domingo, 19 de abril de 2015

nsf.gov - National Science Foundation - Earth Day is on the horizon. But is 'greener' always better? .- Día de la Tierra está en el horizonte. Pero es más "verde" siempre mejor?

Hola amigos: A VUELO DE UN QUINDE EL BLOG., hemos recibido información de la Fundación Nacional de Ciencias de Los Estados Unidos, sobre los próximos acontecimientos sobre el Día de La tierra y ellos se hacen la pregunta "ser mas verde" es mejor?
Y ellos se contestan así: "Ir verde. En el Día de la Tierra y cada día, siendo más "verde" está vinculado con las cosas buenas, como la reducción de su huella de carbono y el consumo de alimentos cultivados localmente....... Pero no cuando se trata de beber o nadar en las brillantes aguas verdes del lago sucias por las algas, dice Hans Paerl, científico ambiental en la Universidad de Carolina del Norte en Chapel Hill.
En los lagos de agua dulce de todo el mundo, estas floraciones de algas suelen ser consecuencia de un exceso de lo que se conoce como las cianobacterias, o algas verde-azules......
Forma cianobacterias flores generalizadas, muy visibles que se parecen a pintura azul-verde o escoria que flota en el agua. Ellos pueden ser tóxicos para los seres humanos y otros animales.
Estas bacterias filamentosas se agrupan en las esteras que cubren la superficie de un lago de una orilla a la otra, con un máximo de oxígeno en el agua y, finalmente, convertir las profundidades lagos en una zona muerta....................."

More information....

Not when it's the bright green waters of algae-fouled lakes and rivers
Collage of images showing algae in alakes and researcher
View a photo gallery of algae blooms in lakes.
Credit and Larger Version
April 15, 2015
The following is part 15 in a series on the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Environmental Research and Education (ERE) programs. Parts one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 in this series are available on the NSF website.
Going green. On Earth Day and every day, being "greener" is linked with good things like lowering your carbon footprint and eating locally-grown foods.
But not when it comes to drinking or swimming in the bright green waters of lakes fouled by algae, says Hans Paerl, an environmental scientist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
In freshwater lakes around the world, such algae blooms often result from an overabundance of what's known as cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae.
Cyanobacteria form widespread, very visible blooms that look like blue-green paint or scum floating on the water. They may be toxic to humans and other animals.
These filamentous bacteria clump into mats that cover a lake's surface from one shore to the other, using up oxygen in the water and eventually turning the lake's depths into a dead zone.
From Lake Taihu, China, to Lake Erie in the U.S.
It was June 2007, and water spouting from kitchen faucets in Wuxi, China, was pea-soup green. The water came from Taihu, China's third largest lake.
Cyanobacteria obscured the surface of the 900-square-mile lake and quickly overwhelmed the intake plant for the city of Wuxi's drinking water.
Chinese officials scooped 6,000 tons of algae from Taihu and diverted water from the Yangtze River to flush the lake. However, says Paerl, the bloom persisted. "It was fall when it finally abated."
Two weeks into the bloom, Paerl was in China, leaning over the side of a small boat to take samples of Taihu's scum.
He discovered that the algae is similar to that found in blooms in North Carolina's ponds, rivers and estuaries, and in many larger bodies of water such as Lake Erie, Lake Victoria and the Baltic Sea.
"Nowhere are the blooms worse than on Taihu, however," says Paerl, whose work is funded by an NSF Dimensions of Biodiversity grant. "Habitat for fish, crabs and other aquatic species is becoming endangered."
Ten million people also depend on Taihu for drinking water, fisheries and tourism.
Lake Erie on the border of the United States and Canada faces the same challenges.
In 2011, a record-breaking bloom of similar cyanobacteria to the species that plagued Taihu smothered Lake Erie, turning it a bright-green that showed up on satellite images.
At the bloom's peak in October, it expanded to more than 1,930 square miles, three times larger than any Lake Erie bloom on record.
New "recipe" for controlling algae blooms
The "recipe" for controlling the problem, says Paerl, "has been to reduce phosphorus finding its way into lakes from sources on land like fertilizers. That's based on the long-standing paradigm that phosphorus is the key nutrient limiting freshwater algae blooms."
But another element, nitrogen, flowing into lakes and rivers is increasing more rapidly than phosphorus. "It's led researchers to question whether both nitrogen and phosphorus should be controlled to stem the tide of proliferating algae blooms," says Paerl.
Lake Taihu, he says, is a "looking glass" for addressing such nutrient overenrichment and toxic algae blooms.
"Our NSF Dimensions of Biodiversity project is determining what roles specific nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus play in the frequency and extent of algae blooms in lakes, and how they affect these ecosystems."
Data from experiments on the relationship between nutrients and algae blooms are being used to formulate a nutrient reduction management strategy. Scientists hope it will lead to the control of blooms in Taihu and other lakes.
The goal, Paerl says, is to find new ways of ensuring sustainable uses of lakes prone to blooms.
Other scientists involved in the research are Wayne Gardner of the University of Texas, Ferdi Hellweger of Northeastern University and Steven Wilhelm of the University of Tennessee.
"Harmful cyanobacteria blooms caused by excessive phosphorus and nitrogen are threatening freshwater lakes worldwide," says Simon Malcomber, lead NSF program director for Dimensions of Biodiversity, which is supported by NSF's Directorates for Biological Sciences and Geosciences.
"This research shows the importance of taking a holistic approach to understanding harmful cyanobacteria blooms," says Malcomber. "Only with an ecosystems approach can long-term successful sustainability strategies be formulated."
Chain of events links land and lake
The complex chain that leads to algae blooms in freshwater begins not in lakes but on land.
Farmers often overfertilize their fields. The excess fertilizer, laden with nutrients like phosphorus and nitrogen, washes into creeks and rivers, where it's eventually carried to lakes.
"Nitrogen is necessary for increasing crop yields," says Paerl, "but plants are inefficient at taking it up. More fertilizer is often added than plants need."
Only a fraction of the nitrogen applied to soils ends up in crops; in some regions, it's less than 20 percent. The rest is on the loose.
When the excess eventually reaches freshwater, it fertilizes aquatic algae such as cyanobacteria--just as it encourages plants on land to grow. The algae proliferate, becoming massive blooms.
As the algae die, they fall to the lake's bottom and are digested by microorganisms. The process removes oxygen from the water, creating low-oxygen "dead zones," fish kills and tainted waters.
Extreme algae blooms: The new normal?
Are algae blooms in lakes around the world a new normal?
Scientists are working to find answers.
"This important work is linking the diversity and identity of algae with nitrogen cycling and harmful algal blooms in heavily affected freshwater lakes," says Mike Sieracki, Dimensions of Biodiversity program director in NSF's Division of Ocean Sciences.
This week at an NSF-funded workshop--Global Solutions to Regional Problems: Collecting Global Expertise to Address the Problem of Harmful Algal Blooms--researchers discussed the current science on algae blooms, and identified knowledge gaps in bloom prevention and mitigation.
"We hope that this workshop will lead to strategies to mitigate future blooms in waterbodies in the U.S. and around the world," says Bill Cooper, program director in NSF's Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental and Transport Systems.
Meeting topics included the biology of bloom-forming species, environmental factors underlying bloom formation, sensor development in bloom detection, prediction of blooms, and best practices for control.
"New nutrient reduction strategies," wrote Paerl and colleagues in the journal Science in October 2014, "should incorporate point and non-point sources, including nitrogen removal in wastewaters, optimization of fertilizer application, and erosion controls.
"An investment in joint phosphorus and nitrogen controls will counter the very high costs of harmful algal bloom events and the losses of freshwater resources worldwide."
It's the only way, Paerl says, to keep blooms of cyanobacteria and other algae in check. When it comes to lakes and rivers, streams and ponds, "going green" means anything but.
-- Cheryl Dybas, NSF (703) 292-7734 cdybas@nsf.gov
Related Programs Dimensions of Biodiversity
Related WebsitesWhither the diversity of life on Earth? NSF, partners award $23 million for studies of planet's biodiversity: 
http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=132506
Earth Week: A Stream Is a Stream Is a Stream: Or Is It?:
 http://www.nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=123855&org=NSF
Staple of recipe favorites--the tomato--reveals processes that maintain biodiversity:
 http://nsf.gov/discoveries/disc_summ.jsp?cntn_id=129676
NSF Grant: Anthropogenic nutrient input drives genetic, functional and taxonomic biodiversity in hypereutrophic Lake Taihu, China:

