchie guilty of raping, killing 9-year-old Felecia Williams - Tampa Bay Times

Granville Ritchie guilty of raping, killing 9-year-old Felecia Williams  Tampa Bay Times

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World in Progress: Cashing in on Kenya's mangroves - Deutsche Welle

World in Progress: Cashing in on Kenya's mangroves  Deutsche Welle

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Climate Week: From the Amazon to the oceans - Conservation International

Climate Week: From the Amazon to the oceans  Conservation International

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Minecraft biome vote: Swamp will get new boats and a frog if it wins - PC Gamer

Minecraft biome vote: Swamp will get new boats and a frog if it wins  PC Gamer

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Mumbai fears for homes and lives amid rising seas - Phys.Org

Mumbai fears for homes and lives amid rising seas  Phys.Org

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From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risks - Reuters Africa

From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risks  Reuters Africa

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Friday, September 27, 2019

For this ocean dweller, ability to respond to warming waters is about location

It's common knowledge that, through the process of natural selection, organisms adapt to their environments. But what happens when there are no barriers to gene flow and organisms are free-floating between extremely variable environmental conditions?

A new study by UConn researchers seeks to tease out some of the myriad pressures that drive adaptation in small, widely dispersed marine animals called copepods -- small crustaceans found in nearly every freshwater and saltwater habitat -- to understand how these animals may cope with an increasingly warming climate.

"We often assume that species adapt in fairly predictable patterns," says Matthew Sasaki a doctoral student in the UConn's Department of Marine Sciences, who is based in the lab of Professor Hans Dam. "However, what we know about these patterns is mainly from animals living on land rather than animals living in ocean currents."

Sample range of copepods studied. (Matthew Sasaki/Submitted Illustration)

Based on what we know about organisms on land, the expectation is that populations of copepods in warmer environments, like Florida, would be more resistant to higher temperatures whereas populations in colder environments like Canada would have lower thermal tolerance.

To test if this hypothesis held true in the marine environment, the researchers collected copepods from sites spanning over 20 degrees of latitude, from Northern New Brunswick, Canada to the Florida Keys.

Sasaki sampled genetic information from the organisms as they were collected to analyze how connected the populations were. He also took live copepods back to the laboratory to be reared under controlled conditions to test thermal tolerance.

The findings did not show a lot of local genetic adaptation. "Despite the fact the sample locations are thousands of miles apart, and you would expect local adaptations, that is not what we saw for most cases," says Dam.

Across most of the sampled range, there were no real differences in thermal tolerance between populations even when populations were separated by more than 1,000 kilometers.

But, another way organisms can cope with environmental change is phenotypic plasticity, which is the ability of organisms to respond without genetic change. The researchers showed that plasticity is extremely important in copepods.

Some populations in colder waters had higher plasticity -- a better ability to respond to environmental change -- than some populations in the warmest waters.

The researchers write that this plasticity may reduce vulnerability to extreme temperature changes, such as those seen with heatwaves, but only to a point. As overall ocean temperatures increase, the likelihood for extreme weather events like heatwaves also increases, which may push marine ecosystems to their limits.

Fortunately this research suggests that the wide distribution of thermal plasticity and gene flow means thermal adaptation can happen relatively quickly, reducing organisms' vulnerability to warming.

Small, Yet Mighty

Though tiny, copepods are the most abundant animals in the ocean and perhaps on the planet, says Dam, and they play a vital role in the marine food web and the cycling of nutrients within the ecosystem.

Copepods eat phytoplankton, which are extremely small, single-celled organisms at the base of the food web. In order for the energy contained in phytoplankton to get passed up the food chain to larger animals like fish or whales, it needs to pass through copepods.

Beyond the role copepods play in the food web, Sasaki says they are also a vital component of the ocean's carbon cycle. With torpedo-shaped fecal pellets, the carbon contained in their droppings is able to sink to great depths within the marine environment where it remains sequestered and out of the atmosphere for long periods of time.

Given the vital role of copepods in the overall health of the ocean, significant changes in population size will have ramifications.

"By virtue of their sheer numbers they are bound to have large effects on carbon transfer from the upper levels of the ocean as well as from removing carbon from the surface waters and transporting to the deep ocean," says Dam.

But, climate changes may also be favorable in some cases. "It all depends on where a particular population is located and if or how well they are locally adapted," says Dam.

"In terrestrial environments, there are geographic boundaries between populations whereas in the ocean there is a constant mixing and exchange. The beauty of this paper is that it shows evidence of how that exchange constrains the ability of populations to adapt locally."



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Thursday, September 26, 2019

Living coral cover will slow future reef dissolution

A team led by David Kline, a staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, asked what would happen if they lowered the pH on a living coral reef. By using computer-controlled pulses of carbon dioxide (CO2) enriched seawater, they simulated a future climate-change scenario. Their results, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, emphasize the importance of protecting live corals.

The ocean absorbs about half of the carbon produced by burning fossil fuels, making seawater more acidic. And according to a UN report, ocean acidity may double by 2100. But most of what is known about the effects of ocean acidification on corals comes from aquarium experiments.

"We wanted to get away from experiments in glass boxes and do them on the reef under natural conditions," Kline said. "But we never imagined the differences would be so dramatic."

"During the eight-month experimental period we went through about five tanks of CO2 gas -- the kind that soft-drink companies use to put the fizz in cans of soda -- to make seawater more acidic," Kline said. "Our underwater time machine (also called a Free Ocean Carbon Enrichment or FOCE system) used an array of sensors and dosing pumps to simulate future high CO2 conditions by controlled pump-ing of high CO2 seawater over both living and dead Porites cylindrica colonies in our open experimental flumes on the reef flat at the University of Queensland's Heron Island field station on the Great Barrier Reef."

pH and temperature normally fluctuate over a 24-hour period. So the team created a system to in-crease CO2 by a constant amount above the background level. They cleaned the flumes, took water sam-ples and constantly calibrated the networks of 40 sensors to ensure they were adding the levels of CO2 predicted for the future.

Like sea shells, corals skeletons are made of calcium carbonate. And as seawater becomes more acidic, coral skeletons accumulate calcium carbonate more slowly or even dissolve, like chalk in a glass of vinegar.

"Using a FOCE system is not the only way to get at the effects of ocean acidification, it's part of a tool kit, but it gives us realistic predictions," Kline said. "The plus is that it generates consistent infor-mation from a real reef -- in natural light, food, nutrients and environmental conditions where the corals are exposed to the natural ecosystem of reef dwellers. The minus is that it is expensive and challenging to set up and run."

