Current:Home > NewsWarming Trends: Asian Carp Hate ‘80s Rock, Beekeeping to Restore a Mountain Top and a Lot of Reasons to Go Vegan -Mastery Money Tools
Warming Trends: Asian Carp Hate ‘80s Rock, Beekeeping to Restore a Mountain Top and a Lot of Reasons to Go Vegan
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:51:21
Want to Irritate an Asian Carp? Play Some Tom Petty
As invasive, ecosystem-killing Asian carp continue to threaten the Great Lakes, government scientists are trying a new method to deter the fish from migrating northward in the Mississippi River: blasting noises that sound like the opening riffs of a 1980s rock song.
“It has kind of a throaty, guitar-like sound,” said Christa Woodly, a research biologist with the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center. “It increases in amplitude and at the tail end of it, it has this whirring sound at a much higher frequency. We developed all of the sounds to stay within the hearing range of the Asian carp.”
Previous research found that these noises were annoying to the four species of Asian carp that are wreaking havoc in U.S. waterways, but were out of the hearing range of some native species.
Some Asian carp species can exceed 100 pounds, and silver carp can jump out of the water, posing a danger to recreational boaters. They also outcompete native species for food resources and can rapidly take over ecosystems.
Asian carp haven’t yet infiltrated the Great Lakes thanks to intensive, expensive deterrent technology. Researchers hope this three-year study that uses 16 speakers installed in Lock and Dam 19 in the Mississippi River near Keokuk, Iowa and Hamilton, Illinois, will be successful and provide another method of invasive species mitigation that could be used elsewhere to prevent the spread of Asian carp.
“The goal here is to create something that is irritating to the fish, that kind of makes them want to turn around and go the other direction and not continue to move upstream,” said Marybeth Brey, a U.S. Geological Survey fish biologist.
Spotting Wildfire With Artificial Intelligence
California’s Sonoma County was devastated in 2017 by the deadly Tubbs fire. This month, the county announced that it will begin using artificial intelligence to help with wildfire detection.
Using a FEMA grant allocated for hazard mitigation, the county will use AI to monitor new and existing wildfire cameras 24/7. If the technology, which can observe, learn and make decisions like a human, detects a fire, it will alert emergency crews.
The system Sonoma County will use has been trained to detect wildfire in the camera images using more than 10 million images of smoke and fire. Once the system notifies emergency crews, firefighters can quickly respond and confirm whether the fire threat is real.
Neil Sahota, an artificial intelligence expert who has consulted with the United Nations on using AI to meet its Sustainable Development Goals, said the technology can be taken to the next level, from reacting to wildfires to predicting wildfires and preventing them from beginning. He said he believes the data exists to accomplish this, including climate data and information on where lightning might strike.
“What Sonoma is doing is a huge step in the right direction,” Sahota said. “AI isn’t always going to be perfect. It’s probably going to miss some wildfires, but if this predictive system can help us cut down wildfires by 20 percent, that’s huge.”
If You Need a Reason to Go Vegan, This Book Will Provide It
Going vegan is cheaper than buying a Tesla. That’s one of 72 reasons to adopt a vegan lifestyle listed in a new book.
From the benefits of a plant-based diet to health, wellness and sex, to the consequences of a meat and dairy diet like animal suffering, pandemics and climate-warming emissions, “72 Reasons to Be Vegan: Why Plant Based, Why Now,” publishing on Tuesday, gives a comprehensive list of arguments in favor of a vegan lifestyle.
Gene Stone, a vegan and journalist, was once a self-proclaimed “meataholic” and a veggie-hater. But once he learned the health benefits of a plant-based diet, he moved toward veganism and never looked back, he said. He and fellow vegan and health writer Kathy Freston wanted to share what they had learned in the form of a book.
“There wasn’t a single book that said, ‘This is why you should be vegan,’” Stone said. “There were health books, there were environmental books, there were athletic performance books, there were animal protection books, but there wasn’t a book that put it together.”
One of Stone’s favorite reasons listed in the book is No. 24: The Numbers Don’t Lie. If every American went vegan for a day, the authors note, they would collectively save 90 billion gallons of water, prevent 1.2 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions from escaping into the atmosphere and reduce animal waste—a massive pollutant—by 4.7 million tons.
