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Cottage Life

What is dead pool? A water expert explains

Journalists reporting on the status and future of the Colorado River are increasingly using the phrase “dead pool.” It sounds ominous. And it is.

Dead pool occurs when water in a reservoir drops so low that it can’t flow downstream from the dam. The biggest concerns are Lake Powell, behind Glen Canyon Dam on the Utah-Arizona border, and Lake Mead, behind Hoover Dam on the Nevada-Arizona border [shown above]. These two reservoirs, the largest in the U.S., provide water for drinking and irrigation and hydroelectricity to millions of people in Nevada, Arizona and California.

Some media reports incorrectly define dead pool as the point at which a dam no longer has enough water to generate hydroelectricity. The more accurate term for that situation is the minimum power pool elevation.

As a 22-year drought in the Colorado River basin lingers, reaching minimum power pool elevation is the first problem. Lakes Powell and Mead have turbines at the bases of their dams, well below the surface of the reservoirs. Water flows through valves in intake towers in the reservoirs and is channeled through the turbines, making them spin to generate electricity.

Water levels in the Colorado River’s major reservoirs are falling to levels not seen since the reservoirs were created.

This system relies on what hydrologists call hydraulic head—the amount of liquid pressure above a given point. The higher the level of water above the turbines in Lake Powell and Lake Mead, the more hydraulic head they have and the more power they will generate.

IJC recommends government action for Lake Huron-Michigan water levels

When the level in a reservoir approaches minimum power pool elevation, the turbines lose capacity to produce power as they start to take in air along with water and must be shut down before they are damaged. A reservoir that reaches this point usually has quite a bit of water left before it drops to dead pool and water stops flowing from the dam.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation recently announced unprecedented changes in its regulation of the water in Lake Mead and Lake Powell. First, the bureau will retain in Lake Powell 480,000 acre-feet of water that was scheduled to flow down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon and into Lake Mead for use by California, Nevada, and Arizona. One acre-foot is about 325,000 gallons.

Second, the bureau will release an additional 500,000 acre-feet from Flaming Gorge Dam on the Wyoming-Utah border. Water from Flaming Gorge flows into the Green River and eventually into Lake Powell. The water level in Lake Powell was 3,522 feet on April 30, 2022—just 32 feet above the minimum power pool elevation of 3,490 feet. Dead pool is 120 feet lower, at 3,370 feet.

The bureau acted suddenly because the levels in both lakes have dropped far faster than anyone forecast. In the last year, Lake Mead dropped 22 feet; Lake Powell, 40 feet.

Extreme drought and climate change partly explain this rapid decline. Another factor is that Glen and Boulder Canyons are V-shaped, like martini glasses—wide at the rim and narrow at the bottom. As levels in the lakes decline, each foot of elevation holds less water.

Signs that your lake might have elevated levels of bacteria

For now, finding enough water to keep generating electricity is the focus. But unless California, Nevada and Arizona make big cuts in the amount of water they use, dead pool in Lake Powell and Lake Mead can’t be ruled out.

This article has been updated to clarify that Hoover Dam holds back Lake Mead.The Conversation

This article, by Robert Glennon, Regents Professor and Morris K. Udall Professor of Law & Public Policy, University of Arizona, is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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Cottage Life

Cottage Q&A: Giraffe legs in the water?

Several years ago, I was kayaking in a swampy bay in our lake. From a distance, I thought I saw the legs of a dead giraffe. How can that be, I wondered. But as I got closer, I could see that it was actually a large plant root of some sort. I took a photo; I was interested to know what it is.—Neil Poutanen, Lac Sinclair, Que.

We were interested too. Because we had absolutely no idea. (Well, we were 99 per cent certain that it wasn’t part of a dead giraffe.) Turns out, your second guess was correct. It’s a root system.

“Those are actually the roots of a water lily—you can see the leaves in the surrounding water,” says Sean Fox, the manager of horticulture and curator of the University of Guelph Arboretum in Guelph, Ont. “The roots would typically be buried in the mud at the bottom of the lake, but if dislodged, they can float to the surface.”

