Daily Archives: June 20, 2021

Can Joe Biden Kick-Start Progress on Ocean Conservation? – The Maritime Executive

Posted: June 20, 2021 at 1:16 am

The US president has announced a raft of positive marine measures and appointments, but must work with China to make a breakthrough on subsidies, the high seas and Antarctic protection Chinese fishing vessels on the high seas of the North Pacific (USCG file image)

PublishedJun 16, 2021 1:59 PM by China Dialogue Ocean

[By Todd Woody]

In the opening months of President Joe Bidens administration there has been a sea change in ocean policy as the United States moves to re-engage with the international community to tackle climate change.

This engagement could have significant consequences for a host of marine issues, from harmful fishing subsidies and a high seas biodiversity treaty, to efforts to create marine protected areas (MPAs) in Antarctica. To achieve progress, though, observers say the Biden administration must work with China, given the countrys influence on ocean policy.

China is working on climate change, they participated inthe Biden summiton that, and so it seems like theyre really interested in engaging in these multilateral forums on ocean issues, said Andrea Kavanagh, project director for the Pew Charitable Trusts Protecting Antarcticas Southern Ocean initiative.

The details of many Biden policies remain to be announced. But the administration has signalled its strong support of ocean issues by appointing respected scientists and environmentalists to key positions at agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which had been demoralised, defunded and politicisedunder the previous president, Donald Trump.

Biden, for instance, has proposed a record $6.9 billion budget for NOAA (a 26 percent increase on the previous year) and has nominated a former top NOAA scientist, oceanographerRick Spinrad, to run the agency. John Kerry, the administrations climate envoy, founded theOur Ocean conferencewhen he served as secretary of state in the Barack Obama administration. Marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco,who has becomethe deputy director for climate and environment at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, served as NOAAs chief under Obama.

The Biden administrationhas pledgedto protect 30 percentof US land and waters by 2030. In May, it tried to globalise that 3030 commitment when it joined acommuniquissued by G7 nations calling for protection of 30 percentof the worlds oceans, also by 2030.

The communiqu committed the nations to work toward concluding negotiations over ahigh seas biodiversity treatyby the end of 2021 and supported efforts to expand a network of marine protected areas in Antarctica.

While the Covid-19 pandemic has significantly slowed international negotiations, 2021 could prove a pivotal year to finalise long-running talks on damaging fishing subsidies, the high seas biodiversity treaty and the creation of vast new marine protected areas in Antarctica.

Fisheries subsidies

For two decades, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) hasattempted to reach an agreementby its 164 member states to ban harmful fisheries subsidies that promote overfishing andillegal, unreported and unregulated(IUU) fishing.

During that time, Chinas overseas fishing fleet has expanded and become the worlds largest, at nearly 3,000 vessels.Researchers in 2016 determined thatUS$20 billion of US$35 billion in annual global fisheries subsidies were harmful. The result: one-third of fish species are being harvested at biologically unsustainable levels,according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation.

Rashid Sumaila, a University of British Columbia fisheries expert and close observer of the WTO, is optimistic that a deal may finally be in sight for two reasons. One is that the new director-general,Ngozi Okonjo-Iwealaof Nigeria, hasmade fisheries subsidies a priority. She is convening aministerial conference in Julywith the aim of finalising negotiations. The other reason is the new environmentally friendly US administration.

Hopefully, these two recent events might just help the WTO and the world get the job done after 20 years of trying, he said. That would be a big win for marine biodiversity, fish and fishers who want to fish sustainably.

The Biden administrations specific stance on the negotiations remains to be seen. So far the administration has been focusing on climate change and have not said much about the WTO negotiation on fisheries subsidies, noted Sumaila, adding that it seems to be holding to the US position that the country wants an ambitious agreement. I hope they are pushing for this behind the scenes.

Cooperation between China and the US, two of the biggest subsidisers, is key to breaking the stalemate at the WTO, according to Sumaila. For years, negotiations have been hampered by disagreements over whether developing countries would be given more time to phase out subsidies. WTO member states are allowed to declare themselves as developing nations, as China has done.

One single action that would help is for the US to work with China and come up with a joint communiqu stating that the nations will support reaching an agreement at the upcoming WTO Ministerial [conference], he said. I think such an agreement between the US and China would incentivise other countries to sign on.

