Category Archives: Physiology

5 tips to get you off the sofa because sitting more during COVID-19 is hurting your health – The Conversation CA

With the Canadian government continuing to recommend physical distancing measures, many people are finding themselves confined to their homes more than ever before. While some are citing the benefits of being able to work from home and having time for self-care, the closures of recreational facilities and commercial gyms make physical distancing a barrier to physical activity for many.

In response, several health organizations and groups are emphasizing the importance of meeting physical activity guidelines. The Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology recommends 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per week, which is roughly 30 minutes of exercise a day, five days a week. Assuming people are spending half an hour a day exercising, and then factoring in the 7.5 to eight hours of sleep the average adult gets, that leaves 15.5 waking hours unaccounted for.

So, what are people doing in the other 97 per cent of the day they spend awake? If youre like the average Canadian, then 9.5 hours of your day is spent sitting.

Sitting, a form of sedentary behaviour (along with lying down and reclining), is one of the most prevalent, habitual and invisible behaviours we perform. We sit in nearly every aspect of our lives from eating to commuting and working to screen time and more.

This is especially true of home-based sitting given the current stay-at-home recommendations. Netflix and other streaming services announced significant increases in traffic and new subscribers recently, while app downloads and weekly time spent on apps have also skyrocketed in the past months.

But why is sitting this much so bad? It may sound harmless, but chronic excessive levels of sitting have been associated with an increased risk of developing heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, hypertension and even some cancers. Even among young people, for whom chronic disease risk isnt as immediately concerning, excessive sitting poses a potential harm through an increased risk of depression and anxiety.

Perhaps most concerning is that these increased risks are independent of physical activity levels meaning even if you exercise regularly, youre still placing yourself at risk for all of these diseases if you spend too much time sitting.

So, what can be done to combat all the sitting we do? Put simply just standing up. Merely standing up or walking for about five minutes for every 30 minutes of sitting can help reduce your risk of heart disease, cancer and even death.

Unfortunately, its not as easy as it sounds. As a health behaviour researcher at Western University, I help people to develop action plans to reduce their sitting. Because we are so used to sitting everywhere, all the time, we typically dont mention sitting when describing activities we are doing. For example, we think of watching TV, not sitting down and watching TV.

Its difficult enough to change a habit or behaviour when you know its happening. Things get harder when you also consider that nearly every environment is designed for sitting: couches, chairs, cars, offices, etc. However, there are things we can do to make sitting less easier. Here are some practical strategies that Ive found to be useful for my participants to leave you in good standing:

Shape your environment: Just like being physically active is easier with the right equipment, modifying your space for standing and moving will make it easier to do so. This can be done by stacking some books for a standing desk or creating a route to pace in the house while on chatting on your phone.

Remind yourself youre sitting: Because sitting is so habitual for most of us, we often need a reminder to break it up. Setting an alarm for every 30 minutes before sitting down, or simply putting a sticky note on your computer screen or desk of when you sat down can be a useful prompt to get up more often.

Pair it up: A break from sitting isnt necessarily a break from what youre doing, such as working or watching TV. But if standing/moving distracts you from your task, then pair it with another healthy behaviour like drinking more water. Getting up to drink water will break up your sitting time, as will going to the washroom more often as a result. Plus, youll get all the benefits of drinking more water too.

Go the distance: When it comes to breaking up sitting time, the more frequent the breaks, the better. Incidental movement the moving we do while going about our day such as doing laundry or the steps we take while walking around our home is an easy way to break up sitting time. Try tracking your steps, and setting a step goal (aim for 2,000 more this week!) to help you monitor your progress.

Tell a friend: Keeping accountable with a housemate or friend can help keep you motivated. Most smartphones have a built-in activity tracker that can track your steps, with apps available to share this data with your social network. Competing for steps with a friend can put the health in healthy competition!

More here:
5 tips to get you off the sofa because sitting more during COVID-19 is hurting your health - The Conversation CA

The Death of Wolverine Really DID Kill Logan in Marvel Canon – Screen Rant

When Wolverine died and returned to life a few years later, some suspected that he simply healed himself. But Logan was actually, truly dead.

Comic book characters in general are notorious for dying and coming back to life, but Wolverine is a special case. With his healing factor, its essentially impossible for Logan to actually die - even when his entire skeleton is torn out of him - which made people skeptical of his supposed demise in theDeath of Wolverine series. But believe it or not, that was one instance where Wolverine did, in fact, die.

