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Popular Science | The 'Michael Jordan' Of Machine Learning Wants To Put Smarter A.I. In Your Home Popular Science That's what the makers of Jibo are trying to create—a robot that can initiate conversation to complete tasks in the home—and they're tapping some of the world's foremost A.I. researchers to do it. Today, Jibo Inc. announces that its adding veteran ... Michael I. Jordan, Artificial Intelligence Pioneer, Joins Jibo Advisory BoardYahoo Finance all 2 news articles » |
Christiana Figueres term as the Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) has just ended and we all owe her a huge thank you for the safer climate legacy she has left our children and grandchildren. I've had the pleasure of knowing her for the entire 16 years I've been working on climate change so when she took the job after Copenhagen I knew she was the best person for this difficult position. If anyone could help steer the global community to a stronger international climate agreement I knew Christiana could do it. But could the global community really get its act together and could she successfully navigate this difficult terrain? She helped eliminate any lingering doubts with the Paris Agreement.
While the Paris Agreement wouldn't have occurred without the perseverance of many NGOs, citizens, countries, cities, and companies, it would have failed miserably without Christiana's leadership. She helped rally the world to finalize an historic climate agreement that includes new climate commitments from all major countries and set in motion efforts to require deeper emissions reduction commitments from all countries over time.
Looking back on her tenure there are a couple of traits that she embodied which I think proved critical in getting us to this point. Here are just a few of them.
Smiling. The night the Paris Agreement was agreed by over 190 countries she attended the NGO celebration and she had her trademark smile as she entered the room. I gave her a hug and congratulated her. But she wasn't only smiling after achieving historic agreements since you could often find her with a welcoming grin. I don't know if this was her intention, but I think her smile reminded the negotiators that even in the midst of difficult negotiations they were people trying to secure a better future for their citizens. A smile has a way of setting the tone for difficult negotiations much better than a straight face or a grimace.
Smart. I interacted with Christiana when we were working on similar ideas to help shift developing country action from the project-by-project nature of the Clean Development Mechanism (e.g., individual wind projects) to sector-wide actions that would help transform entire economies, not just little islands of positive climate action in a sea of climate inaction. She was a leading advocate for this changing dynamic when she represented Costa Rica and she helped shepherd through this shift as the Paris Agreement reflects national climate action plans from all major countries.
Persistent. I saw her in the halls of the UN after she had come out of a meeting with NRDC Trustee Robert Redford who called her a "force for nature" after their meeting. That is an appropriate description for Christiana since she kept at it even when the outcome looked in doubt. At that moment a lot of the key details were uncertain as the negotiating text was a mess and important elements around how countries would strengthen their targets over time were in doubt. She had a smile on her face and seemed confident that countries would resolve these difficult issues and move "us from good success in Paris to shining success in Paris". I knew she would do everything in her power to push countries towards that shining success.
Strategic. The UNFCCC Secretariat can't by herself get 194 countries to adopt a strong climate agreement. Reflecting this dynamic Elizabeth Kolbert described Christiana's job as having "the very highest ratio of responsibility (preventing global collapse) to authority (practically none)". In order to overcome this dynamic, Christiana had to be very strategic with how she helped all the key countries get to the strongest agreement possible. She used her giant megaphone to push where she thought public statements could help and she utilized quiet diplomacy where that was a better tactic.
Forward-looking. In order to address climate change, you often have to see at least two steps ahead of the current political dynamic. So you adopt the agreement that is possible today given the current politics, but include key provisions that create the conditions for even greater action in the coming years. Christiana recognized this aspect of international climate agreements as she was a strong champion of including cities, states/provinces, and companies into the global effort. This "action-agenda" can now play a key role in driving greater action so that when countries start to reassess their targets in 2018 they are prepared to outline even deeper targets than they committed to in 2015.
As Christiana leaves her role as Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC she will be missed. She helped shepherd through the historic Paris Agreement and we all owe her a huge debt of gratitude. I suspect that she won't disappear from the international climate radar as solving this issue is too important to her. This passion to address the gravest challenge of our generation runs too deep in her bones for her to go quietly.
Thank you Christiana and keep up the fight!
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
The Arctic wolf is endangered because of its very fine pelt which is wanted by many hunters. It needs to be saved and put under hunters restriction before it becomes extinct forever.
Industrial development also poses a threat to the wolf, as an increasing number of mines, roads and pipelines encroach on the wolf's territory, and interrupt its food supply.