The results of this first FOCE experiment on a shallow coral reef were grim: both living and dead corals were seriously affected by ocean acidification. The growth rates of living corals declined to almost zero while the rate of dissolution of dead colonies almost doubled. These results suggest that at the CO2 levels predicted for the future, coral reefs will begin to dissolve earlier than previously thought. However, one of their conclusions brightens the future outlook for reefs:

Coral skeletons covered with living tissue were much more resilient than dead corals in this real-world experiment because they were protected from boring worms and other animals that feed on corals from within the coral skeletons, and also from sea urchins, parrotfish and other bioeroders living on the outer surface of the corals that ate the dead corals at a rapid rate.

"The huge difference between the fate of living and dead corals in a natural environment gives me hope," Kline said. "As we create marine reserves and learn how to increase the amount of living coral by restoring reefs, we're setting up a positive feedback loop because living coral will grow the reef and slow dissolution."

Kline worked with colleagues from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, The University of Queensland, Stanford University, OceanX, Florida State University, Carnegie Institution and The He-brew University of Jerusalem.

"It was amazing to work together on Heron Island," he said. "It's a very well studied site: people have been doing research there for 100 years. Many of the landmark studies of coral reefs were done there." Now Kline's time machine is on its way to the other side of the world, where he will see if the same conclusions hold up at the Smithsonian's Caribbean Bocas del Toro Research Station in Panama.

The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, headquartered in Panama City, Panama, is a unit of the Smithsonian Institution. The institute furthers the understanding of tropical biodiversity and its im-portance to human welfare, trains students to conduct research in the tropics and promotes conservation by increasing public awareness of the beauty and importance of tropical ecosystems.



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Hurricanes: Improving rapid intensification predictions

Rapid intensification is a serious challenge for the prediction of hurricane intensity. An example is Hurricane Maria in 2017, which intensified to a Category 5 storm within 24 hours and destroyed Puerto Rico. None of the computer models were able to predict it. A more recent example is Hurricane Dorian, which was predicted to become just a tropical storm, before it rapidly intensified into a Category 5 storm and caused extensive damage in the Bahamas.

An Index to Better Estimate Tropical Cyclone Intensity Change in the Western North Pacific, published in the September 2019 issue of American Geophysical Union's journal Geophysical Research Letters, includes a new operational algorithm that improves prediction of the rapid intensification that may occur in tropical cyclones within 24 hours. The paper is a collaborative effort between researchers from the United States and the Republic of Korea.

"The objective of this study is to improve intensity prediction, especially in a short temporal range of 24 hours," said Woojeong Lee, Ph.D., from the National Typhoon Center, Jeju, the Republic of Korea, who is the first author of this paper. "We developed a synoptic predictor for intensity change based on the microphysics study of the air-sea interface in hurricane conditions conducted by U.S. scientists from Nova Southeastern University (NSU), the University of Miami, the University of Hawaii, and the University of Rhode Island."

While track prediction of tropical cyclones (TCs) has improved steadily over the last three decades, there has been comparatively little advancement in intensity prediction due to the complicated physical mechanisms involved in internal TC dynamics and their interaction with upper ocean and atmospheric circulation. This new index is expected to contribute to improvements in real?time intensity forecasts, not only for the western North Pacific but also for other basins including Florida, the North Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico.

Alexander Soloviev, Ph.D., a professor and research scientist at NSU's Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography who co-authored the paper, said the new algorithm may be a game changer in the field of hurricane intensity prediction.

"We have taken into account the phenomenon of the 'slippery sea surface' under certain hurricane conditions, which is conducive to rapid storm intensification," he said.

These results were previously published in the Nature Scientific Reports and the Journal of Geophysical Research and implemented in the new operational index for rapid intensification, which reduced the error of tropical cyclone prediction within 24 hour period by 16%.

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Farmed oysters able to protect themselves from acidification

Oysters bred for fast growth and disease resistance are able to adapt their shell growth to protect themselves from environmental acidification, according to new research.

Ocean and coastal acidification -- the ongoing increase in the acidity of the world's oceans -- hampers some organisms, such as oysters, from producing and maintaining their shells. However, experts now believe that for oysters there is a potential solution to the problem.

A team led by Dr Susan Fitzer, a Research Fellow at the University of Stirling's Institute of Aquaculture (IoA), studied Sydney Rock Oysters in New South Wales, Australia, and found that resilient strains of this oyster -- generated through targeted breeding -- can cope better with more acidic seawater conditions.

Dr Fitzer said: "Our work addresses a major problem in oyster aquaculture. Coastal acidification in Australia, and in many other regions around the globe, is damaging oysters' ability to grow properly -- with such changes in shell growth mechanisms likely to have implications in the future. For example, we may see the production of smaller oysters with thinner shells -- leaving them prone to fracture and at risk of shell damage during culture and harvesting.

"Our research shows, for the first time, that oysters selectively bred for fast growth and disease resistance can alter their mechanisms of shell biomineralisation, promoting resilience to acidification."

Commercial shellfish aquaculture is vulnerable to the impacts of ocean acidification -- caused by increasing carbon dioxide absorption by the ocean -- and coastal acidification, driven by land runoff and rising sea levels.

Working with New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, the University of Sydney and the Scottish Universities Environment Research Centre, the team characterised the crystallography and carbon uptake in the shells of the Sydney Rock Oyster (Saccostrea glomerata) farmed in habitats affected by acidification from land runoff. The scientists looked at oysters from families selectively bred for fast growth or disease resistance to assess whether these factors were associated with changes in the mechanisms of shell biomineralisation, in comparison to wild oysters.

Dr Fitzer said: "Importantly, our research was able to show that selective breeding in oysters is likely to be an important global mitigation strategy for sustainable shellfish aquaculture to withstand future climate-driven change to habitat acidification."

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Thousands of meltwater lakes mapped on the east Antarctic ice sheet

The number of meltwater lakes on the surface of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet is more significant than previously thought, according to new research.

A study led by Durham University, UK, discovered more than 65,000 supraglacial lakes using high-resolution satellite imagery covering five million square kilometres of the ice sheet, including areas where surface melting was previously thought to be less intense.

This is the first time that researchers have been able to map the widespread distribution of lakes across a vast area of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet -- the world's largest ice mass -- within a single melt year.

Although most of the ice sheet is incredibly cold, with temperatures plummeting to below -40 degrees Celsius in winter, summer temperatures can often reach above zero and cause surface melting. The study shows that meltwater lakes are forming in most coastal areas of the ice sheet, suggesting that East Antarctica could be more susceptible to the effects of a warming climate than previously thought.

The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports.

The researchers looked at satellite images acquired in January 2017 during the East Antarctic Ice Sheet's summer melt season.

The images showed that meltwater lakes often cluster just a few kilometres from where the ice sheet begins to float on the sea, but some can exist hundreds of kilometres inland and at quite high elevations, up to 1,000m.

About 60 per cent of lakes develop on floating ice shelves, including some potentially at risk of collapse if the meltwater lakes become large enough to cause fracturing and drain through the ice.

This new study allowed the researchers to see where lakes are forming in the highest densities due to surface melting and which parts of the ice sheet might be most vulnerable to climate change.