InDeath of Wolverine, a four-part series published in 2014, Logans healing factor suddenly stops working after he is exposed to a virus from the microverse. Since Wolverines entire physiology is based on the fact that he can heal himself, this was a pretty big problem. Even using his claws was now dangerous, since his hands could no longer heal right away after retracting them. Despite this, Logan refuses to try to find a cure.

Related: How Wolverine Brought Charlie Brown To Marvel's Universe

Soon after, a bounty is put on Wolverine's head, and he decides to track down whoever is after him. It turns out to be Doctor Abraham Cornelius, the founder of the Weapon X program that gave Wolverine his adamantium-covered skeleton. Cornelius has been trying to recreate the experiment performed on Wolverine all those years ago, but it cant be done without Logans healing factor, which he hopes to replicate. Wolverine proceeds to cut his hand and show Cornelius that his healing factor is gone. Enraged, Cornelius forces Wolverine to fight one of his test subjects. Logan wins, but in the process covers himself in liquid adamantium, which proceeds to harden around his body and suffocate him.

Fortunately, the admantium cocoon would not be Logans final resting place. The one-shot Hunt for Wolverine in 2018 revealed that Logan had somehow escaped his seemingly unbreakable tomb, but exactly how was not explained until the Return of Wolverine miniseries later that year.

As it turns out, this was not a case of Wolverines healing factor simply keeping alive for all that time. Logan was actually dead, and his return was only possible through a mutant called Persephone, who has the power to resurrect people. Usually, those she resurrects come back as her mindless, zombie-like servants, but Wolverine managed to remember who he was over time, perhaps due to his healing factor returning as a result of his resurrection. He tells Persephone, Im back and Im Wolverine and thats the way it's gonna be. Classic Logan.

The plot for Death of Wolverine has quite a few similarities to James Mangolds two Wolverine movies, The Wolverine from 2013 and Logan from 2017. The Wolverine also saw Logan lose his healing factor - though he regained it by the end - and the character famously died at the end of Logan as Hugh Jackmans final outing as the character, who he played for almost twenty years. While Jackman has insisted hes hung up the claws for good, the Return of Wolverine could serve as a template for his comeback if he has a change of heart.

More: Why Hugh Jackman Never Wore Wolverine's Mask

How She-Hulk Originally Got Her Powers in Marvel Comics

Eddie is a recent graduate of Skidmore College. He has written for publications such as Silverpen Productions, PreLaw Land, and Clifton Park Neighbors Magazine. Now, he is very excited to be writing for Screen Rant. His hobbies include creative writing, reading, gaming, and constantly re-watching the Marvel movies.

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The Death of Wolverine Really DID Kill Logan in Marvel Canon - Screen Rant

Exclusive: Nearly 600 And Counting US Health Workers Have Died Of COVID-19 – Kaiser Health News

Nearly 600 front-line health care workers appear to have died of COVID-19, according to Lost on the Frontline, a project launched by The Guardian and KHN that aims to count, verify and memorialize every health care worker who dies during the pandemic.

The tally includes doctors, nurses and paramedics, as well as crucial health care support staff such as hospital janitors, administrators and nursing home workers, who have put their own lives at risk during the pandemic to help care for others. Lost on the Frontline has now published the names and obituaries for more than 100 workers.

A majority of those documented were identified as people of color, mostly African American and Asian/Pacific Islander. Profiles of more victims, and an updated count, will be added to our news sites twice weekly going forward.

There is no other comprehensive accounting of U.S. health care workers deaths. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has counted 368 COVID deaths among health care workers, but acknowledges its tally is an undercount. The CDC does not identify individuals.

The Guardian and KHN are building an interactive, public-facing database that will also track factors such as race and ethnicity, age, profession, location and whether the workers had adequate access to protective gear. The database to be released this summer will offer insight into the workings and failings of the U.S. health care system during the pandemic.

In addition to tracking deaths, Lost on the Frontline reports on the challenges health care workers are facing during the pandemic. Many were forced to reuse masks countless times amid widespread equipment shortages. Others had only trash bags for protection. Some deaths have been met with employers silence or denials that they were infected at work.

