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Earth

As Ice Melts, Arctic Ecosystem Confronts Emboldened Killer Whales (nytimes.com) 149

The hunting grounds are apparently widening for one of "nature's most effective predators" reports the New York Times, warning of "potentially significant consequences for animals up and down the food chain...."

"As sea ice has receded, killer whales — which are actually dolphins — are now venturing to parts of the sea that were once inaccessible, and spending more time in places they were once seen only sporadically," according to data presented by research scientist Brynn Kimber (who works in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Marine Mammal Laboratory). Arctic sea ice has declined significantly in the four decades since satellite monitoring began. Roughly 75 percent of ice volume disappeared in the last 15 years alone, and the remaining ice is thinner and of poorer quality, said Amy Willoughby, a marine mammal biologist with NOAA's Alaska Fisheries Science Center. The loss of ice coupled with warming waters and atmospheric temperatures has affected every level of the Arctic ecosystem. Large mammals like polar bears have struggled to navigate shrinking habitats, while the marine algae at the base of the Arctic food chain blooms sooner and more abundantly than ever before.

In recent years, scientists have noticed similar upheaval in the behavior of the region's marine mammals. Orca are feasting more often on bowhead whales. Scientists and Indigenous Arctic communities have noted a growing number of bowhead whale carcasses in the northeastern Chukchi and western Beaufort seas with signs of orca attack....

"Killer whales are really intelligent," said Cory Matthews, a research scientist with the Arctic region of Fisheries and Oceans Canada. "They consume really fast. If a new area opens up, they can get in there maybe within the next year and exploit a prey population that could be perhaps really slow to respond to those changes."

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As Ice Melts, Arctic Ecosystem Confronts Emboldened Killer Whales

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  • by aRTeeNLCH ( 6256058 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @01:39AM (#62051133)
    My hopes are up, there could finally be some news about sharks with lasers. I'll settle for dolphins at this point. Being it on, Slashdot!
    • Tis the season of Prancer, Dancer, Dasher and Lasher... ahem... Laser...

  • If people are going to take CO2 emissions seriously then they will have to build nuclear fission power plants in large numbers. That's because nuclear power has the lowest CO2 emissions of any energy source we have available.
    Source: https://ourworldindata.org/saf... [ourworldindata.org] (I'll get to the death rates listed on that source in a bit.)
    More sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    But, as I'll often see people claim, "nuclear power is not safe!" Here's an article from 2016 that shows nuclear power to be the safes

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      How predictable, within minutes of the story going up there is a copy/paste MacMann comment that gets a single up-vote within minutes of being posted. Every single time.

      Nobody wants your nuclear shit, it's too expensive. If you want to spend your own tens of billions on it then go ahead, I'm not paying for your "solution" that won't work and would take too long even if it did.

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        It's infinitely funny to me how far left "take everyone down to the same level, because we hate success" folks have so successfully pretended to be "anti-global warming" to date.

        When they are directly and in many cases solely responsible for most nations not having CO2 per electricity generated of France in the rest of the Western World. Can't have cheap, abundant and almost CO2 emissions free electricity. That would make poor wealthy, or "stabilized" as Marxists phrase it. And that makes them counter-revol

        • by tragedy ( 27079 )

          Can't have cheap, abundant and almost CO2 emissions free electricity.

          That depends. Is it "too cheap to meter" yet? Because that was the original promise. Unleash the mighty power of the atom and get access to almost unlimited power. It turns out though, that practically extracting that power is a lot more costly than originally anticipated.

