Wednesday, April 24, 2013

43 Years Of Earth Day: What's Changed Since 1970

Now in its 43rd year, Earth Day has become an international day dedicated to promoting environmental awareness and action. Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, explains what's changed, as concern about climate change and green energy have come to the forefront of the movement.

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NEAL CONAN, HOST:

On this 43rd Earth Day, organizers declared a theme: the face of climate change, which only suggests how much things have changed since April 22, 1970, when most who turned out for the first Earth Day spoke about clean air and clean water long before climate change had emerged as an issue. Lester Brown joins us now. He's president of the Earth Policy Institute and author most recently of "Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity," is on the phone with us from his office here in Washington. Nice to have you back on the program.

LESTER BROWN: Good to be here, Neal.

CONAN: And when you look back at that first Earth Day, well, a whole lot has changed since then, don't you think?

BROWN: Yeah. In 1970, the big focus was on pollution. I mean, it was "Silent Spring" with - in 1962 that had triggered the evolution and formation of the modern environmental movement, and that was pollution-oriented. And, well, we've seen since then is a shift to focus on environmental support systems, like the natural systems, like the forests and grasslands and fisheries and so forth, and what's happening to them. And now, of course, climate change is on the issue, and water has become a major issue.

These were not on the agenda in 1970. At that time, it was largely a focus on pollution, and that was at the time when the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland caught fire because there was so much oil and other combustible material there. So it was pollution. Now, it's many things.

CONAN: It was just a couple of months after that first Earth Day, Congress authorized the creation of the EPA, a federal agency that regulates environmental regulations. The EPA has, of course, become - gone from an agency created with great bipartisan support to one of the most partisan ideas in government.

BROWN: Yeah. I think the - as I recall, the first head might have been Russell Train...

CONAN: I believe you're right.

BROWN: ...who was a Republican, who was one of the early individuals concerned about the - what was happening to the environment. He was an early leader. And so EPA is now 40-plus years old. We - I still think of it as one of the newer agencies around town, but it's not really so new anymore.

CONAN: And we think at the first blush, of course, this issue has been around forever. But going even back to "Silent Spring" in 1962, it is - this kind of consciousness is relatively new, at least as a major public issue.

BROWN: It is, and that's partly because the environmental effects of human activity were quite small. I mean, if you go back to the beginning of the last century, 1900, the global economy then was only, you know, maybe 2 percent of what it is today. So human activity was very limited even if it were in many ways environmentally careless. But now, given the size of the world economy and the pressures on the Earth's natural systems and resources, whether it's forest resources or the capacity of the system to absorb and process waste and, of course, the capacity to absorb CO2 and climate now being probably the big environmental issue.

CONAN: Even 43 years ago, the - climate change was an issue. We just didn't know it yet. Among the things that was occurring that has occurred since then has been an amazing improvement in climate science.

BROWN: There has been - there were very few meteorologists beyond those doing the, you know, the daily weather reports. Climate science was not a big thing because climate had not been changing. I mean, the period since the beginning of agriculture, 11,000 years ago, has been one of rather remarkable climate stability. So the idea of climate change is a relatively recent concept. And then - and the process of human-driven climate change is quite recent historically.

CONAN: And we look at, oh, I guess, probably the biggest example is looking at the past through either tree rings or ice cores to get an idea of what has happened in previous periods of climactic change.

BROWN: Yeah. It's - I mean, we look at these indirect indicators to sort of reconstruct earlier periods in the earth's history or in human history. And what we do know is that for the 11,000 years since agriculture began, things have been sort of stable. But now, suddenly, the farmers now on the land are the first generation of farmers to have to cope with climate change. I mean, we've always had to. When I was farming back in the '50s, we had to worry about weather, you know, and how the weather would affect that particular year's crop. If climate change was not on the - on our minds then, we didn't even know that we were we were going to be changing climate as we now are.

CONAN: Another thing that has changed has been the public attitude. I covered that first Earth Day in New York City. There were rallies all over the country. I was at the one in Union Square in New York. The atmosphere that day was electric. And as mentioned, some of the legislation began to pass shortly thereafter with enormous bipartisan majorities in both houses of Congress and signed by a Republican president. And public opinion polls these days show that the environment is pretty far down the list of people's concerns.

BROWN: That's right. Interestingly, one of the reasons that Richard Nixon was so strong on the environmental issues is because his likely opponent in 1972 was - for his re-election - was going to be Ed Muskie from Maine. And Ed Muskie was a very - had spoken out very strongly on environmental issues and had raised this as a concern.

And in order to sort of undermine that concern, Nixon really took the initiative on the climate front. And then what was, for him, a very much a political issue was, for us, an important advance in public policy as it related to the environment.

