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Increased Ocean Acidity Puts Alaska Fisheries At Risk, Study Says

July 29, 2014 0

JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) — The release of carbon dioxide into the air from power plant smokestacks to the tailpipe on your car could pose a risk to red king crab and other lucrative fisheries in Alaska, a new report says.

Ocean water becomes more acidic when it absorbs carbon dioxide released by human sources, such as the burning of fossil fuels. Increased ocean acidification could harm important Alaska commercial and subsistence fisheries and communities that rely heavily on them, according to the new research aimed at spurring discussion on how to address the changes.

The research, led by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, was to be published Tuesday in the online journal Progress in Oceanography.

Researchers said changes in ocean chemistry could make it harder for mollusks and other small creatures to build and keep their skeletons or shells. Previous studies have shown red king crab and tanner crab grow more slowly in more acidic water and that red king crab died in highly acidified conditions.

Communities in southeast and southwest Alaska face the highest risk from ocean acidification because of their reliance on fishing, relatively lower income levels and fewer job alternatives than other parts of Alaska, the report states. For communities with high food and energy costs, ocean acidification could be another hit, the research says.

According to the NOAA, Alaska’s high-latitude coastal waters are more vulnerable to acidification because cold water can absorb more carbon dioxide. Circulation patterns also bring more acidic deep-ocean water to the surface, the agency said.

Co-lead author of the study, NOAA oceanographer Jeremy Mathis, said the goal was to try to quantify the potential risk and impacts from ocean acidification, a question that’s come up in meetings with fishermen, villages and communities but one he’s never had a good answer for.

While direct, harmful impacts aren’t showing up yet, the ocean is changing quickly, he said. Oceans are about 30 percent more acidic today than they were at the start of the Industrial Revolution, he said. If fossil fuels continue to be burned at the current rate, pH levels could drop significantly by the end of the century, said Mathis, who is also director of an ocean acidification research center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

“We could have a 300 percent greater change between now and the end of the century than we have in the past 250 years combined,” he said. “So the rate of change is what’s accelerating.”

Mathis said lab studies have shown a low level of tolerance for acidification in crab, but those impacts haven’t been seen in the wild yet. As the oceans change, there are some who believe species will adapt or new organisms will emerge, and that could happen, he said. But acidification also could change population dynamics, he said.

“In a place like the Bering Sea, where a billion-dollar industry has been built around a few species of crabs, then that’s where we really start to worry. It’s something we’re going to have to pay very close attention to,” Mathis said.

As an area of further study, Mathis said he would like to be able to quantify the potential financial impacts of the changes.

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These Are The Foods On America’s ‘No Eat’ List

July 29, 2014 0

It seems the “too much soda is bad” message is finally starting to sink in for Americans.

According to a new Gallup poll, more Americans today are saying that they are trying to avoid drinking soda, compared with 10 years ago. Specifically, 63 percent…

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Last Night’s Leftovers: Waterfront Dining Edition

July 29, 2014 0

Where to dine along the waterfront [Eater] Wonderland Ballroom celebrates its 10th anniversary this Sunday. [PoPville] Bub and Pop’s will launch a weekly supper club. [Washingtonian] Zero Degrees Zero Minutes pop-up attracts die-hard foodies. [Post] Seven new ice cream shops in D.C. [Zagat] Can Lyman’s Tavern resurrect pinball culture in D.C.? [DCist] Photo of Osteria […]

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The 10 Best Ice Cream Shops In America, According To TripAdvisor

July 29, 2014 0

We already told you about the great ice cream New England has to offer, but that’s not the only place you can get a good scoop. Whether you’re by the beaches of Florida or on the lake in New York, there’s an awesome ice cream parlor just around the cor…

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Pie Shakes Are Putting A La Mode To Shame

July 29, 2014 0

Hold on to your forks, pie fans, because there’s a whole new way to eat your slice. You may have thought whipped cream was nice and that a la mode was a treat, but those two toppings have got nothing on the pie shake.

There’s not much to explain when it comes to the pie shake, but we’ll elaborate anyway because a feeling of disbelief usually sets in at the mere mention of this dessert. Get ready.

A pie shake is a milk shake with an entire slice of pie added to it. That’s two desserts blended into one tall glass equipped with a straw. Did you catch that? This is pie you can drink through a straw. Allow us to illustrate.

fruit pie

+

vanilla ice cream

= PIE SHAKE

If you’re shaking your head thinking this is why America is fat, let us set the record straight and tell you that you are dead wrong. The pie shake is why America is great. It’s sweet, sweet proof of our creativity, our guts and our bold, adventurous spirit. The pie shake is THE new frontier in desserts that America has unearthed.

There aren’t too many restaurants hip to the pie shake yet. Sammy’s has a couple of locations out west that are famous for theirs. And Hamburg Inn No. 2 in Iowa City, a popular stop on the campaign trail, blends them up too. But if you don’t live close to one of those, you’ll have to make one yourself.

The dessert doesn’t really require a recipe, but there is a certain ratio you want to achieve in order to arrive at a texture that is thin enough for a straw (though spoons are always an option) and has enough pie to taste. Saveur has a recipe for a blueberry pie shake, perfect for this time of year when those berries are in peak season, that calls for 1 slice of pie and ten ounces of ice cream. Cooking Channel has an apple pie shake recipe, a lovely treat as fall starts to set in, that calls for two scoops of ice cream and a slice of frozen pie. Try them both.

Blueberry and apple are just a couple of examples. You can make a pie shake out of any pie you want. Banana cream. Mint Oreo. Buttermilk. Key lime. All those pies are just waiting to become shakes. And then, guys, there’s the cake shake. But that’s a story for a whole other day.

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It’s A Cookie-Flavored Cookie-Flavored Cookie

July 29, 2014 0

How much do you love cookies? Is life without cookies something like this?

And when you get a cookie, do you feel sort of like this?

If this sounds like you, you may need a cookie-flavored, cookie-flavored cookie. Stay with us here. You’l…