Climate Change rate said to kill more species than it creates

This week evolutionary ecologist Peter Mayhew has presented a set of findings which show the rate of climate change in the Earth to be detrimental to the number of species of animals on our planet. While findings in the past have shown that periods of warmth on our blue globe have also been times when the number of different species of animals has risen, the speed at which the Earth is warming here in the present is, as Mayhew suggests, too rapid for the increase in species to outweigh the number of species that are becoming extinct. The new study Mayhew presents works with a new way of looking at the number of species in each geological period studied with only well-sampled periods rather than with simple tallies of the first and last appearances of each species.

The results of the newest findings here with Peter Mayhew’s group resolve a previous contradiction in the study of climate change in which high and low temperatures both showed growth or decline in numbers of species on the planet. The current article referred to this week “Biodiversity tracks temperature over time” will be appearing in PNAS immediately if not soon, and includes authors P. J. Mayhew, M. A. Bell, T. G. Benton, and A. J. McGowan, who let it be known that with their new findings worked with number of known families of marine invertebrates and sea-surface temperatures over the course of 540 million years.

OF SPECIAL NOTE – Scott Wing, palaeobiologist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC, reacted to the article in a couple ways – the first of which will be important to those of you looking for information on what this all has to do with us humans:

“This article has nothing to say about the effects of global warming at any timescale of interest to most humans.” – Wing

So keep that in mind – you can certainly take what you want from it, but note that the paper does not comment on the effect climate change is having on humans – that’s a talk for a different day.

What findings in this study do show is that when temperatures were high in the history of our planet, biodiversity was high, and when temperatures were low, biodiversity was low as well. These findings, as the group make clear, contradict previous work (that includes work by Mayhew’s group, amongst others), which showed temperature to have the opposite effect on biodiversity.

The rate at which the planet gets warmer or cooler, the group reports, has a direct effect on the biodiversity of the planet. The rate of change can have giant effects on how biodiversity is affected. With the rate of extinctions that are occurring at the rapid change in temperature we’re in now, for example, diversity will likely not rise fast enough to make up for the loss.

Professor Tim Benton, Biological Sciences at the University of Leeds, reacted to this particular possibility according to U of York:

“Science progresses by constantly re-examining conclusions in the light of better data. Our results seem to show that temperature improves biodiversity through time as well as across space. However, they do not suggest that current global warming is good for existing species. Increases in global diversity take millions of years, and in the meantime we expect extinctions to occur.” – Benton

Mayhew adds that the next step is to study longer periods of time, and as Shanan Peters, palaeobiologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, notes: the more interesting study in the future will be findings on major climate transitions, like the one we’re very possibly in right this minute.

“The time periods we’re really interested in now are decades and hundreds of years — at maximum 1,000 years. … You can’t get that kind of detail by looking into the deep past. If you want to know how temperature change is affecting things on that timescale, you’re going to have to look at the more recent fossil record.” – Mayhew

*EDITORS NERD NOTE: Though it would be ironic beyond comprehension if it were true, the ecologist Peter Mayhew and the actor Peter Mayhew are not one in the same. SlashGear awards 5 bonus nerd points to anyone who knows Peter Mayhew’s most famous and iconic role without looking it up!


Climate Change rate said to kill more species than it creates is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


FCC report says 19 million Americans still without broadband access

FCC's Broadband

The FCC believes that 19 million Americans don’t have access to broadband, defined as internet access at a speed of 4 megabits per second or more. Understandably, rural areas are the worst hit, with 14.5 million out in the sticks without access, with areas like West Virginia lacking coverage for 45.9 percent of its population. It’s not limited to the wide open spaces of states like Montana (16.7 percent) however, even tech-heavy states like California lack access for 35 percent of its denizens. The commission’s Connect America fund is charged with closing this gap, and has already awarded CenturyLink $35 million to connect 45,000 homes in under-served areas as part of a plan to help seven million more people get online by 2018.

