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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(9)
Plague/Virus:(2)
Climate Chaos:(5)
Resource Depletion: (5)
Biology Breach:(7)
Recovery:(1)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
ecosystem interrelationships  ~ food crisis  ~ bird collapse  ~ contamination  ~ climate impacts  ~ heavy metals  ~ anthropogenic change  ~ falling fertility  ~ soil issues  ~ toxic buildup  ~ bad policy  



ApocaDocuments (29) gathered this week:
Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from Defenders of Wildlife:
Record number of bison slaughtered around Yellowstone National Park
A record number of bison – over 1,100 – have been slaughtered this winter around Yellowstone National Park. The [killing] of nearly one-quarter of the park’s bison population dramatically demonstrates the need to reform the rules governing the last stronghold for America’s wild bison. "Yellowstone’s bison are America's bison, the last pure descendants of the tens of millions of bison that once thundered through the American landscape," said Jamie Rappaport Clark, executive vice president of Defenders of Wildlife and former director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service under the Clinton administration. "Yet as soon as they set foot outside of Yellowstone Park, even onto publicly owned national forests, they are harassed and killed. This is truly one of the worst examples of wildlife management in the country." ...


Only a quarter of the population? Last time we did this, we slaughtered 99.999\% of them.
Y'call that progress?

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
Drought ignites Spain's 'water war'
"There is a common saying in Spain that during a drought, the trees chase after the dogs. Now it is ringing true as the country struggles to deal with the worst drought since the Forties: reservoirs stand at 46 per cent of capacity and rainfall over the past 18 months has been 40 per cent below average. But months before the scorching summer sun threatens to reduce supplies to a trickle, a bitter political battle is raging over how to manage Spain's scarcest resource -- water. Catalonia, in the parched north east, has been worst affected, with reservoirs standing at just a fifth of capacity. ...


I guess the rain in Spain ain't fallin' on the plain no mo'...

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from Indianapolis Star:
Toxic fears extend beyond Katrina trailers
"When Shelly Higdon went camping in her new 27-foot travel trailer, she didn't expect to get a headache and sore throat or lose her voice, or her 8-year-old son to get a nosebleed. After she got home, she and her family had the trailer tested. They were shocked: Airborne formaldehyde in the travel trailer was seven times the amount considered acceptable by scientists at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency....At issue is the urea formaldehyde put in glue used to make plywood and particle board that is fashioned into furniture, cupboards and floors. As an RV or camper cabin warms up, formaldehyde slowly seeps from the glue as a colorless gas." ...


Three observations: #1: if the scientists at the EPA think it's bad, you know it REALLY sucks!; #2: Since RVs pollute so badly, is it so illogical for them to be toxic? #3: You mean my Minnie Winnie might be Pissy Wissy?

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from International Public Forum on Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples:
Indigenous peoples hardest hit by climate change describe impacts
Indigenous people point to an increase in human rights violations, displacements and conflicts due to expropriation of ancestral lands and forests for biofuel plantations (soya, sugar-cane, jatropha, oil-palm, corn, etc.), as well as for carbon sink and renewable energy projects (hydropower dams, geothermal plants), without the free, prior and informed consent of indigenous people.... [such as] a Dutch company whose operations include planting trees and selling sequestered carbon credit to people wanting to offset their emissions caused by air travel.... Forced evictions continued to 2002, leading indigenous people to move to neighboring villages, caves and mosques. Over 50 people were killed in 2004. ...


Wait -- buying off my guilt with carbon credits led to forced evictions and murders?

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from Yale University:
Study shows why synthetic estrogens wreak havoc on reproductive system
Researchers at Yale School of Medicine now have a clearer understanding of why synthetic estrogens such as those found in many widely-used plastics have a detrimental effect on a developing fetus, cause fertility problems, as well as vaginal and breast cancers.... exposure to DES and similar substances results in lasting genetic memory, known as "imprinting." ...


Having genes "imprinted" with plastic sounds like they're being laminated.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Apr 6, 2008
from Nature, via NSF:
Emission Reduction Assumptions for Carbon Dioxide Overly Optimistic, Study Says
Reducing global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) over the coming century will be more challenging than society has been led to believe, according to a research commentary appearing this week in the journal Nature.... Recent changes in "carbon intensity"--CO2 emissions per unit of energy consumed--already are higher than those predicted by the IPCC because of rapid economic development, says lead author Pielke. In Asia, for instance, the demands of more energy-intensive economies are being met with conventional fossil-fuel technologies, a process expected to continue there for decades and eventually move into Africa. ...


So we can't just have a technological fix? You mean this will be hard?

