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2008 World News Archive
AP:RT:Environ Science Computers 1 Ap...
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#6
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Posted
4/1/05 2:33 PM
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Gerard <Sysop>
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.6
193919.1
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Company Sees Fuel in Citrus Peel
APO 01/04/2005 04:23
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
Associated Press Writer
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Florida, the nation's largest citrus producer, each year creates about 8 million tons of orange peel waste that mostly goes to cattle feed. But researchers at a Fort Lauderdale-based company want to convert some of the peels into methanol, which can be used as an energy source.
Ener1 Inc. is working on a $1.1 million project to convert the hydrogen-rich gas released from citrus peels for use in fuel cells at a model interstate rest stop.
"It's a big part of the waste here in the state of Florida," said Pankaj Dhingra, president of Ener1. The nonprofit Florida Hydrogen Initiative Inc. has given Ener1 a $550,000 grant to help complete the project by next year.
The goal is to create "a road show" for millions of motorists to demonstrate the potential of hydrogen energy, not to mention get rid of citrus peel waste.
Most of Florida's oranges are processed into juice. Eventually, Ener1 researchers hope to try using other forms of waste, such as trash from Orlando's theme parks, to create the methanol.
"We need something besides gasoline and this is one way to get there," said Jim Griffiths, the 90-year-old managing director at Citrus Grower Associates Inc. "If orange waste can be helpful, that's great."
Central Florida has been the location of several such hydrogen-power projects.
In February, Gov. Jeb Bush and Ford Motor Co. executive Bill Ford helped introduce the state's first hydrogen fueling station for buses. The buses will be used to shuttle car rental customers at Orlando International Airport and tourists at the NASA visitor center.
Last May, Ford and BP America selected Florida as one of three sites nationwide to demonstrate hydrogen fuel cell cars.
So far, Ener1 researchers have created 1-kilowatt and 150-watt fuel cell prototypes. They hope to have a 10-kilowatt fuel cell completed over the next 18 months for the rest stop.
If all goes according to plan, five fuel cells, each the size of three car batteries, will be used at the as-yet unbuilt rest stop.
The methanol will be extracted from the orange peels through a distillation process and stored in an offsite tank. The fuel cells will be resupplied with methanol every two or three days.
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#7
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Posted
4/1/05 2:34 PM
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Gerard <Sysop>
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3/19/09
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.7
193919.1
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Snowplaners Sue Over Grand Teton Lake Ban
APO 01/04/2005 00:14
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) -- A group of snowplane operators has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to lift a ban on the craft in Grand Teton National Park.
The lawsuit, filed Tuesday, said the National Park Service considered only two alternatives -- allowing unrestricted use of snowplanes or banning them completely -- without considering reasonable limits before deciding to bar snowplanes from Jackson Lake after the 2001-2002 winter season.
A snowplane is a small craft on runners powered by an airplane engine with a propeller; it does not leave the ground. Before officials banned snowplanes, citing their noise, about 125 people had permits to operate them on the lake.
Snowplane owner and former permit holder Bob Zimmer said the park service targeted snowplanes because they were easier to eliminate than snowmobiles. More than 800 snowmobiles operate in Yellowstone and Grand Teton parks during the winter, compared with a total of 125 snowplanes.
"We're just a bunch of working class folks, and they stomped on us," Zimmer said.
The park service has said snowplanes harmed park resources.
Michael Scott, executive director of the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, said both the Clinton administration and current Bush administration approved the ban.
"We value our parks for the quiet serenity and beauty, but snowplanes were clearly impairing them," Scott said.
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#8
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Posted
4/1/05 2:34 PM
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Gerard <Sysop>
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3/19/09
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.8
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British Wholesaler Files Flu Shot Claim
APO 31/03/2005 23:37
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By MAURA KELLY LANNAN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) -- A British wholesaler that Gov. Rod Blagojevich hired to provide thousands of flu vaccine doses for Illinois has filed a complaint demanding nearly $2.6 million that the state's chief financial officer has refused to pay.
Blagojevich ordered the vaccine from Europe last fall amid fears of a national flu shot shortage. While the state had a contract to buy the doses, it couldn't import them because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration never approved the European vaccine.
