natural archives - planet forward - 克罗地亚vs加拿大让球 //www.getitdoneaz.com/tag/natural/ inspiring stories to 2022年卡塔尔世界杯官网 tue, 28 feb 2023 18:46:18 +0000 en-us hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 nature’s small but mighty fix for algae blooms //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/algae-blooms-natural-fix/ fri, 08 feb 2019 13:07:45 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/natures-small-but-mighty-fix-for-algae-blooms/ algae blooms have created toxic conditions in lakes around the world, but is there a way to naturally control them?

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one summer i spent fourth of july at the house of my family friend, brigitte, tucked away in the rural woods on a small lake. i spent the day kayaking on the lake and enjoying the evening with brigitte who has become family to me. while kayaking i noticed the water was different. brigitte told me this was because blue green algae—scientifically known as cyanobacteria—was starting to become an issue at their lake due to heavy fertilizer use on her neighbors’ backyards who had cut down their trees in favor of grass lawns sloping toward the lake. brigitte taught me that lakes were a lot like human bodies in that they needed to maintain healthy levels of bacteria for the well-being of the ecosystem. too much cyanobacteria or algae could lead to disastrous effects.

brigitte has been trying to implement changes with her local neighborhood association in order to keep algae levels in check to no avail. no one was listening.

hopefully this video sheds some light on the issue of algae blooms and on one natural solution: brigitte’s small but mighty friends, water fleas (daphnia). 

 

 

sources:

https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/10/algae-bloom-lake-erie-toxins-spd/

https://www.cdc.gov/habs/illness-symptoms-freshwater.html

https://www.epa.gov/nutrientpollution/harmful-algal-blooms

https://www.epa.gov/nutrient-policy-data/control-and-treatment

https://dnr.wi.gov/lakes/plants/factsheets/copperfactsheet.pdf

“lady daphnia’s world.” for love of lakes, by darby nelson, michigan state university press, 2012, pp. 72–80. 

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opportunity knocking for true plastic disposal //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/opportunity-knocking-for-true-plastic-disposal/ sat, 10 mar 2018 04:34:10 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/opportunity-knocking-for-true-plastic-disposal/ certain biological processes harbor inherent potential for truly disposing of synthetic waste.

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in a state of perfect nature, there is no such thing as waste.   

every product of every organic process — from a butterfly breaking free of its cocoon to grizzly sows, rooting for grubs in the dirt — is crucial to the continued vital functioning of its larger ecosystem. in usurping that delicate play of interactions to further its own ends, mankind has disrupted the balance of nature.   

the price of such folly stands readily apparent; litter-strewn streets, plastic-clogged beaches, the great pacific garbage patch. mountains of rancid, steaming trash that can’t be redeemed, and thus must be contained until they rot away – which, in the case of most modern synthetic materials, won’t happen for hundreds of years.   

however, all is not lost. over these last two decades, increased awareness of powers that certain species possess has opened the scientific consciousness to new possibilities for treating some synthetic wastes.   

take diapers. because they’re made up of mostly synthetic materials, each one lasts centuries in a landfill. the amount of disposable diapers babies go through during infancy (8000), plus the projected population growth of several countries over the next 50 years (positive), is fairly easy math to do: it adds up several thousand tons of soiled garment waste per year.  

but there is a solution.   

disposable diapers contain a plant material called cellulose. in 2014, scientists in mexico city discovered that oyster mushrooms grown in a substrate of used diapers and lignin can break down that cellulose for food, which reduces the diapers’ weight and volume by up to 80%. what’s left over is mostly recyclable plastics and non-biodegradable, superabsorbent gel, which has potential agricultural applications for areas stricken by drought. the mushrooms can be sold off for animal feed and fertilizer. and it doesn’t have to stop there – if the process works for diapers, then it stands to reason it should work for other types of sanitary waste, like tampons and maxi-pads.   

or what about plastic? researchers at the netherlands’ utrecht university devised a way to turn it into food. by introducing sugar and starch to an agar container filled with uv-treated polyethylene, two commonly cultivated and edible mushroom species — schizophyllum commune and pleurotus ostreatus — can be coaxed to grow inside it. the mycelium — the web-like ‘root’ of the fungus — breaks down and metabolizes plastic waste in only a few weeks. what’s left over is edible biomass: possibly a new food source for earth’s ever-growing population.  

and that’s not nearly all. mealworms, it turns out, can metabolize styrofoam; they have a microbe in their gut that breaks down polystyrene, which the worms excrete as compost. the bacteria ideonella sakaiensis is especially adept at eating plastic water bottles and peanut butter jars.  

pseudomonas putida is another important bacterium. it has the ability to live on pure styrene oil; basically, melted styrofoam.  

there is a veritable treasure-trove of bio-chemical gold to be found in some of our planet’s most overlooked species. it remains only to develop methods we might harvest and refine it. the person who discovers a method, or methods, by which that might be done — who manages to extract and concentrate the plastic-degrading enzymes in wax-worm entrails; who isolates the process by which pestalotiopsis microspora, a rare mushroom from the amazon, breaks down polyurethane; who genetically engineers a bacterium that can digest all different kinds of plastics; who is able to bring the fungi mutarium into viable, large-scale use — that person stands not only to gain wealth beyond man’s wildest dreams but go down in the annals of human history a hero.  

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the stream in your backyard //www.getitdoneaz.com/story/the-stream-in-your-backyard/ thu, 02 mar 2017 19:31:14 +0000 http://dpetrov.2create.studio/planet/wordpress/the-stream-in-your-backyard/ my story aims to spread this idea of stream restoration using a specific design, and to teach why stream restoration is important to our environment, and how different measures can be taken to restore a stream.

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the idea behind this design is to try our best as humans to maintain a healthy, natural ecosystem. the method is self-sustaining, the energy of the stream and the formation of the rocks will do the work themselves without human interference following the original addition in the stream if installed correctly. in result, the benefits can be critical, such as stabilizing banks without planting invasive plants to stabilize with their roots, it creates more exchange of materials between the soils beneath the stream and the water channel itself, and provides a better habitat for aquatic and fish species. 

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