Many of the lakes were the size of a standard swimming pool while the largest measured over 70 square kilometres.

Lead author Professor Chris Stokes, in the Department of Geography, Durham University, said: "We've known for some time that lakes are forming in East Antarctica, but we were surprised at quite how many had formed and all around the ice sheet margin.

"The density of lakes in some regions is similar to the densities we've observed on the Greenland Ice Sheet and on the Antarctic Peninsula, which are generally viewed as much warmer.

"It's concerning because we know that in other areas large numbers of lakes draining can fracture apart floating ice shelves, causing the inland ice to speed-up."

The researchers said the number of lakes mapped was a minimum as some small lakes might have been missed, while others might have been bigger in December or February.

Professor Stokes added: "This dataset should help us better understand why lakes are forming where they are and that will help us predict how the distribution of lakes will change in the future, especially if air temperatures warm. Whilst there is no imminent threat to the stability of the ice sheet, our study has shown which areas we should be keeping an eye on over the next few years and beyond."

Co-author Dr Amber Leeson, of the Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, UK, said: "At the opposite end of the Earth, we've seen Greenland's population of supraglacial lakes spread inland as air temperatures have risen, and we're concerned about the potential implications for enhanced melting and ice loss there. Until recently we assumed that East Antarctica was too cold to be similarly vulnerable, but this work shows that there may be closer parallels here to our observations on Greenland than previously thought."

Co-author Dr Stewart Jamieson, in the Department of Geography, Durham University, said: "At a time where the pressure to act on climate change is increasing, it's more important than ever to establish baseline measurements against which future change can be compared -- this study will enable just that in relation to surface melting at the edges of the world's largest ice sheet."

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Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Letters to editor in Naples Daily News Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019 - Naples Daily News

Letters to editor in Naples Daily News Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019  Naples Daily News

Letter writer: Teachers have been trying to call attention to Florida's gross underfunding of public schools by wearing red every Wednesday.



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Don't cut mangroves to build homes: Your say in News-Press Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019 - The News-Press

Don't cut mangroves to build homes: Your say in News-Press Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2019  The News-Press

Letter writer: Fewer mangroves will mean less absorption and more fertilizer runoff into the Caloosahatchee River, adding nutrients for algal blooms.



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Bullet train project to affect 11 mangrove species, 177 types of birds - Hindustan Times

Bullet train project to affect 11 mangrove species, 177 types of birds  Hindustan Times

At an estimated cost of Rs 1.10-lakh crore, the bullet train project will span 508 km between Mumbai and Ahmedabad. Of this, 155.76 km falls in Maharashtra ...



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DoE: Mangroves could have been saved - Cayman Islands Headline News - Cayman News Service

DoE: Mangroves could have been saved - Cayman Islands Headline News  Cayman News Service

(CNS): A property owner who cleared her land without a permit and before planning permission has been granted for a home removed healthy mangroves that ...



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An entire ecosystem at risk from Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train - Hindustan Times

An entire ecosystem at risk from Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train  Hindustan Times

Badri Chatterjeebadri.chatterjee@hindustantimes.comMumbaiThe construction of the Mumbai-Ahmedabad High Speed Railway (MAHSR) project will not only ...



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Building coastal resilience - chinadialogue ocean

Building coastal resilience  chinadialogue ocean

The Ocean Risk Resilience Action Alliance is using innovative finance mechanisms to help protect and regenerate coastal ecosystems that vulnerable ...



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The Blue Crab, Guardian of the Mangroves of Esmeraldas - Slow food

The Blue Crab, Guardian of the Mangroves of Esmeraldas  Slow food

Esmeraldas: a fragile ecosystem, home to an endangered species. And to a strong community of women who are resisting the destruction of their environment.



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For one Indonesian village, mangrove restoration has been all upside - Mongabay.com

For one Indonesian village, mangrove restoration has been all upside  Mongabay.com

Demand for firewood in recent years led to the depletion of the mangrove forest in the Indonesian village of Paremas. But the local government and NGOs ...



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Ensuring coastal resilience for the Bahamas - Stanford University News

Ensuring coastal resilience for the Bahamas  Stanford University News

A new Stanford-led study provides information on how to invest in natural coastal ecosystems toward future storm preparation in the Bahamas.



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UN Climate Action Summit: Five Things Governments Should be Doing - Council on Foreign Relations

UN Climate Action Summit: Five Things Governments Should be Doing  Council on Foreign Relations

A mangrove plant grows on a shore in Cancun. In the 40 years since Cancun was founded, countless acres of mangrove forests have been lost. Now many ...



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Local homeowners asked to plant salt-tolerant mangrove aeedling - Miami's Community Newspapers

Local homeowners asked to plant salt-tolerant mangrove aeedling  Miami's Community Newspapers

Sea levels are rising and saltwater intrusion into our drinking water, septic tanks, landscape and agriculture is inevitable. Pinecrest Gardens-based ...



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Just 20-Centimetre Rise In Sea Level May Double Mumbai Flood Frequency - Herald Publicist

Just 20-Centimetre Rise In Sea Level May Double Mumbai Flood Frequency  Herald Publicist

Local weather change: Mumbai may be very susceptible to the consequences of rise in sea stage, say consultantsMumbai: Large swathes of Mumbai's ...



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Constructions killed half of Maradu vegetation, but razing flats may do more harm: IIT report - Onmanorama

Constructions killed half of Maradu vegetation, but razing flats may do more harm: IIT report  Onmanorama

Wetland reclamation and mangrove destruction in Maradu between 2002 and 2014 have caused water pollution, depletion of fisheries. Maradu flats demolition.



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From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risk - The Straits Times

From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risk  The Straits Times

NEW YORK (REUTERS) - New York City gets its drinking water from a network of more than 20 reservoirs and lakes further north in New York state, some more ...



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Live, artificial baits work for linesider hookups - The Anna Maria Islander

Live, artificial baits work for linesider hookups  The Anna Maria Islander

Fishing around Anna Maria remains consistently good inshore and nearshore. Fishing along the beaches is especially good for catch-and-release snook.



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Prime Minister Commits To Improving Health Of Jamaica's Waters - rjrnewsonline.com

Prime Minister Commits To Improving Health Of Jamaica's Waters  rjrnewsonline.com

Prime Minister Andrew Holness has committed in the international community to taking steps to improve the health of the waters surrounding Jamaica, including ...



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Kanjurmarg mangrove plot is out of flamingo sanctuary buffer zone - Hindustan Times

Kanjurmarg mangrove plot is out of flamingo sanctuary buffer zone  Hindustan Times

Badri Chatterjeebadri.chatterjee@hindustantimes.comMumbai A 52.5-hectare (ha) plot of mangroves, set aside for the expansion of the Kanjurmarg dumping ...



