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Trees are nature’s water filters, capable of cleaning up the most toxic wastes, including explosives, solvents and organic wastes, largely through a dense community of microbes around the tree’s roots that clean water in exchange for nutrients, a process known as phytoremediation. Tree leaves also filter air pollution. A 2008 study by researchers at Columbia University found that more trees in urban neighborhoods correlate with a lower incidence of asthma.

In Japan, researchers have long studied what they call “forest bathing.” A walk in the woods, they say, reduces the level of stress chemicals in the body and increases natural killer cells in the immune system, which fight tumors and viruses. Studies in inner cities show that anxiety, depression and even crime are lower in a landscaped environment.

Trees also release vast clouds of beneficial chemicals. On a large scale, some of these aerosols appear to help regulate the climate; others are anti-bacterial, anti-fungal and anti-viral. We need to learn much more about the role these chemicals play in nature. One of these substances, taxane, from the Pacific yew tree, has become a powerful treatment for breast and other cancers. Aspirin’s active ingredient comes from willows.

Trees are greatly underutilized as an eco-technology. “Working trees” could absorb some of the excess phosphorus and nitrogen that run off farm fields and help heal the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico. In Africa, millions of acres of parched land have been reclaimed through strategic tree growth.

Trees are also the planet’s heat shield. They keep the concrete and asphalt of cities and suburbs 10 or more degrees cooler and protect our skin from the sun’s harsh UV rays. The Texas Department of Forestry has estimated that the die-off of shade trees will cost Texans hundreds of millions of dollars more for air-conditioning. Trees, of course, sequester carbon, a greenhouse gas that makes the planet warmer. A study by the Carnegie Institution for Science also found that water vapor from forests lowers ambient temperatures.

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Why Trees Matter - NYTimes.com (via dendroica)

(via reagan-was-a-horrible-president)

Tags: trees nature

(Source: tripoddiaries, via dxo)

Tags: nature

cultureofresistance:

The acidification of the world’s oceans from an excess of CO2 emissions has already begun, as evidenced recently by the widespread mortality of oyster larvae in the Pacific Northwest. Scientists say this is just a harbinger of things to come if greenhouse gas emissions continue to soar.

Standing on the shores of Netarts Bay in Oregon on a sunny fall morning, it’s hard to imagine that the fate of the oysters being raised here at the Whiskey Creek Shellfish Hatchery is being determined by what came out of smokestacks and tailpipes in the 1960s and ‘70s. But this rural coastal spot and the shellfish it has nurtured for centuries are a bellwether of one of the most palpable changes being caused by global carbon dioxide emissions —ocean acidification.

It was here, from 2006 to 2008, that oyster larvae began dying dramatically, with hatchery owners Mark Wiegardt and his wife, Sue Cudd, experiencing larvae losses of 70 to 80 percent. “Historically we’ve had larvae mortalities,” says Wiegardt, but those deaths were usually related to bacteria. After spending thousands of dollars to disinfect and filter out pathogens, the hatchery’s oyster larvae were still dying.

Finally, the couple enlisted the help of Burke Hales, a biogeochemist and ocean ecologist at Oregon State University. He soon homed in on the carbon chemistry of the water. “My wife sent a few samples in and Hales said someone had screwed up the samples because the [dissolved CO2 gas] level was so ridiculously high,” says Wiegardt, a fourth-generation oyster farmer. But the measurements were accurate. What the Whiskey Creek hatchery was experiencing was acidic seawater, caused by the ocean absorbing excessive amounts of CO2 from the air.

Ocean acidification — which makes it difficult for shellfish, corals, sea urchins, and other creatures to form the shells or calcium-based structures they need to live — was supposed to be a problem of the future. But because of patterns of ocean circulation, Pacific Northwest shellfish are already on the front lines of these potentially devastating changes in ocean chemistry. Colder, more acidic waters are welling up from the depths of the Pacific Ocean and streaming ashore in the fjords, bays, and estuaries of Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, exacting an environmental and economic toll on the region’s famed oysters.

For the past six years, wild oysters in Willapa Bay, Washington, have failed to reproduce successfully because corrosive waters have prevented oyster larvae from forming shells. Wild oysters in Puget Sound and off the east coast of Vancouver Island also have experienced reproductive failure because of acidic waters. Other wild oyster beds in the Pacific Northwest have sustained losses in recent years at the same time that scientists have been measuring alarmingly corrosive water along the Pacific coast.