The number released today reflects the 586 names currently in the Lost on the Frontline internal database, which have been collected from family members, friends and colleagues of the deceased, health workers unions, media reports, unions, among other sources. Reporters at KHN and The Guardian are independently confirming each death by contacting family members, employers, medical examiners and others before publishing names and obituaries on our sites. More than a dozen journalists across two newsrooms as well as student journalists are involved in the project.

Many of the health care workers included here studied physiology and anatomy for years. They steeled themselves against the long hours theyd endure. Emergency medical technicians raced by ambulance to help. Others did the cleanup, maintenance, security or transportation jobs needed to keep operations running smoothly.

They undertook their work with passion and dedication. They were also beloved spouses, parents, friends, military veterans and community activists.

None started 2020 knowing that simply showing up to work would expose them to a virus that would kill them.

This project aims to capture the human stories, compassion and heroism behind the statistics. Among those lost were Dr. Priya Khanna, a nephrologist, who continued to review her patients charts until she was put on a ventilator. Her father, a retired surgeon, succumbed to the disease just days after his daughter.

Susana Pabatao, one of thousands of Philippine health providers in the United States, became a nurse in her late 40s. Susana died just days after her husband, Alfredo, who was also infected with COVID-19.

Dr. James Goodrich, a renowned pediatric neurosurgeon, acclaimed for separating conjoined twins, was also remembered as a renaissance man who collected antique medical books, loved fine wines and played the didgeridoo.

Some of the first to die faced troubling conditions at work. Rose Harrison, 60, a registered nurse, wore no mask while taking care of a COVID-19 patient at an Alabama nursing home, according to her daughter. She felt pressured to work until the day she was hospitalized. The nursing home did not respond to requests for comment.

Thomas Soto, 59, a Brooklyn radiology clerk faced delays in accessing protective gear, including a mask, even as the hospital where he worked was overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients, his son said. The hospital did not respond to requests for comment.

The Lost on the Frontline team is documenting other worrying trends. Health care workers across the U.S. said failures in communication left them unaware they were working alongside people infected with the virus. And occupational safety experts raised alarms about CDC guidance permitting workers treating COVID patients to wear surgical masks which are far less protective than N95 masks.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the federal agency responsible for protecting workers, has launched dozens of fatality investigations into health workers deaths. But recent agency memos raise doubts that many employers will be held responsible for negligence.

As public health guidelines have largely prevented traditional gatherings of mourners, survivors have found new ways to honor the dead: In Manhattan, a medical resident played a violin tribute for a fallen co-worker; a nurses union placed 88 pairs of shoes outside the White House commemorating those who had died among their ranks; fire departments have lined up trucks for funeral processions and held last call ceremonies for EMTs.

The Lost on the Frontline death toll includes only health care workers who were potentially exposed while caring for or supporting COVID-19 patients. It does not, for example, include retired doctors who died from the virus but were not working during the pandemic.

The number of reported deaths is expected to grow. But as reporters work to confirm each case, individual deaths may not meet our criteria for inclusion and, therefore, may be removed from our count.

You can read our first 100 profiles here. And if you know of a health care worker who died of COVID-19, please share their story with us.

See the article here:
Exclusive: Nearly 600 And Counting US Health Workers Have Died Of COVID-19 - Kaiser Health News

2020 CRC scholarship recipients announced – Austin Daily Herald – Austin Herald

Cooperative Response Center, Inc. (CRC) has announce the eight recipients of its 2020 scholarship program, each awarded $1,000 for their post-secondary education costs.

This years scholarship recipients are as follows:

Malina Luke, sister of CRC employee Rena Cooley and a 2020 graduate of Southland Senior High in Adams, plans to attend Riverland Community College to pursue a degree in nursing.

Katherine Schramek, daughter of CRC employee Julie Schramek, is a 2020 graduate of Austin High School. Katherine will attend Riverland Community College in the fall and plans to pursue a degree in environmental education.

Avery Thompson, daughter of CRC employee Paul Thompson, is a 2020 graduate of Austin High School as well. Avery plans to attend the College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minn., to study exercise physiology and kinesiology.

Mia Fjelsta, the daughter of CRC employee Brad Fjelsta, is a 2020 graduate of Albert Lea Senior High School in Albert Lea, Minn. Mia plans to attend Wayne State College in Wayne, Neb., to double major in accounting and forensic science.

Winners from outside the state included Hudson Hawkins (Cooper High School, Abilene, Texas), Paige Narrramore (Sequatchie County High School, Dunlap, Tennessee), Amber Palmer (Cooper High School, Abilene, Texas), Emily Beavers (Sequatchie County High School, Dunlap, Tennessee).