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FCC report says 19 million Americans still without broadband access originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Aug 2012 12:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Chemical sensors could detect plants’ cries for help, reduce need for pesticides

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It’s a terrifying thought, but science suggests that when under attack, plants cry for help. Invisible and, often odorless, green leaf volatiles emitted from vegetation act as a defense mechanism, communicating to other foliage that danger is near. One researcher at the University of Georgia, however, is developing a chemical sensor to use these distraught emissions for good. Working in a similar fashion detecting glucose in the blood, the sensor would be able to alert farmers to when crops are under attack from pests, allowing them to trigger defenses reactively, and in a localized area. The net result being less chemicals on our food, and potentially lower costs for producers. Other suggested uses include helping us keep our produce at home fresher for longer by — literally — weeding out bad apples in a bag, before they affect the others. The technology is still being optimized for field use, but a testing device should follow once complete. In the meantime, we’ll never feel the same about mowing the lawn again.

Chemical sensors could detect plants’ cries for help, reduce need for pesticides originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 10:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Majority of cell phone owners still experience dropped calls, Pew poll finds

There’s no question that cell phones have made our lives easier, but they can also sometimes cause some pretty big headaches. Dropped calls, for instance, are always a major annoyance, and a new poll from the Pew Internet & American Life Project finds that the vast majority of cell phone users still find themselves dealing with them. 72% of respondents told Pew that they still experience dropped calls occasionally, which is a ridiculously large number of people when you consider how many of us own some kind of cell phone.


Of those people who answered in the affirmative, 32% said they suffer dropped calls multiple times per week or more frequently. Though we’ve only got 32% of polled cell phone users saying that they experience dropped calls frequently, the number that say dropped calls are still an issue is pretty staggering. Looking at the chart above, we can see that 6% of users say they deal with dropped calls on a daily basis, and another 6% say it happens multiple times per day, which we imagine is endlessly infuriating.

Elsewhere in Pew’s report, which was authored by Jan Lauren Boyles and Lee Rainie, 69% of users say that they occasionally receive unwanted marketing calls, with 25% of users claiming that it happens a few times per week. 79% of cell phone users say they text message, and 69% of those texters claim to occasionally receive spam messages. Finally, we come to mobile Internet download speeds. 55% percent of cell phone owners use their phones to access the Internet, and 77% of those mobile Internet users claim to be hit with “slow download speeds that prevent things from loading as quickly as they would like” every once in a while.

The sad news is that smartphone owners report these problems more frequently than “other cell owners.” Looking at the second chart from Pew, we see that smartphone owners report problems with dropped calls, unwanted calls and texts, and slow download speeds more often than the rest. Pew says that the poll took place during March and April 2012, and that the non-profit polled a total sample of 2,254 adults to get these rather interesting results. At least now you know that you aren’t the only one suffering when you experience a dropped call, right?


Majority of cell phone owners still experience dropped calls, Pew poll finds is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Dropped calls, slow download speeds rank among top gripes of mobile users

Dropped calls, slow download speeds rank among top gripes of mobile users

Everyone has an opinion, and if they all stink, then Pew must have one hell of a tolerance for foul odors. The research group recently surveyed a number of mobile phone owners to determine their primary complaints, and while it’s not much of a surprise, slow network performance stole the show. In all, 77 percent aired at least some dissatisfaction with download speeds, and nearly half of all respondents cited frequent frustration. The story is similar for dropped calls, as 72 percent of those surveyed claim to experience the annoyance at least occasionally. While less widespread, the distribution of those who receive unwanted marketing attempts via either telephone calls or text messages is roughly equal — it seems reasonable to assume that many respondents are harassed by both means. For more surveys*, just text #eng-123 to 9999. *Outrageous fees will apply.

Continue reading Dropped calls, slow download speeds rank among top gripes of mobile users

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Dropped calls, slow download speeds rank among top gripes of mobile users originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Aug 2012 03:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles

Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles

Ever get the feeling that you’ve seen it all before? University of Connecticut researcher Peter Turchin has, and he (along with Russian partners Sergey Nefedov and Andrey Korotayev) has even crafted an entire scientific theory around the idea. Cliodynamics, as it’s called, works on the view that broad trends of history occur in predictable patterns based on common factors like government strength, population size and social inequality. The surprise to Turchin is that violence outside of wars, at least in the US, triggers roughly every 50 years like clockwork: people rebel against a social crisis, but their children stay out of the fray and lead to the conditions that ultimately trigger another outbreak, like the 1970s civil rights and peace movements. Don’t set your watch to cliodynamics just yet. Many historians are still skeptical, and even supporters note that one-off events or major wars fall through the cracks. If the theory pans out, however, science could be used to help governments do the right thing before they’re made to do it at gunpoint.