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From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risks - Reuters

From Indonesia to Gabon, countries turn to nature to cut climate risks  Reuters

NEW YORK (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - New York City gets its drinking water from a network of more than 20 reservoirs and lakes further north in New York ...



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Sri Lanka is Wielding Mangroves, its Tsunami Shield, as Buffer Against Climate Change - News18

Sri Lanka is Wielding Mangroves, its Tsunami Shield, as Buffer Against Climate Change  News18

This story originally appeared in Mongabay. It is republished here as part of News18.com's partnership with Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of ...



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UF IFAS Bay Co. participates in Mangrove study - WMBB - mypanhandle.com

UF IFAS Bay Co. participates in Mangrove study  WMBB - mypanhandle.com

PANAMA CITY, Fla. (WMBB)- When you hear mangroves, you probably think of South Florida, or more specifically, the Florida Keys. However, they could be a ...



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Sri Lanka wields mangroves, its tsunami shield, against climate change - Mongabay.com

Sri Lanka wields mangroves, its tsunami shield, against climate change  Mongabay.com

Fifteen years after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, Sri Lanka's government intends to keep expanding the island's coastal green belt — the chain of mangrove ...



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Global Eco Watch: Major ecological happenings of the week (September 16-22) - Down To Earth Magazine

Global Eco Watch: Major ecological happenings of the week (September 16-22)  Down To Earth Magazine

Down To Earth brings you the top happenings in the world of global ecology.



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Maharashtra's MLA, others booked for building hotel on mangroves - The Indian Awaaz

Maharashtra's MLA, others booked for building hotel on mangroves  The Indian Awaaz

AGENCIES / THANE. Thane district police yesterday registered a case against Mira-Bhayander BJP MLA Narendra Mehta and civic officials for allegedly ...



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Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Tale of two climate crises gives clues to the present

Figuring out what lies ahead for our species and our planet is one of the most pressing and challenging tasks for climate scientists. While models are very useful, there is nothing quite like Earth's history to reveal details about how oceans, animals, and plants respond to and recover from a warming world.

The two most recent major global warming events are especially instructive -- and worrisome, say scientists presenting new research Wednesday at the Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America.

Ancient analogs

The two past climate crises that are comparable to today's happened 56 and 66 million years ago. The earlier one, the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary (KPB) mass extinction, is infamous for ending the reign of the dinosaurs. The later event, called the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) was relatively less severe, and provides clues to how the world can recover from such difficult times.

"We chose these two because they are the most recent examples of rapid climate warming and have been widely studied so we have more information about them," said Paula Mateo, a geologist at Caltech, who will be presenting the study on Wednesday.

Both ancient global warming events were, like today, caused by the release of greenhouse gases -- a.k.a. carbon emissions -- into the atmosphere. The sources in the past were not fossil fuel burning however, but related to very large and long volcanic eruptions -- unlike any that have occurred during the time humans have existed.

The geologic evidence suggests that the carbon emissions that preceded the dinosaurs' demise were at an average rate of about 0.2 to 3 gigatons per year. The PETM recorded carbon emissions of less than 1.1 gigatons per year, Mateo said. Those numbers are dwarfed next to humanity's emission rate of 10 gigatons per year, she added.

Dino killer?

The KPB mass extinction event is often attributed solely to the Chicxulub meteor impact in Mexico, but there is a growing body of evidence suggesting that the massive eruption of the Deccan Traps in India also played a role. That mega-eruption flowed across India in pulse after pulse, lasting about 750,000 years. A full 280,000 years before the extinction event the oceans had warmed 3 to 4 degrees Celsius while on land the warming was of 6 to 8 degrees C because of the eruptions. Volcanic activity accelerated during the last 25,000 years before the mass extinction, Mateo said, steadily releasing more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Those pulses added another 2.5 degrees C to the global temperature.

"This series of mega-pulses didn't let the ecosystems adapt or even survive," Mateo said. Fossil evidence suggests that the warming and ocean acidification stressed life on land and oceans, eventually contributing to one of the five mass extinction events in the history of the planet. Microfossils of the oceans' foraminifers, which are part of the base of the marine food chain, show signs that they were struggling leading up the end of the Cretaceous period and then 66% went extinct at the KPB, 33% survived but rapidly disappeared during the first 100,000 years after the KPB, and only one species survived in the long term. On land warming during the last 280,000 years of the Cretaceous appears to have started a decline in dinosaurs as well in early mammals, insects, and amphibians well prior to the last mega-eruptions ending with the KPB mass extinction.

Ocean-building event

The more recent PETM, for its part, was caused by the expansion of the North Atlantic Ocean basin. That involved a lot of magma rising up from below to become the new ocean crust. All that magma released a lot of carbon dioxide, which appears to have caused moderate warming that, in turn, triggered the melting of clathrates -- frozen methane hydrate deposits in the ocean floor. The methane emissions supercharged the greenhouse situation and led to a 5 degree C spike of warming.

That warming was hard on living things on land and sea, but it wasn't a series of blows, like what led to the KPB. Many animals were able to adapt or migrate and avoid the harshest conditions. It was a single blow with environmental consequences that lasted about 200,000 years but there wasn't a mass extinction event.

The best analog

Listed side-by-side, it's sobering to see how many of the same ecosystem effects of the KPB and PETM are now being played out in the oceans and on land in real time as a result of anthropogenic warming.

"The difference with today is that even though it's a very short pulse, the rate of change is very, very rapid," said Mateo. "It's happening so fast that the ecosystems are unable to catch up. There is no time for adaptation."

So while today's greenhouse warming is a single pulse, as in the PETM, it is happening orders of magnitude faster, which could be creating effects more like those of the KPB.

Neither of the past events is a perfect analog, but they are instructive. The PETM could be an analogy for our best case scenario, Mateo explained. It's something humanity could potentially survive. The KPB, on the other hand, would be our worst case scenario analogy. If we take that path it would qualify as the sixth mass extinction in the planet's history.



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How and when was carbon distributed on Earth?

A magma ocean existing during the core formation is thought to have been highly depleted in carbon due to its high-siderophile (iron loving) behavior. Thus, most of the carbon forming the atmosphere and life on Earth may have been delivered by a carbon-rich embryo after the core formation. However, a new high-pressure experiment has shown that previous studies may have overestimated the amount of carbon partitioning to the core.

It is generally accepted that planetary surfaces were covered with molten silicate, a "magma ocean," during the formation of terrestrial planets. In a deep magma ocean, iron would separate from silicate, sink, and eventually form a metallic core. In this stage, elemental partitioning between a metallic core and a magma ocean would have occurred and siderophile elements would be removed from the magma ocean. Such a chemically differentiated magma ocean formed the present-day Earth's mantle. Previous studies have experimentally investigated carbon partitioning between iron liquid and silicate melt under high-pressure conditions and found that a terrestrial magma ocean should be more depleted in carbon than the present day. Thus, how and when the carbon abundance in the Earth's mantle has been established is still poorly understood.

