Category Archives: Human Behavior

Earth Networks Take Interdisciplinary Work to the Next Level – State of the Planet

by Sydney Williams|December 21, 2020

The Earth Institute, through its Earth Networks program, is providing a framework of support for interdisciplinary collaboration across Columbia University, to promote fresh approaches to research, education and impact on themes related to climate, sustainability and the future of the planet. Earth Networks are three-year working groups formed around any interdisciplinary topic that relates to the Earth Institutes mission.

On December 9, the Earth Institute hosted a town hall to introduce its newly funded networks to the community. These are the Healthy and Sustainable Food Network, the Climate Mobility Network, the Environmental Justice and Climate Just Cities Network and the Habitable Planet Network.

Missed the town hall? Watch the recording here, or read on for a brief introduction to each network below.

Top, left to right: Caleb Scharf, Alexander Halliday, Jacqueline Klopp. Bottom, left to right: Alex de Sherbinin, Ama Francis and Walter Baethgen

The Healthy and Sustainable Food Network

The Healthy and Sustainable Food Systems Network, co-led by Jennifer Woo Baidal (Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeonsat Columbia University Irving Medical Center) and Walter Baethgen (International Research Institute for Climate and Society) is focused on combating the main challenges of agriculture and food systems.

One of their main goals is engaging faculty, researchers, and students from across Columbia in order to bring areas like nutrition and health, climate, economics, human behavior, policy, equity and vulnerability together. The work is expected to contribute to the establishment and development of the food-related themes of the Columbia Climate School, as well as support the universitys goal to bring knowledge and experts to the world and solve real world problems.

The network will achieve these goals by developing collaborations across Columbia and beyond in education, collaborative research and practice, and engagement and outreach. For example, the group will create a resource to identify all existing classes on food systems at Columbia; develop new courses, capstone projects and executive education material; and design a food systems curriculum for the Climate School. The network will also engage with stakeholders in New York City such as community-based organizations, food banks, local government and private companies, designing a process to support investment strategies in food systems in NYC.

The network aims to reach across the university, and its steering committee spans a number of schools and centers, including several centers of the Earth Institute as well as Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Mailman School of Public Health, the School of International and Public Affairs, the School of Social Work, the School of Dental Medicine, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Teachers College, and the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. In addition, the network leverages support from external programs, such as the CGIAR Research Program for the Climate Change, Agriculture, and Food Security and the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project.

Healthy and Sustainable Food Networks team structure and levels of involvement.

If you would like to learn more about the network or get involved, please contact Alison Rose at arose@iri.columbia.edu.

The Climate Mobility Network

Co-led by Ama Francis, a climate law fellow at the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, and Alex de Sherbinin, a geographer and associate director at the Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN), the Climate Mobility Network aims to catalyze research insights and data in order to guide the development of program and policy responses to climate mobility. The network will build capacity to teach, think, and develop policy about climate mobility, informed by an understanding of the complex interactions among social, political, economic and environmental drivers. Alex de Sherbinin and Ama Francis explain that the reason they used the term climate mobility is because it captures voluntary and forced migration that are influenced by climate variability and change, including internal displacement, refugee flows, managed retreat and planned relocation.

The group will develop a network of migration researchers, education, and law and policy practitioners across the social, physical and health sciences. The network is building on work with the World Bank, United Nations Development Programme, the Platform for Disaster Displacement, The UN Refugee Agency, and International Organization of Migration, as well as the Columbia Global Centers Committee on Forced Migration.

The network has aligned its outputs with the four purposes of Columbia University and the Climate School. The network plans to develop a trans-disciplinary course, teaching aids and tools to help build curriculum and pedagogy on climate mobility. This spring, the network will launch an interdisciplinary reading group to take advantage of network members science and policy expertise on climate mobility, and will facilitate working groups leading to journal articles. In addition, the network will produce an array of content on the topic through blog posts and opinion pieces in major media outlets, while engaging with national, regional and international organizations with the ultimate goal of guiding policy development.

If you are interested in joining, please contact Ama Francis at afrancis@law.columbia.edu, Alex de Sherbinin at amd155@columbia.edu, or Carlos Romero, the networks intern, at cfr2123@columbia.edu.

The Environmental Justice and Climate Just Cities Network

The Environmental Justice and Climate Just Cities Network is led by Christian Braneon (NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies) and Jacqueline Klopp (Center for Sustainable Urban Development), Kate Orff, Thaddeus Pawlowski, Johanna Lovecchio (Center For Resilient Cities And Landscapes Columbia GSAPP) and Natalie Greaves-Peters (Teachers College). The network is rooted in the concept that no community should take on an unfair share of environmental burden, and that environmental benefits are shared in an equitable way regardless of race, class, gender or other axes of exclusion. The Climate Just Cities Network brings these principles to life in regards to how climate change mitigation and adaptation policies, plans and actions are conceptualized, implemented, managed, and governed.

Like other networks, they have a comprehensive work plan for the next three years which is outlined here:

The Environmental Justice and Climate Just Cities Networks three-year work plan.

To get involved, they invite you to attend future meetings and events, let them know about your environmental justice work, add contacts to their environmental justice directory and help with curriculum development. They especially welcome students who are interested in environmental justice. Please contact Natalie Greaves-Peters at nhg2114@tc.columbia.edu for details.

Habitable Planet Network

The Habitable Planet Network was formed in response to our planetary challenges in an age of discovery. It is co-led by Caleb Scharf, senior lecturer at the Department of Astronomy and director at the Columbia Astrobiology Center, and Linda Sohl, planet-systems scientist at the Center for Climate Systems Research and the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. Presently a 14-person group with members from Lamont, GISS, Astronomy, Biological Sciences, Applied Physics and Earth and Environmental Sciences, the network seeks to draw together Columbias strengths in planetary science and geoscience, exoplanetary science, astrobiology, and solar system science, together with biological systems and ecological science, to develop a set of interdisciplinary research themes centered around the concept of planetary habitability.