Neat-o! But why are the roots so huge? “Water lilies can form large colonies, where many hundreds of leaves are attached to the same root network,” says Fox. “So, while the individual leaves might look small compared to the roots, those large rhizomes are actually part of a broader network that stores food over the winter and supplies many leaves, which can cover a very large area of the surface water.”

It doesn’t take much to dislodge even a big honkin’ root network. It could have been knocked loose by turtles or fish moving around in the substrate, turbulent water during a storm, or “a well-meaning paddler sticking their paddle too deep into shallow water, hitting the mud, and pulling some roots up,” says Fox. (He’s not throwing shade. He means a different paddler. Not you.)

The roots are strange-looking, sure, “but beautiful in their own way,” says Fox. Just like a giraffe.

Got a question for Cottage Q&A? Send it to answers@cottagelife.com.

This article was originally published in the May 2022 issue of Cottage Life magazine.

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Cottage Life

Bees’ eye view: what sunflowers really look like (to pollinators)

Flowers are one of the most striking examples of diversity in nature, displaying myriad combinations of colours, patterns, shapes and scents. They range from colourful tulips and daisies, to fragrant frangipani and giant, putrid-smelling corpse flowers. The variety and diversity is astounding—consider the duck-shaped orchid.

But as much as we can appreciate the beauty and diversity of flowers, it is quite literally not meant for our eyes.

The purpose of flowers is to attract pollinators, and it is to their senses that flowers cater. A clear example of this are ultraviolet (UV) patterns. Many flowers accumulate UV pigments in their petals, forming patterns that are invisible to us, but that most pollinators can see.

What happens to honeybees over the winter

The disconnect between what we see and what pollinators see is particularly striking in sunflowers. Despite their iconic status in popular culture (as testified by the arguably dubious honour of being one of the only five flower species with a dedicated emoji), they hardly seem the best example of flower diversity.

How do insects see the world?

Different light

What we commonly consider a single sunflower is actually a cluster of flowers, referred to as an inflorescence. All wild sunflowers, of which there are about 50 species in North America, have very similar inflorescences. To our eyes, their ligules (the enlarged, fused petals of the outermost whorl of florets in the sunflower inflorescence) are the same uniform, familiar bright yellow.

However, when looked at in the UV spectrum (that is, beyond the type of light that our eyes can see), things are quite different. Sunflowers accumulate UV-absorbing pigments at the base of the ligules. Across the whole inflorescence, this results in a UV bullseye pattern.

In a recent study, we compared almost 2,000 wild sunflowers. We found that the size of these UV bullseyes varies extensively, both between and within species.

The sunflower species with the most extreme diversity in the size of UV bullseyes is Helianthus annuus, the common sunflower. H. annuus is the closest wild relative to cultivated sunflower, and is the most broadly distributed of wild sunflowers, growing almost everywhere between southern Canada and northern Mexico. While some populations of H. annuus have very small UV bullseyes, in others, the ultraviolet-absorbing region covers the whole inflorescence.

Attracting pollinators

Why is there so much variation? Scientists have been aware of floral UV patterns for a long time. Some of the numerous approaches that have been used to study the role of these patterns in attracting pollinators have been quite inventive, including cutting and pasting petals or coating them with sunscreen.

When we compared sunflowers with different UV bullseyes, we found that pollinators were able to discriminate between them and preferred plants with intermediate-sized UV bullseyes.

Sunflowers with different UV bullseye patterns as we see them (top) and as a bee might see them (bottom). (Marco Todesco), Author provided

Still, this doesn’t explain all the diversity in UV patterns that we observed in different populations of wild sunflowers: if intermediate UV bullseyes attract more pollinators (which is clearly an advantage), why do plants with small or large UV bullseyes exist?

Other factors

While pollinator attraction is clearly the main function of floral traits, there is increasing evidence that non-pollinator factors like temperature or herbivores can affect the evolution of characteristics like flower colour and shape.

We found a first clue that this could also be the case for UV patterns in sunflowers when we looked at how their variation is regulated at the genetic level. A single gene, HaMYB111, is responsible for most of the diversity in UV patterns that we see in H. annuus. This gene controls the production of a family of chemicals called flavonol glycosides, which we found in high concentrations in the UV-absorbing part of ligules. Flavonol glycosides are not only UV-absorbing pigments, but play also an important role in helping plants cope with different environmental stresses.