This is the 12th year CRC has offered a scholarship program to local graduates. In October 2019, students in the communities in which CRC has offices Austin, Dunlap, and Abilene were invited to apply for a 2020 CRC scholarship. The scholarship recipients were selected in May.

As these students wrap up an unexpectedly difficult final high school year due to stay-at-home orders, we hope receiving one of CRCs $1,000 scholarships offers them comfort and support as they continue their educational journeys, said Chris Holt, CRCs president and CEO. Congratulations to the students on their high school achievements. Their hard work, dedication, and commitment to community are to be commended.

Excerpt from:
2020 CRC scholarship recipients announced - Austin Daily Herald - Austin Herald

CCAC prepared to move into green phase of reopening – WTAE Pittsburgh

With Allegheny County moving into the green phase of reopening, the Community College of Allegheny County is getting ready for face-to-face classes again."We are very excited for the opportunity to launch our green phase this summer, which we plan to have our first face-to-face classes starting on June 29 and then continuing on in the fall," CCAC President Quintin Bullock said Friday.Students have been taking online classes. But when it comes to in-person learning, Bullock said the campus will look different, including students and staff wearing masks. The college will also have smaller class sizes."Classes that would traditionally be classes of 24 will probably be now a class of eight, to be able to maintain that social distancing," said Bullock.In some cases, instead of having the traditional 15-week course, students will have one week of face-to-face classes followed by online instruction."Programs that require hands-on work, such as many of the science labs and physiology, welding, construction, megatronics, because they have to learn those hands-on skills sets," Bullock said.The Pennsylvania Department of Education has released guidance for schools reopening.CCAC will follow guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Bullock is depending on students to follow the rules too."We're hoping that they come back with learned skills already specific to what the Centers for Disease Control, Department of Health, as well as PDE, has been speaking about over the last several weeks, which are face coverings, social distancing and maintaining very good hygiene," he said.The college won't be able to hold non-educational events with more than 250 people.

With Allegheny County moving into the green phase of reopening, the Community College of Allegheny County is getting ready for face-to-face classes again.

"We are very excited for the opportunity to launch our green phase this summer, which we plan to have our first face-to-face classes starting on June 29 and then continuing on in the fall," CCAC President Quintin Bullock said Friday.

Students have been taking online classes. But when it comes to in-person learning, Bullock said the campus will look different, including students and staff wearing masks. The college will also have smaller class sizes.

"Classes that would traditionally be classes of 24 will probably be now a class of eight, to be able to maintain that social distancing," said Bullock.

In some cases, instead of having the traditional 15-week course, students will have one week of face-to-face classes followed by online instruction.

"Programs that require hands-on work, such as many of the science labs and physiology, welding, construction, megatronics, because they have to learn those hands-on skills sets," Bullock said.

The Pennsylvania Department of Education has released guidance for schools reopening.

CCAC will follow guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bullock is depending on students to follow the rules too.

"We're hoping that they come back with learned skills already specific to what the Centers for Disease Control, Department of Health, as well as PDE, has been speaking about over the last several weeks, which are face coverings, social distancing and maintaining very good hygiene," he said.

The college won't be able to hold non-educational events with more than 250 people.

Link:
CCAC prepared to move into green phase of reopening - WTAE Pittsburgh

Lost On The Frontline: Nearly 600 And Counting U.S. Health Workers Have Died Of COVID-19 – WMFE

Kaiser Health News and The Guardian have launched Lost on the Frontline, a project to document and verify health care workers who have died from COVID-19.

Nearly 600 front-line health care workers appear to have died of COVID-19, according to Lost on the Frontline, a project launched by The Guardian and KHN that aims to count, verify and memorialize every health care worker who dies during the pandemic.

The tally includes doctors, nurses and paramedics, as well as crucial health care support staff such as hospital janitors, administrators and nursing home workers, who have put their own lives at risk during the pandemic to help care for others. Lost on the Frontline has now published the names and obituaries for more than 100 workers.

A majority of those documented were identified as people of color, mostly African American and Asian/Pacific Islander. Profiles of more victims, and an updated count, will be added to the news sites twice weekly going forward.

There is no other comprehensive accounting of U.S. health care workers deaths. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has counted 368 COVID deaths among health care workers, but acknowledges its tally is an undercount. The CDC does not identify individuals.

