Tag-Archive for » environmentalism «

May 21st, 2010 | Author: sarcozona

I’m not happy about the new immigration law in Arizona, but one of my aunts thinks it may be a good thing.  This morning she suggested I more carefully consider “the other side” because of the discarded items in the Sonoran:

It’s definitely true that Oregon Pipe is littered with the backpacks, water bottles, and other garbage of illegal immigrants entering the country, but problems of illegal immigration don’t justify a discriminatory law that probably won’t actually solve problems such as trash in the Sonoran.  Besides, the Republican Arizona legislature and their supporters don’t seem very interested in environmental issues.

Perhaps we should consider how our country’s policies are intimately linked to the horrific torture and murder of hundreds (and maybe thousands) of Mexican women and other violence, or that we helped put in power and supported dictatorial regimes that murdered their citizens indiscriminately, later leading to civil unrest and poverty.  We created or contributed to many of the problems that force people to flee their homes and families.  Addressing those problems is the real way to deal with illegal immigration in the long term.

In the shorter term, INS needs serious reform – not just for our current immigration issues, but for coming, far more serious immigration issues that we expect due to climate refugees (150 million in the next 40 years alone).  The impact of immigrants (legal & not) on our economy isn’t nearly as bad as most people make it out to be and it is actually positive in some sectors – I don’t think a guest worker program with steps to citizenship is bad idea at all.

I think that we can find practical solutions that don’t force us to sacrifice our rights or act inhumanely, but the AZ legislature isn’t heading in the right direction at all.

April 27th, 2010 | Author: sarcozona

If we all lived at the density people in Brooklyn do, everyone in America would fit in New Hampshire.  I’m not suggesting that we all move to New Hampshire, of course.  But imagine the problems we’d solve if our major cities were condensed.

If places are closer together, people can walk more.  This doesn’t just make for a healthier population though exercise, it reduces pollution.  For distances that aren’t comfortably walkable, a good public transportation system wouldn’t be as daunting a project as it is now, again reducing pollution.

We’d reduce the amount of building materials needed per person and energy needed to heat/cool homes because most everyone would live in an apartment.  Because people would be concentrated in certain locations, we’d reduce the transportation costs for food and goods.

The most important consequence of increasing the density of cities would be all of the land we wouldn’t be taking up space on.  Less habitat destruction and fragmentation would give so many more species a chance as the climate changes.

As nice it it could be, implementing this kind of design seems almost impossible.  Will people ever leave the suburbs? And what will happen to the suburbs if they are abandoned?

April 01st, 2010 | Author: sarcozona

Drinking bottled water is not a good thing to do.  It’s expensive and bad for the environment and people (especially the poor).  Here’s a list from the NRDC’s Switchboard blogger Michelle Mehta of just a few bottled water statistics to convince you:

  • It takes 3 liters of water to produce 1 liter of bottled water.
  • Producing the 33 billion liters of bottled water that Americans drink each year has an energy footprint equivalent to between 32 and 54 million barrels of oil.
  • The energy footprint of bottled water is as much as 2000 times the energy footprint of producing tap water.
  • Manufacturing the bottles for bottled water alone produces more than 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide.
  • Only about 13 percent of bottles actually get recycled.
  • About 2 million tons of plastic water bottles a year – 66 million bottles every day – end up in landfills instead of being recycled.
  • While nearly all municipal drinking water systems in the U.S. are covered by EPA standards, only an estimated 40% of bottled water products are regulated by the FDA.

If that’s not convincing enough, a certain popular brand of bottled water is so close to the EPA limit on uranium content that one of the labs at my university uses it to test and calibrate their ICP-MS machine.

February 18th, 2010 | Author: sarcozona

I came across this adorable overload of a snow leopard at the Akron zoo frolicking in the snow.  I’m not going to tell you how many times I watched the video because then I’d have to come to terms with all of the homework I should have gotten done instead.  The zoo snow leopard is squeal-inducing-cute, unlike the visibly dangerous snow leopards on Planet Earth:

Snow leopards, like most (all?) large cats, are endangered and between population pressure, poaching, and climate change, their prospects aren’t looking good.  Maybe we should take the advice of the author of Maybe One: A Case for Smaller Families (and a bunch of other people) and consider not having kids or adopting if you want a large family.  If you live in the US, not having kids is the absolute best thing you can do for the environment:

[It] would save 9,441 tonnes of CO2 – almost six times, on average, the amount of CO2 they would emit in their own lifetime, or the equivalent of making around 2,550 return aero plane trips between London and New York. If the same American drove a more fuel-efficient car, drastically reduced his or her driving, installed energy-efficient windows, used energy-efficient lightbulbs, replaced a household refrigerator, and recycled all household paper, glass and metal, he or she would save fewer than 500 tonnes. [emphasis mine]

The enormous environmental impact is just one of the reasons I’m not planning on having children. I don’t think people shouldn’t have children, of course, but I think having children shouldn’t be expected.  I think many more people would be childless and happy if there wasn’t a constant message from society (and our mothers…) that we should settle down & have kids.