A toxic algae bloom, one of many around the world, covers North Carolina's Cape Fear River.
Credit and Larger Version
China's Lake Taihu, showing an extensive algae bloom that reaches the lake's shores.
China's Lake Taihu shows an extensive algae bloom that reaches the lake's shores.
Credit and Larger Version
boat going through Lake Taihu's thick algae scum.
Researchers travel by boat through Lake Taihu's thick algae scum.
Credit and Larger Version
Scientist Hans Paerl holding a bottle with algae in water from in Lake Taihu.
Scientist Hans Paerl collects samples of the algae bloom in Lake Taihu.
Credit and Larger Version
Satellite view of a widespread algae bloom in September 2013, in Lake Erie.
Satellite view of a widespread algae bloom in September 2013, in Lake Erie.
Credit and Larger Versión
the National Science Foundation(NSF)
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
Inscríbete en el Foro del blog y participa : A Vuelo De Un Quinde - El Foro!

3 comentarios:

  1. Creo que no estamos haciendo mucho por cuidarla. Sería justo que a alguien de los congresistas se le ocurriera presentar un proyecto de ley en la que todas las municipalidades del Perú, Desarrollen proyectos de reforestación cada año, dándoles un incentivo económico para aquellas que hagan mejor su trabajo, tal y como lo hacen por lo de la ejecución presupuestal. Se imaginan la cantidad de árboles que tendríamos en un año y los beneficios que estos traerían para la humanidad?

    ResponderEliminar
  2. Jackeline Amanda Asitimbay10:04 p. m., abril 22, 2016

    Bueno amigos los cominico aqui en ecuador siguen lo temblores

    ResponderEliminar
  3. Francisco Aristides Cordova10:05 p. m., abril 22, 2016

    yo creo que no hay otra igual ni a un millón años luz.

    ResponderEliminar

Por favor deja tus opiniones, comentarios y/o sugerencias para que nosotros podamos mejorar cada día. Gracias !!!.