Archive for the ‘Environment’ Category

Bora Zivkovic

ScienceOnline2010 - interview with Emily Fisher

Wednesday, May 19, 2010, 11:34 am By Bora Zivkovic

Continuing with the tradition from last two years, I will occasionally post interviews with some of the participants of the ScienceOnline2010 conference that was held in the Research Triangle Park, NC back in January. See all the interviews in this series here. You can check out previous years’ interviews as well: 2008 and 2009.

Today, I asked Emily Fisher from Oceana to answer a few questions:

Read more…

Bora Zivkovic

ScienceOnline2010 - interview with Amy Freitag

Tuesday, May 18, 2010, 2:38 pm By Bora Zivkovic

Continuing with the tradition from last two years, I will occasionally post interviews with some of the participants of the ScienceOnline2010 conference that was held in the Research Triangle Park, NC back in January. See all the interviews in this series here. You can check out previous years’ interviews as well: 2008 and 2009.

Today, I asked Amy Freitag from Southern Fried Science to answer a few questions:

Read more…

Sabine Vollmer

NCSU engineering students unveil their EcoCAR

Saturday, May 1, 2010, 7:05 pm By Sabine Vollmer

N.C. State University engineering students participating in the national EcoCAR Challenge for the first time Saturday showed off their entry: A Saturn Vue that runs up to 65 miles on electricity.

NCSU's EcoCAR

To reduce greenhouse gas emissions and fossil fuel consumption, the NCSU team installed a large lithium-ion battery pack behind the front seats of the crossover SUV. Up front is a diesel engine from an Opel Corsa, a European fuel-sipper, to power the wheels on longer-distance drives.

The NCSU team had less than six months to take the vehicle apart to where only a blue shell remained and rebuild it to specifications they had determined the previous school year.

On May 8, a carrier will pick up the car and take it to the General Motors Desert Proving Ground in Yuma, Ariz., where less than two weeks later it will be judged in more than a dozen technical events against entries of 15 other teams from Canadian and U.S. universities. Read more…

Contents of a Mermaid’s Purse

Friday, April 30, 2010, 12:12 pm By Benjamin Young Landis
Sabine Vollmer

RTP researchers help track diseases linked to climate change

Tuesday, April 27, 2010, 8:53 pm By Sabine Vollmer

Duke University researchers suspect climate change is a reason why a deadly new version of a tropical fungus is spreading in the temperate climate of the Pacific Northwest.

Cryptococcus gattii

In Africa, South America, Southeast Asia and Australia, crytococcus gattii infects eucalyptus trees and bothers people with compromised immune systems, such as HIV/AIDS patients and organ transplant recipients, who inhale its spores. But the strain that was first documented on Vancouver Island, Canada, a decade ago and has now spread to Seattle and Portland causes chest pain, fever, shortness of breath and weight loss in otherwise healthy people and has killed at least six of them.

In February 2007, the first North Carolina case, an otherwise healthy man, was treated at Duke University Medical Center, the Duke researchers reported in PLoS One. In a paper they published a week ago in PLoS Pathogen, the researchers wrote that the cryptococcus gattii strain in the Pacific Northwest was new, much more virulent and favored mammals.

The second Duke paper followed on the heels of a report on human health and climate change that was authored by a group of researchers from several federal agencies. Lead author of the report was Christopher J. Portier, the head of the environmental systems biology group at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in Research Triangle Park.

“The purpose of this paper is to identify research critical for understanding the impact of climate change on human health so that we can both mitigate and adapt to the environmental effects of climate change in the healthiest and most effective way,” the report from the Interagency Working Group on Climate Change and Health read.

Filling research gaps in new diseases and well-known diseases that are coming back because of altered growing seasons, more rain in some areas and droughts in others, more violent storms and rising temperatures has been on researchers’ minds for years.

In the past decades, they have identified 30 new diseases, including hepatitis C, avian flu, HIV/AIDS and severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, according to a 2004 report in Nature Medicine. Environmental changes are among the reasons for the emerging diseases. But researchers have also tracked a resurgence of previously documented diseases in new geographic areas, among them tuberculosis and cholera.

The report from the federal interagency working group zeroed in on the following research areas:

  • More mold, dust, pollen and air pollution are likely to increase the prevalence of airway diseases such as asthma and respiratory allergies, which already affect about 50 million Americans.
  • More information is needed on how climate change affects exposure to toxins and chemicals that might boost cancers, with about 500,000 deaths per year the second leading cause of death in the U.S.
  • Heat waves and rising global temperatures could increase the number of heat-related illness and death. The 2003 heat wave in Europe, for example, caused about 35,000 deaths.
  • Some birth defects linked to environmental causes have been steadily increasing.
  • Exposure to biotoxins from ever more frequent, harmful algal blooms and chemicals from new batteries and compact fluorescent light bulbs could boost neurological and waterborne diseases.
  • By 2050, about 200 million people are expected to be displaced by the effects of climate change. The population relocation and the changes in temperatures could cause a resurgence of diseases caused by insects, such as malaria and yellow fever, which were once rampant in parts of the U.S.

Wash Your Stinking Car and Don’t Feel Guilty

Thursday, April 8, 2010, 3:29 pm By Scott Huler

I want you to take a minute to rethink your relationship to water. Because if you get your water from Falls Lake, then you can do the world a big favor by running right out and washing your car to get that green stuff off it. Or for that matter, taking a nice long shower to get that green stuff off you. Or even watering your lawn.