“The goal of the book isn’t to create immediate change, but it’s to create immediate thought,” Stone said. “If you can change people’s thought patterns a little, if you can nudge them, or even interest them, that’s what I want this book to do.”
Beekeeping as Ecosystem Restoration
Pollinators are essential to rebuilding ecosystems. That’s why an initiative to restore areas damaged by mountaintop removal mining in Appalachia is training locals to be beekeepers, providing them the supplies to get started and paying them for the work they do.
The Appalachian Beekeeping Collective, part of the nonprofit Appalachian Headwaters, supports more than 100 beekeepers and also sells the honey produced online for about $15 a jar.
In the winter, experienced beekeepers teach their skills to people interested in getting involved. Then, in the spring, new beekeepers receive some hives and bee colonies, and mentors regularly check in to make sure the bees are thriving.
“It helps teach people in our region to be connected with the ecosystem and the living environment,” said Kate Asquith, director of programs and outreach for Appalachian Headwaters. “It’s a huge tool for engaging with people in a region that wouldn’t be as interested otherwise.”
People in the Appalachian region tend to be hostile toward environmental protection, Asquith said, because the regional economy depended on coal for decades. She sees this collective as a way to get the truth about climate change out with the message that solutions can benefit the local economy and communities.
“Beekeepers, more than most people, see the differences over the last couple of decades with what’s going on with the ecosystem and how the climate has changed,” Asquith said. “They see the impacts on the weather, when it rains and destroys blossoms, when there isn’t enough water for species to flower really well and for there to be good nectar flow, and they notice when things bloom.”
J.K. Rowling Wasn’t Thinking About Trees
It has taken nearly 24 million trees to print the 522 million copies of books in the Harry Potter series that have been produced since 1997, when the first book was published, according to an analysis by a U.K.-based energy-switching website.
All seven Harry Potter books ranked in the top 25 books requiring the most trees to produce, with “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix,” the fifth book in the series, ranking at No. 1. The fifth book is the longest in the series, at 766 pages, and has used up 4,979,000 trees since it was published in 2003, according to the analysis.
The SaveOnEnergy analysis involved multiplying book sales for the 50 best-selling books globally by page counts to determine how many sheets of paper had been used to produce each of the best sellers. That value was divided by 10,000, the number of sheets of paper yielded by a single tree, on average.
Other top-ranking best sellers include “War and Peace,” which has used up 4,410,000 trees since 1869, and “The Da Vinci Code,” which has consumed 3,912,000 trees since 2003.
veryGood! (93)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Less is more? Consumers have fewer choices as brands prune their offerings to focus on best sellers
- Waymo driverless car set ablaze in San Francisco: 'Putting out some rage'
- Real rock stars at the World of Concrete
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Putin signals he's open to prisoner swap for Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich's release
- Kansas City Chiefs Coach Andy Reid Reacts to Travis Kelce’s Heated Sideline Moment at Super Bowl 2024
- Super Bowl 58 bets gone wrong: From scoreless Travis Kelce to mistake-free Brock Purdy
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Do Super Bowl halftime performers get paid? How much Usher stands to make for his 2024 show
Ranking
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Pakistan election results show jailed former PM Imran Khan's backers heading for an election upset
- Hiker missing for a week is found dead on towering, snow-covered Southern California mountain
- During Mardi Gras, Tons of Fun Comes With Tons of Toxic Beads
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Judge orders Elon Musk to testify in SEC probe of his $44 billion Twitter takeover in 2022
- Steve Ostrow, who founded famed NYC bathhouse the Continental Baths, dies at 91
- Super Bowl 58 bets gone wrong: From scoreless Travis Kelce to mistake-free Brock Purdy
Recommendation
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Weight-loss drugs aren't a magic bullet. Lifestyle changes are key to lasting health
Ryan Reynolds Trolls Blake Lively for Going to 2024 Super Bowl With BFF Taylor Swift
Worried about your kids getting scammed by online crooks? Tech tips to protect kids online
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
All the times number 13 was relevant in Super Bowl 58: A Taylor Swift conspiracy theory
Usher obtained marriage license with girlfriend Jennifer Goicoechea in Las Vegas before Super Bowl
Hiker missing for a week is found dead on towering, snow-covered Southern California mountain