Melvin Wylie
News on Green, Facilities Management, LEED, Custodial/Janitorial, Products, Companies, issues that impact our environment and other interesting news.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Guy Harvey Joins Effort to Take Marlin Off the Menu
Melvin Wylie
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Shared Responsibility in Protecting the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
- Mow grass high. Tall grass grows strong roots, which are better able to absorb water and keep rainfall in your backyard and not moving into storm sewers and waterways.
- Mulch grass clippings. Mulching grass clippings recycles nutrients, and returns organic matter to the soil. Rich soil helps absorb and filter rainfall, reducing erosion and water runoff.
- Clean up. Sweep grass clippings, fertilizer and leaves off sidewalks, driveways and other hard surfaces to help keep nutrients out of waterways.
- Conserve water. Use rainfall as much as possible to water your lawn. Most yards do not need supplemental irrigation. Direct downspouts out into the lawn, rain gardens and rain barrels.
- Create buffer. If your lawn borders water, do not mow or fertilize to the water's edge. Create a buffer zone with uncut grass or other vegetation to capture stormwater and prevent soil erosion.
Melvin Wylie
Groundbreaking Technology to Protect Chesapeake Bay
Melvin Wylie
Nissan LEAF Parts Will Be Built in Decherd, Tenn.,
Melvin Wylie
Corona Save the Beach Project
Corona Save the Beach built a hotel made of rubbish collected partly from Europe's beach to raise awareness of beach pollution.
Melvin Wylie
Melvin Wylie
Sunday, August 21, 2011
17th Episode of GreenNews4U
Melvin Wylie
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Guy Harvey Research Institute Working for a Sustainable Marine Ecosystem
[caption id="attachment_2680" align="alignright" width="300" caption="GHRI research assistants (left-to-right) Andrea Bernard, Kate Hamilton, Rebekah Horn, Teagen Gray and Shara Teter."]
[/caption] DANIA BEACH, FL Released on AUGUST 10, 2011 - One of only a handful of private organizations dedicated exclusively to the science-based conservation of marine fish populations and biodiversity, the Guy Harvey Research Institute (GHRI) is making important, new scientific discoveries on everything from migratory and reproductive patterns of various pelagic species, to breakthroughs in DNA analysis, to uncovering seafood fraud, exposing what some restaurants are actually serving on your dinner plate. A collaboration between renowned marine artist, scientist and conservationist, Dr. Guy Harvey and Nova Southeastern University's (NSU) Oceanographic Center, the GHRI was established in 1999 with a mission to provide the scientific information necessary to understand, conserve and effectively manage the world's marine fishes and their ecosystems. GHRI's major research discoveries include:
[/caption] Building on the long history of top-tier research conducted by the GHRI, Dr. Harvey furthered his conservation efforts by founding the GHOF in 2008. The GHRI continues to function as the research branch of the GHOF while the Foundation endeavors to keep the public informed through outreach and education programs. As for Dr. Harvey, through the GHRI, GHOF and other numerous research organizations around the region, he continues his mission to fund inspired scientific research and innovative educational programs to encourage conservation and best management practices for sustainable marine environments. Last year, for example, following news that a Bahamian seafood company was considering exporting sharks to the Far East, the Bahamas National Trust along with the U.S. based Pew Environmental Group and individual conservationists such as Dr. Harvey (who created a "Protect Bahamian Sharks" campaign logo and poster) initiated a petition drive to force the issue of banning commercial shark-fishing. The government this July, upon receiving a petition signed by 5,000 Bahamian residents, enacted into law the protection of some 40 sharks species found in Bahamian waters from commercial fisherman. A year earlier, Dr. Harvey raised more than a half million dollars through the sale of T-shirts to initiate a Save Our Gulf research study following the wake of the nation's largest oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. With shark, blue fin tuna, grouper and other endangered populations around the world continuing to spiral downward, marine scientists such as Dr. Mahmood Shivji and Dr. Guy Harvey, are working around the clock. Their inspirational work along with hundreds of colleagues around the world will give these animals a fighting chance for survival and a sustainable environment in which to thrive.
Melvin Wylie
- Development of DNA testing to identify sharks in the global fin trade and determining impact of this trade on shark populations,
- Proving that sharks can reproduce by virgin birth
- Discovering the existence of a new billfish species, the roundscale spearfish.
- Development of DNA forensic methods to assist the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Office for Law Enforcement to identify if protected sharks are being landed in US fishery
- Using DNA forensics to determine the species composition and geographic origin of shark products (e.g., fins) in global markets
- Investigating migration patterns of sharks using a combination of satellite tag tracking and DNA analysis. Sharks being studied, include tiger, blue, oceanic whitetip, shortfin mako and sand tiger sharks
- Investigating stock structure of sharks globally. Species currently under study include, great hammerhead, smooth hammerhead, porbeagle, blue, tiger, dusky, oceanic whitetip, silky, night, bull, grey reef, Caribbean reef and basking sharks
- Investigating impacts of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on deep sea sharks
- Impacts of overfishing on genetic integrity of Nassau grouper spawning aggregations in the USVI and Cayman Islands
- Development of DNA forensic methods to identify billfish body parts in the Atlantic
- Investigating migration patterns of blue marlin using satellite tag tracking
- Assessing impacts of roundscale spearfish misidentification on previous white marlin stock assessments
Melvin Wylie
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