          • Yes we discovered that heavy, fissile, isotopes are rather rare. That makes abundance less common. Uranium mining is not exactly a great solution. The other elements that get turned into uranium seem more promising, but for it to be as abundant as you suggest, the creation side needs to be such that the yields vastly exceed the work to produce.
            • by tragedy ( 27079 )

              I think you may have misread me slightly. I'm talking about all the pro-nuclear talking points of the past, before cold, hard reality set in. The old promise is that power would be too cheap to meter with nuclear fission. It turned out though, that while the operating costs are fairly low, they're real, and the construction costs are high and the full decommissioning costs are also high, but currently not really known. There's the fuel issue and the question of finite uranium resources (technically they nat

              • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
                diversity. Thats good enough reason for me. I dont want some tornado to wipe out some giant solar farm and leave an area without power for months or even years. I want a diversity of different kinds of power, generated from a lot of smaller locations, so that they are immune from the sort of problems that occur when we stick everything together. Maybe instead of a giant 2TW reactor, smaller, less man-powered 500MW reactors to augment the power grid, spread out. I like solar, and if we could get to the point
                • by tragedy ( 27079 )

                  The majority of people don't have any kind of significant locally sourced electricity. For most people, it comes from far away. A robust electrical grid seems to be very important, but I'm certainly all for local power generation. A diverse mix is fine as well. No need for a monoculture. Without some amazing new nuclear reactors (and I know there are all these amazing new designs coming, but they've been coming for decades) that can be built faster, then nuclear stands little chance of coming to dominance w

          • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

            I know, I know. We need to pretend that if it doesn't pay for itself with subsidies counted in in a decade, it's a really bad investment.

            In real world on the other hand, we just see electricity prices in places like France, put them against prices in places like Denmark, and don't cherrypick only windy days for it... and we end up with reality that shows that nuclear is dirt cheap, while wind is so expensive, that you have to have specific subsidies for the poor for the new problem it creates. The problem c

            • by tragedy ( 27079 )

              I know, I know. We need to pretend that if it doesn't pay for itself with subsidies counted in in a decade, it's a really bad investment.

              Are you trying to have a laugh? In our real world, nuclear always makes use of subsidies counted in decades to get built. Nuclear proponents will hedge with statements like that nuclear power isn't subsidized "per unit of production". Basically weasel words meant for you to come away with the impression that they're actually not subsidized at all. The projects are so huge and complex and take so long to build, with massive cost overruns typical that it's hard for them to be built at all without government h

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          France is a great example of why nuclear doesn't work. They went all in with it, tried their best to make it work, and then realized it had just turned into corporate welfare for the energy companies.

          That's why France wants to move away from nuclear now, it's too expensive and never became self-funded, always reliant on taxpayer subsidy. French energy companies are trying to build new nuclear in other places, and all the projects are failing badly. Over budget, over time, and with eye-watering subsidies.

          Fos

          • To be fair they used rather old, open loop designs. I see more advantage in 'distributed processing' over centralized. Smaller more abundant production is more resilient to problems and less monolithic for operation. Never put all your eggs in the same basket.
          • and then realized it had just turned into corporate welfare for the energy companies.
            It is not that easy, considering that the energy company is state owned.

            That's why France wants to move away from nuclear now, it's too expensive and never became self-funded, always reliant on taxpayer subsidy.
            Obviously, as it is state owned :D

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              EDF is majority state owned, but not state run. It's not supposed to be state funded either, it's supposed to be a profit making venture.

              The idea was that the French state would invest heavily in building nuclear power, and then EDF would take over and run them for profit. EDF was also supposed to export the technology and experience, again for profit.

              What actually happened is that EDF never managed to get off the subsidies for the nuclear plants, and the projects in other countries all went sour and nearly

              • It's not supposed to be state funded either, it's supposed to be a profit making venture.
                I'm not sure about that.

                When it was founded, basically all of Europes power production was state owned. And none was really supposed to make a profit.

                • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                  There was a big reorg some time back that was supposed to stop EDF being a drain on public finances, but right from the start the idea was to cover costs from sales.

          • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

            This is the far left nutjob that doesn't actually know anything, but simply parrots the talking points without having to ever having taken a cursory look at underlying data. For example:

            https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]

            This is in the same vein. The only problem France has with energy right now is that it does need to start life cycle upgrades, and its domestic green movement is hysterically anti nuclear for all the same reasons of being anti-capitalist revolutionaries. They're headed for the same problem th

    • It's build nuclear power plants or see your economy tank.