A second clue came from the discovery that the same gene is responsible for UV pigmentation in the petals of the thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana. Thale cress is the most commonly used model system in plant genetics and molecular biology. These plants are able to pollinate themselves, and therefore generally do without pollinators.

a small white flower in a meadow
Thale cress can pollinate itself without the help of pollinators.
(Shutterstock)

Since they don’t need to attract pollinators, they have small, unassuming white flowers. Still, their petals are full of UV-absorbing flavonols. This suggests that there are reasons not related to pollination for these pigments to be present in the flowers of the thale cress.

Finally, we noticed that sunflower populations from drier climates had consistently larger UV bullseyes. One of the known functions of flavonol glycosides is to regulate transpiration. Indeed, we found that ligules with large UV patterns (which contain large amounts of flavonol glycosides) lost water at a much slower rate than ligules with small UV patterns.

This suggests that, at least in sunflowers, patterns of floral UV pigmentation have two functions: improving the attractiveness of flowers to pollinators, and helping sunflowers survive in drier environments by preserving water.

Thrifty evolution

So what does this teach us? For one, that evolution is thrifty, and if possible will use the same trait to achieve more than one adaptive goal. It also offers a potential approach for improving cultivated sunflower, by simultaneously boosting pollination rates and making plants more resilient to drought.

Finally, our work, and other studies looking at plant diversity, can help in predicting how and to which extent plants will be able to cope with climate change, which is already altering the environments they are adapted to.The Conversation

Marco Todesco, Research associate, Biodiversity, University of British Columbia

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

26 native plants that will attract pollinators to your garden

 

Categories
Mobile Syrup

BlackBerry and University of Waterloo launch research program addressing global water issues

The University of Waterloo’s Water Institute and BlackBerry have recently entered a partnership to address water-related challenges across the world.

The Water Institute is a program focusing on the economics of water, its research, and global challenges.

The partnership has led to the launch of the Water Innovation Challenge. The goal is for professors and students part of the program to propose projects outlining how BlackBerry’s existing technology can be advanced while tackling challenges related to water, such as the cybersecurity of water systems.

The challenge will specifically be referencing the sustainable development goals outlined by the United Nations. The goals include clean water and sanitation for all and the conservation of oceans.

“The Water Institute at the University of Waterloo is thrilled to be partnering with BlackBerry to catalyze technological innovation to advance progress against the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals,” Roy Brouwer, the program’s executive director, said in a statement. “The Water Innovation Challenge will connect our researchers to BlackBerry technologies in new ways to address the most urgent global challenges of today.”

Applications can be submitted between January 10 and February 24. The program’s website provides additional resources, such as information sessions, for interested applicants.

Image credit: United Nations 

Source: BlackBerry

Categories
Cottage Life

Got plastic?!? 30,000 gut enzymes want to help

There’s a famous and often-quoted scene from 1967’s Academy Award-winning film, The Graduate, where a family friend of young Dustin Hoffman’s character tells him, “One word…. Plastics. There’s a great future in plastics.” He was trying to encourage Hoffman to start his career in the industry. But he was also inadvertently referring to the longevity of the now ubiquitous product.

Collectively, we produce a mind boggling 380 million tonnes of plastic every year. Unfortunately, only a small portion of that plastic is recycled. Most of the rest ends up in landfills or polluting the environment. And it’s literally everywhere, with plastic bottles and other trash littering everything from the top of Mount Everest to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, the deepest known point on Earth in the Pacific Ocean near Guam.

12 things that commonly wash up on Canadian shores

In a report published in the journal Microbial Ecology, researchers based in the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, point out that it can take anywhere from 16 to 48 years for a polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottle to naturally degrade. During that time, much of that material breaks down into what are known as “microplastics”—pieces of plastic debris 5 mm or smaller—with potential health impacts for a broad range of creatures, including humans.

