Soil Database to Help Map CO2 Storage, Food Output

Soil Database to Help Map CO2 Storage, Food Output
Mon Jul 21, 2008 3:21pm EDT

MILAN (Reuters) – New database of the world’s soils will help better map agricultural output and storage and sequestration of heat trapping carbon dioxide (CO2), one of its creators, the United Nations’ food agency FAO, said on Monday.

Using the database, UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization has also produced a global Carbon Gap Map to help identify areas with considerable soil carbon storage and degraded soils where billions of tons of CO2 could be sequestrated, it said.

“Soil information has often been the one missing information layer, the absence of which has added to the uncertainties of predicting the potential for and constraints to food and fiber production as well as the capacity of soils to hold carbon and to act as a sink,” FAO said in a statement.

The new worldwide database provides improved information about soils necessary for carbon trading and it can also help agronomists, farm experts and scientists to plan sustainable agricultural production and improve land management, it said.

(Reporting by Svetlana Kovalyova, editing by Anthony Barker)

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How John McCain Doomed Mount Graham

How John McCain Doomed Mount Graham

Star Whores

By JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

We waited for a night when the moon was obscured by clouds. It sounded like a silly plan here in the heart of the Arizona desert, where Oregonians stream each year to worship the unrelenting sun.

But the wait was only two days. Then the sky clouded up, just as the Apaches predicted. These weren’t rain clouds, just a smoke-blue skein, thin as morning fog, but dense enough to dull the moonlight and shield our passage across forbidden ground.

We were going to see the scopes. The mountain was under lockdown. Armed guards, rented by the University of Arizona, blocked passage up the new road and patrolled the alpine forest on the crest of Mount Graham. Only certified astronomers and construction workers were permitted entry. And university donors. And Vatican priests.

But not environmentalists. And not Apaches. Not at night, anyway. Not any more.

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Antarctic Icebergs Scouring Seabed are New Threat to Marine Life

Published on Friday, July 18, 2008 by Telegraph/UK

Antarctic Icebergs Scouring Seabed are New Threat to Marine Life

Antarctic marine life is coming under increasing threat from icebergs that are scouring the seabed and destroying their habitat, a new study by the British Antarctic Survey has found.

Shrinking sea ice is significantly increasing the rate at which the icebergs scour the seabed and the study predicts that the Antarctic Peninsula is going to get hit more frequently.

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