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Apr 5, 2008
from Cosmetics Design-Europe:
Botox rat study shows toxins migrate to the brain
A new scientific study on rats suggests that the anti-wrinkle treatment Botox may be able to move from the skin into the brain, degrading proteins and acting on nerves.... Although the study findings might have some positive applications for research into the treatment of overactive brain neurons, the findings may turn out to have less positive repercussions for individuals seeking the treatment for cosmetic reasons. ...


Thanks, but my "overactive brain neurons" don't need treating. I think I'll go with the wrinkles.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Apr 5, 2008
from Corvallis Gazette Times:
Salmon decline impacts research
A projected shortage of fish is putting salmon research by Oregon State University in jeopardy. Ironically, the study, which enlists commercial fishermen as collaborators, is designed to help protect weak salmon stocks. ...


I fear there'll be lots more declining critters for researchers to have trouble studying.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Apr 5, 2008
from The Free Lance-Star:
Tons of toxic substances released by area industry, military bases
Across the state, more than 400 entities filed reports based on their size and amounts of toxic materials released. The 2006 figures are the latest information available.... The toxic materials are among 650 on a federal list [of persistent bioaccumulative toxics, such as lead, mercury and dioxin-like compounds,] that can cause cancer or other adverse health effects at significant concentration levels beyond the facility boundaries, cause cancer in humans or harm the environment if found in large quantities.... There are no imminent health threats present in the report, which DEQ officials say is useful to communities, industry and regulators. ...


Nothing imminent, since those kinds of toxins gradually accumulate in nature, get passed from prey to predator, and
slowly screw life up...

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
Habitat Destruction May Wipe Out Monarch Butterfly Migration
Intense deforestation in Mexico could ruin one of North America’s most celebrated natural wonders — the mysterious 3,000-mile migration of the monarch butterfly. According to a University of Kansas researcher, the astonishing migration may collapse rapidly without urgent action to end devastation of the butterfly’s vital sources of food and shelter.... In spite of its protected status, the isolated reserve is suffering from illegal logging driven by soaring prices for lumber in Mexico. This logging, once sporadic, has increased in recent years and now is threatening the very survival of the butterflies. ...


Flutter by, my butterfly....
while you can.

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
Climate Change Is Not Caused By Cosmic Rays, According To New Research
New research has dealt a blow to the skeptics who argue that climate change is all due to cosmic rays rather than to man-made greenhouse gases. The new evidence shows no reliable connection between the cosmic ray intensity and cloud cover.... The new research shows that change in cloud cover over the Earth does not correlate to changes in cosmic ray intensity. Neither does it show increases and decreases during the sporadic bursts and decreases in the cosmic ray intensity which occur regularly. ...


Rats! Well, then what could possibly be causing it? Maybe the sun!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from The Canadian Press:
Mutation of the common cold linked to four deaths
Four seniors died at a Nanaimo, B.C. care home earlier this year and 57 others developed serious respiratory infections as a mutation of the common cold swept through the facility. The Vancouver Island Health Authority confirms an outbreak of human metapneumo virus, a recently discovered viral mutation, began Jan. 3 at Dufferin Place long-term care home. It affected 61 of the 150 residents at the home over a six week period. ...


"metapneumo" -- is that "pneumo about pneumo"? How mutant is that?

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from Kenniwick Tri-City Herald:
Hanford workers position 'umbrella' over contamination
"Hanford workers have finished installing a 70,000-square-foot "umbrella" over soil contaminated by what may have been the largest leak of radioactive waste from Hanford's underground tanks. The cap is a temporary measure to keep rain and snow melt from driving contamination deeper into the ground. But eventually, as leak-prone tanks are emptied of radioactive waste, the Department of Energy is expected to identify a way to clean up or otherwise permanently protect the public and environment from the remains of the spill. ...


I'm SINGING in the toxic rain, I'm singing in the toxic RAIN, what a poisonous FEEling, groundwater fouled aGAIN....

ApocaDoc
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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from The Independent:
American songbirds are being wiped out by banned pesticides
"The number of migratory songbirds returning to North America has gone into sharp decline due to the unregulated use of highly toxic pesticides and other chemicals across Latin America. Ornithologists blame the demand for out-of-season fruit and vegetables and other crops in North America and Europe for the destruction of tens of millions of passerine birds. By some counts, half of the songbirds that warbled across America's skies only 40 years ago have gone, wiped out by pesticides or loss of habitat." ...


Nothing to do but quote the late Kurt Vonnegut: Poo-too-weet...

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Apr 4, 2008
from Associated Press:
US: Fighting global warming costly
"BANGKOK, Thailand - With global markets in turmoil and the U.S. threatened by recession, negotiators at a climate change conference are asking: can nations afford to make rapid cuts in emissions to fight global warming without going into an economic tailspin? ... U.S. climate negotiator Harlan Watson said such costs need to be factored in when deciding how deep the world ought to require industrialized nations to reduce emissions. "If you push the globe into recession, it certainly isn't going to help the developing world either," he said. "Exports go down, and many of the developing countries of course are heavily dependent on exports. So there's a lot of issues which need to be fleshed out ... so people understand the real world." ...


