RECOMMENDED TED TALK: Dan Barber: How I fell in love with a fish

In this TED presentation, Chef Dan Barber discusses keeping fish on the menu, fish farming, and sustainability. He describes a fish farm in Spain that doesn’t need to feed its fish and that measures its success on the health of its predators. Basically, a fish farm that’s also a bird sanctuary. More on the presentation from TED.com:

Chef Dan Barber squares off with a dilemma facing many chefs today: how to keep fish on the menu. With impeccable research and deadpan humor, he chronicles his pursuit of a sustainable fish he could love, and the foodie’s honeymoon he’s enjoyed since discovering an outrageously delicious fish raised using a revolutionary farming method in Spain.


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COLONY COLLAPSE DISORDER increasing costs for farmers

Colony collapse disorder or CCD occurs when a bee colony collapses or fails due to the sudden disappearance of its worker bees. Bee colonies may be destroyed or may withdraw from a hive for a number of reasons. For example, Varroa mite infestations can be particularly destructive. However, the exact cause of CCD or “the mass disappearance of worker honey bees” is unknown. There are several theories to explain what’s causing CCD, but it probably results from a combination of factors. Though, there may be one or two factors—probably resulting from anthropogenic activities—which play a more prominent role in the manifestation of CCD. For instance, according to the Daily Green, bee frames, which house the honey, pollen, bee larva, and unhatched bee eggs, have “to be replaced every 2 or 3 years because of the agricultural toxins that build up inside.” More from the Washington Times:

The prevailing theory on the cause of CCD includes several factors. The three main suspects of CCD are: viruses, stress and pesticides. When joined together these factors may create the deadly disease, researchers say.

As a result of the increasing scarcity of bees and beekeepers, the cost of bee rental has skyrocketed. Farmers rent beehives to increase pollination thus crop productivity, so bees do more than just make honey—they’re important pollinators as well. According to estimates from a Cornell University study, “Nearly one-third of U.S. agriculture depends on the 2.4 million bee colonies for big crop production, where they annually pollinate $14 billion worth of seeds and crops.” More from Economist.com:

Since 2006, however, bees have been suffering from “colony collapse disorder” (CCD), a mysterious affliction that has drastically reduced their numbers. As a result, says Joe MacIlvaine, the president of Paramount Farming and the largest almond-grower in the world, the rental cost of a hive has tripled in the past five years to about $150. Bee rental now accounts for 15% of Paramount’s costs.

So Paramount has hired Mr Wardell, who has been studying bees for 30 years and CCD since it broke out. Its cause may be mobile-telephony radiation, viruses, fungi, mites and pesticides—or none of the above. In the absence of a clear explanation, Mr Wardell is concentrating on something different: nutrition.

A healthy worker bee spends about four weeks in its hive, feeding on protein-rich pollen and nursing larvae, and then another two weeks in the field eating sugary honey until its proteins are depleted and it dies. For some reason bees are getting too little protein in the hive, thus dying after only about four weeks, almost as soon as they venture outside. So Mr Wardell is force-feeding them protein. He owns a patent for MegaBee, which he says “looks like cookie dough”. He puts a bit of this into the hives, blocking the bees’ entrance so that they have to chomp their way through it. As part of his new job, Mr Wardell is working with beekeepers across the country to supplement bee diets everywhere.

So far he has noticed that hives are smaller this year and some colonies still collapsing. But he has hopes that his cookies will work, bringing more of a buzz next year.

In addition to nutritional issues, current research into a solution for CCD is focusing on breeding disease-resistant bees. From the Washington Times:

Through the growing science of genomics – the science of looking at molecular information in DNA – Mr. Delaplane’s science team will select a super-resistant bee that is able to naturally combat CCD and a culprit in this disorder: varroa mites.

First, “We’re going to be identifying bees that are resistant to XYZ” diseases, he said. Then, “We will be able to genetically mark these lines.”

The technique of marking and using favorable genetic traits is now done in the animal and plant industry, but marking a natural trait is different than engineering a change.

“We have no plan for doing [genetic] engineered selections,” Mr. Delaplane said. “We’re going to be screening for natural resistance.”

