A million bottles a minute: world's plastic binge 'as dangerous as climate change'

Found on The Guardian on Saturday, 01 July 2017
Browse Nature

The demand, equivalent to about 20,000 bottles being bought every second, is driven by an apparently insatiable desire for bottled water and the spread of a western, urbanised “on the go” culture to China and the Asia Pacific region.

Most plastic bottles used for soft drinks and water are made from polyethylene terephthalate (Pet), which is highly recyclable. But as their use soars across the globe, efforts to collect and recycle the bottles to keep them from polluting the oceans, are failing to keep up.

Major drinks brands produce the greatest numbers of plastic bottles. Coca-Cola produces more than 100bn throwaway plastic bottles every year – or 3,400 a second, according to analysis carried out by Greenpeace after the company refused to publicly disclose its global plastic usage.

Introduce extra taxes for plastic bottles (and bags), so that they will become more expensive than glass bottles. Or drastically raise bottle deposits to increase the recycling. However, as long as it "hurts the industry", this won't happen. As long as he economy is more important than the ecosystem, humanity will continue its path to self-eradication.

Where have all the insects gone?

Found on Science on Thursday, 18 May 2017
Browse Nature

The group, the Krefeld Entomological Society, has seen the yearly insect catches fluctuate, as expected. But in 2013 they spotted something alarming. When they returned to one of their earliest trapping sites from 1989, the total mass of their catch had fallen by nearly 80%. Perhaps it was a particularly bad year, they thought, so they set up the traps again in 2014. The numbers were just as low.

Across North America and Europe, species of birds that eat flying insects, such as larks, swallows, and swifts, are in steep decline. Habitat loss certainly plays a role, Nocera says, "but the obvious factor that ties them all together is their diet."

Maybe they should just ask Monsanto and BASF.

Huge plastic waste footprint revealed

Found on BBCNews on Wednesday, 15 March 2017
Browse Nature

Soft drinks makers admit more needs to be done to stop people discarding single-use plastic bottles.

The biggest brand Coca-Cola is under fire for refusing to disclose how much plastic it produces.

“All plastic bottles are 100% recyclable so it is important that consumers are encouraged to dispose of bottles responsibly."

Obviously customers are not responsible enough, so that plan has failed. A simple alternative is the use of old-fashioned glass bottles: it does less damage.

Taliban leader urges Afghans to plant more trees

Found on BBC News on Sunday, 26 February 2017
Browse Nature

In a statement, he called on civilians and fighters to "plant one or several fruit or non-fruit trees for the beautification of Earth and the benefit of almighty Allah's creations".

"Tree plantation plays an important role in environmental protection, economic development and beautification of earth," the Taliban leader said, in a report carried by the Afghan Taliban Voice of Jihad website.

That would be nice and all, if only they would not constantly blow up everything.

Harvester ants farm by planting seeds to eat once they germinate

Found on New Scientist on Friday, 13 January 2017
Browse Nature

It turns out that Florida harvester ants, Pogonomyrmex badius, have developed a clever farming strategy to do so – they plant seeds, wait for them to germinate and then eat the soft spoils.

A single large seed may have nutritional value of 15 smaller seeds, so it makes sense to collect it and wait for it to crack open. Seeds from various species germinate at different times, which may give the ants a steady supply of their

Darwin at work.

Ants craft tiny sponges to dip into honey and carry it home

Found on New Scientist on Friday, 30 December 2016
Browse Nature

The ants experimented with the tools and eventually showed preference for certain tools – even unfamiliar ones. The ants would drop the tool into the liquid, pick it up and then carry it to the workers back in the nest to drink from.

Senilis started off using all the tools equally, but then focused on pieces of paper and sponge, which could soak up most of the diluted honey they were offered. This indicates that they can learn as they go along.

Not much different than apes who used rocks and sticks a few hundreds of thousands of years ago.

New Zealand is the first country to wipe out invasive butterfly

Found on New Scientist on Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Browse Nature

Before morphing into a butterfly, P. brassicae starts out as a caterpillar that feeds voraciously on brassica crops – including cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower and Brussel sprouts. It can also eat New Zealand’s 79 native cress species, 57 of which are at risk of extinction.

To encourage children to join the eradication effort, the department also offered a NZ$10 bounty for every dead great white butterfly brought in during the 2013 spring school holidays.

New Zealand’s great white butterfly eradication is part of a larger scheme to remove all introduced pests. In July, the government announced that it would also wipe out all rats, stoats and possums by 2050.

With globalization, it has gotten easier for species to travel to new areas. That, and humans have been stupid enough to release species, thinking that can help fixing problems other released species cause.

Ants trapped in nuclear bunker are developing their own society

Found on New Scientist on Tuesday, 06 September 2016
Browse Nature

The ant population was discovered in 2013 by a group of volunteers counting bats overwintering in the bunker, which is part of an abandoned Soviet nuclear base near Templewo in western Poland.

They noticed that the wood ants had built a nest on the terracotta floor of the bunker – right below a ventilation pipe. Looking up through the five-metre-long pipe, they realised where the bunker ants come from.

Fast forward one year: "Giant mutanted ants found near Templewo"

Rio Has Given Up On Its Goal To Clean Up The Water In Time For The Olympics

Found on Deadspin on Friday, 19 February 2016
Browse Nature

When bidding to host the 2016 Summer Olympics, Rio de Janeiro promised the International Olympics Committee that it would eliminate 80 percent of the sewage found in the city’s notoriously filthy water, and would fully regenerate the lagoon in which rowing and kayaking events will be held. Now a few months from the start of the games, Rio has given up on keeping those promises.

Hannafin says the athletes have been asked to get hepatitis A vaccinations and polio boosters and take the oral typhoid vaccine. Their oar handles will be bleached and their boats washed inside and out after each training session or competition. Gear will be laundered at a high enough temperature to kill microbes.

Rio should have never applied for the Olympics, and even though it did, it should have never won against the competition.

Extinct plant species discovered in amber

Found on BBC News on Tuesday, 16 February 2016
Browse Nature

Biologists have described a new species of extinct plant, based on two fossil flowers that were trapped in chunks of amber for at least 15 million years.

"Each plant has its own alkaloids with varying effects. Some are more toxic than others, and it may be that they were successful because their poisons offered some defence against herbivores."

Who knows if maybe one day scientists will sucessfully clone a plant from such a time capsule.