A slide from the Habitable Planets Network presentation.

By doing this, they hope to bring it all home by understanding and contextualizing Earths evolution and present condition as a complex integration of living systems, planetary systems, and human agency. For the future pedagogy and contribution to the Climate School, they would like to develop a strategic roadmap for guiding a national habitable planet program. They want to build a student-led community to facilitate access to habitable planet research opportunities and teaching resources across departments to create pathways for interdisciplinary work and training.

To get involved please contact info-hab-planet@columbia.edu.

These Earth Networks are building on knowledge and experience from across the university, and developing activity purposefully aligned with improving education, research, community and outreach, and social goals. If you would like to get involved, please do not hesitate to reach out to these networks.

Sydney Williams is an undergraduate student in the sustainable development program, and an intern with the Directors Office at the Earth Institute.

Continued here:
Earth Networks Take Interdisciplinary Work to the Next Level - State of the Planet

Southeast Texas bars must close, businesses rolling back to 50% capacity after week of high COVID-19 hospitalizations – 12newsnow.com KBMT-KJAC

The state considers the high hospitalization rate to be over 15% of patients with the coronavirus.

BEAUMONT, Texas Southeast Texans can expect shorter lines at the grocery stores and less people in restaurants as both are scaling back to 50% capacity. Bars that haven't reclassified as a restaurant will have to close.

This is all because of an increase in our hospitalizations.

Bars are having to close for the third time this year only a few months after re-opening.

Other businesses will have to go back to operating at 50% starting Tuesday.

The Texas Department of State Health Services sent a letter to county judges in Southeast Texas Monday saying COVID-19 hospitalization rates have been over 15% for the last seven days.

That means it's time to scale back.

A Beaumont doctor says he's disappointed that we got to this point.

With all the information we've had over the past several months in terms of how to flatten the curve, we should know better and it's disappointing that we're sliding backwards, says Dr. Msonthi Levine

In the past week our lowest hospitalization rate of COPVID-19 patients was 17.88% with the highest hitting nearly 40% according to data from the states online dashboard.

Beaumonts Dr. Levine and other health officials warned of winter surge especially with gatherings that come with the holidays.

We expected the cases to go up. It's hard to fight human behavior and it's disappointing because it's almost like we're starting over to a certain degree, Dr. Levine said on Monday.

In order for the area to return to where they were at (allowing elective surgeries and businesses operating at 75%) they'll need to log seven consecutive days with less than 15% of their hospital capacity being COVID-19 patients.

The region, TSA-R, includes Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton and Orange Counties.

The letter informed officials that based on the criteria of Governor Greg Abbotts executive order GA-32, issued on October 7, 2020, areas of high hospitalization are defined as

Any Trauma Service Area (TSA) that has had seven consecutive days in which the number of COVID-19 hospitalized patients as a percentage of total hospital capacity exceeds 15 percent, until such time as the Trauma Service Area has seven consecutive days in which the number of COVID-19 hospitalized patients as a percentage of total hospital capacity is 15 percent or less.

Here's what's next beginning Tuesday at 8 a.m.

Hospitals must cancel elective surgeries and bars will have to shut down and return to to-go only.

Other businesses must scale back to 50 percent capacity.

This excludes hair and nail salons. They can continue operating at 75 percent capacity, but must follow social distancing guidelines.

No one wants businesses to suffer but Southeast Texas leaders say health and safety will always be a priority. In the meantime, officials ask that we stay vigilant.

We'll be in this into deep next year until we see a big, big downturn of these cases especially if we don't wear our masks, so I'm disappointed, Dr. Levine told 12News.

Counties can ask for an exemption and, of granted, continue to operate at 75% if the county has fewer than 30 cases reported over the last 14 days.

Hardin county judge Wayne McDaniel says he'll be requesting a waiver from the state to exclude Hardin county businesses from the rollbacks. He says contact tracing investigations do no support the need to reduce their capacities.

Currently only Newton County has reported less than 30 cases in the last 14 days according to data from the state.

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Southeast Texas bars must close, businesses rolling back to 50% capacity after week of high COVID-19 hospitalizations - 12newsnow.com KBMT-KJAC

Explained: With the coronavirus mutating, what does this mean for us? – The Indian Express

By: New York Times | Updated: December 23, 2020 7:29:29 amPeople wait on the concourse at Paddington Station in London, after the announcement that London will move into Tier 4 Covid-19 restrictions from midnight, Saturday Dec. 19, 2020. (Stefan Rousseau, PA via AP)

Written by Apoorva Mandavilli

Just as vaccines begin to offer hope for a path out of the pandemic, officials in Britain this past weekend sounded an urgent alarm about what they called a highly contagious new variant of the coronavirus circulating in England.

Citing the rapid spread of the virus through London and surrounding areas, Prime Minister Boris Johnson imposed the countrys most stringent lockdown since March.

When the virus changes its method of attack, we must change our method of defense, he said.

Train stations in London filled with crowds of people scrambling to leave the city as the restrictions went into effect. On Sunday, European countries began closing their borders to travelers from the United Kingdom, hoping to shut out the new iteration of the pathogen.

In South Africa, a similar version of the virus has emerged, shares one of the mutations seen in the British variant, according to scientists who detected it. That virus has been found in up to 90% of the samples whose genetic sequences have been analyzed in South Africa since mid-November.

Scientists are worried about these variants but not surprised by them. Researchers have recorded thousands of tiny modifications in the genetic material of the coronavirus as it has hopscotched across the world.

Some variants become more common in a population simply by luck, not because the changes somehow supercharge the virus. But as it becomes more difficult for the pathogen to survive because of vaccinations and growing immunity in human populations researchers also expect the virus to gain useful mutations enabling it to spread more easily or to escape detection by the immune system.

