Hungry Wild Pigs Are Worsening Climate Change

https://www.wired.com/story/hungry-wild-pigs-are-worsening-climate-change/


There is no agent of ecological imperialism more ferocious than the wild pig. Wherever Europeans invaded, from the Americas to Australia, so did their pigs, many of which escaped into the countryside to wreak havoc. The beasts tear through native plants and animals, they spread disease, they destroy crops, and they reconstruct whole ecosystems in their wake. They’re not so much pests as they are chaos embodied.

Now add climate change to the wild pig’s résumé of destruction. In their never-ending search for food, the pigs root through soils, churning the dirt like a farmer tills fields. Scientists already knew, to some extent, that this releases the carbon that’s locked in the soil, but researchers in Australia, New Zealand, and the US have now calculated how much soil wild pigs may be disturbing worldwide. The carbon dioxide emissions that they produce annually, the authors concluded, equal that of more than a million cars.

It’s yet another piece of an increasingly worrisome puzzle, showing how modification of the land has—in this case, inadvertently—exacerbated climate change. “Anytime you disturb soil, you’re causing emissions,” says University of Queensland ecologist Christopher O’Bryan, lead author on a new paper describing the research in the journal Global Change Biology. “When you till soil for agriculture, for example, or you have widespread land-use change—urbanization, forest loss.”

Given their domination of whole landscapes, pigs had to be making things worse, the researchers knew, but no one had modeled it worldwide. “We started to realize there’s a big gap at the global scale looking at this question,” O’Bryan adds.

The researchers landed on their emissions estimate by aggregating several previous models and sources of data. For instance, one author had a model that mapped the populations of wild pigs around the world. Another had studied wild pigs in Australia, and had data on how much the species disturbs soils. The researchers then pulled in estimates done in Switzerland and China of the carbon emissions created by wild pigs rooting around there.

This patchwork creates inherent uncertainties. No model can pin down exactly how many pigs are in a given place at a given moment, for example. Also, different kinds of soils emit more carbon when they’re disturbed. A material like peat—made up of dead plant matter that hasn’t entirely decomposed—is essentially concentrated carbon, so it has more to give up than other soils. The amount of carbon loss also depends on the microbiome of the soil—the bacteria and fungi that feed on that plant material.

Given this wide range of variables, the researchers simulated 10,000 maps of potential global wild pig densities, excluding the animal’s native ranges across parts of Europe and Asia. (In other words, they only modeled the places where the pigs are an invasive species.) For each of these simulations, they randomly assigned values of pig-induced soil carbon emissions based on data from those previous studies. This allowed them to combine the variables in thousands of ways: Here’s how many pigs might be in a given area, here’s how much land they’d disturb, and here are the resulting emissions. From these thousands of attempts, they were able to generate average emissions estimates.

The world is getting warmer, the weather is getting worse. Here’s everything you need to know about what humans can do to stop wrecking the planet.

Their model showed that, worldwide, invasive wild pigs are rooting through somewhere between 14,000 and 48,000 square miles of land. But they’re not spread out evenly around the globe. While Oceania—the region that includes Australia and the islands of Polynesia—accounts for a tiny fraction of the world’s land surface, it has a huge number of pigs. At the same time, the tropics are home to much of the world’s peat. “In certain parts of Oceania—like tropical Northern Queensland, for example—there’s this substantial amount of carbon stores,” says O’Bryan. The combination of the two means that, according to the team’s model, Oceania accounts for 60 percent of total global emissions driven by rooting wild pigs. 

This estimate, they think, is actually pretty conservative. That’s because they didn’t model emissions from agricultural lands, which are vast, and which wild pigs are known to plunder for free food. They figured that, technically, this land is already disturbed and emitting carbon dioxide, so they didn’t want to count it twice. Additionally, the researchers only estimated where the wild pigs may be now, not where they could be soon. “This pest is expanding, and they could be potentially expanding into areas with high carbon stocks,” says O’Bryan.