What? I am urging you to USE water?

I am doing just that. Not always – not even commonly. But today – right now. You’ll be helping Raleigh and the Army Corps of Engineers if you do.

I hear you scoffing, so I’ll explain.

Remember the drought? Yeah, that one, a couple years ago – Falls Lake was ten feet low, and we were letting our lawns dry out and our cars dust up and washing our babies’ butts in tubs with only an inch or so of water, letting things mellow if they were yellow and taking all kinds of other conservation measures. If you recall, fortunately it started raining again, though we sensibly left in place basic conservation measures.

But remember last November? As recently as November 9th, 2009, Falls Lake, the only source Raleigh (and the almost half a million people to whom who Raleigh Public Utilities delivers water) has for its drinking water, was more than four feet low, down from its managed 251.5 feet above sea level to 247.45 feet. And remember – that doesn’t mean the lake had gone from 251.5 feet deep to 247.45 feet. The Army Corps of Engineers, who manages the lake, measures not how deep it is but how high it is above sea level. The lake itself averages around twelve feet deep – which should tell you something about how much of it turns into dry land when it’s four feet low. You can check historical lake depth, by the way, here.

I bring all this up because it started raining again in November and didn’t stop for a while. At the moment I write this, the lake sits 8.64 inches high, at 252.22 feet above sea level (which you can instantly check here). That’s worth knowing for a couple reasons: for one, we’ve had about eight inches of rain since January 16, and the lake rose more than eight feet in that time. That is, you can see that at our current level of ground saturation, an inch of rain brings the lake up a foot. Given that the Corps works to keep it at 251.5, that means that the work the Corps is doing now is counterintuitive: It’s trying to drain our water source. At this very moment, they’re dumping water out at the rate of 580 cubic feet per second (at the moment you read this you can get the exact total here).

Let me translate for you: each cubic foot of water contains 7.48 gallons, so 580 cubic feet per second equals 4338.4 gallons per second. Which keeps the kayakers in the Neuse just below the dam happy, but above all dwarfs the 80 or 85 cubic feet per second the city of Raleigh drains to supply drinking water for its customers.

So, okay, this takes a bit of rethinking.

The point is you need to understand your lake. Falls Lake is Raleigh’s water source, sure – but it also provides flood storage to protect downstream communities (it can rise to 264.8 feet above sea level before it reaches the spillway – that will hold, by the way, almost twice the volume of the lake at its maintained level); it provides “water quality” storage – or water for constant releases to keep the Neuse River running at a healthy level. It also provides wildlife habitat and recreation opportunities. Five jobs the lake has – and the Corps keeps it at 251.5 feet because that’s where it’s designed to be. If Raleigh water customers get a little concerned about drought, the Corps doesn’t hold back extra water – that soaks habitat, wrecks beaches, and may parch the people downstream.

Which means that when the lake gets high, the Corps works like hell to get it down to 251.5 feet again, releasing, in recent weeks, anywhere from a hundred cubic feet per second or so to nearly 3000. Now the lake hasn’t had a drop of rain since March 29, and in that time, while you weren’t paying attention, the water level has risen and dropped a foot and a half.
I’m advocating paying attention: doing a little backyard and online science without wearing a lab coat. That is, yes – we need to conserve water, but much more important, we need to be aware of our water. Good-natured helpful people were probably conserving water back in early February, because we’ve all been trained to conserve. Except the thing is, the lake was almost nine feet high then (it peaked at almost 260 feet on February 10), the Corps was releasing water at as much as 4000 cubic feet per second), and though I was preaching a gospel of 20-minute showers for everyone, not too many people were listening.

This is a pretty small point, but it’s science and I think we should be doing it. I advocate, first, knowing where your water comes from — mine comes from the Upper Neuse River basin (interactive map; there’s also a list of other NC river basins, so wherever you live you can get this data for your own source of water. And if you happen to reach this piece from outside North Carolina, you can find your watershed here). Next, learn what the conflicts are: Who’s polluting? Who’s cleaning up? Who’s using and who’s complaining? The USGS and the EPA put this information online because they want you to have it. In Raleigh we have predictable fights – when it’s droughty, we want the lake release diminished, though the folks downstream in Goldsboro and Kinston don’t find that neighborly; when it’s hurricane season we want the lake low enough to absorb a Hurricane Fran if one comes by, whereas that’s when the folks downstream would prefer Raleigh to not even flush its toilets for a week (our treated wastewater reenters the Neuse downstream, of course).

Everybody’s talking about water right now: from NASA (http://launch.org/) to National Geographic, with its special issue about water, but water isn’t something that happens to people in sub-Saharan Africa or from satellites in space. Water falls on your yard, fills your reservoir, comes from your faucet, travels to the sea — here’s a video of a drop of water doing just that:

So anyhow, a small point: know your water. Know where it comes from. Check in on it to keep track: is this a time to conserve, or to use to my heart’s content? Today the lake is high, so go wild. It’s even supposed to rain soon, so Falls Lake will probably get higher again. And if science – organized observation of your surroundings, right? – does nothing more for you this week than get that green stuff off you and your car, that’s still a good week for science.

And by the way, wash your car on your lawn, not the driveway. Let that good stuff percolate into the ground, not run off into a creek.