Householders with energy-efficient homes more likely to be complacent

London, March 24 (ANI): People who have made their houses more energy efficient are more likely to give in to small excesses, a new British research has pointed out.

David Lomas, Loughborough University, UK, hinted such excesses could work up a big tab and cost as much as half of the anticipated savings from making homes more energy efficient.

“Some householders who install double-glazing, insulation and energy-efficient boilers end up using fuel at close to the old levels, often because they are more concerned about comfort than saving energy,” New Scientist quoted Lomas as saying.

Paul Stern of the US National Research Council nodded in agreement but added that efficiency measures did their bit in conserving energy overall.

The results were published in Building Research & Information. (ANI)

Ban of e-waste export likely to worsen global environmental problem

Washington, March 22 (ANI): In a new study, researchers have determined that a proposal under debate in the US Congress to ban the export of electronics waste would likely make a growing global environmental problem even worse.

The researchers call into question conventional thinking that trade bans can prevent “backyard recycling” of electronics waste – primarily old and obsolete computers – in developing countries.

Primitive recycling processes used in these countries are dispersing materials and pollutants that are contaminating air, water and soil.

“Trade bans will become increasingly irrelevant in solving the problem,” said Eric Williams.

Electronics waste is often exported from the United States and other developed nations to regions in China, India, Thailand and less developed countries where recycling is done in a crude fashion.

To recover copper from e-waste, for instance, wires are pulled out, piled up and burned to remove insulation covering the copper.

This emits dioxins and other pollutants.

Toxic cyanide and acids used to remove gold from circuit boards of junked computers also are released into the environment.

According to the researchers, with the number of junked computers expected to triple in the next 15 years, the problem will grow much worse if an effective remedy is not put in place in the near future.

The main approach to solving the backyard recycling problem has been to ban trade in e-waste.

Some countries have officially banned e-waste imports, but in some cases, as in China, such legislation has pushed the trade to the black market.

Congress is debating House Resolution 2595, which would ban the export of e-waste from the United States.

“The underlying assumption of this bill and other trade bans is that most e-waste comes from outside developing nations, and that stopping trade with developed countries would cut off the supply of e-waste and stop backyard recycling,” Williams said.

But, authors of the Environmental Science and Technology article forecast that the developing world will generate more waste computers than the developed countries as soon as 2017, and that by 2025, the developing world will generate twice the amount of waste computers as what will come from developed nations.

“Rapid economic and population growth in developing countries is driving an increase in computer use in these parts of the world that is outpacing the implementation of modern and environment-friendly recycling systems,” Williams said.

“So without action, backyard recycling is certain to increase,” he added. (ANI)

Heroin worth millions seized in Punjab

Jalalabad (Punjab), Mar 19 (ANI): Border Security Force (BSF) officials seized heroin worth 1.8 millions here on Thursday.

Acting on a tip off, BSF personnel laid the trap and seized the contraband items like heroin and fake currency from the Pakistani intruders out of whom one was shot dead by the security personnel.

“We recovered 26 kilograms of heroin, fake Indian currency, one pistol, 5,000 live rounds, two empty fire cases of the pistol, two empty fire cases of AK 47, insulation gloves, a mobile two SIM cards and a tester,” said Satyarath, DIG, BSF, Jalalabad.

Punjab”s border with Pakistan is notorious for smuggling illegal drugs, fake Indian currency and weapons.

Last year, the BSF seized around 47.7 kilograms of heroin and fake Indian currency worth over Rupees three million on the Punjab border, besides nabbing four Pakistan-based smugglers. (ANI)

Privacy, fraud and insulation: the debacle continues

Mary from Bribie Island is a polite lady, so when she got a letter addressed to Daphne Weatherby, she didn’t consider opening it. She wrote “return to sender” on the official-looking envelope and planned to drop it back to the post office.

Out driving, she tuned into her radio – and heard another man tell me he had received a letter from the Federal Government asking whether he was happy with the installation of his insulation.

Having never had it installed he was confused, and Mary heard his confusion turn to anger when he told how he was dismissed as not knowing what was in his roof when he alerted the relevant authorities.

