Monday, July 9, 2012
If you're 100, better odds you were born in the fall
In what seems like a bizarre bit of trivia, new research
indicates that people born from September to November have the best chance of
living to 100 or older.
At least that’s the case for people who are now very old. It
may not be as much the case for folks born more recently than the mid-1950s or
so.
And it may not be a useful predictor very long after birth. A lot of the
mortality that leads to the preference for fall-born kids may occur among the
very young—perhaps within the first few months of life.
It may be useful to look at the numbers backward: Kids born
in early summer—May, June and July, are far less likely than average to be
represented among centenarians.
This data comes from researchers who have previously done
Hawai`i work, although this particular research is not Hawai`i-specific. They
are Leonid A. Gavrilov and Natalia S. Gavrilova, of the University of Chicago’s
Center on Economics and Demography of Aging.
The Gavrilovs conclude that “earlylife environmental
conditions may have long-lasting effects on human aging and longevity.”
Their paper, Season of Birth and Exceptional Longevity:
Comparative Study of American Centenarians, Their Siblings, and Spouses, was
published in the Journal of Aging Research. They looked not only at U.S. data,
but found similar patterns in Europe, where the required birth and life data
are available. The paper is available here.
Aging is of interest to Hawai`i in part because Hawai`i
folks live longer than most: Island
residents can expect to live to 81.5 years, more than in any other state. Our previous post on the Gavrilov’s research is here.
The new research suggests a number of reasons for the
seeming anomaly favoring fall-born elders.
The authors suggest it could be
associated with maternal nutrition (summer-born kids were in utero during the harsh winter deprivations.) Temperature
(avoiding extremely high summer temperatures or extremely low deep winter
temperatures in the first month of
life.) The “deadline hypothesis”
(fall-born kids were older and therefore more advanced at the start of school,
gaining an education advantage on their peers that rolls into better lifelong
nutrition and opportunity and a healthier life.)
And it may also be that certain infectious diseases
affecting the very young are more likely to hit summer-born kids. A powerful
data point is that kids born in the fall don’t die of infections disease at as
high a rate as their siblings.
“According to the USA statistics, mortality below age one
month in 1940 was the lowest in September–November suggesting lower infectious
load during this period of the year, because most infant deaths in the past
were caused by infections,” the authors wrote.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Posted by Jan T at 10:28 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Plastics killing seabirds all over Pacific
Laysan albatross on their Hawaiian nesting islands are the
signature species for the devastating impacts of plastics in the marine
environment, but increasingly, the dead albatross are not alone.
The haunting image of the problem is dead albatross chicks,
their burst bellies jammed full of plastic lighters, bottle caps, discarded
toothbrushes and other multicolored debris.
(Image: A northern fulmar, this one photographed in 2008 in
Scotland. Credit: Dick Daniels, http://carolinabirds.org/)
But new studies on a Pacific seabird that comes ashore in
the Pacific Northwest is also showing dramatically high plastic contents. Some northern
fulmars have as much as 5 percent of their body weight in plastic in their
bellies.
These birds, known to science as Fulmarus glacialis, don’t feed exactly the same way albatross do,
but there’s plenty of plastic to go around. In fulmars, researchers found twine,
candy wrappers and styrofoam.
Let’s digress a little about the scope of the problem.
The albatross chicks die so full of plastic that they can’t
take in nutrition, but it’s not just mechanical fullness that kills sealife.
Also entanglement—turtles and seals trapped by abandoned nets and coils of rope—and
the chemicals released by the plastics they eat.
“Microplastics are both abundant and widespread within the
marine environment, found in their highest concentrations along coastlines and
within mid-ocean gyres. Ingestion of microplastics has been demonstrated in a
range of marine organisms, a process which may facilitate the transfer of
chemical additives or hydrophobic waterborne pollutants to biota,” says a report in Marine Pollution Bulletin, by Matthew
Cole and Pennie Lindequeof Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Claudia Halsband of the
High North Research Centre for Climate and the Environment in Norway, and
Tamara Galloway of the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom.
If the plastic is big enough it can trap
and snare them, if it’s smaller it can choke them, and even when it’s
microscopic, it’s not gone.
“Unlike inorganic fines present in sea water, microplastics
concentrate persistent organic pollutants (POPs) by partition. The relevant
distribution coefficients for common POPs are several orders of magnitude in favour
of the plastic medium,” writes Anthony Andrady in the August 2011 issue of thesame journal.
Back to the northern fulmars, also called Arctic fulmars. We
don’t see them in Hawai`i since they cling to higher latitudes and colder
climates. But they are in the same family as the Hawaiian shearwaters and
petrels:
Researchers in the North Sea have used stomach contents of fulmars
to document high levels of plastics in that environment. We have long known
that the Pacific is also a dumping ground—even before last year’s Japan tsunami
scoured island coastlines and dumped their debris into the sea. Now research on
northern fulmars in the Pacific is confirming what we already knew from
albatross chicks—the plastic problem is massive.