CONAN: And as we look ahead, these issues are going to be more and more significant, at least that's what the climate scientists tell us. How did it change to get it - make it more of a priority in people's opinions and in politics?

BROWN: You know, there are various models of social change. One is the - what I call the Pearl Harbor model, where you have an event that changes everything. Sometimes its pressure is gradually building, an awareness building. I call that the Berlin Wall model where things keep building until - in the case of the Berlin Wall, it went down. And sometimes it's difficult to see those tipping points before you reach them. Almost by definition, tipping points are difficult to project and identify.

But my own sense says that we are moving toward a tipping point on the climate issue, and it's going to take a few more droughts like the one in the summer of 2012, an intense heat that greatly reduced the U.S. grain harvest. I think it reduced the corn harvest by close to 30 percent. Or storms unlike anything we've seen before. And then we'll begin to, at some point, realize that climate change is for real. That it's dangerous and it's costly and we need to be doing something about it.

CONAN: Yet, you'd like to think that we could arrive at these kinds of decisions on a rational basis. Don't need a tremendous crisis to focus our attention.

BROWN: One would like to think that, but more often than not, and all too frequently, it takes some sort of a crisis to goad us into action.

CONAN: Well, thanks very much for being with us today.

BROWN: My pleasure.

CONAN: Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, author most recently of "Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity." He joined us by phone from his office in Washington.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

CONAN: We'd like to take this moment to observe silence scheduled for 2:15 P.M. Eastern Time, which was the moment the explosion started at the end of the Boston Marathon last Monday. This is from the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston. Let's listen.

(SOUNDBITE OF CROWD)

CONAN: People around the city of Boston standing, many of them with their heads bowed to mark the moment exactly one week later since the bomb exploded in Boston causing three dead and many, many injured. You're listening to TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/22/178436357/earth-day-the-significance-43-years-later?ft=1&f=1007

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Teen Arrested After Allegedly Telling Jewish Subway Passenger, 'They Should Have Killed All Of You' (VIDEO)

A New York City subway train was the scene of a dramatic scuffle between police officers and bystanders this week after a teenager allegedly accosted a Jewish passenger and uttered anti-Semitic remarks.

The incident began a little after 3 p.m. Monday on a Brooklyn-bound 3 train, according to the New York Daily News. A 17-year-old and group of eight friends approached a Jewish man wearing a yarmulke and addressed him with common greeting among Muslims, police sources told the outlet.

When the Jewish passenger ignored the teen, he became angry, the Daily News reports, citing court documents.

A scuffle eventually broke out when the passenger took the teen's picture with his cellphone, police sources told the outlet. It culminated with the teen threatening to kill the passenger, exclaiming "They should have killed all of you." (The last insult is an apparent reference to the Holocaust.)

Police were alerted and attempted to arrest the teen at the Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum stop, at which point another bystander, Sheniqua Joseph, 22, also became combative and had to be forcibly arrested.

YouTube video taken by a bystander captures the chaotic arrest and has been viewed more than 100,000 times. The clip's description reads, "NYPD is called to assistance on the '3' train in Brooklyn @ Brooklyn Museum. Man resisting arrest and officer calls for backup. Meanwhile, a woman goes rogue and pays the price..."

Gothamist reports that the 17-year-old allegedly resisted arrest and was charged with aggravated harassment as hate crime, grand larceny of property, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

After a spate of anti-Semitic vandalism in 2011, the Brooklyn neighborhood of Williamsburg was outraged earlier this month when police arrested a man for allegedly torching a dozen mezuzahs -- small pieces of religious texts attached to the doors of Jewish homes -- at two different apartment buildings.

Rubin Ubiles, who has been arrested dozens of times, allegedly set fire to the mezuzahon Holocaust Remembrance Day, according to New York Magazine.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/19/teen-jewish-subway-passenger-arrested-new-york_n_3118977.html

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Stress is good thing for parents, babies in squirrel world

Stress is good thing for parents, babies in squirrel world [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Newman
newman01@uoguelph.ca
University of Guelph

Stressed-out mothers raise stronger, heartier offspring at least among squirrels.

In a new study, international researchers including University of Guelph biologists say squirrels tailor their parenting to meet the varied conditions facing their young.

For pups born during crowded, stressful times, mama squirrels kick maternalism into high gear. By the time they leave the nest, these offspring are significantly larger than pups raised under less stressful conditions.

The study was published Thursday in the journal Science.

Female squirrels listen to social cues during pregnancy and while tending their young, said Andrew McAdam, a professor in Guelph's Department of Integrative Biology. He conducted the study with Guelph biology professor Amy Newman and lead author Ben Dantzer.