Mary went home and looked at the envelope again, opened it, and found out her house had also been used by some unscrupulous installation company to claim $1,600 for a job that was never conducted.

She told her neighbour. She had a letter too – another fraud case. And then on the Gold Coast, another one popped up. And so it goes.

Mary is more concerned about her privacy than fraud; she worries that someone has used her address. Others are worried that the Federal Government’s hotline has taken privacy in the other direction – refusing to reveal the name of the company alleging they did work on their homes.

Those cases are just the tip of an iceberg that could up-end attempts by the new assistant energy minister, Greg Combet, to sink the debacle that has demoted Peter Garrett and raised questions about the Government’s ability to deliver on programs.

Combet’s approach has been to get out and sell his plan to either rip the foil out, or install safety switches, in 50,000 homes, and to check a further 150,000.

He wants to be seen on the front foot, and talkback – always a good barometer of public opinion – shows listeners largely believe his vow to get to the bottom of the mess, and not cover it up further.

But with 42,500 of the 50,000 homes in Queensland, the litany of revelations that followed his vow shows the depth of the problem Combet, and his Government, still face.

Just take these examples revealed by talkback callers.

Master Electricians has recorded 20 cases of installers offering to sell lists of names to Queensland electricians, so they could then cold call, offering safety checks.

The Queensland Workplace Rights Ombudsman has initiated seven investigations over serious non-payment of wages by installation companies, that mushroomed overnight, and disappeared quickly afterwards. In one case, a father revealed how his son had worked for six months, and not received a cent.

Reputable installers have been thrown in with the bad; some are owed more than $100,000 from the Government, which isn’t providing any indication when they’ll be paid. Some have no choice, but to sack workers.

Some who have already had someone crawl into their roof, or done it themselves, have been shocked. In some cases, there’s hardly any insulation, in other cases it’s ripped, in other cases, it hasn’t been put where it should.

Others paid hundreds of dollars on top of the $1,600 rebate, because of the size of their roof. Remember, this is under a federal government-funded and encouraged scheme. Now they are having it ripped out – and being left hundreds of dollars out of pocket.

At least two people have had insulation installed, but when they called the hotline, there is no record anywhere of installers having been at their home. As one of them explained, if there’s no record of any insulation being put in, how can he now have it checked?

One listener has been told the Government will pay up to $400 for an electrician to check their home, plus the reimbursement of a safety switch. Another has been told the $400 must include the safety switch. And confusion remains over whether the Government will fund the installation of a second round of insulation, once the foil has been ripped out.

In at least two cases, ceilings have started to crack after a visit from insulation staff. Wayne noticed warps soon after installers crawled around his roof. He tried to contact the company but couldn’t. Last Friday, a big crack appeared. On Monday, the ceiling collapsed. The only people, he says, who had been in his roof are the installers and the company is not interested in his concerns.

Combet, acutely aware that four installers have lost their lives and more than 100 fires are being blamed on the government plan, has shown he’s happy to be exposed to the full extent of the problem, and to work towards fixing it.

But is it possible to gauge the level of fraud when people are unaware they have been targeted? How many homes have so far been used in fictitious claims?

How long will it take electricians to check 42,500 homes in one state and how do residents decide whether to rip out the foil, or install safety switches?

How do people find out whether their insulation has been installed correctly?

When are reputable companies, now shedding staff, going to receive owed monies?

How is the Government going to track down those companies, now disbanded, which employed staff, but didn’t pay them?

Where did thousands of people stand who signed a contract, to have the insulation installed, but required a signature isolating the Government from any legal liability?

What is going to happen to the stockpile of insulation products sitting in factories in Queensland? Electricity safety officers already hold concerns they will be sold at discounted prices, outside the federal scheme.

Combet says details of how the mangled program will be fixed are still being nutted out. But Queenslanders, who have been doubly affected because the end of the federal scheme meant the end of a parallel state scheme offering solar hot water rebates, are fed up.

This was a program that showcased the Government’s commitment to the environment, while helping working families to improve their lot.

On any objective assessment, it’s failed. And Kevin Rudd’s home state wants it fixed, before they’re ordered off to the polls later this year.