The research helps further quantify the rapidly changing carbon cycle on Earth, as humans (and their invasive species) dramatically transform the land itself. “What this paper brings to the fore is something that soil scientists have known for a while—that bioturbation can play this really key role in soil emissions and soil respiration,” says University of Florida computational biogeochemist Kathe Todd-Brown, who wasn’t involved in the research. “You also see similar effects with earthworm movement—any kind of burrowing animal that churns up the soil structure.”

via Wired Top Stories https://ift.tt/2uc60ci

July 19, 2021 at 02:06PM

These Astonishing Minecraft Builds Were Years in the Making

https://www.wired.com/story/best-minecraft-builds/


Minecraft, the best-selling video game of all time, has been around for more than a decade. The procedurally generated survival sandbox is constantly evolving, playing host to everything from speedrun challenges and political dramas to lessons. But it’s best known as digital Lego— and it’s seen some incredible creations over the years. 

Inventive and gifted builders, often working in teams, craft reconstructions of real-life buildings, fantasy or sci-fi settings, and even whole cities. For most, it’s a time-consuming hobby, but a few have parlayed their passion into a professional career. Here are some of the most spectacular Minecraft creations that took years to build.  

Minecraft Middle-Earth

Courtesy of Minecraft Middle Earth

J. R. R. Tolkien arguably created the greatest of all epic fantasy worlds. Fans of The Lord of the Rings trilogy have recreated some of the highlights of Middle-Earth in Minecraft form. There are so many impressive builds in Minecraft Middle-Earth, from Helm’s Deep to Isengard to the mines of Moria, it’s hard to choose a favorite, but Minas Tirith is truly breathtaking. Around nearly as long as Minecraft itself, the map now covers an area equivalent to Dallas, Texas. You can join the server as an adventurer, get a guided tour and learn the lore, or sign up as a builder to work on expanding the world.

Mattupolis

Courtesy of Mattupolis

Heavily influenced by the Pacific Northwest, this modern city combines elements of Vancouver and Seattle, though you can also find references to New York. It’s a gorgeous,sprawling build with distinct commercial, residential, and industrial districts surrounded by beautiful countryside. There are some landmarks here, including the Space Needle, and the imposing skyline features countless skyscrapers. Devised and constructed by a Finnish architecture student named Matias, Mattupolis has been redesigned and reorganized several times since its original release a decade ago and is still growing. 

Greenfield

Courtesy of THEJESTR

This enormous fictional city, inspired by Los Angeles, is extraordinarily detailed. It’s not the prettiest of maps, but what Greenfield lacks in looks it makes up for in scale, and most of the realistic-looking buildings boast fully modeled interiors you can explore. There are beautiful beachfront apartments, skyscrapers, and even a football stadium. But Greenfield is a warts-and-all city, so you’ll find busy docks, an industrial zone, and some shady neighborhoods too. Designed on a 1:1 scale, where each block is equivalent to 1 meter, it has an authentic metropolitan feel. The city is all about exploration, and there are several weird and wonderful easter eggs to discover. It’s still growing, and you can apply to help at the Greenfield website.

The Uncensored Library

Courtesy of The Uncensored Library

Conceptually, this is our favorite Minecraft, build because it gives journalists battling against repressive regimes a place to make their voices heard. The Uncensored Library features news from countries like Saudi Arabia, Russia, Vietnam, and Egypt. This vast working library is constantly growing and offers many books, even some music discs to play while you read. It’s not the best format for long reading sessions, but you can dip in and find important articles about the state of press freedom and what oppressive regimes are doing. Built by Blockworks, a team of professional Minecraft builders for hire, it’s also an interesting structure to explore. 

Witchcraft and Wizardry

Courtesy of The Floo Network

Designed by The Floo Network, the inspiration for this build is no mystery. The Witchcraft and Wizardry map brings the world of Harry Potter to life with locations like Hogwarts and Diagon Alley painstakingly realized block by block. The original was simply a map to download and explore, but the makers continued working to create an adventure map that allows you to experience the magic of J. K. Rowling’s famous books. It features several characters to meet, proper cut scenes, a storyline, and plenty of side quests.

WesterosCraft

Courtesy of HAL9007

Fans of Game of Thrones can visit Winterfell, King’s Landing, Highgarden, and many other places mentioned in George R.  R. Martin’s fantasy series in the vast WesterosCraft map. Under construction for close to a decade, this map covers a staggering 485 square miles. We first visited WesterosCraft in 2013, but it has been revamped and has grown significantly since then. Even after the disappointing ending to the wildly popular TV show, WesterosCraft still has a very active community. The eventual aim is to build every city, castle, and landmark that encompasses Westeros—all 500 of them!