Females listen to sounds of other squirrels. As crowding increases, territorial defence "rattles" get louder and more frequent. That causes mother squirrels to make more stress hormones, which makes their pups grow faster. "If they know the population is exploding, they must do what they can to produce fitter offspring, so that they can make it under such conditions," McAdam said.

Red squirrels' territorial behaviour enables them to survive through the winter. When there are a lot of squirrels around, it's harder to find vacant homes, McAdam said.

"When there are lots of squirrels around only the fastest-growing squirrels survive ," he said. "But when population density is low, all squirrels survive well, so how quickly they grow doesn't matter."

For the study, Newman and Dantzer, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge and McAdam's former graduate student, tricked mother squirrels into believing that they had more neighbours than they really did by playing squirrel calls recorded in the forest over loudspeakers.

Dantzer and Newman then tested the effects of the stress hormones by feeding some mother squirrels peanut butter laced with stress hormones. Those mothers also raised faster- growing pups than control females.

"Despite the widespread perception that being stressed is bad, our study shows that high stress hormone levels in mothers can actually help their offspring," Dantzer said.

The team studied groups of North American red squirrels over six years.

"What was remarkable," Newman said, "Is that the perception of high density and elevated maternal stress hormones boosted pups' growth rates as much as if the mothers had been fed extra food."

"It proves that complex ecological and physiological factors and not simply resources affect reproduction and maternal behaviour," she said.

However, McAdam added, squirrels ncrease their investment in their offspring only during crowding.

Similar principles probably apply to other animals. "In a changeable world, they need to be flexible in their parenting and adjust to current conditions," McAdam said.

###

Other researchers in the study were Rudy Boonstra, University of Toronto-Scarborough; Rupert Palme, University of Veterinary Medicine in Austria; Stan Boutin, University of Alberta; and Murray Humphries, McGill University.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Stress is good thing for parents, babies in squirrel world [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Amy Newman
newman01@uoguelph.ca
University of Guelph

Stressed-out mothers raise stronger, heartier offspring at least among squirrels.

In a new study, international researchers including University of Guelph biologists say squirrels tailor their parenting to meet the varied conditions facing their young.

For pups born during crowded, stressful times, mama squirrels kick maternalism into high gear. By the time they leave the nest, these offspring are significantly larger than pups raised under less stressful conditions.

The study was published Thursday in the journal Science.

Female squirrels listen to social cues during pregnancy and while tending their young, said Andrew McAdam, a professor in Guelph's Department of Integrative Biology. He conducted the study with Guelph biology professor Amy Newman and lead author Ben Dantzer.

Females listen to sounds of other squirrels. As crowding increases, territorial defence "rattles" get louder and more frequent. That causes mother squirrels to make more stress hormones, which makes their pups grow faster. "If they know the population is exploding, they must do what they can to produce fitter offspring, so that they can make it under such conditions," McAdam said.

Red squirrels' territorial behaviour enables them to survive through the winter. When there are a lot of squirrels around, it's harder to find vacant homes, McAdam said.

"When there are lots of squirrels around only the fastest-growing squirrels survive ," he said. "But when population density is low, all squirrels survive well, so how quickly they grow doesn't matter."

For the study, Newman and Dantzer, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge and McAdam's former graduate student, tricked mother squirrels into believing that they had more neighbours than they really did by playing squirrel calls recorded in the forest over loudspeakers.

Dantzer and Newman then tested the effects of the stress hormones by feeding some mother squirrels peanut butter laced with stress hormones. Those mothers also raised faster- growing pups than control females.

"Despite the widespread perception that being stressed is bad, our study shows that high stress hormone levels in mothers can actually help their offspring," Dantzer said.

The team studied groups of North American red squirrels over six years.

"What was remarkable," Newman said, "Is that the perception of high density and elevated maternal stress hormones boosted pups' growth rates as much as if the mothers had been fed extra food."

"It proves that complex ecological and physiological factors and not simply resources affect reproduction and maternal behaviour," she said.

However, McAdam added, squirrels ncrease their investment in their offspring only during crowding.

Similar principles probably apply to other animals. "In a changeable world, they need to be flexible in their parenting and adjust to current conditions," McAdam said.

###

Other researchers in the study were Rudy Boonstra, University of Toronto-Scarborough; Rupert Palme, University of Veterinary Medicine in Austria; Stan Boutin, University of Alberta; and Murray Humphries, McGill University.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/uog-sig041913.php

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France investigates Sarkozy campaign funds on alleged Libya link

PARIS (Reuters) - France has opened a judicial investigation into allegations that former President Nicolas Sarkozy's 2007 election bid won illicit funds from late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, the public prosecutor's office said on Friday.