Madonna King presents Mornings each weekday from 8.30am on 612 ABC Brisbane.

Global Insulation Logistics Signs Exclusive Landmark Partnership With MiddleEast Data Centre Company TechXact

LONDON–(Business Wire)–
Global Insulation Logistics (GIL) Ltd together with insulated panel
manufacturer, Eurobond, today signed an exclusive 10 year partnership agreement
with TechXact, the leading consultancy and developer of data centres in the
Middle East and North Africa. This marks a major development in GIL`s presence
in the region and together they will jointly market and sell their products and
services in data centre construction.

Mr Mehdi Paryavi President of TechXact commented: “We first met the directors of
GIL at a data centre strategies conference in Abu Dhabi last June and we were
very impressed with the company`s ethos and heritage in providing data centre
solutions. While we looked at other companies, nobody really came close or had
the kind of fire rated composite technology for insulated construction we
desperately needed and we instantly saw the benefits of the Eurobond panels and
GIL`s unique approach.”

TechXact markets a newly developed German, State -Of -The-Art, Fire Prevention
System called OxyReduct. OxyReduct (Oxygen Reduction) is Fire Prevention through
the extraction of oxygen. In order for a fire to start, heat and oxygen from the
atmosphere are needed. If the oxygen level is reduced flammability levels also
decline. By introducing nitrogen the oxygen content can be reduced and held at a
pre- atmosphere, outbreak of fire can be excluded. This innovative system relies
on “sealed ” rooms which is impossible to achieve using traditional methods of
construction. GIL’s insulated construction system provides the appropriate
containment for them to apply their fire resistant system.

Greg Hodge, founder and director of Global Insulation Logistics said: “We have
become very aware that there is a growing data centre market in the Middle East
and Africa and we have been determined to make our mark in this region. Working
with TechXact gives us the opportunity to not only partner with one of the best
data centre construction companies in the Middle East, but also to have access
to their premium contacts and experience in the region. As most UK companies are
well aware of, this region is typically well known for its challenges, so
working with TechXact presents us with a valuable and unique opportunity to
penetrate this market effectively. It also strengthens our network of partners
across EMEA and Asia.”

Eurobond, manufacturer of composite insulated panels, is the co-signatory on
this agreement as GIL`s main supplier. Simon Thomas, Managing director of
Eurobond explained: “We have been keen to exploit opportunities in this region
for some time, but lacked the experience in both data centre construction and
dealing in the Middle East. Being included as a key partner into this agreement
allows Eurobond to take advantage of GIL`s international experience.”

GIL recently participated in TechXact`s key event by attending the Data Centre
Tops conference in January in Abu Dhabi where over 300 major VIP decision makers
attended.

www.techxact.com

http://www.globalinsulationlogistics.com/

www.eurobond.co.uk

VP Communications for Global Insulation Logistics
Julia Vockrodt, +44(0)20-8964-0260
julia@vp-pr.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Styrofoam addition makes roofs eco-friendly

Washington, July 5 (ANI): Soon, homeowners seeking energy efficiency and savings could be making an environmentally friendly addition to their roofs, with a Styrofoam piece specifically designed for air ventilation covered with foil that can be installed on top of a standard shingle roof.

Billy Ellis Roofing, a Fort Worth, Texas-based roofing company, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory are testing the new roof system called ‘Thermadeck insulation’.

Taking advantage of the simple science that heat rises, the Thermadeck insulation equipped with air gaps helps move hot air up and away from the roof in an effective, cost efficient way without compromising the quality of the roof. (ANI)

Over 33pct Brits troubled by noisy neighbours

London, April 9 (ANI): Noisy neighbours have made the lives of more than a third of Britons miserable, a new survey has found.

According to the survey by insulation manufacturer Rockwool, loud music and televisions are the biggest causes of disturbance while other irritants for neighbours include parties, children and wooden floors.

The survey revealed that for many people the problem is so severe in some areas that it risks sparking violence.

Householders revealed during the survey that they had already been involved in physical fights with neighbours following complaints about noise.

Rockwool is using the findings to support its calls for better building controls in new-build homes to help to curb the problem.

However, house builders said tough standards were already in place.