Cyberpunk

Courtesy of Elysium Fire

Cyberpunk 2077 caused a stir for all the wrong reasons and failed to impress, but the game does feature a gorgeous futuristic city that serves as the inspiration for this astounding map. Built by a French team, Elysium Fire, this glowing neon megacity has incredibly tall and densely packed skyscrapers awash in lights, holograms, and billboards. The scale of the Cyberpunk map and the skill of the building team can hardly fail to impress. Fans of CD Projekt Red, the developer behind Cyberpunk and The Witcher games, owe it to themselves to check out Elysium Fire’s Novigrad map too.

The Kingdom of Cipher

Courtesy of Circleight

It’s tough to choose a map from visionary builder Circleight, because she produces some truly astounding builds with complex constructions and incredible colors. The Kingdom of Cipher might just be the most memorable. It features nine pillars representing different gods or goddesses standing before an incredibly ornate cathedral. A flying dragon, or “soul serpent,” ferries the souls of the dead across the sky. This ethereal world is amazingly vibrant and packed with little details that make it a joy to explore. Circleight passed away last year, but her wonderful creations live on in Minecraft.

Mount Olympus

Courtesy of ChaosOlymp

The home of deities like Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, and Aphrodite, Mount Olympus is an important place in Greek mythology. Olympus builds are common, but this map, from the German ChaosOlymp team, stands out. It takes some inspiration from the game God of War. There are countless details beyond the massive statue of Poseidon that make this map fun to fly or walk around. It’s not very big compared with others on this list, but it’s a terrific piece of sculpture that nails the essence of Olympus.

Atropos

Courtesy of carloooo

Riffing on the Cosmic Turtle, which carries the world on its back, the Atropos map is a beautifully imaginative build. It has an industrial, steampunk-feel with cogs, machines, and canons amid medieval buildings, all crammed onto the back of an enormous clockwork tortoise. It is impressive enough as a sculpture, but you can also go inside and explore the fully built interiors. The work of Minecraft builder carloooo, you can see how Atropos evolved from sketches and learn more about the concept at Planet Minecraft. It also happens to be a great place to discover more inspiring builds.


More Great WIRED Stories

via Wired Top Stories https://ift.tt/2uc60ci

July 19, 2021 at 06:06AM

Blue Origin launch will be the 1st fully automated flight with civilian astronauts: report

https://www.space.com/blue-origin-first-astronaut-launch-completely-automated


The crew aboard Blue Origin’s first astronaut launch on Tuesday (July 20) will take a giant leap into the unknown when they fly the first automated flight with an all-civilian crew, according to a media report.

Blue Origin will launch four civilians, including the company’s billionaire founder Jeff Bezos, on its its suborbital New Shepard rocket on Tuesday from Launch Site One near Van Horn, Texas. There has never before been a fully autonomous suborbital or orbital flight with an all-civilian crew, Teal Group space industry analyst Marco Caceres recently told Reuters

The 11-minute space shot on a suborbital path will include four people who have never been in space before, although one of them is a highly respected civilian pilot who attempted to make it into the NASA space program in the 1960s.

Related: How to watch Blue Origin launch Jeff Bezos into space on July 20
Live updates: Blue Origin’s first astronaut launch updates

The crew of Blue Origin’s First Human Flight are: (from left) founder Jeff Bezos, Mark Bezos, Wally Funk and Oliver Daemon. They will launch on Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket  (Image credit: Blue Origin)

That crew member, Mercury 13 aviator Wally Funk, has logged more than 19,600 flight hours as an instructor and pilot, which likely provides her some in-air experience for the “anomalies” astronauts are trained to face.

But the other people will be experiencing a highly dangerous environment for the first time, including billionaire Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos, his brother Mark (whose background is in advertising), and paying passenger Oliver Daemen, who at age 18 is said to be working towards a pilot’s license and plans to study physics.

As any astronaut will tell you, space is inherently dangerous and dozens of professionals have lost their lives during training or operations. Blue Origin does have a terms and conditions document that among other things, requires participants to sign an informed consent document — a common practice among companies that offer risky activities like skydiving.