Its a real warning that we need to pay closer attention, said Jesse Bloom, an evolutionary biologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Certainly, these mutations are going to spread, and definitely, the scientific community, we need to monitor these mutations, and we need to characterize which ones have effects.

The British variant has about 20 mutations, including several that affect how the virus locks onto human cells and infects them. These mutations may allow the variant to replicate and transmit more efficiently, said Muge Cevik, an infectious disease expert at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland and a scientific adviser to the British government.

But the estimate of greater transmissibility British officials said the variant was as much as 70% more transmissible is based on modeling and has not been confirmed in lab experiments, Cevik added.

Overall, I think we need to have a little bit more experimental data, she said. We cant entirely rule out the fact that some of this transmissibility data might be related to human behavior.

In South Africa, too, scientists were quick to note that human behavior was driving the epidemic, not necessarily new mutations whose effect on transmissibility had yet to be quantified.

The British announcement also prompted concern that the virus might evolve to become resistant to the vaccines just now rolling out. The worries are focused on a pair of alterations in the viral genetic code that may make it less vulnerable to certain antibodies.

But several experts urged caution, saying it would take years not months for the virus to evolve enough to render the current vaccines impotent.

No one should worry that there is going to be a single catastrophic mutation that suddenly renders all immunity and antibodies useless, Bloom said. It is going to be a process that occurs over the time scale of multiple years and requires the accumulation of multiple viral mutations. Its not going to be like an on-off switch.

The scientific nuance mattered little to Britains neighbors. Worried by the potential influx of travelers carrying the variant, the Netherlands said it would suspend flights from Britain from Sunday until Jan. 1.

Italy also suspended air travel, and Belgian officials Sunday enacted a 24-hour ban on arrivals from the United Kingdom by air or train. Germany is drawing up regulations limiting travelers from Britain as well as from South Africa.

Other countries are also considering bans, among them France, Austria and Ireland, according to local media. Spain has asked the European Union for a coordinated response to banning flights. Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York asked the Trump administration to consider banning flights from Britain.

In England, transport officials said that they would increase the number of police officers monitoring hubs like railway stations to ensure only essential journeys were being taken. The countrys health secretary, Matt Hancock, on Sunday called those who were packing trains clearly irresponsible.

He also said that the restrictions Johnson imposed could be in place for months.

Like all viruses, the coronavirus is a shape-shifter. Some genetic changes are inconsequential, but some may give it an edge.

Scientists fear the latter possibility especially. The vaccination of millions of people may force the virus to new adaptations, mutations that help it evade or resist the immune response. Already, there are small changes in the virus that have arisen independently multiple times across the world, suggesting the mutations are helpful to the pathogen.

The mutation affecting antibody susceptibility technically called the 69-70 deletion, meaning there are missing letters in the genetic code has been seen at least three times: in Danish minks, in people in Britain and in an immune-suppressed patient who became much less sensitive to convalescent plasma.

This things transmitting. Its acquiring. Its adapting all the time, said Dr. Ravindra Gupta, a virologist at the University of Cambridge who last week detailed the deletions recurrent emergence and spread. But people dont want to hear what we say, which is, this virus will mutate.

The new genetic deletion changes the spike protein on the surface of the coronavirus, which it needs to infect human cells. Variants of the virus with this deletion arose independently in Thailand and Germany in early 2020 and became prevalent in Denmark and England in August.

Several recent papers have shown that the coronavirus can evolve to avoid recognition by a single monoclonal antibody, a mixture of two antibodies or even convalescent serum given to a specific individual.

Fortunately, the bodys entire immune system is a much more formidable adversary.

The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines induce an immune response only to the spike protein carried by the coronavirus on its surface. But each infected person produces a large, unique and complex repertoire of antibodies to this protein.

The fact is that you have a thousand big guns pointed at the virus, said Kartik Chandran, a virus expert at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. No matter how the virus twists and weaves, its not that easy to find a genetic solution that can really combat all these different antibody specificities, not to mention the other arms of the immune response.

In short: It will be very hard for the coronavirus to escape the bodys defenses, despite the many variations it may adopt.

Escape from immunity requires that a virus accumulate a series of mutations, each allowing the pathogen to erode the effectiveness of the bodys defenses. Some viruses, like influenza, amass those changes relatively quickly. But others, like the measles virus, collect hardly any of the alterations.

Even the influenza virus needs five to seven years to collect enough mutations to escape immune recognition entirely, Bloom noted. His lab Friday published a new report showing that common cold coronaviruses also evolve to escape immune detection but over many years.

The scale of the infections in this pandemic may be quickly generating diversity in the new coronavirus. Still, a vast majority of people worldwide have yet to be infected, and that has made scientists hopeful.

It would be a little surprising to me if we were seeing active selection for immune escape, said Emma Hodcroft, a molecular public health researcher at the University of Bern in Switzerland.

In a population thats still mostly naive, the virus just doesnt need to do that yet, she said. But its something we want to watch out for in the long term, especially as we start getting more people vaccinated.

Immunizing about 60% of a population within about a year and keeping the number of cases down while that happens will help minimize the chances of the virus mutating significantly, Hodcroft said.

Still, scientists will need to closely track the evolving virus to spot mutations that may give it an edge over vaccines.

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Explained: With the coronavirus mutating, what does this mean for us? - The Indian Express

Hero and Monster of 2020: Gerald the Turkey – Mother Jones

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When people sheltered in place this spring, coyotes patrolled the streets of San Francisco. A herd of goats reclaimed a town in Wales. Endangered Thai turtles set a 20-year nest-building record. Los Angeles, which invented smog, had three straight weeks of clean air.

Yet in the Morcom Rose Garden in Oakland, California, nature was not healing.

Gerald, a roughly 20-pound wild male turkey missing a tail feather on his left side, had been a longtime fixture of the tranquil, volunteer-tended park, tolerating the joggers, birdwatchers, and picnickers who passed through his home and sometimes fed him snacks. He liked to spend his mornings waiting in a nearby carpool line with commuters.

