Friday, January 25, 2013

What do innovative people actually do?

A very interesting discussion on Linkedin -

http://www.linkedin.com/groups/What-do-innovative-people-actually-32614.S.206163002?view=&srchtype=discussedNews&gid=32614&item=206163002&type=member&trk=eml-anet_dig-b_pd-ttl-cn&ut=1dru64PGtkFlA1


What do innovative people actually do?



Janet Sernack • Great conversation, I have spent the last 2 years researching, deciphering and modelling the intrinsic motivators, mindsets and behaviors behind the unique and globally successful Israeli entrepreneurial and innovative leadership model.
Typically and simply (nutshell version) innovators do:
- Adapt easily and collaborate with others to identify band solve problems,
- Disruptively debate to achieve high level thinking and create inflection points that result in innovative solutions, products and services,
- Improvise and experiment by prototyping, and not giving in to, and learning from failure,
- Keep the pot simmering by embracing and maximizing diversity, deviance, conflict and difference.
Happy to share more via personal conversation.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

How Climate Change is Damaging the Great Lakes



http://ecowatch.org/2013/how-climate-change-is-damaging-the-great-lakes/?goback=%2Egde_2414449_member_206000259


ThinkProgress

Great Lakes Michigan and Huron set a new record low water level for the month of December, and in the coming weeks they could experience their lowest water levels ever. It’s becoming certain that, like the rest of the country, the Great Lakes are feeling the effects of climate change.
Last year was officially the warmest year on record for the lower-48 states. The hot summer air has been causing the surface water of the Great Lakes to increase in temperature. One might think this causes more precipitation around the lakes, but the warmer winter air is causing a shorter duration of ice cover. In fact, the amount of ice covering the lakes has declined about 71 percent over the past 40 years. Last year, only 5 percent of the lakes froze over—compared to 1979 when ice coverage was as much as 94 percent.
Furthermore, the continuing effect of the historic drought in the Midwest is causing increased levels of evaporation. This combination of climate change side-effects results in low water levels for the Great Lakes.
The impact climate change has on the five lakes—Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario—will have serious implications for aquatic life, as well as high economic costs for communities.
  • The Great Lakes stretch from Minnesota to New York. They account for more than 80 percent of North America’s surface freshwater, and provide drinking water to 40 million U.S. and Canadian citizens.
  • Many industries in the region that depend on trade through the lakes will face navigation challenges, and will have to reduce the amount of cargo carried.
  • Tourism and recreational activities that are vital to coastal communities will surely feel the negative economic effects. Activity associated with recreational fishing alone is estimated to be at least $7 billion annually.
  • Infrastructure investments will need to occur, as the necessity for extending docks and dredging increases.
  • And the habitats of fish, birds and other mammals will be altered.
The two maps below developed by the Great Lakes Environmental Assessment and Mapping project (GLEAM) illustrate the severity of the environmental impacts on the lakes, as well as the warming temperature of the lakes.
The researchers behind GLEAM note that water surface temperatures between 2000 and 2100 will warm at rates ranging from 0.37-0.93 degrees Celsius per decade in Lake Superior, and 0.20-0.60 degrees Celsius per decade in Lake Eire as a result of climate change. Research conducted by the University of Minnesota-Duluth’s Large Lakes Observatory(LLO) found that summer surface water temperatures on Lake Superior have increased 2.5 degrees Celsius between 1979 and 2006. As climate change continues, fueling more frequent and more extreme droughts, we will continue to see more reductions in the extent and duration of winter ice cover.
Researchers at GLEAM are not alone in this finding. Several different climate models for the Great Lakes region all predict that lake levels will decline over the next century. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory (GLERL) uses two different modeling approaches, researching the net effect of precipitation due to climate change, and the warming lakes and air surrounding the lakes are leading to increased evaporation levels.
The third National Climate Assessment draft, the most comprehensive peer-reviewed analysis of how climate change impacts regions and sectors across the U.S., was released last week. It found that the likelihood of extreme events like intense heat waves, mild winters and lack of ice cover on the lakes will occur with greater frequency. The draft also finds:
  • The Great Lakes are warming at rates faster than the world’s oceans. This will also stimulate blooms of harmful algae in the lakes, leading to toxic cyanobacteria.
  • Climate change will likely heighten the impact that invasive species have in the Great Lakes.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Phytoplankton Video

Ashort and interesting video about Phytoplankton

http://vimeo.com/46431468

by Dr Emmanuel Reynaud

Monday, January 14, 2013

Algal bloom in River Torrens, Adelaide, Australia



http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-01-07/city-lake-blighted-by-another-algal-bloom/4454818


Another algal bloom has occurred in the Torrens Lake less than a month after the State Government committed $1 million to fix the problem.
Outbreaks of blue green algae have become an annual occurrence in the lake as temperatures soar over summer.
Water Minister Paul Caica announced plans to release up to 40 megalitres a day into the lake to limit algal counts before they could reach problem levels in December.
That spending followed a $1.2 million trial by the Adelaide City Council to improve water quality last summer.
But the attempt failed because of pumping problems.
Lord Mayor Stephen Yarwood says the water is now being tested daily and renewed efforts are under way to try to flush the algae out.
He says the Lake can remain open until two outbreaks have occurred.
"We're flowing water down the Torrens at the moment to flush out the Torrens and we're also doing a number of other treatments," he said.
"We're still learning, adapting and evolving but at this stage it's not officially closed until we get two separate outbreaks and at this stage it's looking okay."
Mr Yarwood says the latest bloom is not proof the council's program is failing.
"This is a really complicated system. This is about urban development, this is about people illegally dumping lawn clippings and things like that into the Torrens," he said.
"It's not just a council responsibility, it's not just a State Government responsibility. This is the community's responsibility.
"Algal blooms in the River Torrens are never a good outcome but we're certainly keen to work with the State Government and we'll continue to do trials to minimise the impacts."

Friday, January 11, 2013

All choked up


All choked up

11 January 2013


This has led to algae becoming the dominant group of aquatic plants almost everywhere in the UK, and especially in static water like reservoirs, gravel pits, lakes and ponds. They might be easy enough to remove from a garden pond, but to UK water companies they represent a major and increasing cost.

http://planetearth.nerc.ac.uk/features/story.aspx?id=1309&cookieConsent=A

There is no discussion of various types of algae and no mention of Diatom Algae.

Saturday, January 5, 2013