However, the greatest threat to the Arctic wolf is climate change. Extreme weather variations in recent years have reduced the traditional food supply of the Arctic wolf (populations of muskox and Arctic doesn't find food and decline in numbers).
The Arctic wolf is a sub-species of the grey wolf and lives in the Arctic regions of North America and Greenland.
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
The Griffon Vulture is a large raptor, inhabitant of the steep cliffs and rocky areas offering numerous cavities where it will nest.
The main cause of the rapid decline in the griffon vulture population is the consumption of poisoned baits set out by people. Wildlife conservation efforts have attempted to increase awareness of the lethal consequences of using illegally poisoned baits through education about the issue. It is very highly vulnerable to the effects of potential wind energy development and electrocution has been identified as a threat.
The flight of the Griffon Vulture is a real show of virtuosity. It soars during long moments, moving scarcely the wings, in an almost unperceivable and measured way.
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
Soha is the male White Tiger of La Flèche Zoo Park, La Flèche, France
The White Tiger, also known as the White Bengal Tiger, is a pigmentation variant and a subspecies of Tiger, found throughout the Indian subcontinent.
Over the past couple of centuries the White Tiger has become even rarer in the wild due to trophy hunting or capture for the exotic pet trade, with there having been no recorded sightings of these elusive predators for the past 50 years.
Today, the White Tiger can still be found in a handful of zoos and animal sanctuaries around the world with these large and beautiful felines often being the star attraction.
Mohan, the last recorded white tiger born in the wild, was the founding father of the white tigers. He was captured as a cub in 1951 by Maharaja of Rewa. In 1953, Mohan was bred to a normal-coloured wild tigress called Begum "royal consort", which produced orange cubs. Mohan was then bred to his daughter Radha (who carried the white gene inherited from her father) with success.
Mohan was featured in the National Geographic documentary "Great Zoos Of The World" in 1970. He died aged almost 20, and was laid to rest with Hindu rites as the palace staff observed official mourning.
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
Yuan Zi is the male Giant Panda of Beauval Zoo Park, Saint Aignan sur Cher, France
The giant panda is perhaps the most powerful symbol in the world when it comes to species conservation.
Adored around the world, the distinctive black and white animal is a national treasure in China and has been the symbol of WWF since its formation in 1961.
Giant pandas live in a few mountain ranges in central China, in Sichuan, Shaanxi, and Gansu provinces. They once lived in lowland areas, but farming, forest clearing, and other development now restrict giant pandas to the mountains.
While its numbers are slowly increasing, the giant panda remains one of the rarest and most endangered bears in the world. It is listed as endangered in the World Conservation Union's (IUCN's) Red List of Threatened Species. There are about 1,600 left in the wild. More than 300 pandas live in zoos and breeding centers around the world, mostly in China.
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
Jabu is the White Lion of La Flèche Zoo Park, La Flèche, France
Up until 2009, when the first white lions was reintroduced to the wild, it was widely believed that the white lion could not survive in the wild. It is for this reason that a large part of the population of white lions now reside in zoos.
The white lions of the Global White Lion Protection Trust (GWLPT) have been reintroduced into their natural habitat and have been hunting and breeding successfully without human intervention for a significant amount of time.
The white lion is a rare color mutation of the Timbavati area. White lions are the same as the tawny African Lion (Panthera leo krugeri) found in some wildlife reserves in South Africa and in zoos around the world.
White lions are not albinos. Their white color is caused by a recessive trait derived from a less-severe mutation in the same gene that causes albinism, distinct from the gene responsible for white tigers. They vary from blonde to near-white. This coloration does not appear to disadvantage their survival.
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My Planet Experience posted a photo:
Liao is the female red panda of Beauval Zoo Park, Saint Aignan sur Cher, France
Red pandas are listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. Its population has plausibly declined by 50% over the last three generations (estimated at 18 years) and this decline is projected to continue, and probably intensify, in the next three generations.
The red panda shares the giant panda's rainy, high-altitude forest habitat, but has a wider range. Red pandas live in the cool temperate bamboo forests in Sichuan and Yunnan Provinces in China, in the Himalayas and in Myanmar.
These pandas typically grow to the size of a house cat, though their big, bushy tails add an additional 46 centimeters. The pandas use their ringed tails as wraparound blankets in the chilly mountain heights.