But 2020 changed us, and it also changed Gerald. This spring, reports of turkey attacks in the rose garden flooded Facebook and Nextdoor. Local news reports told stories of Gerald kicking and pecking visitors, even jumping on their backs and chasing people into trees. One fleeing woman ended up in the hospital. His favorite targets included older people and baby carriages. In late May the citys parks department took the extraordinary step of closing the garden to provide some time and space to work to prevent human-wildlife conflicts.

Human-human conflict followed as neighbors retreated to social media to stake out pro- and anti-turkey stances. Some called for Gerald to be cooked. The parks department got a permit to execute him June 22, then granted clemency when over 10,000 people (myself included) signed a petition to save Gerald from being euthanized.

You see, if Gerald is a monster, were his Dr. Frankenstein. Wild turkeys wouldnt even be in California without us: Humans forced them here from other states to be hunted. Human behavior also could explain Geralds transformation. The director of Oakland Animal Services believes that being fed may have caused him to lose his fear of people; locals think the recent influx of visitors to the rose garden agitated him. I would point you to his heroic qualities: Some have posited that Gerald was simply protecting his chicks.

In any case, Gerald, provided the single most entertaining local news cycle of this godforsaken year. Consider his escapades as officials attempted to neutralize him without harming him. According to Oaklandsides definitive account:

First, they tried to reinstill a sense of fear in Gerald so that he might avoid humans on his own. They hazed him by charging him and opening umbrellas in his face, though they avoided the most extreme ideathrowing rocks at him.

When the hazing didnt work, California Fish and Wildlife agreed to relocate Gerald. But first, they had to capture him. They initially tried luring him with food in hopes of caging him, but one park visitor continued to feed Gerald on a daily basis, rendering the bait ineffective. They tried tossing loose nets over him, but he ran away. Oakland Animal Services stepped in, laying netting on the ground, hoping to scoop Gerald up in a snare, but he escaped. Benjamin Winkleblack, assistant director of Oakland Animal Services, baited Gerald with robotic turkey calls, several decoy hens, and an umbrella painted with the likeness of a male turkey. All told, the entire staff at Oakland Animal Services, a number of employees from California Fish and Wildlife, and a team of twenty volunteers failed to capture Gerald.

Gerald evaded apprehension until an expert animal trapper, Rebecca Dmytryk, finally ended his reign of terror. One day in mid-October, after staking out the garden, she tried luring him in with blueberries and sunflower seeds, but then her net gun failed. So, thinking fast, Dmytryk hunched over like one of Geralds older victims and pretended to be afraid. When the turkey closed in, she grabbed him by his neck.

Gerald was relocated to the nearby hills, but within a week he found his way to a playground. A spokesperson for the California department of fish and wildlife told the Guardian that its law enforcement officers went and picked him up again and took him to another location. Stay free, Gerald.

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Hero and Monster of 2020: Gerald the Turkey - Mother Jones

Coronavirus to take years to evolve and render Covid-19 vaccines impotent: Scientists – Mint

New York: As the new variant has been surfaced that causes COVID-19, experts urged caution, saying it would take years, not months, for the virus to evolve enough to render the current vaccines impotent.

They added that no one should worry that there is going to be a single catastrophic mutation that suddenly renders all immunity useless.

According to The New York Times (NYT), scientists are worried about these variants but are not surprised by them. Researchers have recorded thousands of modifications in the genetic material of the coronavirus as it has "hopscotched across the world."

Also Read | Inside the rumble in Indias coding jungle

"Some variants become more common in a population simply by luck, not because the changes somehow supercharge the virus. But as it becomes more difficult for the pathogen to survive -- because of vaccinations and growing immunity in human populations -- researchers also expect the virus to gain useful mutations enabling it to spread more easily or to escape detection by the immune system," NYT reported.

"It's a real warning that we need to pay closer attention,"said Jesse Bloom, an evolutionary biologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle and added, "Certainly these mutations are going to spread, and, definitely, the scientific community -- we need to monitor these mutations and we need to characterize which ones have effects."

The American daily further reported that The British variant has about 20 mutations, including several that affect how the virus locks onto human cells and infects them. Muge Cevik, an infectious disease expert at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland said that these mutations may allow the variant to replicate and transmit ore efficiently.

She added that the estimate of greater transmissibility is based on modeling and has not been confirmed in lab experiments. "Over all, I think we need to have a little bit more experimental data... We can't entirely rule out the fact that some of this transmissibility data might be related to human behavior," she said.

Scientists in South Africa said that human behavior was driving the epidemic, not necessarily new mutations whose effect on transmissibility had yet to be quantified.

"No one should worry that there is going to be a single catastrophic mutation that suddenly renders all immunity and antibodies useless," Dr. Bloom said and added, "It is going to be a process that occurs over the time scale of multiple years and requires the accumulation of multiple viral mutations... It's not going to be like an on-off switch."

While many countries have suspended air travel from the UK, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo urged the Trump administration to ban travel from the UK in the US.

'Scientists fear the latter possibility, especially: The vaccination of millions of people may force the virus to new adaptations, mutations that help it evade or resist the immune response. Already, there are small changes in the virus that have arisen independently multiple times across the world, suggesting these mutations are helpful to the pathogen," the NYT reported.

"The mutation affecting antibody susceptibility -- technically called the 69-70 deletion, meaning there are missing letters in the genetic code -- has been seen at least three times: in Danish minks, in people in Britain and in an immune-suppressed patient who became much less sensitive to convalescent plasma," it added.

It was reported that scientists initially thought the new coronavirus was stable and unlikely to escape vaccine-induced immune response, said Dr. Deepti Gurdasani, a clinical epidemiologist at Queen Mary University of London.

"But it's become very clear over the last several months that mutations can occur," she said. "As selection pressure increases with mass vaccination, I think these mutants will become more common."