“Domestic noise pollution is not just an urban nuisance, the problem of noisy neighbours is rapidly becoming the scourge of suburbia,” the Telegraph quoted Hans Schreuder, the managing director of Rockwool, as saying.

“Living with persistent noise can be very debilitating, increasing stress levels and leaving people feeling like prisoners in their own homes.

“We are calling for greater enforcement by environmental health officers to address the problem of nuisance noise.

“It is important that new buildings are built in accordance with strict building regulations with regard to noise penetration and rigorous testing is conducted to ensure compliance,” Schreuder added. (ANI)

World’s greenest invention: Solar-powered oven made from cardboard

London, April 9 (ANI): A solar-powered oven made from cardboard is the 50,000-pound winner of a contest to find the world’s greenest invention.

The invention bagged the FT Climate Change Challenge crown after beating 300 other creations, including a food additive, which stops cows passing wind.

Kenya-based entrepreneur Jon Bøhmer a Norwegian, set up Kyoto Energy with his Kenyan wife Neema, and has used his own money to fund the project.

The oven – which costs just 3.50 pounds to make – can slowly cook casseroles, boil water and bake bread.

It is made from two boxes, one inside the other with an acrylic cover, which lets the sun’s power in and traps it.

Black paint on the inner box and silver foil on the outer help concentrate the heat while a layer of straw or newspaper between the two provides insulation.

Bøhmer hopes that the oven would put an end to the use of firewood to cook in developing countries.

“We’re saving lives and saving trees. I doubt if there is any other technology that can make so much impact for so little money,” Sky News quoted Bøhmer as saying.

He plans to use the prize money to conduct mass trials in 10 countries, including South Africa, India and Indonesia and gather data to back an application for carbon credits. (ANI)

Empire State Building to get a ‘green’ makeover

London, April 7 (ANI): The owners of the Empire State Building have announced that they are planning to turn the tall skyscraper ‘green’, by investing an additional 20 million dollars to reduce its carbon footprint and energy consumption.

According to a report in the Guardian, the current owners of the 102-storey office block, Wien and Malkin, hope to buck the economic trend by making the building environment friendly and charging higher rents.

The retrofit is being added to a renovation of the art deco structure that starts this summer already costing half a billion dollars.

Part of the hard sell to potential new clients will be its “greenness” once the work is completed in 2013.

The plan aims to cut the use of energy by almost 40 percent, which would in turn reduce the emissions of CO2 from the building by some 105,000 metric tonnes a year.

That is no easy feat, bearing in mind that the Empire State has some 6,500 windows, 73 elevators and a total floorspace of 2.6 million square feet.

All the windows will have an extra layer of insulation added by secreting a coated film between two glass panes – done in situ to avoid pollution caused by transporting the glass from an outside destination.

Insulation will be added behind radiators, and the cooling system in the basement will be replaced with new more efficient machines.

Individual workers in the office spaces will be encouraged to take responsibility for their own emissions by being given access through their computers to monitors, which will tell them how much energy is being expended in their part of the building.

Also, the owners have decided that the famous coloured lights on the top of the Empire State that turn green, for instance, on St Patrick’s day, will remain intact, arguing they are responsible for relatively little energy consumption. (ANI)

Straw house design used in Pakistan withstands violent shaking at quake lab

Washington, April 4 (ANI): An innovative straw house design used in Pakistan by an engineer has withstood an earthquake-simulation shake table that involved violent shaking.

The full-scale, 14-by-14-foot straw house, complete with gravel foundation and clay plaster walls, was built by University of Nevada, Reno alumna and civil engineer Darcey Donovan.

It was subjected to 200 percent more acceleration/shaking than was recorded at the 1994 Northridge, California earthquake, the largest measured ground acceleration in the world.

After a series of seven increasingly forceful tests, in the final powerful test the house shook and swayed violently, cracked at the seams and sent out a small cloud of dust and straw, and remained standing.

Donovan oversaw the successful series of seismic tests run at the University’s Large-Scale Structures Laboratory.

She was testing her innovative design for straw bale houses she has been building since 2006 throughout the northwest frontier provinces of Pakistan, in the foothills of the Himalayas between Pakistani tribal areas and Kashmir.