Red pandas are solitary except for breeding season, but in zoos most breeding pairs are housed together year-round for enrichment.
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syphrix photography posted a photo:
A pair of white tigers play fighting in the water.
Taken at the Singapore Zoo.
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European commissions' opposition to a proposed global ban will spell the beginning of a mass extinction of African elephants, warn officials from 29 African states
Wildlife officials in nearly 30 African states say they are appalled by an EU decision to oppose a comprehensive global ban on the ivory trade.
In a position paper released on 1 July, the European commission said that rather than an all-encompassing ban it would be better to encourage countries with growing elephant numbers to “sustainably manage” their populations.
Continue reading...Read more: Energy, Sustainability, Smarter Ideas, Thought Leadership, Environment, Business News
Read more: Earthjustice, Congress, Environment, Green News
Conservationists are devastated after the first two chicks born in captivity to one of the world's rarest birds die at a wildfowl centre in Gloucestershire
An attempt to breed one of the world's rarest birds in captivity has failed after the only two chicks which hatched died, conservationists said.
Efforts to breed critically endangered spoon-billed sandpipers, named after their unusual beak, from the world's only captive population seemed to have yielded results, with seven eggs laid and two chicks hatching.
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Rise of the machines: Spare a thought for the only Rectal Teaching Assistant in the UK who has lost his livelihood to a cold, metal bastard.…
William Jackson Hooker Scientist of the Day
William Jackson Hooker, an English botanist, was born July 6, 1785.
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European Medicinal Leech “Hirudo medicinalis.” Sucker is on the right, blood-feeding mouth is on the left. (Encyclopedia of Life image by Pavla Tochorová)
Thanks to a recent reassessment of specimens preserved in jars of alcohol at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, New Hampshire is now on a short list of states that can claim the New England medicinal leech, Macrobdella sestertia, as a native species. Bright olive green with small reddish-orange spots, scientists discovered three M. sestertia specimens in the museum's collection. Collected in 1936 in Suncoop Pond near Epsom, N.H., they had been mistakenly identified and labeled M. decora (or the North American medicinal leech) some 78 years ago.
Researchers used microscopes to examine the gonads of the specimens, which revealed the leeches had been misidentified. Smithsonian Research Zoologist Anna J. Phillips and Ricardo Salas-Montiel, a master's student at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, made the discovery. Their work was presented recently in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington.
Known only from Maine, Massachusetts and now one New Hampshire pond, M. sestertia is one of the rarest and poorly known leeches in North America. It can grow up to five inches in length and is a Species of Special Concern in the state of Massachusetts.
These three specimens of “M. sestertia” in the collections of the National Museum of Natural History (dorsal, top, and ventral views shown here) were collected in 1936 in New Hampshire and incorrectly identified as a different species.
Medicinal use
Despite being called a medicinal leech, M. sestertia has never been used in medicine, leech expert Phillips points out. It gets the name from its blood-feeding behavior, similar to the European medicinal leech Hirudo medicinalis, which was widely used in medicine in the 1700s and 1800s. “Leeches that feed readily on humans have taken on the name ‘medicinal,' however there are members of these families that don't feed on humans,” Phillips says.
During the 19th century, when bloodletting represented America's premier medical theory, leeches were employed by physicians on a massive scale. This fancy 19th-century display jar from the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History was used by a pharmacist to highlight his supply of medicinal leeches. Elaborate presentation indicates the high value leeches held as a commodity during this time.
Demand for live European medicinal leeches once skyrocketed in Europe and the United States as treatment to drain “bad blood” or to “balance the humors,” then the supposed cause of illness and infirmity. Leeches were attached to a patient's skin to gorge themselves. “Leeches were used as a cure-all for everything from headaches to the common cold,” Phillips says.
Hirudo medicinalis were put to work across Europe and transported in great numbers to the United States and elsewhere, sparing the native U.S. species. “Populations of the European medicinal leech were so overharvested that today it is considered a threatened species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature,” Phillips says. “Today, a different leech species, Hirudo verbana is commercially sold for medicine.” They use in modern medicine is for quite a different purpose.