All previous studies have used a graphite capsule, and therefore, the sample was saturated with carbon. However, the bulk Earth is unlikely to be saturated with carbon given the carbon abundance in chondrites which are believed to be the building blocks of the Earth. Moreover, it is known that the partition coefficient varies with the bulk concentration of the element of interest even if experimental conditions are identical. In order to investigate the effect of bulk carbon concentration on its liquid metal-silicate partitioning behavior, researchers at Ehime University, Kyoto University, and JAMSTEC have conducted new carbon partitioning experiments at carbon-undersaturated conditions using a boron nitride capsule.

The new experimental result shows that the partition coefficient of carbon between iron liquid and silicate melt at carbon-undersaturated conditions is several times lower than previous studies using a graphite capsule. This suggests that carbon in a magma ocean may not have been as depleted as previously thought and requiring re-investigation of the core-mantle partitioning of carbon.

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Monday, September 23, 2019

Greta Thunberg’s speech to the UN Climate Action Summit

My message is that we’ll be watching you.

This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be up here. I should be back in school, on the other side of the ocean. Yet you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you? You have stolen my dreams, and my childhood, with your empty words. And yet I’m one of the lucky ones.

People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money, and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you?

For more than 30 years, the science has been crystal clear. How dare you continue to look away, and come here saying that you’re doing enough, when the politics and solutions needed are still nowhere in sight? You say you hear us and that you understand the urgency. But no matter how sad and angry I am, I do not want to believe that. Because if you really understood the situation and still kept on failing to act, then you would be evil. And that I refuse to believe.

The popular idea of cutting our emissions in half in 10 years only gives us a 50 percent chance of staying below 1.5 degrees [Celsius] and the risk of setting off irreversible chain reactions beyond human control. Fifty percent may be acceptable to you. But those numbers do not include tipping points, most feedback loops, additional warming hidden by toxic air pollution, or the aspects of equity and climate justice. They also rely on my generation sucking hundreds of billions of tons of your CO2 out of the air with technologies that barely exist.

So a 50 percent risk is simply not acceptable to us—we who have to live with the consequences. To have a 67 percent chance of staying below a 1.5 degree global temperature rise—the best odds given by the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]—the world had 420 gigatons of CO2 left to emit back on Jan. 1, 2018. Today that figure is already down to less than 350 gigatons.

How dare you pretend that this can be solved with just “business as usual” and some technical solutions? With today’s emissions levels, that remaining CO2 budget will be entirely gone within less than 8½ years.

There will not be any solutions or plans presented in line with these figures here today, because these numbers are too uncomfortable. And you are still not mature enough to tell it like it is.

You are failing us. But the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us, I say: We will never forgive you. We will not let you get away with this. Right here, right now is where we draw the line. The world is waking up. And change is coming, whether you like it or not



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Earth, wind, flora sway Trinidad sulfur levels

As scientists observe the force of nature through a satellite weather tracker, they only see the day's events. To observe the long-term atmospheric influence, University of Cincinnati geologists are taking research a step further by tracking and measuring the distribution of sulfur in plants in the Caribbean island of Trinidad.

A new study out of the University of Cincinnati suggests that coastal proximity, rain and prevailing wind direction can all influence the distribution of marine sulfur on land. While science has known for decades that sulfur is a useful method for tracking diet and mobility, UC researchers say the combined effects of wind and precipitation like rain and ocean spray hasn't been fully investigated before.

Their results, also aligning closely with patterns reported for soils and precipitation in the Mediterranean and Pacific Islands, demonstrate that plants in coastal settings are utilizing marine-derived sulfur.

"What makes our study unique is that we were able to show quite clearly how the spatial distribution of sulfur isotopes in vegetation is related to not just coastal proximity, but also wind and rain," says Brooke Crowley, UC associate professor of geology and anthropology. "And we have shown that these spatial patterns are detectable in vegetation.

"This information may aid researchers in tracking not only the origin of human resources and the movement of animals but also sulfur emissions from human activities within the Caribbean."

Chemical sleuths

Crowley and Janine Sparks, a UC doctoral student in geology at the time and first author on the study's publication, joined researchers at the University of the West Indies to measure sulfur isotope levels from wind-blown ocean spray on Trinidad's weedy native plants.

"We looked at the sulfur content in plants found across the island of Trinidad to see how windward coastal locations compared to inland and leeward wind coastal areas," says Crowley.

The study, published in Applied Geochemistry, described some interesting findings. Along windward coastlines with the most torrential rain and strongest winds blowing off the ocean, the chemical detectives found what they expected -- the highest concentrations of marine-derived sulfur.

"But in the middle of the island, there was not as much as we thought we would see," says Sparks, now a laboratory manager in the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences at Purdue University. "Levels started dropping off between 1.5 to 10 kilometers inland.

"We based our expectations on a previous study other researchers performed on sheep's wool in Ireland. There they found a higher content of marine sulfur on sheep near the coast but almost as high a content level for sheep who lived 100 kilometers inland from the windy coast."

While sheep obvously travel more than plants, Sparks says the high content of marine-derived sulfur on inland sheep stems more from the environment than their movement. Unlike Trinidad's dense terrain, Ireland's lack of a diverse variety of plants, especially tall vegetation, and much stronger winds tend to carry the sulfur further inland in a very steady direction. This would enable the sea spray to travel farther without any windbreak.

The UC researchers' results were more similar to patterns reported for soils and precipitation in Japan and Hawaii. Like Trinidad, these islands are peppered with a lot of diverse vegetation and mountains, and marine-derived sulfur is only found up to 16 kilometers inland, "so we were not completely unique," Sparks adds.

'Reigning' sea spray

The results of this study, the researchers say, helped establish clear spatial patterns in the Carribbean because, although there have been other papers looking at sulfur isotopes in other parts of the planet, they may not be globally relevant. The researchers needed a baseline for what was going on regionally.

While focusing on wind direction and precipitation patterns across Trinidad's diverse terrain, they found differing oceanic sulfur signals between windward coasts blowing sea spray directly in from the ocean compared to coasts that are more leeward where wind is coming from across the island.

"If you travel from the east windward coast of Trinidad to the west coast there are obvious gradients. Within about 1.5 kilometers from the east coast, we see plant sulfur values that look just like marine sulfur," says Crowley. "The plants are using sulfur spray being blown in off the ocean, but there's also more rain there so we can't completely disentangle the influence of wind and rain -- they work in concert.

"On the leeward west coast, we don't see that. Coastal plants resemble plants further inland."

Human activities may be affecting these patterns, specifically. Emissions from oil refineries and vehicles appear to have a measurable influence, they found.

"Sulfur isotope values of plants near busy roads or urban centers are clearly affected by modern human influences," says Sparks. "Using these results and other modern datasets for reconstructions of the past, we need to acknowledge what sources would and would not have been present."