November 26th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona

Just one collection of Flabellidium spinosum was ever made.  Theodor Herzog found this moss growing in the Tres Cruces Cordillera almost a century ago.  Theodor Herzog was a German bryologist and is famous (What? You haven’t heard of him?) for his work on the biogeography of mosses.

Condoriri seen from Laguna Juri Khota, Cordillera Real, Bolivia by Paul Salisbury

Condoriri seen from Laguna Juri Khota, Cordillera Real, Bolivia by Paul Salisbury

The area and others of they type where F. spinosum was found have since been logged and used for cultivation and F. spinosum hasn’t been spotted since its original collection.  Niles Eldredge calls it “a representative of all the species that slip, unnoticed, into oblivion when an ecosystem is destroyed.”

Mosses are tiny – this one was described as “a fragile moss, with fronded, yellow-green branches growing to only about 1 cm in height.” Most people don’t notice moss at all or they think of it as all basically the same.  Lucky for me, I’ve had lots of plant classes where I’ve learned to appreciate the beauty and diversity of these tiny plants.

Moss Diversity by ForestForTrees

Moss Diversity by ForestForTrees

Have you ever wondered why moss is so small?  That was one of the big questions in my life when I was 5.  I had to wait until college to get a real answer.  Most plants have vascular systems made up of tracheids and/or vessels, which are tube-like cells that move water throughout the plant.  These cells are what make up the veins in leaves and the rings in trees.

Tracheids & Vessels

Tracheids & Vessels

Mosses don’t have these special cells.  Mosses were the first plants on land and are what botanists call primitive (the botanical term for really old and super cool).  The don’t even have real roots!  They get water through absorption – like little sponges.  If they’re big, they can’t absorb enough water.

Their small size doesn’t mean they aren’t important.  Because moss is such an early plant, we can learn a lot about plant evolution by studying themF. spinosum seems to have been the only species in its genus, so when it went extinct, we lost a lot of important moss genes.

Mosses stabilize the soil crust – it’s often one of the first colonizers.  They help prevent flash flooding by absorbing lots of water quickly and releasing it slowly and regulate humidity in a system the same way.  They form the basis of several ecosystems – like peat bogs – and are incredibly important in many wetlands.  Mosses are worth a lot of money, too.  Even though they’re “primitive” plants, they can produce some very weird chemicals that we use in medication and perfume. Moss is even used for cleaning up oil spills on land and may prevent more extensive damage from spills.

Peristome on moss capsule

Peristome on moss capsule

Another thing I really like about moss is that they have really cool reproductive structures. Flowers are pretty and often big and flashy.  Moss reproductive structures are teeny tiny and not very colorful, but some of them have teeth!

I get disheartened by all of the species extinctions, but today is Thanksgiving and there is a lot to be thankful for.  I’m grateful for all the species that are still out there and that, while many will go extinct in my lifetime, I’m here to see and appreciate them before they go.  I’m grateful for all of the systematists, naturalists, and other scientists (like Theodor Herzog!) who devoted their lives to finding and describing so many species.  I’m grateful for all of the organizations dedicated to maintaining a record of the incredible diversity of life, especially the Missouri Botanical Garden and the Encyclopedia of Life.  Most of all, I’m grateful for all of the people who care about non-human species and do what they can to prevent extinction.

September 19th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona

Sexual assault prevention tips guaranteed to work: men, don’t rape people; women, just stop having a vagina to tempt the rapists.

Postcards from a green future by Liam Young & Darryl Chen

Postcards from a green future by Liam Young & Darryl Chen

For as wealthy as the US is, you’d think we’d have safe drinking water.  But we really don’t.  Pollution is one reason why the popularity of bottled water is such a bad thing – people think that because they’re drinking bottled water they’re safe.  Then they stop worrying about the tap water until it’s too late.

fush suckerbutt by snickcluck on Flicrk

fush suckerbutt by snickcluck on Flickr

Churches and sexual abuse seem to go hand in hand.

Ive always wondered if wed recognize alien intelligence

I've always wondered if we'd recognize alien intelligence

Nation building is for the people who live in that nation.  Also, Afghanistan has a pretty awesome (and rather long) history.

