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WildClickers #72: Green, the color of life

 
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Jul, 2006 02:55 pm
sumac, thanks for the great articles... I have certainly noticed the additional vines growing on trees and the huge amounts of poison ivy. There are wild grape vines taking over everywhere. So CO2 is the reason... Hmmm. Everything around our home here in NE TX is wilting - it is 103 degrees F at 4 pm - and has been this way daily for over a week now.

ul, stay under ceiling fans........

clicked
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Jul, 2006 03:45 pm
I figured you were in bad shape, Danon. We will hit triple digits this week and were at 80 degrees F at 8:30 am. Two days of chance of rain have come and gone, and nothing. I will have to drag the hose around again.

Yes, the wild grape vines are voracious here too. Wild honeysuckle - Virginia creeper, and yes,poison ivy. I am sure that the kudzu is going nuts further south as well.
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Jul, 2006 10:46 pm
102.2 in Tranna today

sticky sticky sticky

the drag queens were overheating under their wigs tonight

~~~~~~~~~

You and your 298 friends have supported 2,472,339.3 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 121,014.6 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 298 friends have supported: (121,014.6)
American Prairie habitat supported: 54,004.3 square feet.
You have supported: (13,320.5)
Your 298 friends have supported: (40,683.7)
Rainforest habitat supported: 2,297,320.4 square feet.
You have supported: (171,914.9)
Your 298 friends have supported: (2,125,405.5)

~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1520 56.756 acres
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Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Jul, 2006 10:51 pm
I know I slack ehBeth but wherever I see your name come up I remember to click.

Clickty click. Very Happy
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 04:09 am
Drag queens overheating under their wigs. What a hoot!

Will resume clicking and getting ready for virtual tour when I finish getting gardens ready for long, hot and dry summer. Almost there.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 04:14 am
Drag queens overheating under their wigs. What a hoot!

I will resume clicking soon. I promise. Just ultra busy lately trying to get the gardens ready for the long, hot, dry summer. Almost done.
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 08:51 am
clicked.
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Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 10:07 am
danon5 wrote:
clicked.


Ditto.
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andrew T
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 10:30 am
still click... 3 - 7 times a week. if ehBeth hasn't beat me Smile
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Jul, 2006 03:14 pm
You and your 298 friends have supported 2,473,111.9 square feet!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1521 56.766 acres

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

clicked for me and devriesj
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danon5
 
  1  
Reply Mon 17 Jul, 2006 08:15 am
Yet another Monday.

Hi andrewT...... Glad to see ya.

clicked

Nice ditto - Merry Andrew
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Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Mon 17 Jul, 2006 01:43 pm
Howdy wildclickers!

California is melting!!!!!!!!!! What earthquake? The state is just gonna liquify and stream out to sea with the Pacific tide!
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Mon 17 Jul, 2006 05:07 pm
hey tbird and tbirds!

~~~~~~~~~~~

You and your 298 friends have supported 2,474,727.5 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 121,342.4 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 298 friends have supported: (121,342.4)

American Prairie habitat supported: 54,074.5 square feet.
You have supported: (13,344.0)
Your 298 friends have supported: (40,730.6)

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,299,310.6 square feet.
You have supported: (171,961.7)
Your 298 friends have supported: (2,127,348.9)

~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1522 56.808 acres
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Jul, 2006 03:35 am
Heard on the news last night that every state in the lower 48 was over 90 degrees F yesterday. More of the same for the next couple of days.
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Jul, 2006 09:21 am
G'day wildclickers!

With the current news from the middle east, an article that shines a light on collaborative efforts and solutions for peace and a healthy enviornment.

Call Him Angel...

http://www.grist.org/comments/interactivist/2006/07/17/roey_angel.jpg


Israel and its neighbors are hurtling into a vicious war, but at the Arava Institute for Environmental Research in Israel, Palestinians, Jordanians, and Israelis live and work together in harmony, collaborating on efforts to solve environmental problems. Roey Angel, this week's InterActivist, is a grad student at the institute, working on a joint Palestinian-Israeli project to study and help restore watersheds. In answering Grist's questions, he talks about his love of biking, his vegan ethic, what freaked him out about Burlington, Vt., and how peace can be forged in the Middle East. Send Angel a question of your own by noon PDT on Wednesday; we'll publish his answers to selected questions on Friday.

http://www.grist.org/comments/interactivist/2006/07/17/angel/index.html?source=weekly
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Jul, 2006 09:59 am
What a hunk.
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Jul, 2006 01:06 pm
Nice article, Stradee. Great link with interesting reading. I've always thought the secret to working together is learning together.

clicked
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Jul, 2006 06:07 pm
aktbird57 - You and your 298 friends have supported 2,476,319.6 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 121,506.3 square feet.
You have supported: (0.0)
Your 298 friends have supported: (121,506.3)

American Prairie habitat supported: 54,074.5 square feet.
You have supported: (13,344.0)
Your 298 friends have supported: (40,730.6)

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,300,738.8 square feet.
You have supported: (172,008.5)
Your 298 friends have supported: (2,128,730.3)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1 Aktbird57 .. 1523 56.844 acres
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Jul, 2006 03:58 am
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Farm-Scene.html

July 19, 2006

"New York Man Grows Coral in His Basement

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 4:20 a.m. ET

DRYDEN, N.Y. (AP) -- In upstate New York, famous for its snowy winters and far from any tropical ocean, Steve Lowes is growing coral reefs in his basement.