The new strain of Covid-19 is "out of control", said UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock on Sunday. Chief Medical Officer for England Chris Whitty on Saturday called on the nation to remain vigilant as a recently discovered variant of coronavirus was rapidly spreading.

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.

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Coronavirus to take years to evolve and render Covid-19 vaccines impotent: Scientists - Mint

Chino Hills State Park Battered From Recent Flames in Blue Ridge Fire This Year – Voice of OC

By Hosam Elattar | 19 hours ago

Chino Hills State Park keeps burning.

Again and again.

The park, located at the intersection of several counties, including the County of Orange was severely burned this year in the Blue Ridge fire.

Editors Note: This three-day series takes a look at the ongoing risks for many Orange County residents who are living near wildfire zones that are burning more often with each passing year. This is the second story inthe series. In the first story, Noah Biesiada looks into the challenges of evacuation communications in the last three wildfires.

The fire burned 8,770 acres in Chino Hills State Park so that amounts to just over 60% of Chino Hills State Park total acreage, Ken Kietzer, Senior Environmental Scientist for California State Parks Inland Empire district told the Voice of OC.

The fire itself took 11 days to contain and dealt damage to 10 structures and destroyed one.

We believe that it may have been the result of a house fire, but the cause of the house fire is undetermined, said Capt. Thanh Nguyen, a public information officer for the Orange County Fire Authority.

At the same time, firefighters were responding to the Silverado Canyon Fire that broke out earlier in the day, forcing thousands of Orange County residents to evacuate their home.

From my experience living in fire country most of my life, Its really hard to stop a wind driven fire because usually theres other fires burning and so the resources are stretched thin, and firefighting resources are depleted and so youve got the double whammy of it, youre more vulnerable and you have less resources to fight with, said Claire Schlotterbeck, the executive director for the Hills for Everyone organization.

The group formed in 1977 with the goal to preserve and protect the Puente-Chino Hills.

It was founded in the mid 1970s by a guy named Dave Myers, who grew up hiking in the hills, and just kind of ran into one too many bulldozers one day and decided somebody needed to do something about the hills that he loved, Schlotterbeck said.

Schlotterbeck said she joined the group in 1980 and worked with Myers and legislators to turn the area into a state park, which her organization acquired the land for. Since the first land acquisition in 1981, there has been over 30 acquisitions of land to expand the park.

There is still land the organization is looking to acquire for the park something they have not been able to do for years now.

Meanwhile, wildfires at Chino Hills State Park are becoming a common occurrence.

Sometimes well have one or two fires in a year and sometimes well be able to manage for two or three or four years without a fire and then something like this tends to happen, Kietzer said Unfortunately, this is not the largest fire weve had in Chino Hills State Park. In November of 2008, the Freeway Complex Fire burned 95% of the park and an area much larger than that outside the park.

The park in many ways was still in recovery from that fire.

Over the years, there have been efforts to develop homes on that very land in Yorba Linda that burnt in 2008. The Orange County Board of Supervisors approved the Esperanza Hills project that would build over 340 homes in unincorporated territory.

They only have one road in, one road out and that site burned almost in its entirety, again in this fire and it burned in 2008. Its burned 2 other times, Schlotterbeck said.

Pushback and lawsuits filed against the county and the city of Yorba Linda have fought to stop the project from seeing the light of day with residents voicing concerns about fire mitigation and evacuation plans.

An appeals court dismissed one of the lawsuits in June of this year.

JOSE HERNANDEZ, Voice of OC

Parts of Chino Hills State Park have burned numerous times before the fire burned over 60% of the parkland this year.

For over a 100 years, wildfires have burned through the area where the state park now encompasses, according to a study done by the Hills for Everyone organization.

Though fires are a natural part of the ecosystem, there is nothing natural about the size and frequency of the fires destroying our wild lands year after year, reads the study.

Following the fire in 2008, the group ventured out to research the history of the fires in the area and provide recommendations on how fires can be avoided in the future. The study came out in 2012 and an updated version was published online last year.

Ive lived here 42 years and it just didnt seem like people were paying attention to where fires were starting and what was causing them so we embarked on a fire study, Schlotterbeck said. Basically portions of the park are burning just about every year.

The study encompasses fires in the area dating back to 1914 all the way to 2018 and found that during this period there have been around 150 fires. Most of the fires were caused by unknown sources.

We identified three hotspots where fires, more commonly start and the most common place is where the Blue Ridge fire started, Schlotterbeck said. Its a wind tunnel, thats where the winds funnel through and they consolidate through the forest and the hills and so they become fiercer going through that Canyon.

She added that a lot of fires start there because of its proximity to the 91 freeway as well, caused by the vehicles passing by and sometimes roadwork.

The Canyon Fire in 2017 that that went down into Orange and burned 80 homes there and part of the park, that was started by a road flare put out by Caltrans on a Santa Ana wind day, Schlotterbeck said.

Its frustrating when you watch something that costs a lot of money to protect, burn down over and over and over again.

The park is home to a lot of wildlife and native plants to California. Kietzer said that a good portion of the damage by the fire was of low severity and that many of the trees and vegetation living along the streams should recover well.

We had some acreage of the park that was in very good condition, and supported some of the endangered species and much of that will recover naturally and some of it will have been degraded by the fire and well look to work on recovery of that and some of it was already in a degraded condition from previous land uses, he said.

Kietzer said the biggest impacts to the habitats that live in the park will be seen in the coastal sage scrub habitat home to the California gnatcatcher, an endangered species of birds dependent on the sage scrub for foraging, nesting and shelter. The cactus habitat will also be impacted.

A coastal sage scrub habitat can run from $30,000 to $60,000 per acre, its not inexpensive, it requires a fair amount of site preparation and it can require irrigation systems and plant propagation and then maintenance, he said.

Kietzer said the park may look for funding opportunities like grants to help with restoration efforts but expects the restoration will not happen all at once.