Her design uses bales as structural and load-bearing components rather than just insulation as in other straw-bale designs.

“We’re very pleased with the results,” said Donovan. “The house performed exceptionally well and survived 0.82g (0.82 times the acceleration of gravity) and twice the acceleration of the Northridge quake,” she added.

The Geological Survey of Pakistan estimates the 2005 Kashmir earthquake to have had peak ground accelerations in the range of 0.3 to 0.6g.

Most people were killed and injured in that October 2005 earthquake as they slept when their poorly built houses collapsed on top of them.

The magnitude 7.6 earthquake killed 100,000 people and left 3.3 million homeless or living in tents.

“Our goal is to get the largest number of poor people into earthquake-safe homes. We want to make it as affordable as possible so they build a safe home. We want to save lives,” said Donovan.

According to Donovan, “Straw bale houses are used around the world, but those have posts and beams for support and rely on energy-intensive materials, skilled labor and complex machinery, making it unaffordable for the poor.”

“In our design, the straw bales are the support, and not just for insulation. Our design is half the cost of conventional earthquake-safe construction in Pakistan. The materials we use – clay soil, straw and gravel – are readily available; and we utilize unskilled labor in the construction,” she explained.

The earthquake-safe buildings are 80 percent more energy efficient than modern conventional buildings at 50 percent of the cost.

“Our system is different than anything ever tested,” said Donovan. (ANI)

Intelligence is largely inherited

Washington, March 18 (ANI): Scientists at the University of California – Los Angeles (UCLA) say that a new study lends more force to the suggestion that intelligence is largely inherited.

The researchers used a new type of brain-imaging scanner to show that intelligence is strongly influenced by the quality of the brain’s axons, or wiring that sends signals throughout the brain.

Given that the integrity of the brain’s wiring is influenced by genes, the researchers suggest that the inheritance of genes play a far greater role in intelligence than was previously thought.

Paul Thompson, a professor of Neurology, points out that genes seem to influence intelligence by determining how well nerve axons are encased in myelin, the fatty sheath of “insulation” that coats the brain’s axons and allows for fast signalling bursts.

The thicker the myelin, says the researcher, the faster the nerve impulses.

During the study, Thompson and his colleagues scanned the brains of 23 sets of identical twins and 23 sets of fraternal twins-considering that identical twins share the same genes while fraternal ones share about half their genes.

The researchers said that they were able to compare each group to show that myelin integrity was determined genetically in many parts of the brain that are key for intelligence-including the parietal lobes, which are responsible for spatial reasoning, visual processing and logic, and the corpus callosum, which pulls together information from both sides of the body.

Thompson highlights the fact that the myelination of brain circuits follows an inverted U-shaped trajectory, peaking in middle age and then slowly beginning to decline.

He believes that identifying the genes that promote high-integrity myelin is critical to forestalling brain diseases like multiple sclerosis and autism, which have been linked to the breakdown of myelin.

“The whole point of this research is to give us insight into brain diseases,” he says.

The researcher says that his study has already narrowed down the number of gene candidates that may influence myelin growth, and may one day lead to a therapy that could make people smarter by enhancing their intelligence.

“It’s a long way off but within the realm of the possible,” Thompson said.

A research article describing Thompson’s study has been published in the Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

Buckingham Palace tops list of London’s most environmentally damaging buildings

London, March 12 (ANI): Using thermal imaging technology, a team of energy surveyors has determined that the Buckingham Palace tops the list of the “dirty dozen” league of London’s most environmentally damaging buildings.

According to a report in the Telegraph, the team labeled the palace “shocking and appalling”, the biggest “central heating radiator” in the Capital and gave it a score of 0 out of 10.

“It appears the building is better at heating the air outside than inside,” said the report by Navitron, the renewable energy company.

Buckingham Palace, despite being in darkness, is completely lit-up as the thermal image shows snapshot pictures of heat instead of light.

Ian Lucas, from Navitron, was astonished by the leaks at Buckingham Palace which last year spent 2.2 million dollars on utility bills.

“The construction of Buckingham Palace does not lend itself to easily turning it into an ‘eco-home’, and I can’t imagine Her Majesty wanting to apply insulation panels either to the inside or the outside of the property,” he said.

