In a perfect world, everyone would keep their elderly parents at home with them. But space and time constraints don’t always allow that, especially for parents with serious medical conditions.
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In a perfect world, everyone would keep their elderly parents at home with them. But space and time constraints don’t always allow that, especially for parents with serious medical conditions.
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400 PPM: Can Artificial Trees Help Pull CO2 from the Air?: Scientific American |
What unconventional fuels tell us about the global energy system | Plugged In, Scientific American Blog Network |
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[CARACAS] The collapse of sardine fisheries in the southern Caribbean Sea during the past decade may have been driven by global climate change, according to a study.
Researchers from the United States and Venezuela linked ecological measurements in the southern Caribbean Sea with global climate change indicators. These indices were revealed to correlate to changes in regional wind and seawater circulation patterns, which may have dire socioeconomic consequences for Caribbean countries — such as the collapse of valuable sardine fisheries. The sardine, Sardinella aurita, feeds on plankton but since 2005, plankton levels in the Caribbean have reduced significantly, which, coupled with overfishing, may have contributed to the collapse of these fisheries — which plummeted by as much as 87 per cent, the study says. The research team said that the decreasing levels of plankton production are the result of a reduction in ocean upwelling, whereby nutrients crucial for plankton production are brought from the sea's floor to the surface. The drop in upwelling has, in turn, been driven by changes in wind patterns and wind strength, themselves driven by global climate change. Via Athena Drakou Delete the scoop?
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