We are concerned about those habitats recovering and the impact from the fire to them and well be assessing the recovery, those habitats and the needs to do post fire restoration work as we start to get precipitation and as we start to see what recovers next year, he said.

JOSE HERNANDEZ, Voice of OC

The Blue Ridge Fire that started in late October burned over 8,700 acres of Chino Hills State Park.

Schlotterbeck said the best way to predict where a fire will break out next is where its already burned and that they have made suggestions to Caltrans mitigate fire risks.

We have to have better human behavior if we want to stop these fires basically and more cautious behavior by agencies, she said.

Kietzer said the park works with regional organizations like the Orange County Fire Authority to prepare a coordinated response for when there is a fire.

Its working with the fire authorities to make sure that were coordinated and have as best a plan leading into the next fire so that the response is effective and we can keep future fires to a minimum, either in size or in number, frequency, he said.

The fewer fires we can have the better.

Nguyen said people should be careful when out in dry vegetation.

We havent had a worthwhile amount of rain in over 200 days, Nguyen said. Anything that can cause a spark has a chance of starting the fire.

Hosam Elattar is a Voice of OC Reporting Fellow. Contact him at [emailprotected] or on Twitter @ElattarHosam.

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Chino Hills State Park Battered From Recent Flames in Blue Ridge Fire This Year - Voice of OC

Farmer of the Year – Successful Farming

With a wintertime pandemic raging outside our windows, many of us have opted to hunker down. Watching a movie in the comfort and the safety of your living room has gone from being an unhealthy way to avoid exercise to a good way to stay healthy.

A series of random connections recently brought to my attention a movie that was shot in the nearby small town of Tyler, Minnesota, and in my home state of South Dakota.

Farmer of The Yearwas released in 2018 by Yellow House Films. The movies stars include Mackinlee Waddell, Terry Kiser, and Barry Corbin along with a cast of various local folks. Over the course of his lengthy acting career, Corbin has worked with the likes of Clint Eastwood, John Travolta, and Sam Elliott.

After watching the flick on a streaming service, I wanted to learn how the movie came to be, so I got in touch with filmmaker Kathy Swanson. Kathy and her husband, Vince OConnell, wrote, produced and directed Farmer of the Year.

Is it true, I began, That you were once a dairy princess? I always ask the toughest questions first.

That was a long time ago, Kathy replied with a chuckle. Yes, I was Lincoln County Dairy Princess in 1974. But I doubt if anyone remembers that.

I asked Kathy to tell me about the genesis of the film.

Ive always liked stories, she said. When I was about 15, I began to take notes about things that I observed and the things that my dad said. The idea for the movie sprang from some of those stories and observations.

How does one assemble the myriad resources that are needed to produce a feature-length movie?

Vince and I had made about 20 shorts and decided that we wanted to do a feature film. Once the script was finished, we knew that it made sense to shoot it in Tyler. I have a lot of background in Tyler and a solid infrastructure of friends and family.

Vince and I sold our house to help finance the film. A grant from the state of Minnesota covered 25% of the production costs. About five months before we began shooting, Vince and I moved in with my dad, who lives in Tyler. We shot at Dads house, around Tyler, and on the dairy farm where I grew up, which is now operated by my brother, Dale.

So, you saved a bunch of money on location rentals. How did you get Barry Corbin involved?

Barrys name was on the list for the lead role of Hap Anderson, but we thought there was no way we could get him. We offered the role to Terry, but it didnt fit his schedule. Terrys agent then told us that Barry was interested. It turned out that Barry, Terry, and Mackinlee all have the same agent.

What was it like to work with Barry Corbin?

Barry was awesome. We hadnt worked with an actor of that caliber before and didnt know what to expect. He was really approachable and was just like part of the crew. Vince and I had a very clear vision of what we wanted, but we would always discuss the next scene with Barry.

Courtesy Yellow House Films

This flick is a humorous yet touching road movie about the misadventures of a cantankerous old dairy farmer and his granddaughter. Are there parallels between Haps and Ashleys stories?

Hap and his granddaughter, Ashley, are both trying to grapple with changes in their lives and are both trying to figure out their next chapters. With a movie, you get to tell your story with more than just words. A lot of the films humor is contained in the human behavior that everyone can relate to.

Why is Tyler named as Sleepy Eye in the film?

Sleepy Eye had an iconic water tower that I had wanted to use in the movie. Plus, I really like the name Sleepy Eye. Its unique.

How many people are involved in a typical day of shooting?

There would be up to 30 people on the set during a shoot. A good number of our crew were film students. They were young and enthusiastic and a joy to work with.

How has your movie been received?

We have gotten a lot of positive feedback from across the nation. We sent a DVD to Barry and he wrote a letter saying that he loved it and was very pleased with the result. But the praise that I value the most came from the folks in the area where I grew up.

You can learn more about Farmer of the Year.

Jerrys book,Dear County Agent Guy, is available atworkman.com/products/dear-county-agent-guy.

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Farmer of the Year - Successful Farming

Birxs post-Thanksgiving visit with family broke her own rules – Las Vegas Review-Journal

WASHINGTON White House Coronavirus Task Force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx is the latest public official caught violating her own advice as she spent part of Thanksgiving weekend with her extended family.

Before Thanksgiving, Birx told the public to vigilant and limit Thanksgiving gatherings to ones immediate households. But on Sunday the Associated Press reported Birx visited a vacation property on Fenwick Island in Delaware with her daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren two households on the day after Thanksgiving.

In a statement to AP, Birx said that the purpose of the trip was not a Thanksgiving visit, but to winterize the house ahead of a possible sale. Since she and her husband share one of her two homes with a daughter, son-in-law and grandchildren, she considered the weekend limited to immediate household even though she does not live in the second home in Potomac, Maryland.

Her son-in-laws sister, Kathleen Flynn, brought forward the information because, she said, she feared her mother might contract the virus after babysitting for their mutual grandchildren in the Potomac home, which Birx occasionally visits.