Afterward, Mr. Delaplane’s team will take those disease-resistant bees and breed more of them. Here science is guiding the process of natural selection.

Once the genetically strong bees are developed in the laboratory, they will be shipped to commercial bee breeders. The breeders, in turn, will mass produce them and flood the market with disease-resistant bees to beekeepers across the country. CCD may still be around, but the superbee’s immune system will effectively combat it.

Photo source for attribution here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. The authors or licensors of these images do not endorse my work or me and their images are protected under an attribution license. The bee graphic is via The New York Times.

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NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES dwindle as consumption and populations increase

Image via Cool Infographics

If demand continues to grow, the estimates of remaining reserves of some natural resources—or nonrenewable resources in particular—are grim (click on the image to enlarge and read how long some nonrenewable resources are predicted to last).

The amount of nonrenewable resources is fixed, meaning that replenishment or concentration is extremely slow (i.e., on geologic timescales), so unsustainable human consumption causes these resources to become increasingly unavailable. To put it another way, human consumption disperses or dilutes these nonrenewable resources to the point that it’s not economically feasible to recover them. Consequently, conservation and recycling, in addition to other sustainable policies, should be aggressively implmented, and people should be educated about overconsumption and environmental degradation. Certainly, sustainable policies are prudent policies.

Since consumption directly impacts the availability of natural resources, our economy is directly dependent on natural resources. As a result, all goods and services depend on the availability of natural resources. As a result, environmental degradation is a costly habit—both to the environment and to future generations. In fact, the “world’s leading 3,000 companies cause $2.2 trillion in annual damage to the environment.” More from the Atlantic Online:

The world’s leading 3,000 companies cause $2.2 trillion in annual damage to the environment, according to a UN report that will be released this spring. Based on eight years of studying a group of companies that includes the entire S&P 500, the report tracks corporate supply chains in order to place a monetary figure on greenhouse gas and particulate emissions, local pollution, water use, and various other depletions of environmental resources.

The report, which the UN commissioned in order to educate eco-minded investors, may be the first step in a global push to factor natural resources into business costs. Environmentalists have long argued that since nature provides services — “ecosystem services,” they’re now termed — vital to doing business, placing a monetary value on these services is the best way to ensure that we do not overuse them. In some instances this extra cost would be passed on to consumers, but in others it would be absorbed by businesses.

.       .       .

Since it never hurts to be prepared, though, utility, mining, forestry, and chemical companies — the biggest offenders, according to the report — would be wise to develop contingency plans for what they would do if forced to pay for the environmentally harmful byproducts of their longstanding business models.

THE VIEW FROM ABOVE: Giant iceberg collides with the Mertz Glacier Tongue to calve another enormous iceberg

A massive iceberg, named B-9B, collided with the Mertz Glacier Tongue in Antarctica to shed another massive iceberg the size of Luxembourg. The image at right shows the Mertz Glacier Tongue and the B-9B iceberg during December 2007 before the collision, and the image below shows the aftermath of the collision.

According to the BBC, the two massive icebergs have changed the geography of the region and may threaten local marine line. More from the European Space Agency:

This animation, made up of eight Envisat radar images, shows the 97-km long B-9B iceberg (right) ramming into the Mertz Glacier Tongue in Eastern Antarctica in early February 2010. The collision caused a chunk of the glacier’s tongue to snap off, giving birth to another iceberg nearly as large as B-9B. The new iceberg, named C-28, is roughly 78-km long and 39-km wide, with a surface area of 2500 sq km (the size of Luxembourg).

Envisat’s Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) acquired these images from 10 February to 4 March in Wide Swath Mode, providing spatial resolution of 150 m. ASAR can pierce through clouds and local darkness and is capable of differentiating between different types of ice.

If the image below isn’t animating, then click on it to see the animated GIF showing the collision in action:

Images via the European Space Agency

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THE VIEW FROM ABOVE: Lena Delta

The Lena Delta is the largest wilderness protected area in Russia, and it’s an important ecoregion that provides habitat for numerous species of wildfowl. According to WWF, “The whole of the Lena Delta area has been nominated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.” The Delta is located in the northeast of Siberia.

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