Ecosse Hospital Products Ltd. says the state still owes it for 254,250 doses. It filed a complaint March 16 with the Illinois Court of Claims accusing the state of breach of contract.
State Comptroller Dan Hynes has argued the FDA's refusal to allow the imports should let the state cancel the contract. He cited a provision that allows termination for "unforeseeable circumstances beyond its reasonable control, including ... governmental regulation."
"We believe we took proper action based on the language of the contract," Hynes spokesman Alan Henry said.
Ecosse lawyer Stephen Tagge said the complaint was filed in the Illinois Court of Claims because the state's contract directed that any claim arising from the contract be filed there. He declined to comment further.
A commissioner will be assigned to hear the case and make a recommendation to the court. The state has 60 days to respond to Ecosse's complaint, said Melissa Merz, spokeswoman for Attorney General Lisa Madigan.
Blagojevich drew national attention in October when he arranged to buy 700,000 doses of flu vaccine overseas amid worries over a U.S. shortage of the vaccine. New York City, Cleveland and New Mexico signed onto the deal, but the FDA never gave its approval to bring the vaccine into the country.
Jordan Barowitz, a spokesman for New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, said he did not know if Ecosse had filed a complaint against the city, but said the city has not paid Illinois for the flu shots. Officials from Cleveland and New Mexico said Ecosse had not filed complaints against them.
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#9
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Posted
4/1/05 2:34 PM
From
Gerard <Sysop>
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3/19/09
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.9
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Ships No Longer Allowed to Dump Ballast
APO 31/03/2005 23:18
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By TERENCE CHEA
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A federal judge ruled Thursday the government can no longer allow ships to dump without a permit any ballast water containing nonnative species that could harm local ecosystems.
U.S. District Judge Susan Illston ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to immediately repeal regulations exempting ship operators from having to obtain such permits.
"This is a slam dunk for healthy oceans," said Sarah Newkirk, clean water advocate for the Washington, D.C.-based Ocean Conservancy. "The court decision will prevent a vast amount of pollutants from the shipping industry from entering U.S. waters."
EPA officials did not immediately return calls seeking comment.
In 1999, the Ocean Conservancy and four other environmental groups petitioned the EPA to repeal the ballast-water exemption. They claimed the Clean Water Act prohibits the discharge of pollutants, including biological materials -- such as invasive species -- into U.S. waters without a permit.
When the EPA denied the petition, the conservation groups filed a lawsuit in federal court in San Francisco in 2003.
Invasive species are known to cause significant economic and environmental damage. Marine species such as mollusks often are inadvertently transported in the ballast water of ships and discharged at ports far from their origins.
The bay's two most destructive species that originated in ballast water are Chinese mitten crabs, which clog irrigation and drinking water pipes, and Asian clams, which consume large amounts of plankton at the expense of other marine species.
Invasive species in San Francisco Bay cause more than $40 million in economic damage each year, Newkirk said.
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#10
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Posted
4/1/05 2:35 PM
From
Gerard <Sysop>
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3/19/09
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.10
193919.1
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Digital-Photo Era Changes Industry
APO 31/03/2005 22:34
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By BEN DOBBIN
AP Business Writer
biz--topic:Product;
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -- Jesse Eisenberg came within a technological whisker of losing all her honeymoon snapshots. The 31-year-old lawyer's digital images, stored on an online photography site, vanished while she was in the hospital this winter having her first child. She had given up all hope of retrieving them when they suddenly reappeared on her computer more than a month later.
"I can't believe we got them back!" she exclaimed. "Oh my God, I'm going to be printing all day today."
It's a refrain that sets the photo industry's heart racing.
As the digital revolution sidelines film, the photo industry is having to rely more heavily on high-margin services and supplies -- inks, chemicals, paper -- that go into making prints.
Yet the picture is not quite as it seems.
While there's no hint of a falloff in the desire of Americans to freeze-frame the world around them, the overall number of images converted into prints has been slipping since the dawn of the 21st century.
The drop-off coincided with the lightning transition to a world without film. A few years ago, there wasn't a framework in place to help digital shutterbugs print easily or cheaply.