Related: Blue Origin’s launch with Jeff Bezos: Everything you need to know

The company also designed its spacecraft deliberately to accommodate only passengers, not pilots, to increase revenue potential, as presumably each one would be paying money for the opportunity. But what is worrying some observers, Reuters said, is this is the very first crewed flight of New Shepard (although 15 uncrewed tests came before.)

Some “company insiders,” who were not named, told Reuters that they would have preferred that Blue Origin flew at least some astronauts or technical experts upon this flight. This would have been useful for collecting “data and technical feedback for a program in its infancy,” Reuters wrote, which could help improve the flight experience for later customers.

Image 1 of 3

A look inside Blue Origin’s New Shepard space capsule, which features passenger seats, each with their own window, around a central covering for the capsule’s abort motor. (Image credit: Blue Origin)
Image 2 of 3

The passenger seat of Blue Origin’s New Shepard spacecraft. (Image credit: Blue Origin)
Image 3 of 3

A view of the Earth below from with massive window on Blue Origin’s New Shepard spacecraft. (Image credit: Blue Origin)

The Blue Origin crew will receive two days of training with assistance from two staff members, Reuters reported. While that education pales beside the typical 2.5 years of basic training NASA makes it “astronaut candidates” complete before even being assigned to a flight, the staff members will provide headset instructions during the flight to the Blue Origin customers, too.

Yet there is still some concern that the passengers may not be able to respond adequately to instructions and especially in case of emergency, as they may be distracted or overwhelmed, Reuters reported. “It’s kind of like getting on a ride at an amusement park,” Caceres told Reuters. “You just trust that everything has been checked out, is in good working order … and you just sit back and enjoy the ride.”

Blue Origin is not alone in offering all-civilian opportunities to untrained astronauts. Business billionaire Jared Isaacman bought seats aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon for himself and three others (two contest winners and a former childhood cancer patient, all working in fields outside of aerospace), for the Inspiration4 mission slated to launch later this year. The rookie crew recently underwent “weightless” training for the first time.

Competitor Virgin Galactic, however, always flies two trained pilots aboard the spaceliner VSS Unity. It also ran several piloted test flights in space (although the definition of whether Virgin Galactic reached space varies) before allowing any passengers to come aboard. When founder Richard Branson took his famous spaceflight on July 11, the crew area included three Virgin Galactic employees and among them, Beth Moses had already been to space on a previous test flight.

Visit Space.com on July 20 for complete coverage Blue Origin’s first astronaut launch.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 

via Space.com https://ift.tt/2CqOJ61

July 18, 2021 at 08:02AM

Zoom is buying a cloud call center company for $14.7 billion

https://www.engadget.com/zoom-acquires-contact-center-company-five9-for-14-7-billion-101956102.html

After experiencing enormous growth during the COVID-19 pandemic, Zoom has made its first major acquisition by purchasing cloud contact center company Five9 for $14.7 billion, it announced. The move will allow Zoom to expand into call center technology worth up to $24 billion, diversifying its products once employees start returning to the office after the pandemic. 

Five9 will become an operating unit of Zoom when the deal is closed, likely in the first half of 2022. "We are continuously looking for ways to enhance our platform and the addition of Five9 is a natural fit that will deliver even more… value to our customers,” Zoom CEO Eric Yuan said in a statement.

Five9 is a 20-year-old firm with 2,000 customers worldwide, including SalesForce and Under Armour, and processes over 7 billion minutes of calls annually. Zoom notes that it was already a "long-term" customer of Five9 and said the partnership will give Five9’s business clients access to Zoom products like the multi-platform Zoom Phone app.

The acquisition won’t have much of an impact on consumers, as Five9 is largely a business-to-business company. However, Zoom’s recent growth has been fueled in part by employees needing to work and communicate from home due to the pandemic. Once that crisis eases, Five9’s contact center business will provide another revenue stream.

While most of its products are aimed at businesses, Zoom has also embraced the consumer side of things. Last year, the company released a new category of products called Zoom for Home, with both software and a line of hardware devices. While those products are aimed at employees working from home, they can also be used by consumers looking for a reliable video calling system. 

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 19, 2021 at 05:33AM