Faunal impact

In an associated study published prior to this one, Crowley and Sparks looked at carbon, nitrogen and sulfur isotope values in modern vegetation as well as land animal remains from three coastal archaeological sites in southwestern Trinidad.

Through a thorough understanding of the uneven distribution of sulfur isotope levels across the island, values found in vegetation can be used to track resource use, geographical origin and mobility of animals or people, says Crowley.

"After establishing what spatial variability is like for each of these isotope systems using plants, we can look at the mobility of organisms or where things are sourced," says Crowley. "For example, if the remains of a deer are recovered from a coastal location -- but have a low sulfur isotope value -- we know the deer must have come from further inland.

"It could have moved to its current location and died here or it may have been brought to the location by people. The important thing is that we can confirm it did not originate or live at the location where it was recovered. We can use this approach to investigate where people obtained their food in the past," she adds.

"We hope our studies will be of use for future ecological and archaeological research, not only for Trinidad but for the Greater Caribbean and other coastal or island systems around the world."



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Is theory on Earth's climate in the last 15 million years wrong?

A key theory that attributes the climate evolution of the Earth to the breakdown of Himalayan rocks may not explain the cooling over the past 15 million years, according to a Rutgers-led study.

The study in the journal Nature Geoscience could shed more light on the causes of long-term climate change. It centers on the long-term cooling that occurred before the recent global warming tied to greenhouse gas emissions from humanity.

"The findings of our study, if substantiated, raise more questions than they answered," said senior author Yair Rosenthal, a distinguished professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. "If the cooling is not due to enhanced Himalayan rock weathering, then what processes have been overlooked?"

For decades, the leading hypothesis has been that the collision of the Indian and Asian continents and uplifting of the Himalayas brought fresh rocks to the Earth's surface, making them more vulnerable to weathering that captured and stored carbon dioxide -- a key greenhouse gas. But that hypothesis remains unconfirmed.

Lead author Weimin Si, a former Rutgers doctoral student now at Brown University, and Rosenthal challenge the hypothesis and examined deep-sea sediments rich with calcium carbonate.

Over millions of years, the weathering of rocks captured carbon dioxide and rivers carried it to the ocean as dissolved inorganic carbon, which is used by algae to build their calcium carbonate shells. When algae die, their skeletons fall on the seafloor and get buried, locking carbon from the atmosphere in deep-sea sediments.

If weathering increases, the accumulation of calcium carbonate in the deep sea should increase. But after studying dozens of deep-sea sediment cores through an international ocean drilling program, Si found that calcium carbonate in shells decreased significantly over 15 million years, which suggests that rock weathering may not be responsible for the long-term cooling.

Meanwhile, the scientists -- surprisingly -- also found that algae called coccolithophores adapted to the carbon dioxide decline over 15 million years by reducing their production of calcium carbonate. This reduction apparently was not taken into account in previous studies.

Many scientists believe that ocean acidification from high carbon dioxide levels will reduce the calcium carbonate in algae, especially in the near future. The data, however, suggest the opposite occurred over the 15 million years before the current global warming spell.

Rosenthal's lab is now trying to answer these questions by studying the evolution of calcium and other elements in the ocean.

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New evidence of the Sahara's age

The Sahara Desert is vast, generously dusty, and surprisingly shy about its age. New research looking into what appears to be dust that the Sahara blew over to the Canary Islands is providing the first direct evidence from dry land that the age of the Sahara matches that found in deep-sea sediments: at least 4.6 million years old.

"People have been trying to figure it out for several decades," said Daniel Muhs, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver, Colorado. "More recent studies said it was the beginning of the Pleistocene (about 2.6 million years ago). Then others say a few thousand years ago." Added to this is a model suggesting the Sahara Desert first appeared as far back as seven million years ago.

There is also other evidence that the desert has taken breaks and had wetter, greener periods interspersed with arid times. It's this sensitivity to climate -- and the Sahara's role in global climate -- that makes the region so interesting to researchers.

The new work by Muhs and his colleagues in the Canary Islands focused on thick layers of fine reddish-brown soil found among layers of volcanic rocks and dune sands on Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria islands. The islands are off the west coast of North Africa, at the mouth of a spigot that seasonally pours windblown dust off of the Sahara and across the Atlantic Ocean. Muhs is presenting the results tomorrow at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Phoenix, Arizona.

Muhs's and his colleagues' mission was to find, identify, and date any layers of ancient African dust in what are called paleosols, or buried, ancient soils. In one coastal location studied, they found layers of dunes made from local shells of sea animals; in another, there were layers of lava from the volcanoes that built the islands. Both of these geologic archives contained paleosols made of very fine-grained minerals rich in quartz and mica -- minerals that do not reflect the local geology of the islands. They do, however, reflect the minerals found on the nearby African mainland.

Luckily for the geologists, the lava flows that sandwich the windblown fine-grained quartz and mica layers made it possible to nail down approximate ages of the Saharan dust. This is because volcanic rocks contain minerals with what are essentially isotopic clocks that start ticking when the minerals in the lava cool and solidify. And since the layers of lava, paleosols, and other local soils are stacked chronologically with the youngest on top, the lava flows provide some boundaries of when the Sahara was dry enough to launch massive dusty storms out over the Atlantic.

In all, the researchers report eight paleosols that record African dust piling up in the Canaries between about 4.8 and 2.8 million years ago, 3.0 to 2.9 million years ago, and at about 400,000 years ago. The oldest paleosols agree with the deep-sea cores, which put the earliest Sahara dust to the Atlantic at about 4.6 million years ago.

That's not to say the Sahara is 4.6-million-years-old. That's only as old as Muhs and his colleagues could determine based on the paleosols and lavas they found.

"We could take it further back in time if we can find the paleosols," Muhs said.

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Why are mountains so high? It doesn't add up

Over millions of years, Earth's summits and valleys have moved and shifted, resulting in the dramatic landscapes of peaks and shadows we know today. Mountains often form when pressure under Earth's surface pushes upward, yet many factors impact their ultimate height, including the erosion of the areas between mountains, known as channels.

Scientists have long assumed that as land is pushed faster upward to form a mountain, its height increases in a continuous and predictable way. But new research shows that these predictions may stop working for the steepest mountains and therefore limit their height -- and this may hold true for ranges on the entire planet.

"People have argued for a long time that as channels get steeper and steeper, the erosion rate keeps increasing," said George Hilley, a professor of geological sciences at Stanford University's School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences (Stanford Earth) and lead author of a study published in Nature Geoscience Sept. 16. "We find that the theory works really well until a certain point and then it breaks down empirically -- it seems as though something else kicks in that we don't completely understand."