Digital cameras are now in about 43 million homes in America, and that 40 percent penetration could reach 70 percent by 2007. The more mainstream they become, some analysts argue, the more likely that old printing habits will re-establish themselves.
"Everybody treasures memories, and what makes memories more vivid than a photograph, a print?" said Ulysses Yannas of Buckman, Buckman & Reid in New York. That impulse, he thinks, "will not fade, it's human nature."
Bolstering Yannas' belief is a recent frenzy of acquisitions of online photo startups, which are projected to churn out 700 million prints this year, up from 400 million in 2004.
Others dismiss the notion of shoe boxes filling up to the brim again as wishful thinking.
"The pie isn't necessarily going to get any bigger," said Frank Baillargeon, an industry consultant in Eagle, Idaho. "But the pie is going to be sliced up in many, many different ways.
"In the digital era, you can see your pictures immediately, share them instantaneously, store them in a variety of arguably safe ways and print them selectively. My children's generation is so comfortable with technology that the need to just have a print in your hand or in a shoe box doesn't sound like a very compelling proposition."
Manufacturers like Eastman Kodak Co., however, think the meteoric rise of camera phones could turn the lucrative print business into a growth market again, possibly within two years.
Aside from rushing higher-resolution cameras, speedier printers, fancier software and all-purpose kiosks into the marketplace, they're employing all their marketing tricks to mold consumer habits and transform electronically stored images into prints of all varieties.
Their campaigns run from scaremongering about the perils of letting pictures languish on computers that might crash to behavior-reinforcing TV ads by Rochester-based Kodak in which new digital patrons shout out "Where are my pictures?"
In the United States, prints ordered from retailers and Web sites or made at home fell from a peak of 30.3 billion in 2000 to 27.4 billion in 2004 and could dip to 25.9 billion this year, according to Photo Marketing Association International, a trade group in Jackson, Mich.
Propelled by price wars among retailers led by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Costco Inc. and online upstarts like Snapfish and Shutterfly.com, prints from digital cameras could hit 7.7 billion this year, up from 400 million in 2000, and outnumber prints from film cameras by 2007.
And while an estimated 100 billion images are snapped in America each year -- of which about a quarter are turned into prints -- that could skyrocket above 1 trillion as camera phones not only proliferate but rapidly improve in quality.
"You've got the mass market going digital now and they care about prints more than ever before," said Raj Kapoor, co-founder of Snapfish, a 13-million-member online pioneer just snapped up by Hewlett-Packard Co., which dominates the ink jet photo-printer market.
Most digital prints are still made at home -- 61 percent last year compared with 90 percent in 2000. But online photo services have been whittled down of late to a handful of big players (in the past week, UOL bought PhotoSite for $10 million and Ofoto was renamed Kodak EasyShare Gallery) and retailers look likely to re-emerge soon as the kings of printing -- their digital orders tripled to 1.6 billion last year.
While electronic storage "is a great way" to share and save images, consumers need to be aware of the potential pitfalls, cautioned Walter Haug, a marketing manager at Fuji Photo Film Co.
"Hard drives can crash, people sometimes misplace their CDs, media cards can become vulnerable," Haug said. "If you're relying strictly on digital methods, you may end up with a problem."
In 2003, a computer virus wiped out all 350 photos of Eisenberg's three-week honeymoon in Africa and the Maldives. Luckily, the New York City woman had uploaded them onto Snapfish.
But misfortune struck again in January.
Snapfish issued dire warnings that Eisenberg's pictures would be deleted if she didn't fulfill her minimum obligation -- order one 19-cent print a year. Instead of taking quick action, she spent weeks creating a honeymoon album. She was just about to order one when she went into labor.
By the time Eisenberg returned home, the photos were gone -- she thought for good.
But a call to Snapfish in February turned up her treasured collection. Snapfish, it turns out, keeps deleted files for an extra month or so.
A grateful Eisenberg's advice to all: "Print early and often."