We regularly but unknowingly consume microplastics contained in everything from seafood to table salt. Unfortunately, a paper published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials found that once ingested, microplastics can damage human cells.

Luckily, it seems like Mother Nature may be developing a means of cleanup.

The researchers at Chalmers University explained how they found 30,000 different naturally occurring enzymes found in the gut microbiomes of a variety of species that can eat 10 different kinds of plastic. They also found that there was a direct correlation between an enzyme’s ability to digest a particular type of plastic with the amount of that plastic found in a particular area.

In other words, these enzymes were evolving to develop a taste for plastic. While on the surface that sounds like a frightening biological change, the researchers, based in the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, are excited to uncover “microbiome’s potential to degrade plastics.” The hope is that some of these enzymes can be utilized for industrial-scale plastic decomposition.

Trash-trapping Seabins are cleaning the Great Lakes

 

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Potins

Babadook and Water Diviner share film award

‘The Babadook’ and ‘The Water Diviner’ shared the coveted Best Film award at the Australia Academy Cinema Television Arts (AACTA) awards last night (01.29.15).

The horror movie – which also won Best Original Screenplay and Best Direction for Jennifer Kent – tied for the prize with Russell Crowe’s movie at the prestigious ceremony, the first time the accolade has been jointly awarded and filmmaker Jennifer was thrilled to be honored by her home country.

She said: ”I’ve traveled round the world with ‘The Babadook’ and it’s been an extraordinary journey this last year

”But to be here and to have this award from my industry peers in my home country means so much to me.”

‘Charlie’s Country’ actor David Gulpilil won Best Lead Actor, while Best Lead Actress went to ‘Predestination’ star Sarah Snook.

As well as sharing the Best Film award, ‘The Water Diviner’ also saw Yilmaz Erdogan pick up Best Supporting Actor, while Susan Prior’s performance in ‘The Rover’ won her Best Supporting Actress.

Elsewhere at the Sydney ceremony, three special individual awards were handed out for career achievements.

‘Bridesmaids’ actress Rose Byrne took home the AACTA Trailblazer Award in recognition of her work both in her native Australia and in the US.

She said: ”I’m so proud to be Australian and be a part of our wonderful industry here. I salute everyone in this room.”

Director, producer, writer Amiel Courtin-Wilson received the Byron Kennedy Award for outstanding creative enterprise within the film and television industries and the AACTA Longford Lyell Award – the highest honor bestowed by the Australian Academy – went to writer and producer Andrew Knight.

AACTA chief executive Damian Trewhella said: ”The Academy in particular takes this opportunity to congratulate our three outstanding individual recipients awarded tonight – Rose Byrne, Andrew Knight and Amiel Courtin-Wilson.

”Between these exceptional people, their talents serve as in inspiration to the screen industry and to fans like.”

In the TV categories, new drama ‘The Code’ was the big winner, taking home four awards, including Best Television Drama Series, Best Direction in a Television Drama or Comedy, Best Lead Actor in a Television Drama for Ashley Zukerman, and Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama for Chelsie Preston Crayford.

‘Please Like Me’ followed with two wins, for Best Screenplay in Television and Best Performance in a Television Comedy for its star Debra Lawrance.

AACTA awards 2015 full list of winners:

Longford Lyell Award

Andrew Knight

Byron Kennedy Award

Amiel Courtin-Wilson

Trailblazer Award

Rose Byrne

Film:

Best Film:

‘The Babadook’ and ‘The Water Diviner’

Best Direction:

‘The Babadook’, Jennifer Kent

Best Original Screenplay:

‘The Babadook’, Jennifer Kent

Best Adapted Screenplay:

‘The Railway Man’, Frank Cottrell Boyce and Andy Paterson

Best Lead Actor:

David Gulpilil, ‘Charlie’s Country’

Best Lead Actress:

Sarah Snook, ‘Predestination’

Best Supporting Actor:

Yilmaz Erdogan, ‘The Water Diviner’

Best Supporting Actress:

Susan Prior, ‘The Rover’

Best Visual Effects or Animation:

‘The Lego Movie’

Television:

Best Television Comedy Series:

‘Utopia’

Best Light Entertainment Television Series:

