nanoatzin
nanoatzin t1_j1r69c0 wrote
Reply to comment by CBXER in Logged forest compared with an unlogged forest could be better for climate change. A detailed assessment of vegetation growth, bird and mammal numbers, and energy flows in logged and unlogged forests offers some surprising findings. by Creative_soja
Obviously so. Trees evaporate hundreds of gallons of water each day into the atmosphere.
nanoatzin t1_j1qpyz5 wrote
Reply to comment by Creative_soja in Logged forest compared with an unlogged forest could be better for climate change. A detailed assessment of vegetation growth, bird and mammal numbers, and energy flows in logged and unlogged forests offers some surprising findings. by Creative_soja
Scientist: “clear cutting trees good for climate change and wildlife diversity”.
> Wildfires, logging turn protected forests into carbon emitters -report
I think we can safely say that if a toilet paper company can give a 65 year old semi-retired scientist $5 million to conduct research explains how “clear cutting old growth forest is a good thing”, then we would expect that scientist to study how wildlife diversity increases after wildlife migrated from the logged area from the unlogged area, with a bonus that toilet paper is a “carbon sink”, therefore “proving” the claim that global desertification by clear cutting all of the trees is the solution to climate change and habitat loss.
Problem: trees are where quite a bit of our oxygen comes from, most of the wildlife is now gone, so flushing all of our trees down the toilet may not be the best way to remove carbon from the atmosphere and improve the environment.
The fossil fuel industry has shown us how to conduct this kind of fraudulent scientific research for over half a century by making old scientists wealthy.
nanoatzin t1_j1f4j6f wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TikTok Spied On Forbes Journalists - ByteDance confirmed it used TikTok to monitor journalists’ physical location using their IP addresses by BasedSweet
TikTok data is going to a Silicon Valley company in California.
> TikTok moves all US traffic to Oracle servers, amid new claims user data was accessed from China
Kevin McCarthy made what TikTok did into not a crime in 2017.
> House Votes To Allow Internet Service Providers To Sell, Share Your Personal Information
Maybe write to congress if you don’t like you data being sold?
nanoatzin t1_j1f2wuu wrote
Reply to TikTok Spied On Forbes Journalists - ByteDance confirmed it used TikTok to monitor journalists’ physical location using their IP addresses by BasedSweet
Kevin McCarthy voted to convert this into not a crime in 2017.
> House Votes To Allow Internet Service Providers To Sell, Share Your Personal Information
TikTok has flagrantly been caught doing doing the exact same thing as Telegram, Facebook, Twitter, Apple, LinkedIn, Google, …
Telegram is the company that is owned by a citizen of a foreign enemy, so why aren’t we doing that one too?
Kevin McCarthy will probably be back in charge in about 3 weeks, so maybe write him a letter asking him to change his mind?
nanoatzin t1_j1362cu wrote
Probably debris from the satellite Russia blew up with a missile a while back.
nanoatzin t1_j0omwnl wrote
Reply to comment by Haunting-Offer6922 in Cambridge scientists have shown that a widely-used drug to treat liver disease can prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection or reduce COVID-19 severity by hot
I cannot take vaccines. I have an autoimmune reaction to something they use in vaccine. It has been impossible to test for what it is because I cannot get ingredient disclosure.
nanoatzin t1_iwfvtkt wrote
Reply to comment by Wagamaga in The lifespans of honey bees living in laboratory environments has dropped about 50% over the last 50 years, hinting at possible causes for the worrisome trends across the beekeeping industry, according to new research by University of Maryland entomologists. by Wagamaga
Is it possible that air quality could be a significant factor?
Carbon dioxide has increased from around 250ppm to over 400ppm during the industrial revolution, with most of that increase occurring since 1940.
Carbon dioxide becomes toxic for humans above around 750ppm, however we have a fairly efficient respiratory system with a great deal of reserve capacity.
Insects breathe through tracheae and spiracles that run directly through the body seem less efficient. For example, insects grew to the size of birds during the Carboniferous period when oxygen was 35% of air and not the current 21%. Air quality seems to drive natural selection for insect size.
It seems that an increase in carbon dioxide would induce evolutionary pressure selecting for insects with smaller size because of respiratory efficiency limits.
nanoatzin t1_iu4ro7x wrote
Reply to (Canada) House of Commons unanimously agrees to describe residential schools as genocide by EdithDich
Would be nice if the US did this.
But no. The wealthy that stole from the natives will bribe anyone to stop that.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqqcdnm wrote
Reply to comment by dylsekctic in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
There is nothing special about the US.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqpqezc wrote
Reply to comment by dylsekctic in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
It seems that we spend quite a bit of effort on disease treatment after it’s too late to prevent, but we spend almost zero effort on actual prevention because disease is more profitable.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqppqb0 wrote
Reply to comment by memento22mori in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
That’s a good question. Some nutrients interact, so too much of one can impair the other even if consuming enough.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqpny69 wrote
Reply to comment by Few_Journalist_6961 in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
The article suggests that one of the health risks that people suffer in old age can reduced.
Some medications used more by the elderly cause deficiencies that can’t be corrected by diet.
Proper diet is inadequate if intestinal disease or age impairs nutrient absorption. The diagnostic failure rate for just celiac disease is 98%, so it’s pretty safe to assume that the first warning of impaired absorption would be the the kind of issue described in the article.
Some of that is genetic. Some is not.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqpmpt2 wrote
Reply to comment by New-Difference9684 in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
This article actually says:
> Namely, Dr. Kieboom and team performed further analyses in which they excluded dementia cases diagnosed in the first 4 years after magnesium measurements were taken. The results were similar, which, the authors write, “[strengthens] the possibility of a causal relationship.”
The articles that are written by journalists are more readable.
Correlation isn’t causation, but it will probably be decades before magnesium investigated by pharmaceutical companies if it happens.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqosdnf wrote
Reply to comment by Few_Journalist_6961 in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
Many genetic conditions involve nutrition, and the need for supplements that can be properly absorbed increases with age.
> Gluten intolerance is associated with severe vitamin and mineral deficiencies
> Magnesium is largely obtained through food; however, absorption of magnesium decreases with age.
nanoatzin OP t1_iqorrc0 wrote
Reply to comment by New-Difference9684 in As for magnesium levels, both those in the high and the low group were significantly more likely to develop dementia compared with those in the middle group. by nanoatzin
That’s the average for people in their early 80s, but risk rises very fast after that.
About 1 in 3 people that reach 90 are likely to die from dementia complications.
nanoatzin t1_j1stnpc wrote
Reply to Chinese ships depart after record-long intrusion into Japanese waters by OceanBreeze246
This sounds kind of James Bondish, but it may be possible to make a large submarine for coastal defense using AI that can rise up under the trespassing ship and float it into port to take possession.