The researchers analyzed samples from a broad range of mountain landscapes across the tropics, including Venezuela, Brazil, Guatemala, Costa Rica and Taiwan, controlling for rock type and climate conditions to assess parallel comparisons. They found that after mountains reach a certain elevation, channels between mountains suddenly become extremely sensitive to subtle changes in their inclines, thereby limiting the height of the mountains above. They added data from hundreds of mountain ranges worldwide and found they followed a similar pattern: the height, or relief, of the landscape is capped after crossing a threshold driven by channel steepness.

"Areas of land above channels are likely being controlled by how quickly a river can cut down -- this is the framework by which we understand how the height of mountains varies as a function of climate and the collision of continents," Hilley said. "The anomaly we observed is kind of a mystery and is not necessarily what conventional theory might predict."

Research impacts

By bringing evidence of this mysterious factor influencing mountain height, the research could impact other work, such as studies on the relationship between mountain erosion rates and climate -- important elements for understanding ancient climate and forecasting future patterns.

"Our work adds an interesting depth to some of these studies, because the way in which Earth's topography changes as climates become more or less erosive may also change as the threshold is approached," Hilley said.

The work also has implications for the geophysical links of mountain formation, which scientists are interested in exploring to understand the hidden activity of tectonic movements below our feet.

"People like me have always hoped that you could actually use the topography in order to say something about how quickly faults might be slipping," Hilley said. "What our results say is that you can still do that in landscapes that are moderately steep, but it might become increasingly difficult as landscapes become steeper."

Global patterns

The scientists took a fundamentally different approach to the research by searching the globe for conditions that reveal changes in mountain height rather than focusing on just one location. That search led them to focus on ranges in the tropics, but the conclusions were consistent across all regions of the globe and may also be applied to understand ancient topography.

"The Himalayas are being uplifted pretty rapidly and they expose pretty hard rocks, and indeed, when you measure them out, they are pretty close to this threshold," he said. "You might be able to take this threshold with just the modern configuration of the landscape and actually place some upper bound on what the topography of the ancient Himalayas looked like."

Hilley said the results of the study were surprising, as well as the fact that they remained consistent when compared with global data.

"In retrospect it makes sense when you look at it from the overall context of what our planet actually looks like," Hilley said. "It really speaks to the fact that there might be lots of fertile ground to explore why this might happen. It also points to the fact that there might be something about the way in which rivers incise that we just don't understand yet."



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Sunday, September 22, 2019

Ton of cocaine seized in mangrove grove - MENAFN.COM

Ton of cocaine seized in mangrove grove  MENAFN.COM

(MENAFN - Newsroom Panama) Panama's National Aeronaval *Service* (Senan) seized a ton of cocaine in 1998 packages on the coast of the Tonosí.



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New conservation grants from USAID - Loop PNG

New conservation grants from USAID  Loop PNG

The US government, through the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), launched two new grants to promote the conservation of ...



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A decade dedicated to mangroves - The Hindu

A decade dedicated to mangroves  The Hindu

While the State witnessed a rapid decline in mangroves in recent decades, there are a few who still care for the lush green trees with tangled roots, which can ...



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Cleaning up the shore: Hundreds of volunteers participate in the annual Coastal Cleanup - WTSP.com

Cleaning up the shore: Hundreds of volunteers participate in the annual Coastal Cleanup  WTSP.com

Across the world, volunteers participated in Ocean Conservancy's annual International Coastal Cleanup.



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Forest dept to build walls to protect mangroves in Navi Mumbai - Hindustan Times

Forest dept to build walls to protect mangroves in Navi Mumbai  Hindustan Times

Pranab Jyoti Bhuyanpranab.bhuyan@hindustantimes.comNavi Mumbai The forest department has decided to develop walls along mangroves in Navi Mumbai.



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MH-HOTEL-MANGROVES - THE WEEK

MH-HOTEL-MANGROVES  THE WEEK

Maha BJP MLA, others booked for building hotel on mangroves. Thane, Sep 21 (PTI) Police in Maharashtra's Thane district on Saturday registered a case ...



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Gujarat: NGT tells forest department to restore damaged mangroves within 6 months - The Indian Express

Gujarat: NGT tells forest department to restore damaged mangroves within 6 months  The Indian Express

Revenue department, coastal authority asked to find out persons responsible for destruction, take action. By Express News *Service* |Gandhinagar | Published: ...



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Cape Coral neighbors look to protect land bordering ecological preserve - Wink News

Cape Coral neighbors look to protect land bordering ecological preserve  Wink News

After we reported on the mangroves ripped out near a preserve, revealing potential plans for a developer to take over, we are finding out homeowners have a ...



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Climate change is creating ghost forests on Marco Island - NBC2 News

Climate change is creating ghost forests on Marco Island  NBC2 News

Rows and rows of dead trees create a forest of skeletons on Marco Island.



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Leveraging nature to shore up coastal defences, World News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

Leveraging nature to shore up coastal defences, World News & Top Stories  The Straits Times

With climate change causing ice sheets to melt and sea levels to rise, coastal cities and island nations like Singapore are exploring solutions to fortify their ...



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Can’t cut mangroves beyond 200 sq.m for sea link, HC tells MSRDC - The Hindu

Can’t cut mangroves beyond 200 sq.m for sea link, HC tells MSRDC  The Hindu

The Bombay High Court on Friday directed the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change to explain two discrepancies while granting permission for ...



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96 Hours in Qatar | Sponsored - Smithsonian

96 Hours in Qatar | Sponsored  Smithsonian

From centuries-old maritime forts to state-of-the-art museums and from majestic desert sands to lush mangrove forests, Qatar is a land of rich contrasts.



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Protecting Forests by Building Schools - News18

Protecting Forests by Building Schools  News18

A California non-profit protects island ecosystems like Sri Lanka's mangroves by funding local infrastructure.



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Massacre of the Mangroves - India Today

Massacre of the Mangroves  India Today

Illegal tree-felling to build homes and create farmlands in a section of the protected mangrove belt-allegedly to favour ruling party loyalists-highlights new threats ...



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Saltwater fishing: Redfish are biting strong everywhere - News Chief

Saltwater fishing: Redfish are biting strong everywhere  News Chief

RedfishThe redfish bite remains good for Tampa Bay area anglers. Good catches are being reported around the bay and elsewhere.Strike Zone, 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, ...



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Fishing report: mangrove jack continue to bite - Bundaberg Now

Fishing report: mangrove jack continue to bite  Bundaberg Now

Mangrove jack are on the move in both the Kolan and the Baffle systems with fish up to 50cm responding well to soft plastics and more.



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Evaluating Cumulative Human Impacts on Marine Ecosystems - Daily Nexus

Evaluating Cumulative Human Impacts on Marine Ecosystems  Daily Nexus

Recently, UCSB researchers published a paper that addressed for the first time the combined impact humans are having on our marine ecosystems.



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Greta Thunberg: ‘We are ignoring natural climate solutions’ - The Guardian

Greta Thunberg: ‘We are ignoring natural climate solutions’  The Guardian

Film by Swedish activist and Guardian journalist George Monbiot says nature must be used to repair broken climate.