The Guardian and KHN are building an interactive, public-facing database that will also track factors such as race and ethnicity, age, profession, location and whether the workers had adequate access to protective gear. The database to be released this summer will offer insight into the workings and failings of the U.S. health care system during the pandemic.

In addition to tracking deaths, Lost on the Frontline reports on the challenges health care workers are facing during the pandemic. Many were forced to reuse masks countless times amid widespread equipment shortages. Others had only trash bags for protection. Some deaths have been met with employers silence or denials that they were infected at work.

The number released today reflects the 586 names currently in the Lost on the Frontline internal database, which have been collected from family members, friends and colleagues of the deceased, health workers unions, media reports, unions, among other sources. Reporters at KHN and The Guardian are independently confirming each death by contacting family members, employers, medical examiners and others before publishing names and obituaries on our sites. More than a dozen journalists across two newsrooms as well as student journalists are involved in the project.

Many of the health care workers included here studied physiology and anatomy for years. They steeled themselves against the long hours theyd endure. Emergency medical technicians raced by ambulance to help. Others did the cleanup, maintenance, security or transportation jobs needed to keep operations running smoothly.

They undertook their work with passion and dedication. They were also beloved spouses, parents, friends, military veterans and community activists.

None started 2020 knowing that simply showing up to work would expose them to a virus that would kill them.

This project aims to capture the human stories, compassion and heroism behind the statistics. Among those lost were Dr. Priya Khanna, a nephrologist, who continued to review her patients charts until she was put on a ventilator. Her father, a retired surgeon, succumbed to the disease just days after his daughter.

Susana Pabatao, one of thousands of Philippine health providers in the United States, became a nurse in her late 40s. Susana died just days after her husband, Alfredo, who was also infected with COVID-19.

Dr. James Goodrich, a renowned pediatric neurosurgeon, acclaimed for separating conjoined twins, was also remembered as a renaissance man who collected antique medical books, loved fine wines and played the didgeridoo.

Some of the first to die faced troubling conditions at work. Rose Harrison, 60, a registered nurse, wore no mask while taking care of a COVID-19 patient at an Alabama nursing home, according to her daughter. She felt pressured to work until the day she was hospitalized. The nursing home did not respond to requests for comment.

Thomas Soto, 59, a Brooklyn radiology clerk faced delays in accessing protective gear, including a mask, even as the hospital where he worked was overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients, his son said. The hospital did not respond to requests for comment.

The Lost on the Frontline team is documenting other worrying trends. Health care workers across the U.S. said failures in communication left them unaware they were working alongside people infected with the virus. And occupational safety experts raised alarms about CDC guidance permitting workers treating COVID patients to wear surgical masks which are far less protective than N95 masks.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the federal agency responsible for protecting workers, has launched dozens of fatality investigations into health workers deaths. But recent agency memos raise doubts that many employers will be held responsible for negligence.

As public health guidelines have largely prevented traditional gatherings of mourners, survivors have found new ways to honor the dead: In Manhattan, a medical resident played a violin tribute for a fallen co-worker; a nurses union placed 88 pairs of shoes outside the White House commemorating those who had died among their ranks; fire departments have lined up trucks for funeral processions and held last call ceremonies for EMTs.

The Lost on the Frontline death toll includes only health care workers who were potentially exposed while caring for or supporting COVID-19 patients. It does not, for example, include retired doctors who died from the virus but were not working during the pandemic.

The number of reported deaths is expected to grow. But as reporters work to confirm each case, individual deaths may not meet our criteria for inclusion and, therefore, may be removed from our count.

You can read our first 100 profiles here. And if you know of a health care worker who died of COVID-19, please share their story with us.

Continued here:
Lost On The Frontline: Nearly 600 And Counting U.S. Health Workers Have Died Of COVID-19 - WMFE

Graduates sum up their MSU experience in one word – The Wichitan

Ashma Henry. Photo courtesy of Ashma Henry.

Ashma Henry | Computer science graduate

One word: fulfilling.

I use this word as in most cases individuals dont know their own strength until strength is the only thing you can rely on to get through the semester. These past years have definitely pushed me past what I thought was my limit, allowing me to develop the abilities and characteristics that I assumed were dormant: fulfillment not only in the educational field but also as it pertains to being well rounded. Joining different organizations and working with different personalities has definitely changed my perspective of life and I will always value this experience.