(Source: socialuprooting)

cultureofresistance:

boston:

Study finds steep drop in Bay State’s native birds
- The melancholy whistling of the yellow-bellied eastern meadowlark had long been heard in hay fields and salt marshes throughout Massachusetts. The American kestrel, the continent’s smallest falcon, thrived in local grasslands, hunting for grasshoppers, mice, and other prey in the state’s once-abundant farms. (Above: American kestrel.)

“The report found nearly half of all the state’s breeding birds are declining, including many marshland and grassland species as well as more common birds such as blue jays and swallows, raising questions about the health of the state’s wetlands and other ecosystems.
 
It also found that although the state has helped bring back endangered birds such as piping plovers, peregrine falcons, and bald eagles, 20 of the 28 birds listed under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act remain vulnerable. An additional 34 birds that have been identified as of “conservation concern’’ were also found to be declining.
“As a longtime observer of the natural world, I am alarmed by the challenges facing many Bay State bird species,’’ wrote Edward O. Wilson, the biologist from Harvard University, in a letter introducing the report titled “State of the Birds.’’ “My concern is not simply for the loss of birdlife, but that birds as nature’s heralds are signaling broader ecological deterioration.’’
He added: “This report captures the changes in bird distribution that seem to be unmistakable markers of climate change.’’
Among the other findings: More than a quarter of all wintering birds are in decline; the number of species that are increasing has fallen by half since 1980; and the number of ground-nesting birds and others that feed on insects are dropping.
The report, which surveyed more than 300 birds, notes that some declines are to be expected as Massachusetts continues to lose its agricultural lands to development and suburbs replace farmland, but the authors say in the report that there is “a real risk that we could lose some of our native birdlife.’’
This is extremely despairing… I very much enjoy the company of the birds in my yard and in the city when I see them bathing in puddles and picking the ground for bits of food. 

cultureofresistance:

boston:

Study finds steep drop in Bay State’s native birds

- The melancholy whistling of the yellow-bellied eastern meadowlark had long been heard in hay fields and salt marshes throughout Massachusetts. The American kestrel, the continent’s smallest falcon, thrived in local grasslands, hunting for grasshoppers, mice, and other prey in the state’s once-abundant farms. (Above: American kestrel.)

The report found nearly half of all the state’s breeding birds are declining, including many marshland and grassland species as well as more common birds such as blue jays and swallows, raising questions about the health of the state’s wetlands and other ecosystems.

It also found that although the state has helped bring back endangered birds such as piping plovers, peregrine falcons, and bald eagles, 20 of the 28 birds listed under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act remain vulnerable. An additional 34 birds that have been identified as of “conservation concern’’ were also found to be declining.

“As a longtime observer of the natural world, I am alarmed by the challenges facing many Bay State bird species,’’ wrote Edward O. Wilson, the biologist from Harvard University, in a letter introducing the report titled “State of the Birds.’’ “My concern is not simply for the loss of birdlife, but that birds as nature’s heralds are signaling broader ecological deterioration.’’

He added: “This report captures the changes in bird distribution that seem to be unmistakable markers of climate change.’’

Among the other findings: More than a quarter of all wintering birds are in decline; the number of species that are increasing has fallen by half since 1980; and the number of ground-nesting birds and others that feed on insects are dropping.

The report, which surveyed more than 300 birds, notes that some declines are to be expected as Massachusetts continues to lose its agricultural lands to development and suburbs replace farmland, but the authors say in the report that there is “a real risk that we could lose some of our native birdlife.’’

This is extremely despairing… I very much enjoy the company of the birds in my yard and in the city when I see them bathing in puddles and picking the ground for bits of food. 

(via socialuprooting)

mothernaturenetwork:

Rising seas expected to wash out key California beaches
The effects of climate change will wash away iconic beaches by century’s end, along with millions of dollars in real estate, roads and tax revenues.

mothernaturenetwork:

Rising seas expected to wash out key California beaches

The effects of climate change will wash away iconic beaches by century’s end, along with millions of dollars in real estate, roads and tax revenues.

(via socialuprooting)

"All things are connected.
Whatever befalls the Earth
Befalls the sons of the Earth.
Man did not weave the web of life,
He is merely a strand in it.
Whatever he does to the web,
He does to himself."

— Chief Seattle (via cultureofresistance)

(Source: thetripster, via lespritduprintemps)