More than a century of groundwater over-exploitation in Vietnam has drawn the water table down and, with it, arsenic. It may only be a matter of time before the toxic element also permeates deep aquifers in other Asian countries that follow the same practice, such as those around the Bengal Basin.
These conclusions, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences1, point to high future costs in terms of both health and water-purification processes. Some 100 million people throughout Asia are currently at risk from unsafe levels of arsenic in their water supplies. The element can trigger conditions ranging from anaemia to skin cancer. With deeper aquifers so far thought to be arsenic-free, some municipal authorities in Bangladesh, and many in Vietnam, are drilling into lower sediments.
In Vietnam, a nation that began overusing its deep aquifers under French occupation more than 110 years ago, the effect is already pronounced. In the region surrounding the densely populated city of Hanoi — with nearly 2,000 people per square kilometre — it is difficult to escape arsenic-contaminated water, no matter how deeply you drill.
The researchers analysed 512 private tubewells reaching to depths ranging from 10 metres to more than 50 metres throughout the country's Red River Delta. Their findings revealed that 27% of the wells contained levels of arsenic in excess of the World Health Organization's standard of 10 micrograms per litre, says Michael Berg, a senior scientist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology in Dübendorf and a co-author on the study1. This puts some 3 million people at risk.
The survey, carried out in cooperation with the Hanoi University of Science and Technology, also found harmful levels of other elements — about 7 million people in the Red River Delta are exposed to unsafe levels of at least one element. After arsenic, the most important of these is manganese, which exceeded World Health Organization guidelines in 44% of the wells. Elevated levels of this element can affect neurological development in children.
Mapping the depths
From the survey data, Berg's team created the first three-dimensional groundwater map, using statistical modelling to show levels that are relatively arsenic-free. "It is now clear where water is safe and where it is unsafe. That is one of the most important findings for the public," says Berg.
The map makes it difficult for officials to ignore the arsenic problem, says Dieke Postma, a senior researcher at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, who has been working in the region since 2004 and is unconnected with the new study. "It's important for the Vietnamese authorities because they haven't had an overview of how big the problem is," he says.
Postma says he hopes that an international scientific conference on the issue, to be held in Hanoi in November, will draw further official attention to arsenic contamination in the region.
The implications of the finding could be serious for countries around the Bengal Basin in South Asia. In Bangladesh, where some 70 million people2 are exposed, the use of deep aquifers is a more recent phenomenon. Decades ago, aid agencies introduced tube wells as a reliable and clean water source, only to find that the top-most sediment layers, formed in the 12,000 years since the start of the current Holocene epoch, contain naturally occurring arsenic that leaches into the groundwater.
To avoid contamination, wells in the Bengal Basin can be drilled into deep layers that were oxidized during the last ice age, in which the water is free of arsenic, Berg says. These aquifers were created during the Pleistocene epoch, between 12,000 and 2.5 million years ago, and lack the organic carbon that is needed for arsenic to leach into water.
Leaching lower
But if people in the Bengal Basin continue to exploit their water supplies at the current rates, arsenic-laden water from the upper layers may find its way into Pleistocene aquifers, the study suggests.
Berg's team is in contact with scientists in Dhaka to evaluate arsenic migration into deeper sediments.
The group is the first to give real-life evidence that arsenic in deeper layers can get into groundwater. Other lab-based studies2,3 have suggested that sediments in deeper aquifers tend to keep arsenic out of the water, says William Burgess, a hydrogeologist at the Department of Earth Sciences at University College London. On the basis of the new study, he thinks that such sequestration may not always happen and probably depends on the composition of sediments and the complexity of water flow underground.
"Pumping from the Pleistocene aquifer has certainly had an adverse effect in terms of drawing down arsenic at significantly high concentrations over about 100 years," says Burgess. "These deep wells weren't being monitored 10, 20, 30 years ago, so we don't know how quickly arsenic got down there, but it got there sometime in the past 100 years."
For more info- http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110117/full/news.2011.20.html
Nature related news
Monday, January 17, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Cholera and Cooperation Play Into Haiti Reforestation
From the passenger seat of a truck rumbling along a rough and dusty road in rural Haiti, Drew Kutschenreuter points out trees planted to feed the country’s charcoal habit, patches of millet, and irrigation canals cut along the sides of rolling brown hills.