‘Hamish and Andy’s Gap Year South America’

Best Reality Television Series:

‘The Voice Australia’

Best Television Drama Series:

‘The Code’

Best Telefeature or Mini Series:

‘Devil’s Playground’

Best Direction in A Television Drama or Comedy:

‘The Code: Episode 1’, Shawn Seet

Best Screenplay in Television:

‘Please Like Me Episode 2/07’

Best Lead Actor in a Television Drama:

Ashley Zukerman, ‘The Code’

Best Lead Actress in a Television Drama

Marta Dusseldorp, ‘Janet King’

Best Guest or Supporting Actor in a Television Drama:

Eamon Farren, ‘Carlotta’

Best Guest or Supporting Actress in a Television Drama:

Chelsie Preston Crayford, ‘The Code Episode 1’

Best Performance in a Television Comedy:

Debra Lawrance, ‘Please Like Me’

Documentary:

Best Feature Length Documentary:

‘Ukraine Is Not A Brothel’

Categories
Pets Files

Summer safety tips for your pet

This summer, ensure your pets are safely geared up for summer heat, traveling and outdoor activity. Whether they’re lounging around at home alone while you’re slaving away at the office – 54 percent of us leave our pets home alone while we’re at work according to a recent U.S. survey – or hitting the road, keep these tips in mind to ensure furry family members enjoy a safe and fun summer.

Keep cool and hydrated
With temperatures warming up and pets spending more time outdoors, make sure they stay hydrated with fresh water throughout the day. For longer car trips, store a travel water bowl in your vehicle.

For longer walks, tuck a collapsible fabric travel bowl in your pocket – it can easily be filled at any public fountain or restroom, or put to good use while you’re relaxing and rehydrating on the outdoor patio. Or you can rely on the kindness of strangers by asking shopkeepers for a bowl of water for Rover.

If you spend a lot of time outdoors, you may want to invest in a pair of doggie sunglasses or “doggles” as one manufacturer calls them. Whether you’re camping, traveling, or swimming, take a look at some of these summer pet essentials.

Keep Fido afloat
If you’re spending time a lot of time in or around the pool, lake or beach, dogs are like toddlers and need to be kept safe. Should a dog become exhausted or fall into the water, it’s important that the pet remains visible from the shore and boats, and a quality flotation device does the job.

Other wonderful inventions include special doggie steps that attach to the side of the pool, allowing pets to safely exit the pool. A specially-designed ramp-style boat ladder, which clamps onto the boat’s swimming ladder, allows your pet to easily climb back aboard after a cooling dip.

Buckle up on the road
When you hit the road this summer, make sure pets are properly restrained to prevent driver distraction and to keep pets, passengers and other drivers safe. According to the American Automobile Association, unrestrained pets cause more than 30,000 accidents annually.

With the average dog enjoying about five car trips per year, it’s crucial to keep pooches properly secure and comfortable. Before setting out, check out travel products like the Roadie seat belt for pets. The vet-approved adjustable device is made of the same type of webbing used in human seat belts, and easily attaches to any vehicle’s seatbelt system.

Keep pets away from the grill
With all the delicious scents in the air, make sure pets stay clear of hot grills and food. Instead, use an outdoor tie-out to ensure the dog is not sniffing around under the hot barbecue, and distract them with some of yummy treats of their own.

Load up on toys
Keep pets busy and entertained during long days and car travels by keeping plenty of toys on hand. Hint: For a relaxing trip, you may want to choose an ultrasonic squeaky toy that only your pet can hear. And don’t forget to get a few human summer toys of your own – like a state-of-the-art barbecue or a new chaise for the patio.

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Uncategorized

Bottled Water Isn’t Very Pure

According to a report by Cyberpresse.ca, tests conducted on several popular brands of bottled water have revealed the presence of contaminants.  At times, these contaminants were three times the amount considered normal by California standards.

The research, conducted by a group of environmentalists, confirmed what many people already believed.  Bottled water is not guaranteed to be any better than the water you can get from your tap.

The study showed that all of the bottled water tested met the federal requirements set forth by the United States.  However, the requirements in the state of California are more stringent than the national regulations.