What I think when I see women in games

What I think when I see women in games

September 17th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona

Fitchia mangarevensis was endemic to Tarvai in the Gambier islands of French Polynesia. It was described by science in the 20s and studied through the 50s, but hasn’t been seen since. The Gambier islands have a long history of human environmental destruction.  While the Gambier islands once had a population of thousands, they can now only support a few hundred.  Many Tarvai villages are abandoned or very small – the wikipedia article is a bit unclear, but there may only be 3 residents of the entire island.

Taravai

Taravai

There isn’t a lot of information about Fitchia, though research articles in the 50s suggested it could be useful for learning about vascular and floral evolution.  Considering that F. mangarevensis key to that research and at least 3 of 8 known Fitchia species are threatened, we’ll probably never be able to answer all of our questions about the evolution of this genus.

August 27th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona

While I haven’t paid any attention to plant species in the last several weeks, this isn’t at all because they’ve stopped disappearing.  This week’s plant is Firmiana major, a flowering tree from China.  This is a beautiful tree and I imagine it’s even lovelier covered in flowers.

Firmiana major leaves from Arkive

Firmiana major leaves from Arkive

The aesthetic appeal of this tree is why it didn’t go extinct when its habitat was converted to cropland – it was planted and tended around Chinese villages and temples. This tree is native to Yunnan and southwestern Sichuan, and the Guangzhou Botanical Garden has at least one of these trees if you’re in the region.

One of the things I loved about China was how loved and valued plants and gardens were.  The apartment complex I lived in was surrounded by a sea of concrete, but there were raised gardens between the buildings that everyone in the complex tended, fussed over, and congregated around.

chinese chess

Chinese chess by the communal garden

I think growing your own garden, even if it is just in pots on your balcony or at a tiny plot in your community garden, is a good thing to do.  I find it relaxing and satisfying.  Growing vegetables in the summer is much cheaper than buying them in the store.  Most importantly, gardening causes us to be more aware of the environment around us – the weather and climate, the soils, the plants we didn’t plant in our garden that end up there anyway…  I think this lack of awareness (and subsequent appreciation) of our environment is part of why we’re having such a hard time convincing people that we need to do something about environmental degradation and climate change.

June 11th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona
Erythroxylum echinodendron

Erythroxylum echinodendron

Erythroxylum echinodendron was endemic to Cuba and was declared extinct in the wild in 1998.  Echinodendron means “spiny tree,” and you can see where it got its name in this herbarium specimen.  Erythroxylum is a tropical genus with about 250 species.

While this particular species was declared extinct in the wild rather than extinct, this damaged herbarium specimen is the only record I could find of Erythroxlym echinodendron.  There don’t seem to be any reintroduction projects in place or even specimens being studied in botanical gardens.

This is particularly sad since many Erythroxylum species are hosts for butterfly and moth larvae and some have powerful alkaloid compounds. Not only are we probably losing insect species with the loss of this plant, but we’ve lost a plant that could have contained chemicals for new medications.

While you may have never heard the word “Erythroxylum,” a large number of your tax dollars are spent trying to control a particular species in this genus.  You may have even used a product of  Erythroxylum coca.

While most people wouldn’t recognize this shrub,

Erythroxylum coca

Erythroxylum coca

everyone knows what it’s most valuable product looks like:

Our use of coal is very, very bad for the environment and everything in it - including us.  While we won’t stop using coal anytime soon, we can decrease the damage it does with stronger regulations.  Write a letter.

June 04th, 2009 | Author: sarcozona

Erythrina, or coral trees, are well known for their spectacular flowers and are often grown ornamentally.  They’re also very important in the ecosystems they belong to.  Their leaves are food for caterpillars of many moth and butterfly species.  Their nectar and seeds sustain numerous bird species, including a number of hummingbirds.  Coral trees are also medically and culturally important  to people.

Erythrina crista-galli

Erythrina crista-galli

While members of this genus are found throughout the tropics and subtropics, Erythrina schliebenii is no longer found anywhere.  E. schliebenii was described in the 1930s from a specimen found in Tanzania.  It was seen again in 1984 between Lindi and Masasi, Tanzania.  Like many coral trees, it had bright red flowers.  This herbarium sheet from the 30s is all we have left of E. schliebenii – it was declared extinct by the IUCN in 1994.

Erythrina schliebenii

Erythrina schliebenii

There might not be much you can do to directly help protect species in Tanzania, but you can help protect fragile Arctic ecosystems.  There’s ANOTHER bill trying to open up the Arctic Refuge for drilling.  Write a letter.