Jocelyn Miranda | Business administration graduate

One word: worried.

I chose the word worried, because I have always been the type of person to know what comes next and who always has a plan, but graduating was really the last part of my life that I truly had planned for. Im not sure what the future holds, and its kind of intimidating to not know what comes next especially with everything going on right now in the world.

Yelena Nemchen-Rueda | Exercise physiology graduate

One word: excited.

There is so much more to explore in this world, and I will finally be able to have a weekend to do whatever I want and not spend it doing homework and getting the assignments done.

Yelena Nemchen-Rueda | Exercise physiology graduate

One word: excited.

There is so much more to explore in this world, and I will finally be able to have a weekend to do whatever I want and not spend it doing homework and getting the assignments done.

Ramon Rueda | Exercise physiology graduate

One word: motivation.

I think that now I have sufficient knowledge as well as experience to share with children as I want to teach high school and coach track and field.

Alexis Walsh | Nursing graduate

One word: accomplished.

Ive worked really hard to get to where I am at today, and this achievement just solidifies that all the struggles were worth it!!

Brendan Wynne | mass communication graduate

One word: lackluster.

Dont get me wrong, I couldnt be more thrilled to be done, but I didnt realize that March 11 was the last day I was going to see most of my classmates, you know? I didnt realize that the whole world would suffer a pandemic, or that my graduation would be null and void.

I didnt get the chance to make the documentary that I had intended, but I got to make something very different and unique in its place. So, I am also grateful.

Hannah Mattinson | Education graduate

One word: excited.

I know thats corny and about as basic as can be but Im ready for the next step in life. I had a great time at MSU but I think Im ready to move on and start what Ive been preparing for. Were leaving Wichita Falls and getting jobs and its exciting to have this huge change and to keep moving forward.

Javier Fuerte | Sport and leisure studies graduate

One word: proud.

[I chose proud] because I am a first-generation Hispanic student and it brings me and my family a ton of emotions and overall feeling of pride to be able to have achieved this goal.

Sarah Glawe | Education graduate

One word: excited.

While I am sad about leaving MSU, I cant wait to see what the next chapter holds!

Jernelle Baptiste | Management information systems graduate

When I think of graduation, I think of the word accomplishment.

Being the eldest sibling and a first generation student, I felt compelled to do well. I wanted to be a great role model for my siblings. I wanted to show them that they can accomplish anything they set their mind to.

Read more here:
Graduates sum up their MSU experience in one word - The Wichitan

UW-Green Bay, Manitowoc Professor has been helping intelligent lab rats find good homes for the last 20 years | Good News Network – UWGB

Dozens of lab rats have been given happy retirements thanks to a professor of physiology and biology in Wisconsin.

Prof. Richard Hein of the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Manitowoc Campus has been helping his lab rats find forever homes after his first and second-year students complete their introduction to anatomy courses.

Source: For the Last 20 Years, College Professor Has Been Helping Intelligent Lab Rats Find Good Homes | Good News Network

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UW-Green Bay, Manitowoc Professor has been helping intelligent lab rats find good homes for the last 20 years | Good News Network - UWGB

In memoriam gift to the Academy celebrates the life and work of Professor Sally Smith – Australian Academy of Science

May 29, 2020

Academy Fellow Professor Andrew Smith recently made a donation in memory of his wife Professor Sally Smith FAA to support two Academy awards for PhD students and early- to mid-career researchers. The awards are the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Travelling Research Award and the Max Day Environmental Science Fellowship Award.

Andrew said that Sallyunderstood the challenges of being a young researcher and it is fitting that this gift supports these awards.

Sally died suddenly in September 2019, aged 78, after a distinguished research career based at the University of Adelaide. Sally, who was elected to the Academy in 2001, was a world authority on soil-plant reactions. Andrew and daughters Caroline and Hilary decided that these Academy awards fit well with Sallys ongoing commitment to train and mentor young scientists as they seek to develop their research careers, and to the importance of travel to establish links in research. They were attracted by the emphasis on multi-disciplinary research involving environmental science and thatespecially in the case of the relatively new Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Awardthey can extend into social sciences.

An unusual honour, announced soon after Sallys death, was her inclusion in a select list of just 46 women associated with the University of Adelaide from many walks of life who have helped blaze the trail for gender equality.

