Deepwater Oil Plume in Gulf Degraded by Microbes, Study Shows

In the aftermath of the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico, a dispersed oil plume was formed at a depth between 3,600 and 4,000 feet and extending some 10 miles out from the wellhead. An intensive study by scientists with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) found that microbial activity, spearheaded by a new and unclassified species, degrades oil much faster than anticipated. This degradation appears to take place without a significant level of oxygen depletion.

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Gaia Hypothesis:Relationship of Biotic and Abiotic Environment

In 1965, J.E. Lovelock published the first scientific paper suggesting the Gaia hypothesis. The Gaia hypothesis states that the temperature and composition of the Earth’s surface are actively controlled by life on the planet. It suggests that if changes in the gas composition, temperature or oxidation state of the Earth are caused by extraterrestial, biological, geological, or other disturbances, life responds to these changes by modifying the abiotic environment through growth and metabolism. In simplier terms, biological responses tend to regulate the state of the Earth’s environment in their favor.

The evidence for Gaia is as follows:
If not continually replaced by biotic activities gases like methane and hydrogen would become non-existant in the atmosphere in a few decades.
Carbon dioxide (C02) in the Earth’s atmosphere is far less abundant than chemistry alone would allow. If life was deleted carbon dioxide would become 30 times more abundant. Large quantities of carbon dioxide are currently locked up by living organisms.
The Sun’s energy output has increased by 30% in the past 3.5 billion years. Yet, historical climate data indicates that the temperature of the Earth has only fluctuated by about 5° Celsius from the current average global temperature of 15° Celsius. Computer climate models suggest that a 30% reduction in solar radiation would create a global average temperature of between -10 and -52° Celsius all things being equal. These results indicate that levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide must have been much higher in the past when the Sun was less powerful. Extra atmospheric carbon dioxide would have created a greater greenhouse effect and warmer temperatures. These results also indicate that some mechanism must have removed carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as the Sun’s output of radiation increased over the Earth’s geologic history. This mechanism is the conversion of atmospheric carbon dioxide into fossilized organic matter (natural gas, oil, coal, limestone, and peat). In other words, Gaia!

This theory is important to Physical Geography and other Earth Sciences for the following reasons:

  • The Gaia theory suggests that the abiotic and biotic environment is made up of many complex interrelationships;
  • Many of these complex interrelationships are quite delicate and may be altered by human activity to a breaking point; and
  • The theory suggests that humans must learn to respect Gaia by reducing their intentional modification of the Earth’s abiotic and biotic components.

Links:
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Wikipedia

Gaia Hypotheses: Is the Earth Smarter Than Us?

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Bananas Get Pepper Power

Despite their ubiquity in grocery stores and in cereal bowls, a number of diseases threaten bananas, and farmers often have no way to fight back. One reason is that bananas have lost their ability to produce fertile seeds, so they can’t reproduce sexually.

As a result, there are a limited number of banana varieties. And an entire plantation generally consists of genetically identical plants. So, if a disease hits one, it usually hits them all.

Now Bananas might have gained a new weapon against a devastating disease: The green pepper.Bananas given green pepper genes are resistant to a devastating bacterial disease.If it works in the field, the genetic modification would secure banana health worldwide.Banana diseases cost African farmers hundreds of millions of dollars yearly.Bananas are one of the most important sustenance crops in the world.

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Mauritania plants trees to hold back desert

Mauritania has launched a tree-planting program aimed at protecting its capital from the advancing desert and coastal erosion, a project that could eventually extend thousands of kilometers across Africa.

According to the government the aim of this green belt is to stop the advancing desert and stop encroachment by the sea, which is threatening the town with floods.The aim of this green belt is to stop the advancing desert and stop encroachment by the sea, which is threatening the town with floods. The project is part of a broader ant-desertification plan, the “Great Green Wall,” launched by the African Union in 2005 to try to create a 15 km-wide wall of greenery stretching 7,000 km between Africa’s east and west coasts. Image shows the planned location of the Great Green Wall across Africa.

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