Flynns father Richard told AP he trusted Birx to do what is right.

Caught violating rules

Birx story doesnt exactly match the infamous lunch at the French Laundry in Napa Valley, California, that put Gov. Gavin Newsom in hot water. Newsom had dined without wearing a mask indoors with two dozen people, some of them lobbyists, who were not socially distanced as he flouted his own strictures among restaurant staff and customers.

After he was caught and photos were released, Newsom, a Democrat, admitted he had made a bad mistake.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed dined at the same Napa Valley restaurant three days before she banned indoor dining in San Francisco.

Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo recently was spotted attending a wine party days after she told Rhode Islanders to avoid nonessential public activities. The Democrat reportedly wore a mask when she was not drinking wine.

Austin Mayor Steve Adler released a video in which he warned city residents he might have to boost COVID restrictions if they dont follow lock-down rules. We need to stay home if you can. This is not the time to relax, he said from Cabo San Lucas.

Hours after she voted to ban outdoor dining, Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl was seen eating al fresco in nearby Santa Monica.

In August, Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak took heat when he was videotaped dining at Pizzeria Monzu feet from a singer and three-piece band in what some took as a violation of a ban on live entertainment and performances. Sisolak maintained that the ban did not apply to ambient background music.

Credibility problem

Whats the public to think when leaders break their own COVID rules?

It is astonishing to me that Dr. Birx thinks a multi-generational Thanksgiving gathering is okay for her even after publicly urging Americans not to do this because the trip wasnt primarily for Thanksgiving. This is a reckless betrayal of public trust, Georgetown University virologist Angela Rasmussen tweeted.

Stanford Medical School professor Jay Bhattacharya, an author of the Great Barrington Declaration that calls for an end to lock-down mandates, told the Review-Journal, I think her advice about the pandemic has been misguided, but this is not the line to attack her on.

Bhattacharya denounced the tendency to invent a sense of shame over normal human behaviors, adding, these mandates are not the way to get people to do things that you want them to do. The better course, he said, is giving people good information and trusting them to do the right thing.

But bioethicist Art Caplan, Professor of Bioethics at New York University Langone Medical Center, said there is a nuance to what Birx did.

I dont think her behavior is quite on the par with the French Laundry behavior or showing up at rallies with masks, Caplan said. But still, shes a role model. And people were saying that family gatherings were dangerous and you want to be good role model about that.

Caplan said he fears people will read about Birxs decision and wonder why they cant do the same: Theyre gonna say she got to visit the family. Me, too. Wheres the airport?

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjournal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @DebraJSaunders on Twitter.

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Birxs post-Thanksgiving visit with family broke her own rules - Las Vegas Review-Journal

Virus hunters delve into Gabon forest in search for next threat – ABS-CBN News

ZADIE CAVES, Gabon - The scene looks like something out of a science fiction movie, or maybe some dystopian TV series.

Six men in yellow biohazard suits clamber in suffocating heat towards a cave in the heart of the Gabonese jungle.

Their quest: to unlock new knowledge on how pathogens like coronavirus leap the species barrier to humans.

In the cave is their goal -- a colony of bats.

"Our job is to look for pathogens, which could endanger humans and understand how transmission happens between species," explained Gael Maganga, a professor at the University of Franceville.

Bats can be hosts to viruses that do not harm them but can be dangerous to Homo sapiens, often crossing via other animals.

COVID-19 is just the latest microbe believed to have taken the zoonotic path from animals to humans.

It notably follows 3 other respiratory viruses, MERS in 2012, SARS in 2003 and H5N1 flu in 1997; the hemorrhagic virus Ebola in 1976; and AIDS, which is believed to have crossed over from chimps about a century ago, possibly through hunters who handled infected meat.

BAT CAVE

Getting to the cave is hard work. The team has to almost wade through thick soil, pieces of bark and russet-colored leaves that exhale the musky perfume of the forest.

The environment here -- hot and humid and filled with natural hazards -- is tough for humans, but perfect for viruses.

Bit by bit, the scent of damp earth yields to the smell of bat droppings, which eventually becomes suffocating in the sticky air. Bees and silvery butterflies dance around the heads of the virus hunters, their faces dripping in sweat beneath their goggles.

Above them, the tree tops seem to lose themselves in the sky, and gnarly creepers hang down, as if suspended from the heavens.

The mouth of the cave suddenly rears up ahead, and a stream of bats flies out. A thick white bedding of bat droppings spreads across the ground and the rocks.

Maganga calls on the team to stretch a net across the cave's dark maw and the bats, suddenly sensing the alien presence of humans, start to hunker down inside.

But one of the scientists moves forward, shining his torch inside. Bats fly out and get caught in the net.

Now the real scientific stuff can begin. The team take out sterile swabs and take samples from the bats' mouths and rectums.

These are then carefully stored for transport back to the lab, where they will be analyzed for any emerging pathogen.

SPECIES CONTACT

To any who would blame the bats for the catastrophe of coronavirus, the scientists are bluntly dismissive.

Human encroachment on their habitat, they say, has brought the 2 mammal species into closer, riskier proximity.

"Human behavior is often the cause of an emerging virus," said Maganga. "Today, with population pressure, intensified farming or hunting, contact between humans and animals is more and more frequent."

Maganga is also co-director of the Emerging Viral Diseases Unit at Franceville's Interdisciplinary Centre for Medical Research (CIRMF).

It hosts 1 of Africa's 2 P4 laboratories -- ultra-high-risk labs that operate at top levels of security.

A report issued in October by the UN's biodiversity panel IPBES said there were up to 850,000 viruses that exist in animals and may infect humans.

Seventy percent of emerging diseases circulate in animals before jumping to humans, and each year around 5 new diseases break out among humans, it said.

Pauline Grentzinger, a vet at the Lekedi Nature Park, a biodiversity haven near Franceville, warned against the conventional thinking "that it's humans on one side and animals on the other."