      Making the economy tank is the actual goal for far more people than you might appreciate.

    • Isn't nuclear power expensive? No, it's cheaper than natural gas, offshore wind, and rooftop solar, by many sources:

      Not only is nuclear power more expensive than utility solar and onshore wind. Your link has a helpful chart [wikipedia.org] to show solar and wind are getting cheaper and cheaper, while nuclear is getting more and more expensive.
      Another one too. [wikimedia.org]

      • I get it, we solved global warming. What is it that you really wanted me to see? That nuclear power costs more than coal? I already pointed out that nuclear power has the lowest CO2 emissions, least deaths per TWh, least demands for land/labor/material, is abundant, and reliable. The costs you cite only delay the inevitable use of nuclear fission. What is going on now without delay is solving global warming. In time nuclear power costs will come down. Or maybe not. Either way we price fossil fuels o

        • You seemed to think it was important enough to tell people nuclear was cheaper than wind and solar.
          I felt it important enough to tell you you were wrong.

          Not only is nuclear power more expensive than utility solar and onshore wind. Your link has a helpful chart [wikipedia.org] to show solar and wind are getting cheaper and cheaper, while nuclear is getting more and more expensive. Another one too. [wikimedia.org]

          It should have been quite easy to understand.
          Not only is nuclear not the cheap solution you claimed. It's actually getting more expensive.
          As the links (that were pretty pictures) showed.

          I guess it is hard to get someone to understand something when their job is based on not understanding that thing.

        • You say, "Nobody wants nukes!" My answer, "Problem solved!"

          No mod points today, but I agree completely. If you can afford to be picky about solutions, then global warming is obviously not that big a problem. And since they have the perfect solution all figured out and nothing else will do anyway, I just ignore it completely.

          Have at it, go ahead and save the world folks. I'll just continue on as normal.

    • However, there is a notable amount of people who did the math and must assess that nuclear fission as we know it isn't cost-effective. Or all that effective in general to begin with. This is the sole reason why Germany is decommissioning classic nuclear fission. It's not that they don't have the engineering capacity, they just did the math.

      If you show me a way to turn radiation into current without hopping over the nefarious "heating up water and the environment and piping steam through dynamo turbines" bit

      • This is the sole reason why Germany is decommissioning classic nuclear fission. It's not that they don't have the engineering capacity, they just did the math.
        Has nothing to do with math.

        The German population was fighting to get rid of the nukes for over 50 years. Finally we won.

        That nukes are expensive is not the reason. We simply had to many near accidents in the nukes, and they are all placed at places were with modern knowledge/regulations no one ever would be allowed to build one anyway.

  • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @05:29AM (#62051397)

    >Large mammals like polar bears have struggled to navigate shrinking habitats

    Ah yes, the old propaganda of late 1900s and early 2000s. It's also complete and utter lie. Polar bears have never been better as species since we started monitoring them. They have experienced a massive growth in numbers in recent times.

    Turns out "shrinking habitat" isn't really a thing for them, because they don't actually live out their lives on the ice but over land. Almost nothing lives on the ice. Polar bears mostly live on the northern edges of the continents, and they thrive there today to the point where humans have to start culling them again, as there's so many of them, they are now disturbing the northern settlements and towns across the continental Arctic, especially in Asia and North America.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Strange. We stopped killing them. And their numbers went up. Must have been a lucky coincidence.
    • When they pulled that oh-the-poor-polar-bear thing, I pointed out that its the top of the food chain. Think of all the baby seals you are saving!! I mean if I had to choose which one to save, Id go with the baby seal. Its not going to track me, hunt me, and eat me :-)
      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        Seals are also thriving, because as temperature goes up, so does the energy state (amount of energy usable by the ecosystem through photosynthesis) of the region. More food generally means more biomass, which means more life. We live in historically cold period in the planet's existence, which is why megafauna that was so prevalent in the past is overwhelmingly dead. Large mammals are now the top of the foodchain, and not terribly surprisingly, they're thriving as more and more of things they eat are around

  • Welcome our new Shamu overlords.

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

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