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07/03/2023

~ Six-Leaf Clover 🍀✨

A six-leaf clover is so rare that most people go their entire life without ever seeing or finding one.

The leaves on a 6-leaf clover symbolize faith, hope, love, extra luck, money, and good fortune.

Spreading the love & luck!
Much love & peace.

🥰💚 ~

07/03/2023

~ Four-Leaf Clover 🍀✨

4-leaf clovers are very rare. No clover plants naturally produce four leaves, when it does, it’s a result of a mutation where the plant has the four-leaf gene on all four chromosomes, which is extremely uncommon.

It is said it’s about a 1 to 10,000 chance of finding one. Some people have gone a lifetime without ever seeing one.

Wishing you a blessed day!
Much love, luck, & peace.

🥰💚 ~

07/03/2023

🌊

07/03/2023

Switzerland Mountains 💚
📷 Unknown

Shark Attack Mitigation Systems teamed up with the Ocean Institute to create these shark-deterrent designs that can be a...
07/03/2023

Shark Attack Mitigation Systems teamed up with the Ocean Institute to create these shark-deterrent designs that can be applied to wetsuits. One wetsuit, dubbed the Diverter, has bold, black-and-white stripes that mimic the striped pattern often seen on poisonous fish and other creatures.

"Many animals in biology are repelled by noxious animals — prey that provide a signal that somehow says, 'Don't eat me' — and that has been manifest in a striped pattern," Collin told AFP.

The Diverter is also available with striped stickers for the underside of surfboards. Another design, the Elude, takes advantage of sharks' limited vision to camouflage a swimmer in the water.

The Elude features a pattern of blue-on-blue waves designed to "hide you in the water column," Craig Anderson, who developed the wetsuits with partner Hamish Jolly, told AFP.

"It's based on new breakthrough science, which is all about visionary systems for predatory sharks," Anderson said. "We've been able to interpret that science and convert that into, basically, materials that create some confusion for sharks' visual systems."

Though sharks use a number of senses to find prey, some researchers believe the animals rely on vision in the final stages of an attack. Anderson and Jolly tested their wetsuits in the shark-infested waters off Western Australia.

In a video of a test, sharks were seen swimming past dummies wearing the striped Diverter pattern, the BBC reports, but when presented with dummies wearing a typical black wetsuit, sharks attacked with gusto.

Worldwide, sharks face a number of threats: Overfishing is pushing some shark species toward extinction, and a study from March estimates that annual shark deaths total 100 million or more each year.

One advantage of the new wetsuit design, marketed as Shark Attack Mitigation Systems (SAMS), is its nonlethal nature: "It's safe, it's natural and gives the animals no harm at all," Anderson told AFP.

Despite the success of early testing, Jolly told AFP that SAMS "cannot say that our suits are a fail-safe protection against shark attacks." The company plans on doing additional testing off the coasts of Australia and South Africa beginning this December, when summer arrives in the Southern Hemisphere.

The recent encyclical "On Care for Our Common Home" by Pope Francis focused attention on the critical importance of our ...
07/03/2023

The recent encyclical "On Care for Our Common Home" by Pope Francis focused attention on the critical importance of our natural environment. As a response to the environmental crisis, he calls for an economy that favors business creativity and integrated solutions based on the notion that protection of the natural environment is a critical part of economic development and society.

Similarly, a broad range of leaders in conservation, development, government and business also appreciate the urgent need to find cost-effective ways to protect nature while meeting the needs of a human population that has surpassed seven billion people .

Nature as a cost-effective water filter

Water filtration is a perfect example. New York City pays landowners in the Catskills watershed to implement land-use practices that benefit water quality for the city downstream and is billions of dollars cheaper. In addition to naturally filtering the Catskills water, similar payment arrangements have helped preserve carbon stocks stored in Madagascar's rainforests, maintained wildlife populations important for tourism in Tanzania, and protected watersheds in France.

Such wide-ranging benefits that nature provides to humanity are called "ecosystem services" and include tangible goods like food, medicine and fuel; "invisible" benefits, such as the regulation of climate, water filtration, flood control, storm protection, pollination and disease control; and cultural benefits like tourism, recreation and spiritual nourishment.

Payments for ecosystem services (PES), as in the Catskills, can be made by individuals, businesses, nonprofits, or governments and are conditional on the continued delivery of a specific ecosystem service. Collectively, ecosystem services are estimated to be worth over $100 trillion per year. As important benefits like clean air and water have grown scarcer their value has increased. Paying for nature's services makes a lot of sense, particularly, when nature delivers benefits to society just as effectively — and less expensively — than other alternatives.

But as investments in nature increase in number and form, it's important that buyers get what they pay for and that nature is protected in the process. To do this, buyers, sellers, and intermediaries must understand the way the natural world functions and delivers benefits to communities, businesses and governments.

And yet, that understanding has been lacking. A group of leading researchers, practitioners, policy makers and investors coordinated by Columbia University and the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) recently identified six scientific principles that can guide payments for nature's services.

The six principles, published in the journal Science, are scientifically robust and practical for a wide range of situations:

Understand the dynamics characterizing the ecosystem. For example, if farming practices have a greater impact on water quality, or quantity, than the climate, then payments to improve those practices may be warranted. If climate plays a larger role, then probably not.
Document existing conditions before a given investment is made. If there is no such record, it will be impossible to assess if a payment has generated benefits from nature.
Monitor changes in an ecosystem throughout an investment period. Many factors may affect an ecosystem and the services it generates throughout time — tracking how those factors change will clarify an investment's impact.
Use metrics that support future decisions. Metrics (standards of measurements) used to assess changes in an ecosystem service should be appropriate for size of the area of interest and the service’s duration, informative with respect to capturing changes in an ecosystem, and compatible with metrics used by existing standards or regulatory agencies.
Identify connections among components within a natural system. For example, planting trees may increase carbon stocks, but could also decrease water availability or biodiversity. Thus, investments may have unintended consequences if ecological linkages are not considered in advance of a project.
Assess the sustainability of an investment relative to how an ecosystem may change through time. Climate or demographic changes could affect land use or water supplies, making the long-term success of a given investment uncertain.

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