"In health terms, what happens with one (species) has a repercussion on the other. To protect natural fauna is to protect humans," she said.

HUNTERS NOT DETERRED

In Gabon, every outbreak of Ebola has occurred in the Zadie Caves area, which lies close to the border with the Republic of Congo. CIRMF researchers have found samples of Ebola virus among bats, confirming that the flying mammals were the host.

Maganga has also uncovered a number of coronavirus strains circulating among bats, including some that are close to the COVID-19 strain that infects humans.

Despite the obvious risk, hunters still come into the area to hunt for animals -- antelopes, gazelles, monkeys and bats.

In April, Gabon imposed a ban on the sale of bats and pangolins, another species deemed to be a potential vector of coronavirus.

But villagers living near the caves say they have yet to see a case of COVID-19 -- and for many, poverty seems to trump any danger.

"In one night, I can earn a month's money," said Aristide Roux, a 43-year-old hunter, showing the body of a gazelle on a tree stump by the side of the road.

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Virus hunters delve into Gabon forest in search for next threat - ABS-CBN News

NIH researchers discover brain area crucial for recognizing visual events – National Institutes of Health

News Release

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Researchers at the National Eye Institute (NEI) report that a brain region in the superior temporal sulcus (fSTS) is crucial for processing and making decisions about visual information. The findings, which could provide clues to treating visual conditions from stroke, appear today in the journal Neuron. NEI is part of the National Institutes of Health.

The human visual system recognizes, prioritizes, and categorizes visual objects and events to provide actionable information, said Richard Krauzlis, Ph.D., chief of the NEI Section on Eye Movements and Selective Attention and senior author of the study. We were surprised to learn that the fSTS is a crucial link in this story-building process, passing information from an evolutionarily ancient region in the midbrain to highly specialized regions of the visual cortex.

While aspects of visual processing begin in the eye, crucial steps in visual attention start in the superior colliculus, a part of the midbrain that handles a variety of sensory input. Previous work in Krauzlis lab showed that neuronal activity in the superior colliculus is necessary for the brain to notice an event in the visual field and decide that it is significant.

To study visual attention, the researchers work with monkeys trained to complete specific visual attention tasks. While fixing their eyes on a dot straight ahead, the monkeys pay attention to or specifically ignore events happening in the visual periphery in this case, a patch of moving dots that changes direction, on either the right side or the left side of their visual field. The superior colliculus is strongly triggered when the monkeys are paying attention to the visual event, and less so when theyre ignoring it.

Krauzlis and his colleagues described the discovery of the fSTS in a study published last year with David Leopold, Ph.D., chief of the Section on Cognitive Neurophysiology and Imaging at the National Institute of Mental Health. Together they had the monkeys complete the visual attention tasks inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine. fMRI imaging revealed that a specific region in the temporal cortexlater named fSTSwas, like the superior colliculus, strongly activated during these attention tasks. This was surprising because this cortical region was not yet known to be important for visual attention.

Led by co-first authors Amarender Bogadhi, Ph.D., and Leor Katz, Ph.D., the research team designed a series of experiments to further uncover the role of the fSTS in the visual attention circuits.

The researchers directly measured fSTS neurons firing in the areas previously revealed by fMRI. These direct measurements revealed that not only is a large proportion of fSTS neuronal activity dependent on the superior colliculus, these neurons use information from the superior colliculus to represent complex visual information.

The researchers were surprised that these regions of the cortex, which are involved in higher level processing, are so heavily dependent on input from the midbrain, Krauzlis said.

The fSTS neurons activated in response to attended events and changes in stimulus, and their activity strongly correlated with the likelihood that the monkey would report seeing an event. For ignored events, the fSTS neurons were much quieter. When the researchers dampened the superior colliculus, the fSTS neurons showed less distinction between attended and ignored events, with lowered activity to attended events and higher activity for ignored events. In other words, the fSTS depends on the superior colliculus to mark which events are important and which are not.

The researchers also found that some fSTS neurons fired in response to specific images, a property found only in areas of the brain that manage high-level processing. For example, some fSTS neurons would only fire in response to an image of a water bottle, but not a stereo or an abstract image. Without the contribution of the superior colliculus, many of these object-specific neurons in the fSTS failed to fire in response to their favored object.

Even in an animal like a mouse, which has a pretty sophisticated visual system, there are a lot of shortcuts to interpret what things mean, handling much of that in the superior colliculus, Krauzlis said. But in humans and other primates, that processing is spread out and delayed, passing information from the superior colliculus to the cortex through this fSTS region. And I think that lets us take advantage of a wider variety of visual features to help us figure out what a visual event means.

These findings are particularly relevant to a condition known as visual neglect, which can occur in people after a stroke or other brain injury that affects brain areas involved in visual attention. People with visual neglect can see all the objects and events in their visual field, but often arent aware of the events on the affected side, especially when the visual field is cluttered.

Visual attention has to do with the internal management of information, Krauzlis said. The connection with the superior colliculus is important, because we think it could be acting like a spatial index, that helps you keep track of the information that youre trying to process.

The study was funded through the Intramural programs of the NEI and the National Institute of Mental Health.

This press release describes a basic research finding. Basic research increases our understanding of human behavior and biology, which is foundational to advancing new and better ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease. Science is an unpredictable and incremental process each research advance builds on past discoveries, often in unexpected ways. Most clinical advances would not be possible without the knowledge of fundamental basic research. To learn more about basic research, visit https://www.nih.gov/news-events/basic-research-digital-media-kit.

NEI leads the federal governments research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs to develop sight-saving treatments and address special needs of people with vision loss. For more information, visit https://www.nei.nih.gov.

About the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH):The mission of the NIMH is to transform the understanding and treatment of mental illnesses through basic and clinical research, paving the way for prevention, recovery and cure. For more information, visit theNIMH website.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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NIH researchers discover brain area crucial for recognizing visual events - National Institutes of Health