I think the real world is that we will pay a helluva a lot more later if we don't act now.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Apr 3, 2008
from Houston Chronicle (US):
Shell CEO: Easy-To-Produce Oil to Peak
Van der Veer said while depletion of maturing conventional resources would certainly play a key role in peak production, lack of access to remaining large reserves, such as in Saudi Arabia, was also a central component in his forecast. Remaining resources, such as gas trapped in difficult-to-tap reservoirs or oil sands and shales, will require increasingly costly investments per barrel to produce. "It's becoming technologically expensive, capital intensive and lead times are growing longer," van der Veer said at an energy supply scenario seminar at the Center for Strategic International Studies. ...


Our "lead time" is measured in months, these days.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Apr 3, 2008
from Nature:
EPA feels heat over flame retardant
"A much-anticipated report on the health hazards of a ubiquitous flame retardant has been delayed amid controversy over the removal of a respected toxicologist from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) advisory panel reviewing the report. The report, which was due last week, is expected to mount pressure on the chemical industry to ban decabrominated diphenyl ether (deca-BDE), which is used as a flame retardant in furniture, carpets, and televisions and other electronic goods. The EPA has delayed its release by a month and experts tracking the issue expect further delays." ...


Now who's being a retardant?

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Apr 3, 2008
from Anchorage Daily News:
Interior secretary dodges hearing on polar bear status
"Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne was a no-show Wednesday in front of a Senate committee seeking an explanation for why his agency has been slow to decide whether to list polar bears as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. Kempthorne, summoned in front of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, refused to testify. Instead, he sent a letter and spoke personally to several of the committee members. He also pledged to testify once he had issued a decision, now three months late." ...


While Dirk fiddles, polar bears burn.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Apr 3, 2008
from US News and World Report:
Land Once Preserved Now Being Farmed
"Since the mid-1980s, the U.S. government, in an attempt to reduce the environmental fallout from large-scale farming, has been paying farmers to set aside less-than-ideal land for conservation. The results have been overwhelmingly positive: Soil erosion has been reduced; chemical and fertilizer runoff has eased; habitats for game birds and endangered species have been created and enlarged. The pushback to climate change has been equally noteworthy: In 2007, the lands trapped 50 million metric tons of carbon dioxide, making the Conservation Reserve Program the most effective government-funded defense against greenhouse gases on private lands....But dark clouds are forming on the protected fields. Historically, farmers have been eager to participate in the program, and many still are. But as prices for crops have soared, a growing number of farmers have opted to put conservation land back into production. The trend is expected to accelerate -- to the grave concern of many observers who caution that years of steady environmental progress could be halted, or even reversed, as buffers and habitats are converted into farmland...to feed the global demand for biofuels. ...


There's clearly only one solution to this and all related problems: Kill your car!

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Apr 3, 2008
from Litchfield County Times (CT):
Bat die-off now found in Connecticut
Dr. Davis said that there is little data available on bats, which is making it difficult for scientists to determine cause and effect. "They don't normally do bat surveys every year in every cave," he said, "mainly because when you go in, you wake them up and they burn up fat with nothing to eat. This syndrome could have started earlier than two years ago -- we just don't know. The real problem is there are no in-depth studies of bat biology. There are several labs working as hard as they can and they find parasites, they find bacteria on the fur or skin -- but no one knows if this is normal because there is no data on a healthy population. We haven't found any toxins; we haven't found any smoking gun. Everything is so inter-connected. There are so many different elements that could be attributed to something else. No one knows for sure." ...


Everything is so inter-connected, indeed: it'll be a banner season for mosquitos, moths and their larval caterpillars, flies, and so much more. Not a lot of bees, though...

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Apr 2, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
Elevated Concentrations Of Toxic Metals In China
Ming H. Wong and colleagues collected dust samples from roads adjacent to e-waste processing workshops in Guiya, China, to find that lead levels were 330 and 371 times higher than non e-waste sites located 5 miles and 19 miles away. Copper levels were 106 and 155 times higher. "Currently, there are no guidelines or regulations for heavy metals in dust. It is hoped that the results can serve as a case study for similar e-waste activities in countries such as Africa, India and Vietnam where e-waste is becoming a growing problem, so that the same mistakes could be prevented." ...


Yes, it's clear that we learn from our mistakes so very well.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Apr 2, 2008
from New Zealand Herald:
Gwynne Dyer: World countdown to crop catastrophe
In Thailand, farmers are sleeping in their fields after reports that thieves are stealing their rice, now worth $600 a tonne. Four people have died in Egypt in clashes over subsidised flour that was being sold for profit on the black market. There have been food riots in Morocco, Senegal and Cameroon.... Last year it became clear that the era of cheap food was over. Food costs worldwide rose by 23 per cent between 2006 and 2007. This year, what is becoming clear is the impact of this change on ordinary people. ...