[Image credit: Steve Wilson, Flickr]

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Theory of cliodynamics uses science to predict history, sees violence erupt in cycles originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Aug 2012 20:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Researchers prove your grandmother right, modern music is louder and all the same

Researchers prove your grandmother right, modern music is louder and all the same

Are your elders always complaining about loud and monotonous music? Or perhaps you’ve started to feel similar sentiments? The Artificial Intelligence Research Institute in Barcelona says it’s not just a matter of opinion. The team analyzed data on loudness, pitch and timbre from just under half a million tracks spanning 55 years, finding the average volume of recordings has increased in that time — said to be the doing of record labels so songs stand out amongst other radio noise. But, they report that little has changed in the actual music, and whilst there are obviously differences in composition, most melodies are created from just ten popular chords. Variations in timbre, or tone quality, have also dipped since the 1960s, which the team attributes to the experimentation of shredders from that era. Creativity in music is obviously still abundant and it’s important to point out only Western pop music was included in the analysis, but Gran was never really into the progressive stuff anyway.

Researchers prove your grandmother right, modern music is louder and all the same originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Jul 2012 16:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Economist  |  sourceScientific Reports  | Email this | Comments

Dumping iron into the ocean may slow global warming

Scientists may have found a new way to slow the progression of global warming, but at first, this method sounds a bit out there. It involves dumping iron sulphate into the oceans, which will then spur the growth of carbon-trapping algae. The algae will then remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis, and once the algae dies, it will fall to the ocean floor, taking the trapped carbon with it.


That’s according to a new report issued this week by the European Iron Fertilization Experiment (EIFEX). In 2004, a team of EIFEX researchers fertilized 167 square kilometers of the Southern Ocean with the iron sulphate, and watched for the next 37 days as phytoplankton flourished and died. What they found is somewhat exciting: the team says that at least half of the bloom sank to depths below 1,000 meters, taking the carbon it had captured with it. The carbon will likely stay trapped down there for centuries to come, whereas if the bloom had died and settled near the surface, all of that captured carbon would have had a chance at returning to the atmosphere.

So, fertilizing the ocean with iron sulphate may help slow global warming, but this discovery does not come without controversy. Some scientists are concerned about the long-term effects of continuously adding iron in the sea, saying that doing so could have adverse effects on marine ecosystems. Causing such a spike in algae growth could deplete the oxygen level in the water column, they say, or lead to toxic algae growth.

It sounds like this is just one of those things that needs to be researched more before scientists can make the call. The results of the study are promising, but scientists say that they’re “nowhere near” offering iron fertilization as a solution to global warming. Stay tuned, as further research could show that climate scientists have something big on their hands.

[via Nature]


Dumping iron into the ocean may slow global warming is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Smartphone overtakes PC as primary internet device in China

Shocker Smartphone overtakes PC as primary internet device in China

The Chinese government has issued a study revealing that the smartphone has overtaken the PC as the most popular device to surf the internet with. China’s Internet Network Information Center revealed that 538 million people — around 40 percent of the country have internet access. It recorded 388 million instances of surfing from a mobile handset, compared to the 380 recorded from PCs. Microblogs are also popular, with around 43.8 percent of phone users documenting the minutiae of their lives on Weibos like Sina and Tencent — which reminds us, we need to tweet about what we’re having for dinner.

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Smartphone overtakes PC as primary internet device in China originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Jul 2012 13:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ofcom: Texting is more popular than talking

Ofcom reveals texting is more popular than talking

Ofcom’s annual report into the communications habits of Britons has revealed that it’s not just geeks who stare in annoyance when the phone rings. The general consumer is now abandoning voice calls is favor of texting in a big way, making five percent fewer calls than they did the previous year. The numbers also showed that on average, people send 50 texts a week, smartphone ownership was up 12 percent and tablet purchasing shot from 2 to 11 percent in a single year. The trend isn’t slowing, either, given that a whopping 96 percent of 16 to 24-year-olds prefer SMS and Facebook to talking — giving us hope that we’ll soon be spared having to listen to that guy’s conversation during our morning commute.

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Ofcom: Texting is more popular than talking originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Jul 2012 09:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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