------
On the Net:
Photo industry research firms: www.idc.com; www.infotrends-rgi.com; www.pmai.org
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#11
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Posted
4/1/05 2:36 PM
From
Gerard <Sysop>
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3/19/09
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.11
193919.1
]
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Biologists Planning Long Look at Pelicans
APO 31/03/2005 22:26
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By JAMES MacPHERSON
Associated Press Writer
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -- Federal biologists trying to solve the mystery of why 28,000 pelicans left Chase Lake National Wildlife Refuge last year have bought electronic tracking devices for the birds.
But for the plan to work, the pelicans will have to return to the refuge near Medina.
Wildlife officials are confident they will come back -- and earlier than normal.
"We're predicting they'll start coming back next week," said Ken Torkelson, a spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Bismarck. "Their normal return date is anywhere from April 10 to 15."
The birds are currently at their winter grounds in Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi, Torkelson said. Chase Lake was still frozen on Thursday, he said.
The big birds returned last April to nest, as they have for at least a century. But they took off in late May and early June, abandoning their chicks and eggs. The 4,385-acre Chase Lake refuge had been the site of the largest nesting colony of white pelicans in North America.
Biologists checked air, water and soil quality at the site. They also have checked for diseases, food supply, predators and other possible factors to solve the mystery of why the pelicans abandoned their young.
Biologists are still baffled. "We may never know," Torkelson said.
He said electronic tracking equipment will be harnessed to 10 pelicans at Chase Lake. Long-range video surveillance cameras and extra crews also will monitor the pelicans this year.
Torkelson said each tracking device costs about $4,000. The device will give a pelican's location, altitude, speed and heading.
"We're hoping to learn how much time they spend at the colony and where they go when they leave the colony," Torkelson said. "We're also hoping to learn more about their foraging sites."
A fence will be installed around one nesting colony to keep out predators.
Backpack-like tracking devices also will be attached to five pelicans at Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge in northeast Montana, between the Missouri River and the Canadian border. Additional monitoring of pelicans also is planned at Waubay National Wildlife Refuge in northeast South Dakota.
Only the North Dakota refuge had a premature exodus of pelicans last year, Torkelson said.
Pelican nesting grounds will be off-limits to the public this year at Chase Lake, he said. Wildlife officials also have installed signs around the refuge, telling people to stay away.
Visitors still will be able to see pelicans feeding at prairie potholes in the Chase Lake area, Torkelson said.
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#12
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Posted
4/1/05 2:36 PM
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Gerard <Sysop>
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.12
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Asian Nations Vow to Stop Turtle Decline
APO 31/03/2005 22:25
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- Asian countries on Thursday declared 2006 the "Year of the Turtle," vowing to step up a campaign to combat dramatic declines in the region's turtle populations.
Officials and experts from 25 Indian Ocean and Southeast Asian countries had gathered for a three-day conference in Bangkok to discuss the reptiles.
Delegates agreed to set out measures "aimed at conserving habitat that marine turtles require for their survival, as well as addressing specific threats," said a conference statement issued at the end of the meeting.
The statement did not give figures for the region's turtle populations, or say what species were most under threat.
It said a conservation campaign, to be launched next year, would be organized by the secretariat of the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia Marine Turtle Memorandum of Understanding, which is based in Bangkok.
Millions of Asian turtles are sold annually as Chinese delicacies, traditional medicines and pets
------
On the Net:
IOSEA Marine Turtle Memorandum of Understanding Web site: http://www.ioseaturtles.org
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#13
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Posted
4/1/05 2:37 PM
From
Gerard <Sysop>
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.13
193919.1
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Virginia Task Force Probes Fish Deaths
APO 31/03/2005 22:24
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- A state task force is investigating the deaths of hundreds of fish in Peninsula waters last week and this week.
An algal bloom that can be harmful to humans and animals was found in one creek where dead fish were found, and Department of Environmental Quality spokesman Bill Hayden said Thursday that officials are trying to determine whether it was connected to kills in nearby waters.
However, he said officials believed gill nets were responsible for the deaths of menhaden in the Poquoson River, Back River and Queens Creek.
Reddish water -- an indication of algal bloom activity -- was noted in the Taskinas Creek area March 25, a Health Department statement said. Test results from the James City County creek showed a high concentration of a type of pfiesteria, an organism that can be present in algal blooms and can be harmful to humans and animals.