Part biofuel blowback, part climate change, part China and India's rising middle class, part overpopulation... and all human!

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Apr 2, 2008
from Bloomberg.com (US):
Bird Flu Crosses Species Barrier to Spread Among Dogs
A bird flu virus that killed dogs in South Korea can spread from one dog to another, showing that the disease is capable of crossing species and causing widespread sickness in mammals, a study found.... Transmission of avian influenza A virus to a new mammalian species is of great concern because it potentially allows the virus to adapt to a new mammalian host, cross new species barriers, and acquire pandemic potential,'' the Korean researchers said. ...


Uh-oh. Man's best friend becomes a viral vector...

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Apr 2, 2008
from Yahoo News (US):
States suing EPA over global warming
Officials of 18 states are taking the EPA back to court to try to force it to comply with a Supreme Court ruling that rebuked the Bush administration for inaction on global warming.... In a petition prepared for filing Wednesday, the plaintiffs said last April's 5-4 ruling required the Environmental Protection Agency to decide whether to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, including carbon dioxide, from motor vehicles... The EPA has instead done nothing, they said. ...


Who'd have thought the lawyers would ride in to rescue the planet?

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Apr 1, 2008
from Associated Press:
Maryland crab season opens to anxiety
"...The prognosis for the blue crab, the Chesapeake's hallmark seafood product, is bad. Last year's catch was Maryland's second-lowest since 1945, and winter population surveys indicate this year's harvest may not be much better. Fishery regulators in Maryland and Virginia say the crab population is nearing dangerous lows. Regulators are expected to reduce the harvest even further to save crabs...The worry extends to government scientists who manage the crab fisheries in the Chesapeake. Maryland and Virginia scientists say they've got one last shot to protect the crabs or they could face the collapse of one of the region's last viable fisheries." ...


Everything about this story is depressing.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Mar 31, 2008
from The Guardian:
Tensions rise as world faces short rations
"Food prices are soaring, a wealthier Asia is demanding better food and farmers can't keep up. In short, the world faces a food crisis and in some places it is already boiling over. Around the globe, people are protesting and governments are responding with often counterproductive controls on prices and exports -- a new politics of scarcity in which ensuring food supplies is becoming a major challenge for the 21st century...Global food prices, based on United Nations records, rose 35 percent in the year to the end of January, markedly accelerating an upturn that began, gently at first, in 2002. Since then, prices have risen 65 percent." ...


Hey, don't forget, if things get really bad, we can always eat each other!

ApocaDoc
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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Mon, Mar 31, 2008
from The Toronto Globe and Mail:
The end of the road
"To most Canadians, migration is a spectacle that marks the seasons. We know spring is here, despite the snowbanks in much of the country, because northbound geese have begun to appear from the south, just as we knew winter was coming when we saw them flying the other way. But many long-distance travellers -- from the whooping crane and the red knot to sea turtles and the rarest of the world's large whales, the North Atlantic right -- are in serious trouble. Over millions of years, they have been hardwired to undertake long journeys to survive. But these feats of strength and endurance are increasingly perilous in a world ever more congested and plagued by a changing climate." ...


If only we could teach these animals to use the internet, they could telecommute instead migrate.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Mar 31, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Gore Launches Ambitious Advocacy Campaign on Climate
"Former vice president Al Gore will launch a three-year, $300 million campaign Wednesday aimed at mobilizing Americans to push for aggressive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, a move that ranks as one of the most ambitious and costly public advocacy campaigns in U.S. history. The Alliance for Climate Protection's "we" campaign will employ online organizing and television advertisements on shows ranging from "American Idol" to "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart." It highlights the extent to which Americans' growing awareness of global warming has yet to translate into national policy changes, Gore said in an hour-long phone interview last week. He said the campaign, which Gore is helping to fund, was undertaken in large part because of his fear that U.S. lawmakers are unwilling to curb the human-generated emissions linked to climate change." ...


Woo-hoo! The American idle can have their consciousness raised in the convenient comfort of their living rooms.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Mar 31, 2008
from Science Daily (US):
Migratory Wetland Habitat for Shorebirds Declining Fast
"A decline by more than 70 percent of several North American shorebird species since the early 1970s has brought state, federal and international concern about conservation efforts for these birds and their wetland habitat.... Shorebirds stop over in Oklahoma to utilize wetlands and other waterways to rest and feed during both their spring and fall migrations. Davis said little is known about how landscape patterns and land use influence shorebirds migrating through the state. ...


Oklahoma! where the wind goes sweepin' down the plain -- but where development may be sweepin' out the birds.

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Other
Weeks' Archived
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