An agronomist from Wisconsin, Kutschenreuter has been working in Haiti for more than two decades, most recently on soil conservation and hillside terracing projects run by the International Organization for Migration. Kutschenreuter’s goals: to create jobs and reverse the country’s downward spiral into ecological degradation and extreme poverty—problems exacerbated by last year’s earthquake and the island’s history of hurricane damage.
With only a fraction of its forest cover remaining, Haiti has become increasingly vulnerable to flash floods and mudslides. Without underground tree roots, only a quarter of the water that should permeates the soil. Storms often damage what water systems do exist, crippling access to clean drinking water supplies. The United Nations (UN) estimates some 36 million tons of rich topsoil are carried away each year by wind and rain, much ending up in rivers and lakes that become lifeless mudscapes during the rainy season. With the loss of soil fertility, crop yields drop, and farmers have increasingly turned to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal as a source of revenue.
With the recent outbreak of cholera in camps crowded with earthquake victims, and in mountainous rural areas where people take their drinking water from the river or underground wells, there may be an added stress on forest resources. According to Wesler Lambert of Partners in Health, when citizens are asked to boil water as a protection measure against cholera or other water-borne diseases, they use charcoal, leading to more deforestation and therefore more flooding.
Rebuilding Hillsides, Futures
Kutschenreuter works in an area of northern Haiti called Gonaîves, which did not see earthquake devastation, overseeing planting and hillside terracing projects to slow down the flow of water and protect topsoil. While the project area is only a small patch of Haiti, it offers a glimpse of how an environmentally rehabilitated landscape could look.
Mending Haiti’s environment is the ambitious end game of a new program called the Haiti Regeneration Initiative, spearheaded by Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP). The effort started in 2008 with the ecological restoration of one of the country’s several dozen watersheds. Now, having secured $8 million in funding, the project’s leaders are expanding its scope along Haiti’s southern coast, and will couple environmental restoration with development efforts, such as building infrastructure for drinking water and sanitation, and efforts to improve the livelihoods of local Haitians.
Until now, much of the work has been focused on planning: using soil quality surveys, and satellite data that accounts for topography and water patterns, to create a map that determines which hillsides can support which crops. They’ve also installed an automated rain gauge, which communicates wind speed and precipitation data in real-time via satellite back to New York, and could be developed into a flood risk early warning system.
The program builds on practices the UN has developed in African villages. "Haiti's are among the lowest crop yields in the world,” said Marc Levy, a Columbia University professor and Earth Institute program director. “By using fertilizer feeds and best management practices, they could double or triple their yields very quickly.” Fruit-bearing trees like banana and mango could be planted along hillsides, and walls built to shore them up against erosion. By focusing on more efficient use of “good” land, like plateaus, farmers might be able abandon some of the steeper grades altogether. Reforestation programs could provide alternative jobs to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal production.
But the idea that choosing not to farm a particular slope because of its value for flood protection and water quality—an individual sacrifice for a collective benefit—challenges the coping strategies that poor farmers have relied on for centuries, said Levy. He argues that it will take a significant change, like the one the Haiti Regeneration Initiative promotes, to reverse the country’s ecological decline.
For more info- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/01/110113-haiti-cholera-reforestation-water-floods-hurricane-earthquake/
An agronomist from Wisconsin, Kutschenreuter has been working in Haiti for more than two decades, most recently on soil conservation and hillside terracing projects run by the International Organization for Migration. Kutschenreuter’s goals: to create jobs and reverse the country’s downward spiral into ecological degradation and extreme poverty—problems exacerbated by last year’s earthquake and the island’s history of hurricane damage.
With only a fraction of its forest cover remaining, Haiti has become increasingly vulnerable to flash floods and mudslides. Without underground tree roots, only a quarter of the water that should permeates the soil. Storms often damage what water systems do exist, crippling access to clean drinking water supplies. The United Nations (UN) estimates some 36 million tons of rich topsoil are carried away each year by wind and rain, much ending up in rivers and lakes that become lifeless mudscapes during the rainy season. With the loss of soil fertility, crop yields drop, and farmers have increasingly turned to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal as a source of revenue.