Here is an article on the subject in e! Science News. Science Daily has an article here.
“We quantified the stomach contents of 67
fulmars from beaches in the eastern North Pacific in 2009–2010 and found that
92.5% of fulmars had ingested an average of 36.8 pieces, or 0.385 g of plastic.
Plastic ingestion in these fulmars is among the highest recorded globally,” says the paper's abstract.
"Despite the close proximity of the 'Great Pacific
Garbage Patch,' an area of concentrated plastic pollution in the middle of the
North Pacific gyre, plastic pollution has not been considered an issue of
concern off our coast. But we've found similar amounts and incident rates of
plastic in beached northern fulmars here as those in the North Sea,” says
author Stephanie Avery-Gomm , a
zoologist at the University of British Columbia.
Oh, the euphemism "beached?" It generally means "washed up dead."
Here’s the journal reference for that article: Stephanie Avery-Gomm,
Patrick D. O’Hara, Lydia Kleine, Victoria Bowes, Laurie K. Wilson, Karen L.
Barry. Northern fulmars as biological monitors of trends of plastic pollution
in the eastern North Pacific. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2012; DOI:
10.1016/j.marpolbul.2012.04.017
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Posted by Jan T at 10:07 AM 0 comments
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Visited a missing beach lately?
Visited a missing Hawaiian beach lately?
Get used to it.
With the lack of aggressive action on climate change over
the past decades, continued sea level rise is now essentially baked in, ocean and climate scientists are saying.
A study
in the journal “Nature – Climate Change,”a new study argues that there’s little we can do now to
prevent dramatic sea level rise.
Even with an aggressive program of controlling greenhouse
gas emissions, sea levels will continue to rise based on our past misdeeds,
write researchers Michiel Schaeffer, William Hare, Stefan Rahmstorf and Martin
Vermeer. Schaeffer is from the Netherlands, much of which is below sea level,
where accurate modeling of sea conditions is taken seriously. He works with the
Environmental Systems Analysis Group of Wageningen University and Research
Centre in Holland. His co-authors are climate researchers from Germany and
Finland.
Their message: A 50% chance that sea levels will be a couple
of feet (75-80 centimeters) higher than 2000 levels by 2100, if we can hold
warming below 2 degrees Centigrade. And it will keep rising, they argue, to
more than 8 feet by 2300.
We would not even recognize the coastlines of our
great-great-grandkids . The islands would be significantly smaller as the ocean
washes much higher on their shoulders.
“Halting (sea level rise) within a few centuries is likely
to be achieved only with the large-scale deployment of CO2 removal efforts, for
example, combining large-scale bioenergy systems with carbon capture and
storage,” write Schaeffer and his team.
The globe needs to not only stop rising CO2 levels, but to
drive CO2 production to negative levels, if sea level rise is to be slowed. Without
that level of effort, imagine even larger rise.
The authors concede that the science of sea level change is
still evolving and that there are many uncertainties—but they point out that
current estimates are more likely to be low than high—thus, it could be worse
than they now estimate.
“Physics-based models attempting to predict the combined
contributions from thermal expansion, glaciers and ice sheets are not yet
mature and underestimate the (sea level rise) observed in past decades,” they
write.
There’s a fair amount of other alarming science out there.
One piece is that sea level rise isn’t uniform across the oceans, and one group
of researchers suggests that the northern Atlantic coast of the North America
will see higher rise than other areas. It attributes this to salinity,
currents, changing gravity and the Earth’s rotation.
“(Sea Level Rise) rate increases in this northeast hotspot
were ~3-4 times higher than the global average,” write the authors of a paper, “Hotspotof accelerated sea-lkevel rise on the Atlantic Coast of North America.”
Add storm surge, and they predict serious vulnerability for harbors
and coastal cities.
It doesn’t help that the popular media are screwing up the
story. One big component of global sea level predictions is whether and how
quickly the Greenland glaciers melt. Two recent pieces on the same day, May 3,
2012, had these contradictory headlines.
If you only read the headlines, you’d think those stories
were contradictory. They’re not. The first one just says the glaciers are
melting scary fast, but just not at breakneck speed. It says they’re not
melting fast enough for 6 feet of sea level rise in the next 88 years—just 3
feet.
Well, three feet is enough to erase virtually every beach we
now know in Hawai`i, to put much of coastal Honolulu underwater, to push Hilo and
Hanalei Bays deep inland, to have significant impacts on coastal Kihei.
Have you visited a missing beach in Hawai`i?
If you visit the shore at all, you know the scenario. Where
there used to be sand, there are rocks. Where there used to be palm trees and
heliotropes, there’s water. Where kids used to build sand castles, there’s
ancient sandstone washed by waves.
And that's just what's happening now.
Here is University of Hawai`i coastal geologist Chip Fletcher's famous progression of what happens to Waikiki under three feet of sea level rise--think street surfing.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Posted by Jan T at 9:10 AM 0 comments
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