The readings at the mouth of the creek the runs through York River State Park were "the highest we've ever seen in Virginia," said Frank Daniel, regional director of the state Department of Environmental Quality.
However, readings Wednesday were normal, Hayden said.
As a precaution, the park closed Taskinas Creek to fishing and boating until it receives more information from state health and environmental experts, said Brad Thomas, the park's chief ranger.
Biologists found pfiesteria-like organisms in the East River in Mathews County, but Hayden said there was no indication that the organism was responsible for the fish kill there.
The high concentration of pfiesteria in Taskinas Creek prompted the Chesapeake Bay Foundation to call for the state to act immediately to reduce pollution in state waters.
"Past outbreaks of pfiesteria in the Chesapeake Bay region ... have occurred in waters heavily polluted by nitrogen and oxygen," Jeff Corbin, CBF's deputy Virginia director, said in a statement.
Health Department spokesman Larry Hill said algal blooms usually occur in warmer water.
"What's unusual is the time of year it's doing it," he said.
Some scientists believe that pfiesteria killed fish and sickened humans exposed to the waters of the Pocomoke River in Maryland in 1997.
The state task force looking into the cause of the fish kills includes members from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, the DEQ and Old Dominion University, as well as the Health Department.
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#14
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Posted
4/1/05 2:39 PM
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Gerard <Sysop>
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Gerard <Sysop>
[Msg # 193919.14
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Expert Finds Dandruff in Air Pollutants
APO 31/03/2005 22:23
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
The information contained in this news report may not be published, broadcast or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of the Associated Press.
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A researcher has discovered unexpectedly large amounts of dandruff and other flaking skin, fur, pollen and similar materials in air pollutants known as aerosols.
Aerosols, tiny particles in the air, are widely studied because they are an important factor in regulating climate, variously absorbing heat to warm the air and reflecting sunlight to cool it. They are also important in forming rain and snow.
But the amount of cellular material -- bacteria, plant fragments, spores, fungi and so forth -- had been thought to be only a small proportion compared with mineral dusts, clay and sea salt.
Now, Ruprecht Jaenicke of the Institute for Atmospheric Physics at Mainz University in Germany has studied air samples and discovered that biological materials can range up to 25 percent of aerosols in some areas, and as high as 40 percent in others.
His findings are reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.
The source of many aerosols has been unexplained and this could provide the answer, Jaenicke said.
Jaenicke reported that the percentage of biological materials in aerosol pollution topped 40 percent in Mainz in September and 30 percent in October. And a study at Lake Baikal, Russia, showed more than 30 percent in September.
He said he did similar studies of the air over ocean environments, on mountains and in ice cores. There was no strong annual cycle, he said, although pollen was more abundant in spring while decaying cellular matter was more common in fall and winter.
He estimated that the amount of biological particles in the air, worldwide, annually is 1,000 teragrams. A teragram is somewhat more than a million tons.
By comparison, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, established by the World Meteorological Organization and the U.N. Environmental Program, estimated biological particles at 56 teragrams, compared with 3,300 teragrams of sea salt and 2,000 teragrams of mineral dust.
The new finding means researchers should take biological materials seriously in climate modeling, in cloud physics and in hygienic questions such as allergies, Jaenicke said.
"Don't regard that as a minor contribution," he said.
The implications for the global climate are unclear, said Murray V. Johnston, a chemistry professor at the University of Delaware.
"The number concentrations of (biological particles) reported here are much higher than previously thought and merit follow-up research," said Johnston, who did not participate in Jaenicke's research.
James J. Schwab, an atmospheric chemistry research professor at the State University of New York at Albany, isn't so sure Jaenicke's figures are correct.
"He may very well be right. His paper does not convince me that I should believe his estimate, however. He needs to present a more detailed and convincing argument first," said Schwab.
If Jaenicke's estimate is right, Schwab said, "It will have small but important effects on global climate change. It will have a bigger effect on air pollution and air quality for regions of the country and the globe that are out of compliance with air quality standards."
The research was funded by the German Science Foundation.
------
On the Net:
Science: http://www.sciencemag.org
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