The inquiry adds to the legal issues plaguing Sarkozy, who some see making a comeback bid in 2017 after losing office last year - a defeat which cost him the immunity from prosecution he enjoyed during five years as head of state.

An official at the prosecutor's office said an inquiry had been opened after allegations made by a Franco-Lebanese businessman Ziad Takieddine, himself under investigation in a separate affair of arms sales to Pakistan in the 1990s.

Sarkozy, who met Gaddafi in Paris in 2007, has always denied wrongdoing and has pointed out that he was the chief advocate of a NATO-led military campaign that resulted in Gaddafi's overthrow and killing at the hands of rebel forces in 2011.

The funding of Sarkozy's successful 2007 election campaign is already being examined as part of another inquiry into ties between his center-right UMP party and France's richest woman, Liliane Bettencourt, heiress of the L'Oreal cosmetics empire.

Sarkozy was placed under formal investigation last month over allegations he took advantage of the mental frailty of the 90-year-old woman to win campaign funds. Sarkozy has always denied wrongdoing in the Bettencourt case too.

(Reporting by China Labbe; Writing by Brian Love and editing by Mark John)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/france-investigates-sarkozy-campaign-funds-alleged-libya-120148931.html

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Monday, April 15, 2013

Antarctic ice samples: What do they say about global warming?

Antarctic ice core samples, up to 150,000 years old, may help scientists estimate whether it will take 50 years - or 500 years - for the Ross Ice Shelf to collapse at the current rate of climate change.

By Nick Perry and Rod McGuirk,?Associated Press / April 6, 2013

Scientist Nancy Bertler holds the final section of ice she collected from a half-mile under Antarctica's surface in a laboratory freezer, near Wellington, New Zealand. Antarctica's pristine habitat provides a laboratory for scientists studying the effects of climate change.

(AP Photo/Nick Perry)

Enlarge

Nancy Bertler and her team took a freezer to the coldest place on Earth, endured weeks of primitive living and risked spending the winter in Antarctic darkness, to go get ice ? ice that records our climate's past and could point to its future.

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They drilled out hundreds of ice cores, each slightly longer and wider than a baseball bat, from the half-mile-thick ice covering Antarctica's Roosevelt Island. The cores, which may total 150,000 years of snowfall, almost didn't survive the boat ride to New Zealand because of a power outage.

Bertler hopes the material will help her estimate how long the Ross Ice Shelf would last under the current rate of climate change before falling apart.

Evidence from the last core her team hauled out needs further study, but it contains material that Bertler said appeared to be marine sediment that formed recently ? at least in geological terms measured in thousands of years.

That would bolster scientists' suspicions that the shelf could collapse again if global temperatures keep rising, triggering a chain of events that could raise sea levels around the world.

"From a scientific point of view, that's really exciting. From a personal point of view, that's really scary," said Bertler, a senior research fellow at the Antarctic Research Centre at the Victoria University of Wellington.

The ice shelf acts as a natural barrier protecting massive amounts of ice in West Antarctica, and that ice also could fall into the ocean if the shelf fell apart. Scientists say West Antarctica holds enough ice to raise sea levels by between 2 meters (6.5 feet) and 6 meters (20 feet) if significant parts of it were to collapse.

Ted Scambos, the lead scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado, said that even under the worst case scenario he thinks it would take at least 500 years for West Antarctica's ice to melt.

However, he said a discovery of sediment would indicate a significant portion of the ice shelf is under threat of becoming unstable again, and that the implications were "huge."

Bertler hopes the material she recovered will help her to estimate by the end of this year whether it will take 50 years or 500 years for the ice shelf to collapse at the current rate of climate change. Those answers should prove important for policymakers who, she said, may need to decide whether to build sea walls or move populations to higher ground.

Bertler's project is one of scores that take place on Antarctica every Southern Hemisphere summer. To scientists, the continent's pristine habitat offers a unique record of the planet's weather and a laboratory for studying the effects of climate change.

Studies indicate that while the Arctic has suffered what scientists consider to be alarming rates of ice loss in recent years, the Antarctic ice shelf has remained relatively stable despite having have lost ice in recent decades.

Research in Antarctica creates huge logistical and personal challenges.

Bertler's camp on Roosevelt Island is a three-hour flight from the nearest permanent Antarctic outposts, Scott Base and McMurdo Station. The island is surrounded by the Ross Ice Shelf, the world's largest mass of floating ice, covering an area the size of Spain.

Even during the spring and summer months when Bertler's team was working there, the temperature sometimes dropped to minus 25 C (minus 13 F) and there were frequent storms and thick fog.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/x_6KmBRtxxI/Antarctic-ice-samples-What-do-they-say-about-global-warming

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