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Morning Paddling Adventure & Explore Mangrove in Purple Island - ILoveQatar.net

Morning Paddling Adventure & Explore Mangrove in Purple Island  ILoveQatar.net

Embrace Qatar's natural heritage by travelling to the North of Qatar, passing through Al Khor and enjoying the eco-tourist kayaking in the Mangroves of Al ...



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NGT comes to the aid of Kharai camels and mangroves in Kachchh - Mongabay-India

NGT comes to the aid of Kharai camels and mangroves in Kachchh  Mongabay-India

In an important decision to protect the mangroves in Gujarat's Kachchh district, which is also the habitat of the indigenous Kharai camels, the National Green ...



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Friday, September 20, 2019

Surface melting causes Antarctic glaciers to slip faster towards the ocean

Surface meltwater draining through the ice and beneath Antarctic glaciers is causing sudden and rapid accelerations in their flow towards the sea, according to new research.

This is the first time scientists have found that melting on the surface impacts the flow of glaciers in Antarctica.

Using imagery and data from satellites alongside regional climate modelling, scientists at the University of Sheffield have found that meltwater is causing some glaciers to move at speeds 100 per cent faster than average (up to 400m per year) for a period of several days multiple times per year.

Glaciers move downhill due to gravity via the internal deformation of ice, and basal sliding -- where they slide over the ground beneath them, lubricated by liquid water.

The new research, published today in Nature Communications, shows that accelerations in Antarctic Peninsula glaciers' movements coincide with spikes in snowmelt. This association occurs because surface meltwater penetrates to the ice bed and lubricates glacier flow. The scientists expect that as temperatures continue to rise in the Antarctic, surface melting will occur more frequently and across a wider area, making it an important factor in determining the speed at which glaciers move towards the sea.

Ultimately, they predict that glaciers on the Antarctic Peninsula will behave like those in present-day Greenland and Alaska, where meltwater controls the size and timing of variations in glacier flow across seasons and years.

The effects of such a major shift in Antarctic glacier melt on ice flow has not yet been incorporated into the models used to predict the future mass balance of the Antarctic Ice Sheet and its contribution to sea level rise.

Dr Jeremy Ely, Independent Research Fellow at the University of Sheffield's Department of Geography and author of the study, said: "Our research shows for the first time that surface meltwater is getting beneath glaciers in the Antarctic Peninsula -- causing short bursts of sliding towards the sea 100% faster than normal.

"As atmospheric temperatures continue to rise, we expect to see more surface meltwater than ever, so such behaviour may become more common in Antarctica.

"It's crucial that this factor is considered in models of future sea level rise, so we can prepare for a world with fewer and smaller glaciers."

Pete Tuckett, who made the discovery while studying for his Masters in Polar and Alpine Change at the University of Sheffield, said: "The direct link between surface melting and glacier flow rates has been well documented in other regions of the world, but this is the first time we have seen this coupling anywhere in Antarctica.

"Given that atmospheric temperatures, and hence surface melt rates, in Antarctica are predicted to increase, this discovery could have significant implications for future rates of sea level rise."

Story Source:

Materials provided by University of Sheffield. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.



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Hurricane Nicole sheds light on how storms impact deep ocean

In early October 2016, a tropical storm named Nicole formed in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. It roamed for six days, reaching Category 4 hurricane status with powerful 140 mile-per hour-winds, before hitting the tiny island of Bermuda as a Category 3.

Hurricanes like Nicole can cause significant damage to human structures on land, and often permanently alter terrestrial landscapes. But these powerful storms also affect the ocean.

Scientists have a good understanding of how hurricanes impact the surface layer of the ocean, the sunlit zone, where photosynthesis can occur. Hurricanes' strong winds churn colder water up from below, bringing nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus to the surface and stimulating short-lived algae blooms. However, until recently, we didn't know much about how hurricanes impact the deep ocean.

A new study of Hurricane Nicole by researchers at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), Woods Hole, and the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences (BIOS) has provided novel insight on those impacts. Nicole had a significant effect on the ocean's carbon cycle and deep sea ecosystems, the team reports.

Studying the deep ocean

The Oceanic Flux Program (OFP) has been continuously measuring sinking particles, known as marine snow, in the deep Sargasso Sea since 1978. It's the longest-running time series of its kind.

Before hitting Bermuda, Hurricane Nicole passed right through the OFP site, about 50 miles southeast of Bermuda. This gave the scientists a unique opportunity to study how hurricanes impact the deep ocean.

To study the deep ocean, the OFP strings scientific equipment, including sediment traps, at various depths on a mooring line that extends up from a 2,000-pound anchor situated on the seafloor (2.8 miles below the surface).

Key findings

In the new study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, MBL and BIOS scientists provide the first direct evidence that hurricanes affect the ocean's biological pump, a process in which living organisms transfer carbon from the surface to the deeper ocean layers and the seafloor.

High-velocity winds associated with Hurricane Nicole generated intense surface-ocean cooling and strong currents and underwater waves, some of which lasted more than two weeks. This significantly accelerated the biological pump, with the currents pushing nutrients into the surface layer, triggering an algae bloom.

The supercharged biological pump then rapidly funneled the organic material from the hurricane-induced algae bloom down into the deep ocean. This provided a big boost of food for marine life in the deep ocean where light doesn't reach.

The scientists found substantial increases in fresh organic materials in sediment traps at 4,900 feet and 10,500 feet below the surface. Algae growth measurements at the OFP site after Hurricane Nicole's passage were among the highest observed in October over the last 25 years.

"The surface and the deep ocean are really well connected in the aftermath of these powerful storms," explained Rut Pedrosa Pàmies, a biogeochemist and oceanographer at MBL's Ecosystems Center and first author of the study. "The material that is reaching those depths is crucial for the deep-ocean ecosystem."

Long-term implications

Since 1980, seven Category 3 or greater hurricanes have passed within 186 miles of Bermuda. These hurricanes affected a total of more than 32,800 square miles of surface water, an area greater than the state of Maine.

Current climate models indicate that hurricane intensity could increase as human-induced global warming continues. This could expand the area of ocean disturbed by hurricanes, with implications for the ocean's biogeochemical cycles and deep-ocean ecosystems.

Earth's last frontier

Due to the extreme conditions of the deep ocean, this remarkable biome has been notoriously difficult for scientists to study. Additionally, due to difficulties of shipboard data collection in extreme weather conditions, the direct impacts of hurricanes are not well understood. Sediment traps like those used by the OFP are crucial to understanding their influence on the deep ocean.

When the OFP began in 1978, scientists were only able to collect a single cup of sinking particles every two months. "Now, we have biweekly sample resolution and sediment traps at three depths," Pedrosa Pàmies said.

With the proliferation of new equipment and technologies to study the deep ocean, understanding this last frontier is finally within reach.



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