“However, the main concern for the palace should be its windows – something that could be improved without great expense,” he added.

According to Lucas, “Clearly the windows are single-glazed, and I suspect that it would not be acceptable to replace with double-glazing, however improvements in draught-proofing on the windows, and perhaps adding secondary-glazing would significantly reduce heat losses and bills.”

“Despite the heavy curtains draped inside during the thermal photography, almost all of the palace’s windows demonstrated serious heat loss. Noticeably, some groups of windows look a lot cooler than others. At least Her Majesty apparently turns down the thermostat in unused rooms,” he said. (ANI)

Soap-like foam produced by “red tide” algae caused American seabird deaths in 2007

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Intensive investigation by scientists has determined that a massive “red tide” bloom of marine algae had produced a foamy soap-like substance that stripped the natural waterproofing from the feathers of seabirds in the US, causing them to die in large numbers.

This massive die-off happened in late 2007, when hundreds of dead and stranded seabirds washed up on the shores of Monterey Bay, their feathers saturated with water and coated with an unknown substance.

“The problems we traditionally associate with harmful algal blooms are caused by toxins produced by the algae. In this case, it was a surfactant that removed the water-repellent properties of the feathers,” said Raphael Kudela, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Although this red tide bloom was nontoxic, it was very harmful to the affected birds, which included grebes, loons, northern fulmars, and surf scoters.

Live birds found stranded on beaches around Monterey Bay were starving and severely hypothermic, having lost the insulation normally provided by their waterproof plumage.

A total of 550 birds were stranded alive and 207 were found dead during this event.

“There were a lot of questions at the time about whether the stranding was related to those events, and we were able to eliminate those possibilities,” Kudela said.

The dominant species in the red tide was a type of dinoflagellate known by the scientific name Akashiwo sanguinea, which has caused red tides in the past without harmful effects on wildlife.

Kudela said that the problems in 2007 resulted from the unusual combination of a large red tide late in the year, when large numbers of migrating birds had arrived in the area, plus big waves that churned up the water.

An algal protein produced the slimy foam that fouled the birds’ feathers. Its effects were similar to those of soap and other surfactants that are used in detergents to dissolve grease.

Wave action contributed to the problem by breaking up the cells of dying algae and churning the dissolved protein into the thick foam that was seen along the shoreline and floating on the surface of the water.

“We grew the algae in the lab, and when we shook it up it produced the same foam,” Kudela said. “The waves act like a blender, churning up the cells and the protein,” he added.

“Although 2007 was the first time we saw an impact on birds, the conditions are there for the same thing to happen the next time we have that combination of red tide, birds, and big storm waves,” he said. (ANI)

Soap-like foam produced by “red tide” algae caused American seabird deaths in 2007

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Intensive investigation by scientists has determined that a massive “red tide” bloom of marine algae had produced a foamy soap-like substance that stripped the natural waterproofing from the feathers of seabirds in the US, causing them to die in large numbers.

This massive die-off happened in late 2007, when hundreds of dead and stranded seabirds washed up on the shores of Monterey Bay, their feathers saturated with water and coated with an unknown substance.

“The problems we traditionally associate with harmful algal blooms are caused by toxins produced by the algae. In this case, it was a surfactant that removed the water-repellent properties of the feathers,” said Raphael Kudela, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Although this red tide bloom was nontoxic, it was very harmful to the affected birds, which included grebes, loons, northern fulmars, and surf scoters.

Live birds found stranded on beaches around Monterey Bay were starving and severely hypothermic, having lost the insulation normally provided by their waterproof plumage.

A total of 550 birds were stranded alive and 207 were found dead during this event.

“There were a lot of questions at the time about whether the stranding was related to those events, and we were able to eliminate those possibilities,” Kudela said.

The dominant species in the red tide was a type of dinoflagellate known by the scientific name Akashiwo sanguinea, which has caused red tides in the past without harmful effects on wildlife.

Kudela said that the problems in 2007 resulted from the unusual combination of a large red tide late in the year, when large numbers of migrating birds had arrived in the area, plus big waves that churned up the water.

