mstdn.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A general-purpose Mastodon server with a 500 character limit. All languages are welcome.

Administered by:

Server stats:

15K
active users

#ecosystem

24 posts19 participants2 posts today

Shark researchers show what could happen to Cape Cod if great whites disappear
‘Sharks help keep it all in balance… they’re the guardians’

What would happen if great white sharks disappear from Cape Cod?

A new shark study shows the potential “ecosystem consequences” when the apex predator is no longer in a region, as a leading shark researcher stresses that great whites are keeping balance in the local ecosystem.

#sharks #CapeCod #nature #balance #ecosystem

bostonherald.com/2025/04/27/sh

Boston Herald · Shark researchers show what could happen to Cape Cod if great whites disappearBy Rick Sobey

#NPR: The U.S. takes a step toward allowing #mining on the ocean floor, a fragile #ecosystem

by Julia Simon, April 25, 2025

"President #Trump signed an executive order Thursday aimed at making it easier for companies to mine the deep seafloor, saying it would create 'a robust domestic supply for critical minerals.'

"There is currently no commercial-scale deep-sea mining anywhere in the world. But companies have long eyed the ocean floor as a potential source of metals like nickel, cobalt, manganese and copper, which are used in batteries for electric vehicles and other technologies.

"The world has no rulebook for deep-sea mining. One company is pushing forward anyway

"These metals can be found in potato-sized nodules lying on the ocean floor. Many of the nodules are in the middle of the Pacific ocean, beyond the legal territory of individual countries.

"Thursday's order might circumvent ongoing international negotiations to regulate deep-sea mining.

"Those regions have traditionally been overseen by an international organization, the #InternationalSeabedAuthority (#ISA). The ISA has hosted talks for years to try to hammer out a rulebook to govern a potential seabed mining industry. The U.S. did not ratify the treaty that governs the seabed, and is not a voting member of the ISA, though in the past under previous administrations it has respected the ISA process.

"In his executive order, Trump instructed federal agencies to expedite the process for reviewing and issuing permits for mining on the seafloor in both U.S. and international territory. It will use a U.S. law from 1980, the "#DeepSeabed Hard Mineral Resources Act."

"Scientists and environmental groups condemned the order, arguing that opening the deep seabed for mining could disrupt important marine ecosystems, and damage the fishing industry.

" 'This is being planned on some of the least resilient #ecosystems on the planet,' says Douglas McCauley, professor of ocean science at the University of California Santa Barbara. 'It would have #catastrophic biological consequences.'

"Underwater mining can create plumes of sediment that could suffocate marine life, and degrade the #FoodWebs that fish depend on, McCauley says.

"There are also important questions about whether we actually need to be mining the seabed to get enough of these minerals for technologies like batteries, says Micah Ziegler, assistant professor of energy and chemical systems at Georgia Institute of Technology.

"While a couple of years ago researchers were concerned about the limitations of land-based mining for metals like cobalt and nickel, a variety of alternative #battery chemistries have been developed that might reduce the need for those elements, Ziegler says."

Read more:
npr.org/2025/04/25/nx-s1-53764

#OceansAreLife #MarineLife #DeepSeaMining #NoDeepSeaMining
#DarkOxygen #LifeOnEarth #Extinction #Nodules #Greenwashing #CorporateColonialism #CorporatePolluters #TrumpSucks #Idiocracy
#BatteryAlternatives #NoCobaltMining #RecycleCopper #RecycleCobalt #RecycleZinc #Recycle! #Ecocide #PlanetDestroyers #HumanGreed #NoJobsOnADeadPlanet

The hidden life....
(The deeper meaning of the dark depths)

We usually only see half of the tree. The other half is hidden. In the realm of darkness. However, it is just as important as the visible (above ground) part. The root system is just as big as a tree crown. And there, in the dark depths between the roots, the fascinating life of thousands of tiny creatures is buzzing. An ecosystem of bacteria, fungi, nematodes, mites, earthworms and other creatures. Millions of mini creatures and even up to 1 kilometer of fungal threads fit easily in a spoonful of soil. So small but so valuable to the trees.

The tree cannot exist without them.
And therefore an ode to the invisible second half of the tree.

#artwork #mixedmedia #tikography #myart #trees #bomen #wezens #leven #ondergronds #lifeofthetree #nature #hidden #verborgen #ecosystem #ig_landscape #ig_artist #umění #kresba #kunstwerk #baum #arbre #albero #arbol #arte
Continued thread

“The ongoing global #CoralBleaching event is the biggest to date,” #NOAA scientists said.

Bleaching occurs when #heat upends the #coral’s metabolism, causing it to turn white as it expels the symbiotic algae that provide it with nutrients & color. Bleaching doesn’t mean the coral has died, but prolonged bleaching — which scientists say is made more frequent & severe by rising #sea #temperatures — can kill it.

Largest #coral bleaching event on record harms 84% of #global #reefs

Bleached coral dies when exposed to #heat stress for too long, threatening the bountiful #marine #ecosystem that depends on it for survival.

#CoralReefs around the world are losing their color at an unprecedented scale as a result of rising #sea #temperatures, marine scientists announced this week, w/ 84% of reefs exposed to bleaching levels of heat since 2023.

#ClimateCrisis #oceans #conservancy
washingtonpost.com/climate-env

"Some of the biggest projects are maintained by #corporateoverlords. React has Facebook, for example. That’s a problem in-and-of-itself.

But a lot of big, important #opensource projects are maintained by just one person. A lot of them become critical infrastructure for companies. And a lot of those companies contribute absolutely nothing to the project, but demand a lot in return.

I don’t blame the #maintainers. They literally don’t owe anyone a damn thing.

But the #ecosystem around is broken, with big companies profiting off of free labor and contributing nothing back in return."

gomakethings.com/open-source-i

Logo
gomakethings.comOpen source is kind of brokenYesterday, I mentioned that I’m working on a Web Component UI library for people who love HTML. One thing I’ve been mindful of as I work through this project is how very broken and exploitative the open source ecosystem is, both as a maintainer of and consumer of open source projects. I want to explore this a bit more, and offer some thoughts. Let’s dig in! I owe my career to open source!