In her own words, Sally said that her career: depended on accidents, incredible mentors and collaborators, persistence and a hefty measure of good luck. For younger scientists she said: Never give up and collaborate whenever you can. She summarised her career in an invited profile, published in New Phytologist, a prominent journal with which she had a long association (New Phytologist 2019, 221: 648-9).

Professor Tim Cavagnaro, formerly Sallys PhD student, who went on to work overseas and is now back at the University of Adelaide as leader of the Soil Ecology group on the Waite campus, writes:

Sally took a physiologists approach to her research; that is, she wanted to know how things work. And when experiments did not work she would advise that it was all part of lifes rich tapestry. Sally used many tools and techniques in her research, including whole plant physiology, molecular biology, morphological studies, mycorrhiza defective mutants, and isotope tracing.

The Academy gratefully acknowledges this generous gift that will provide research opportunities to young researchers for many years to come through its annual Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Scientist Travelling Research Awardand Max Day Environmental Science Fellowship Award.

Continued here:
In memoriam gift to the Academy celebrates the life and work of Professor Sally Smith - Australian Academy of Science

ZLI’s Beached Campaign to Combat Bigotry in Wildlife Conservation – CSRwire.com

NEW YORK, Jun. 02 /CSRwire/ - The Zoological Lighting Institute (ZLI) has announced ZLIs Beached Campaign to overcome the structural and cultural bigotries that hinder animal sciences. Formed as an initiative to provide photobiology grants for researchers and animal keepers studying whales and dolphins, ZLIs Beached Campaign recognizes the challenges that racial, cultural and economic bias pose for viable scientific communication and dialogue. Grant applications for aid are due to ZLI by 1 August 2020, with an online monthly lecture and symposium series set to begin on 9 September, 2020.

Wildlife conservation has not been immune to the challenges of bigotry, no more so than other areas of life. Bias takes root at least three levels across the environmentally necessary sciences of light and life; by influencing the sciences directly and changing the questions researchers ask, in limiting participation of who gets to ask questions, and also by limiting the desire to apply the knowledge of science inclusively.ZLIs Beached Campaignbegan by mobilizing stakeholder offense at anti-asian racism prevalent in media such asWhale WarsandThe Cove, but the challenges that bias and bigotry present for science in general have root in a much wider and deeper history that continues to harm us today.

Structural bias and racism in environmentalism and the sciences has to be confronted it cannot be left to chance or simply ignored as a reflection of our times remarked ZLI Executive Director Dr. James Karl Fischer PhD. ZLI had chosen whales, specifically the deep diving Black Bairds Beaked Whale identified in Japan in 2019, as an icon of an animal capable of creating vision in an incredible range of environmental circumstances. Whales too, are so important to so many people around the globe, identified in histories and cultures sporting figures as diverse as Paikea, Ahab, Bake-kujira, Willie, Pinocchios Monstro and with a sleight of hand, Jonah. This diversity of appreciation and engagement are a vital aspect of civil human life, and it is far different than bias and bigotry which seeks to unify understanding under intractable one-sided violence. Engagement, not division, remains the touchstone of this campaign.

ZLIs Beached Campaign is set to fund research in the form of grants, scholarships and pending additional funding, a potential post-doctoral position within the Institute itself. The Awards Committee will consider projects studying cetaceans of all species, including a distinct PhotoDiversity Award for the encouragement of diversity in science as has been the case in years past. ZLIs PhotoSciences Research funds exploration in photo-physiology, sensory ecology and light based community interactions (integrative photo-biology). Candidates for the initial grant distribution will be selected on 1 August 2020.

ZLI perpetually seeks candidates for ZLIs Beached Campaign lecture series and symposium with letters of inquiry sent to beached@zoolighting.org also due by 1 August for the fall season. ZLIs Beached Campaign also will feature an upcoming documentary Beached, to begin shooting in New Bedford (USA), New Zealand and Japan in conjunction with PhotoDiversity Films, as soon as investments and sponsorships are secured.

For more information about ZLIs Beached Campaign, and to learn how to sponsor or donate to help whales while encouraging diversity and engagement, please do visit << www.zoolighting.org >>. For an immediate response contact ZLI directly at beached@zoolighting.org, and ask to speak with one of ZLIs Beached Campaign Committee Leaders.

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ZLI's Beached Campaign to Combat Bigotry in Wildlife Conservation - CSRwire.com