An algal protein produced the slimy foam that fouled the birds’ feathers. Its effects were similar to those of soap and other surfactants that are used in detergents to dissolve grease.

Wave action contributed to the problem by breaking up the cells of dying algae and churning the dissolved protein into the thick foam that was seen along the shoreline and floating on the surface of the water.

“We grew the algae in the lab, and when we shook it up it produced the same foam,” Kudela said. “The waves act like a blender, churning up the cells and the protein,” he added.

“Although 2007 was the first time we saw an impact on birds, the conditions are there for the same thing to happen the next time we have that combination of red tide, birds, and big storm waves,” he said. (ANI)

Soap-like foam produced by “red tide” algae caused American seabird deaths in 2007

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Intensive investigation by scientists has determined that a massive “red tide” bloom of marine algae had produced a foamy soap-like substance that stripped the natural waterproofing from the feathers of seabirds in the US, causing them to die in large numbers.

This massive die-off happened in late 2007, when hundreds of dead and stranded seabirds washed up on the shores of Monterey Bay, their feathers saturated with water and coated with an unknown substance.

“The problems we traditionally associate with harmful algal blooms are caused by toxins produced by the algae. In this case, it was a surfactant that removed the water-repellent properties of the feathers,” said Raphael Kudela, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Although this red tide bloom was nontoxic, it was very harmful to the affected birds, which included grebes, loons, northern fulmars, and surf scoters.

Live birds found stranded on beaches around Monterey Bay were starving and severely hypothermic, having lost the insulation normally provided by their waterproof plumage.

A total of 550 birds were stranded alive and 207 were found dead during this event.

“There were a lot of questions at the time about whether the stranding was related to those events, and we were able to eliminate those possibilities,” Kudela said.

The dominant species in the red tide was a type of dinoflagellate known by the scientific name Akashiwo sanguinea, which has caused red tides in the past without harmful effects on wildlife.

Kudela said that the problems in 2007 resulted from the unusual combination of a large red tide late in the year, when large numbers of migrating birds had arrived in the area, plus big waves that churned up the water.

An algal protein produced the slimy foam that fouled the birds’ feathers. Its effects were similar to those of soap and other surfactants that are used in detergents to dissolve grease.

Wave action contributed to the problem by breaking up the cells of dying algae and churning the dissolved protein into the thick foam that was seen along the shoreline and floating on the surface of the water.

“We grew the algae in the lab, and when we shook it up it produced the same foam,” Kudela said. “The waves act like a blender, churning up the cells and the protein,” he added.

“Although 2007 was the first time we saw an impact on birds, the conditions are there for the same thing to happen the next time we have that combination of red tide, birds, and big storm waves,” he said. (ANI)

Soap-like foam produced by “red tide” algae caused American seabird deaths in 2007

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Intensive investigation by scientists has determined that a massive “red tide” bloom of marine algae had produced a foamy soap-like substance that stripped the natural waterproofing from the feathers of seabirds in the US, causing them to die in large numbers.

This massive die-off happened in late 2007, when hundreds of dead and stranded seabirds washed up on the shores of Monterey Bay, their feathers saturated with water and coated with an unknown substance.

“The problems we traditionally associate with harmful algal blooms are caused by toxins produced by the algae. In this case, it was a surfactant that removed the water-repellent properties of the feathers,” said Raphael Kudela, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Although this red tide bloom was nontoxic, it was very harmful to the affected birds, which included grebes, loons, northern fulmars, and surf scoters.

Live birds found stranded on beaches around Monterey Bay were starving and severely hypothermic, having lost the insulation normally provided by their waterproof plumage.

A total of 550 birds were stranded alive and 207 were found dead during this event.

“There were a lot of questions at the time about whether the stranding was related to those events, and we were able to eliminate those possibilities,” Kudela said.

The dominant species in the red tide was a type of dinoflagellate known by the scientific name Akashiwo sanguinea, which has caused red tides in the past without harmful effects on wildlife.

Kudela said that the problems in 2007 resulted from the unusual combination of a large red tide late in the year, when large numbers of migrating birds had arrived in the area, plus big waves that churned up the water.