With the recent outbreak of cholera in camps crowded with earthquake victims, and in mountainous rural areas where people take their drinking water from the river or underground wells, there may be an added stress on forest resources. According to Wesler Lambert of Partners in Health, when citizens are asked to boil water as a protection measure against cholera or other water-borne diseases, they use charcoal, leading to more deforestation and therefore more flooding.
Rebuilding Hillsides, Futures
Kutschenreuter works in an area of northern Haiti called Gonaîves, which did not see earthquake devastation, overseeing planting and hillside terracing projects to slow down the flow of water and protect topsoil. While the project area is only a small patch of Haiti, it offers a glimpse of how an environmentally rehabilitated landscape could look.
Mending Haiti’s environment is the ambitious end game of a new program called the Haiti Regeneration Initiative, spearheaded by Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP). The effort started in 2008 with the ecological restoration of one of the country’s several dozen watersheds. Now, having secured $8 million in funding, the project’s leaders are expanding its scope along Haiti’s southern coast, and will couple environmental restoration with development efforts, such as building infrastructure for drinking water and sanitation, and efforts to improve the livelihoods of local Haitians.
Until now, much of the work has been focused on planning: using soil quality surveys, and satellite data that accounts for topography and water patterns, to create a map that determines which hillsides can support which crops. They’ve also installed an automated rain gauge, which communicates wind speed and precipitation data in real-time via satellite back to New York, and could be developed into a flood risk early warning system.
The program builds on practices the UN has developed in African villages. "Haiti's are among the lowest crop yields in the world,” said Marc Levy, a Columbia University professor and Earth Institute program director. “By using fertilizer feeds and best management practices, they could double or triple their yields very quickly.” Fruit-bearing trees like banana and mango could be planted along hillsides, and walls built to shore them up against erosion. By focusing on more efficient use of “good” land, like plateaus, farmers might be able abandon some of the steeper grades altogether. Reforestation programs could provide alternative jobs to cutting trees for firewood and charcoal production.
But the idea that choosing not to farm a particular slope because of its value for flood protection and water quality—an individual sacrifice for a collective benefit—challenges the coping strategies that poor farmers have relied on for centuries, said Levy. He argues that it will take a significant change, like the one the Haiti Regeneration Initiative promotes, to reverse the country’s ecological decline.
For more info- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/01/110113-haiti-cholera-reforestation-water-floods-hurricane-earthquake/
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Bats Crash More When They Rely on Vision
Being blind as a bat apparently has its benefits: Wild bats that use their vision to fly short distances are more likely to crash into objects, new research says.
Bats can navigate both visually and acoustically, by sending out sound waves and listening for echoes bouncing off objects—including prey. Bat vision is generally known to be sharpest in dim light, and to get worse the brighter it gets.
For the new study, scientists set up an obstacle course near an abandoned mine in Ontario, Canada, where little brown bats often gather.
The team manipulated three types of light conditions—dark, dim, and bright—and observed how little brown bats flying through the course behaved. The results showed that bats primarily relied on their vision to navigate the well-illuminated course—even though their reliance on vision made them more prone to crashing.
In the obstacle course, the team used fabrics of three different visibilities—a clear fabric, an opaque fabric, and a reflective fabric. If the bats were mostly using their sonar, they should have detected all three. But the bats did not sense some fabrics—such as the clear one—suggesting the animals were depending more on their vision, the scientists noted.
The study is among the first experiments to confirm such behavior in wild bats, according to study co-author Dara Orbach, formerly a graduate student at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.
Past experiments have shown that blindfolded, captive Indiana bats ran into windows less often than bats that could see, and that little brown bats flying through a lab obstacle course crashed more often when the lights were turned up.
Hormone Switch Changes Crash Rates?
It's unknown why bats use their vision to their detriment. But the research also turned up a tantalizing clue: Midway through the study, when the bats' hormones shifted, so did their the crash stats.
"That was the really unexpected part," Orbach said. "We know there are two phases [of bats' preparation for hibernation]. During the first phase of swarming, during the month of August, they're flying around to different hibernation sites. And then there's this distinct day—at least at our field site—[when] there's a switchover."
After that turning point, the bats changed their eating habits, became sleepier during the day—like a temporary hibernation—and began "promiscuous" mating, Orbach said.