The 41-year-old English-born Lowes is raising dozens of coral species for his Web-based coral business, Reef Encounters, and is one of a growing breed of coral farmer who have found a niche supporting the booming hobby of keeping aquariums, which in 2005 was a $6.9 billion market.

And in the process, they are also helping scientists learn more about coral and are raising public awareness about a threatened species.

''It brings the ecosystem to life for people in a very effective way that's much more persuasive than reading about it in a book or looking at photographs,'' Lowes said.

Scientists have identified about 2,000 species of reef-building coral. The coral reefs are typically found in the warm salt waters in region between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn and cover about 1 percent of the earth's surface. The reefs, some millions of years old, are among the planet's most diverse and productive ecosystems.

Their value to the world economy is projected at more than $300 billion as a food source, for tourism appeal and in reducing shoreline erosion. However, they are threatened because of disease, natural disasters, pollution, overharvesting and global warming.

''There's something about life under the sea that attracts the human spirit. It starts with children,'' said Lowes, a scuba diver whose fascination with the sea began as a child watching Jacques Cousteau documentaries in the 1970s.

Lowes, a chemist for a pharmaceutical company, began growing coral as a hobby more than a decade ago while living in the United Kingdom. In 2002, he turned his ''addiction'' into a business and became a professional coral farmer.

Lowes raises 50 species and sells about 200 animals a month to upstate New York hobbyists and wholesalers. Depending on the species' rarity, they sell from $10 to $1,000 or more. He also helps install high-end reef aquarium systems, some of which can cost in excess of $30,000.

Home reef aquariums have been gaining popularity in the United States since the late 1980s, said Joe Yaillo, curator at Atlantis Marine World in Riverhead, N.Y., which features a 20,000-gallon tank with the nation's largest live coral reef exhibit.

Lowes belongs to a loosely knit organization called the Upstate Reef Society with approximately 100 active members. Yaillo estimated there are more than 100 such groups across the United States.

Lowes' basement looks like a mad scientist's laboratory, with tens of thousands of dollars worth of lighting and filtration equipment hooked up to a 125-gallon aquarium and three large 100-gallon tanks.

He propagates his coral by breaking off millimeter-sized fragments and growing them in the tanks. They grow to about two inches in six months, when they are ready for sale and shipment. While its primary purpose is display, the aquarium also allows Lowes to study the interaction among the more than 60 species he keeps.

Lowes is investigating the ways corals' anti-fungal compounds could be useful to humans, one of many subjects he is working on with a Cornell University professor. Another is a project studying coral photosynthesis as part of an effort to develop improved lighting systems -- it bothers him that he must rely on fossil fuel to light and power his tanks.

By growing coral for home aquariums, hobbyists are reducing the need to harvest wild coral and have contributed significantly to the growing understanding of coral over the past 15 years, said Eric Borneman, a professor of coral reef biology at the University of Houston who has written extensively on coral.

''As scientists, we often only get snapshots of the coral we study, whether in the wild or in the lab,'' Borneman said. ''Hobbyists are filling in the gaps by looking at coral every day, for much longer periods.'' "
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Jul, 2006 03:59 am
http://www.bocaratonnews.com/index.php?src=news&prid=16333&category=Local%20News

"Microbes hitchhike across Atlantic on desert dust

Published Tuesday, July 18, 2006


Bacteria and fungi, some with the potential to cause disease in plants or animals, may be finding the way from Africa to the Americas by hitchhiking on microscopic dust particles kicked up by storms in the Sahara, according to a new U.S. Geological Survey research study.

"This study presents evidence of early summer survival and transport of microorganisms from North Africa to a mid-Atlantic research site," says Dale Griffin of the U.S. Geological Survey in St. Petersburg, Florida, one of the researchers.

Griffin and his colleagues tested air samples on a research ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean during May and June 2003 to determine if airborne, viable populations of bacteria and fungi could be detected and also to see if total population counts increased with the presence of airborne desert dust.

"The phenomenon known as desert-dust storms moves an estimated 2.2 billion metric tons of soil and dried sediment through the Earth's atmosphere each year. The largest of these events is capable of dispersing large quantities of dust across oceans and continents. Since a gram of desert soil may contain as many as 1 billion bacterial cells, the presence of airborne dust should correspond with increased concentrations of airborne microorganisms," says Griffin

Viable bacterial and fungal populations were collected on 24 of 40 sampling days. The three days where the highest populations were collected corresponded with the two highest periods of dust activity as determined by the U.S. Navy's Naval Aerosol Analysis and Prediction System Global Aerosol Model.

DNA analysis matched two of the isolates 100 percent to two dust-borne isolates previously collected from the atmosphere in Mali. One of them, a known human pathogen, has also been found in atmospheric samples in the U.S. Virgin Islands when African desert dust was present. Additional analysis identified a number of bacteria and fungi capable of causing disease in animals and plants, including the cause of Florida Sycamore canker.

"It is tempting to speculate that transatlantic transport of dust could be a vector to renew reservoirs of some plant and animal pathogens in North America and could also be the cause of new diseases," says Griffin. "
0 Replies
 
 

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