An algal protein produced the slimy foam that fouled the birds’ feathers. Its effects were similar to those of soap and other surfactants that are used in detergents to dissolve grease.

Wave action contributed to the problem by breaking up the cells of dying algae and churning the dissolved protein into the thick foam that was seen along the shoreline and floating on the surface of the water.

“We grew the algae in the lab, and when we shook it up it produced the same foam,” Kudela said. “The waves act like a blender, churning up the cells and the protein,” he added.

“Although 2007 was the first time we saw an impact on birds, the conditions are there for the same thing to happen the next time we have that combination of red tide, birds, and big storm waves,” he said. (ANI)

Soap-like foam produced by “red tide” algae caused American seabird deaths in 2007

Washington, Feb 21 (ANI): Intensive investigation by scientists has determined that a massive “red tide” bloom of marine algae had produced a foamy soap-like substance that stripped the natural waterproofing from the feathers of seabirds in the US, causing them to die in large numbers.

This massive die-off happened in late 2007, when hundreds of dead and stranded seabirds washed up on the shores of Monterey Bay, their feathers saturated with water and coated with an unknown substance.

“The problems we traditionally associate with harmful algal blooms are caused by toxins produced by the algae. In this case, it was a surfactant that removed the water-repellent properties of the feathers,” said Raphael Kudela, professor of ocean sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Although this red tide bloom was nontoxic, it was very harmful to the affected birds, which included grebes, loons, northern fulmars, and surf scoters.

Live birds found stranded on beaches around Monterey Bay were starving and severely hypothermic, having lost the insulation normally provided by their waterproof plumage.

A total of 550 birds were stranded alive and 207 were found dead during this event.

“There were a lot of questions at the time about whether the stranding was related to those events, and we were able to eliminate those possibilities,” Kudela said.

The dominant species in the red tide was a type of dinoflagellate known by the scientific name Akashiwo sanguinea, which has caused red tides in the past without harmful effects on wildlife.

Kudela said that the problems in 2007 resulted from the unusual combination of a large red tide late in the year, when large numbers of migrating birds had arrived in the area, plus big waves that churned up the water.

An algal protein produced the slimy foam that fouled the birds’ feathers. Its effects were similar to those of soap and other surfactants that are used in detergents to dissolve grease.

Wave action contributed to the problem by breaking up the cells of dying algae and churning the dissolved protein into the thick foam that was seen along the shoreline and floating on the surface of the water.

“We grew the algae in the lab, and when we shook it up it produced the same foam,” Kudela said. “The waves act like a blender, churning up the cells and the protein,” he added.

“Although 2007 was the first time we saw an impact on birds, the conditions are there for the same thing to happen the next time we have that combination of red tide, birds, and big storm waves,” he said. (ANI)

‘Eco-house’ based on 600-yr-old medieval architecture could be home of the future

London, Feb 18 (ANI): Architects at the University of Cambridge have developed a eco-friendly house, which is based on a 600-year-old Medieval design that retains heat from the sun while cooling naturally in the summer.

According to a report in the Telegraph, any extra energy needs are provided by solar panels on the roof and a woodchip boiler.

The unusual dome-like design is based on a medieval technique, originating in Spain, known as ‘timbrel vaulting’.

The four-bedroom “Eco-house” cost 445,000 pounds to build. However, with the price of renewable technologies set to plummet, it could be the most affordable and practical option for the future.

The building materials used were environmentally friendly, such as locally-sourced timber and recycled newspaper for insulation.

The house was also easy to build.

The arched building is essentially one large vault spanning 65 feet (20 metres), covered on the outside with earth and plants to camouflage it and help it blend in with the rural surroundings.

The natural materials mean the house can absorb fluctuations in temperature while triple-glazed windows use as much light as possible.

According to Michael Ramage, who is based at the University of Cambridge Department of Architecture, future developments may look more and more like the eco-house.

“The design is cost-effective in that the home is relatively simple to build and, once you know what you’re doing, it’s quick,” he said.

“Many of the costs come from the new technology it uses for energy storage and generation.

If those become more widely available, making a similar house cheaply in much larger quantities may be possible,” he added. (ANI)