In 2004, leeches (H. verbana) were approved by the Food and Drug Administration as a “medical device” to prevent post-surgical congestion of the veins. “If you have a skin graft, finger reattachment, or plastic surgery, leeches can be put on the affected area to suck out extra blood that may pool in the tissue causing swelling,” Phillips says. “Anticoagulants in leech saliva enter the bite, go into the wound and keep blood from clotting. In this way leeches increase blood circulation, reduce swelling and promote healing. Leeches have tiny mouths so it is easy to put them on the ends of fingers and noses and ears.”
Hospitals can order leeches sent overnight, starved and ready to feed from a companies like Leeches USA or Biopharm Leeches.
Fine teeth
In the water leeches attach to your skin first using a muscular sucker, similar to a suction cup located on their tail end. Next, they bite with their mouth at the other end using two or three jaws arranged like a Mercedes Benz logo, Phillips says. “The jaws are lined with very fine teeth—up to 150 per jaw—they press the jaws out and move them back and forth slicing the skin and creating the wound. Then they start sucking.”
Smithsonian leech expert Anna Phillips collecting leeches in a wetland in Maryland. (Photo by T.R. Kahn)
Only about one-third of leech species have jaws, Phillips adds. “Others have stylets or cutting plates, or have a proboscis for feeding. Almost all medicinal leeches have jaws.”
Blood-feeding Macrobdella can eat between six and 10 times their bodyweight in one meal and take a long time to digest a blood meal. “When I've kept leeches in a lab they only need to eat about 3 or 4 times a year. When they take in a blood meal they need to digest the bits of blood differently. They first eject all the plasma, then process more complex cells such as red and white blood cells,” Phillips says.
“There is little evidence to suggest that leeches transmit disease between humans,” Phillips continues. “It is possible to detect the presence of viruses in the leech gut for several months after they have fed on infected blood, but the viruses do not infect humans during subsequent feedings. Some leeches are vectors for turtle parasites, but these parasites do not pose a threat to humans.”
“The diet of leeches is still something we are exploring. Many leeches are free-living, and we do not know exactly what they feed on,” Phillips says. “Out of more than 680 described leech species, just a handful will feed on humans. Leeches are found in freshwater, terrestrial and marine habitats worldwide except for on Antarctica.”
Frogs, snails, fish
While the diet of the mysterious M. sestertia is unknown, Phillips thinks it could be similar to that of other Macrobdella species: primarily feeding on frogs, but also frog eggs, and perhaps even humans. “Some leeches only feed on insect larvae, some only on snails, still others only fish. Aside from the blood-feeders, there's a whole bunch of leeches that predominantly feed on earthworms,” Phillips says.
Leeches for sale in the pet markets beside the Egyptian Bazaar, Sultanahmet, Istanbul. (Flickr photo by RStacker)
No one knows how long Macrobdella species live in the wild, but Phillips estimates three to four years. “Leeches seem to continue to grow as long as they live. Big ones are a target for being eaten by birds, fish and other animals,” Phillips says.
Why does a poorly known leech species living in New England matter? “Because everything is connected,” Phillips explains. “In the wetlands in New England where this leech is found, there are many organisms that contribute to those ecosystems. These ecosystems have complex, interconnected food webs that rely on a diversity of organisms. All ecosystems are like a machine; to function correctly it must have all its parts in order to work.”
“For example,” Phillips continues, “leeches may be one of many invertebrates a bird eats. If there is a decline in aquatic insect larvae in a given year, the leeches may not be affected and the bird might not go hungry that year because it could eat more leeches. Having a diversity of organisms in an ecosystem helps it to maintain integrity and survive environmental disturbances, such as a flood, a drought or changing climates.”
Macrobdella sestertia has been found only a handful of times and has not been seen in the wild since 1997, Phillips adds. “The big question when you have a poorly-known species like M. sestertia is not necessarily that they have declined, it is more likely that no one is looking. This species may have a much broader distribution than what we know, but the right people have not seen the specimens. The danger right now for many animals including leeches is that if their habitat is being lost due to residential or commercial development of lands, then we may not even know that we are contributing to, if not the driver of, its decline.”
The post Discovery in Smithsonian collection broadens understanding of rare North American leech appeared first on Smithsonian Insider.
US one sheet for UNDER THE SUN (Vitaly Mansky, Russia, 2015)
Designer: TBD
Poster source: IMDb
US one sheet for TASTE OF CHERRY (Abbas Kiarostami, Iran, 1997)
Designer: Kevin Gaor
Poster source: Zeitgeist Films
R.I.P. Abbas Kiarostami (1940-2016)