What's more, the mammals' behavior reversed: They began crashing more in the dark than in the light.
The switch between bats' behavior and the collision rates match up nearly perfectly.
"We don't know for sure, but our suggestion is that the way bats are using vision could correspond to their different needs" at different times, Orbach said.
"There seems to be this relationship that corresponds to hormonal or physiological changes in the bat."
For more info- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101115-bats-vision-science-animals/
Bats can navigate both visually and acoustically, by sending out sound waves and listening for echoes bouncing off objects—including prey. Bat vision is generally known to be sharpest in dim light, and to get worse the brighter it gets.
For the new study, scientists set up an obstacle course near an abandoned mine in Ontario, Canada, where little brown bats often gather.
The team manipulated three types of light conditions—dark, dim, and bright—and observed how little brown bats flying through the course behaved. The results showed that bats primarily relied on their vision to navigate the well-illuminated course—even though their reliance on vision made them more prone to crashing.
In the obstacle course, the team used fabrics of three different visibilities—a clear fabric, an opaque fabric, and a reflective fabric. If the bats were mostly using their sonar, they should have detected all three. But the bats did not sense some fabrics—such as the clear one—suggesting the animals were depending more on their vision, the scientists noted.
The study is among the first experiments to confirm such behavior in wild bats, according to study co-author Dara Orbach, formerly a graduate student at the University of Western Ontario in Canada.
Past experiments have shown that blindfolded, captive Indiana bats ran into windows less often than bats that could see, and that little brown bats flying through a lab obstacle course crashed more often when the lights were turned up.
Hormone Switch Changes Crash Rates?
It's unknown why bats use their vision to their detriment. But the research also turned up a tantalizing clue: Midway through the study, when the bats' hormones shifted, so did their the crash stats.
"That was the really unexpected part," Orbach said. "We know there are two phases [of bats' preparation for hibernation]. During the first phase of swarming, during the month of August, they're flying around to different hibernation sites. And then there's this distinct day—at least at our field site—[when] there's a switchover."
After that turning point, the bats changed their eating habits, became sleepier during the day—like a temporary hibernation—and began "promiscuous" mating, Orbach said.
What's more, the mammals' behavior reversed: They began crashing more in the dark than in the light.
The switch between bats' behavior and the collision rates match up nearly perfectly.
"We don't know for sure, but our suggestion is that the way bats are using vision could correspond to their different needs" at different times, Orbach said.
"There seems to be this relationship that corresponds to hormonal or physiological changes in the bat."
For more info- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101115-bats-vision-science-animals/
Pictures: Oldest Dinosaur Embryos Show "Big Surprises"
The sharpest look yet at the oldest known dinosaur embryos (pictured, one of the eggs and its inhabitant) has revealed some "big surprises," a scientist says.
For one thing, the 190-million-year-old babies of Massospondylus—a two-legged dinosaur that preceded the well-known sauropods, such as Diplodocus—do not resemble their parents, according to study co-author Hans-Dieter Sues, a paleontologist at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. (See more dinosaur-embryo pictures.)
The 8-inch-long (20-centimeter-long) youngster, for example, had long front legs for walking on all fours, and its overall body proportion—such as a short snout—made it "look like a dwarf version of a sauropod dinosaur," the largest animals to walk Earth. The babies would have lost these traits as they matured.
The discovery suggests Massospondylus had characteristics that "foreshadowed" the later look of the sauropods.
Collected from- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/photogalleries/101116-oldest-dinosaur-embryos-eggs-science-photos-pictures/
For one thing, the 190-million-year-old babies of Massospondylus—a two-legged dinosaur that preceded the well-known sauropods, such as Diplodocus—do not resemble their parents, according to study co-author Hans-Dieter Sues, a paleontologist at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. (See more dinosaur-embryo pictures.)
The 8-inch-long (20-centimeter-long) youngster, for example, had long front legs for walking on all fours, and its overall body proportion—such as a short snout—made it "look like a dwarf version of a sauropod dinosaur," the largest animals to walk Earth. The babies would have lost these traits as they matured.
The discovery suggests Massospondylus had characteristics that "foreshadowed" the later look of the sauropods.
Collected from- http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/photogalleries/101116-oldest-dinosaur-embryos-eggs-science-photos-pictures/
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