Antarctic marine protection

Antarctica is one of the regions most impacted by climate change and fishing. Its also where the international community, even at its most divided, has come together to protect the continents unique biodiversity. At the height of the Cold War in 1959, the US, Soviet Union and 10 other countries signed theAntarctica Treaty, committing the parties to peaceful exploration.

An international convention established the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) in 1982. CCAMLR currently has 26 member states, including China and the US. The parties approval of the 1.57 million km2Ross Sea marine protected area, which came into effect in 2017 and banned commercial fishing for 35 years, created the worlds largest MPA.

Temperatures in Antarctica are rising three times faster than the global average, according to a 2020 study

It was to be part of a network of protected zones to limit the effects of climate change and a burgeoning krill fishing industry.Krill, a small crustacean, is considered a keystone species because it converts energy from the sun by eating single-celled plants called phytoplankton into food for larger marine species including penguins and whales. Commercial fishing turns hundreds of thousands of tonnes of krill into fish meal to feed farmed fish and pets, as well as krill oil for human health supplements.

Krill populations are also being affected by climate change, with temperatures in Antarctica rising three times faster than the global average, a 2020studyfound.

However, efforts to address these two threats through the establishment of three additional MPAs in East Antarctica, the Weddell Sea, and around the Antarctic Peninsula have foundered in recent years, largely due to objections from China and Russia. China deploys akrill fishing fleetin the Southern Ocean and Russia has taken steps to establish its own krill fishery. Other nations fishing for krill in the past decade include Norway, South Korea, Japan, Chile, Poland and Ukraine. A proposed MPA requires unanimous approval by member states.

Efforts to break the impasse received a boost in April whenKerry announced the US would join other CCAMLR statesto press for the approval of the East Antarctica and Weddell Sea MPAs. The proposed Antarctica Peninsula MPA is still being evaluated by CCAMLRs scientific committee.

The US coming on as an official co-sponsor is great news, said Kavanagh of the Pew Charitable Trusts. Its just showing that theres this global push and a global awareness that we need to have these protections.

She noted that negotiations over the Ross Sea MPA dragged on for years until a group of nations coordinated a campaign to persuade China and Russia to sign off on it. Obama himself got involved, especially when talking with China, said Kavanagh.

In virtual negotiations, you dont have any of the hallway meetings or the receptions and dinners where most of the work gets done.

She said a similar approach is needed to reach consensus on the East Antarctica and Weddell Sea MPAs. Kerrys involvement is an encouraging sign, given his former position as secretary of state and hisexperience in negotiating with China.

John Kerry in his role as the climate envoy knows how important MPAs are to provide resilience against climate change, said Kavanagh.

Prospects for face-to-face negotiations, however, look dim. CCMALR is headquartered in Tasmania, Australia, where its annual meeting is held. But in May, theAustralian government announcedit would keep its borders closed to international visitors until mid-2022.

Its just tough because in the virtual meetings you dont have as much time for negotiations because of time differences, Kavanagh said. And you dont have any of the hallway meetings or the receptions and dinners where most of the work gets done.

High seas biodiversity treaty

In early March 2020, Kerry helped facilitate a High Seas Treaty Dialogue with government leaders in Monaco. The event highlighted issues to be taken up three weeks later at the United Nations when delegates were to convene for what was to be a final session to complete a landmarktreatyto protect biodiversity on the high seas.

Among other provisions, the treaty would allow for the creation of marine protected areas in the 58 percentof the ocean that lies beyond national jurisdiction, provide for thesharing of marine genetic resourcesamong nations and require environmental impact assessments for certain high seas activities.

There was little consensus, though, on the specific terms of those provisions or how they would be implemented as delegates prepared to gather in New York last year. Then, days before negotiations were to begin, the United Nations and the rest of New York City went into lockdown as the pandemic spread.

With in-person negotiations postponed, delegates began meeting virtually in monthly video sessions, according to Peggy Kalas, coordinator of theHigh Seas Alliance, a coalition ofmajor environmental groupsfounded in 2011 to advocate for a high seas biodiversity treaty. The talks are informal, which means they dont carry the weight of formal negotiations.

Kalas said its too early to know how the Biden administrations environmental policies will affect the treaty negotiations, noting that ocean-related senior positions in the US State Department remain vacant.

But observers view Kerrys interest in the high seas biodiversity treaty as promising.

Were hoping that we can perhaps get Kerry to engage in treaty negotiations, Kalas said.

In-person negotiations currently are set to resume in August, though some observers expect talks to be postponed as other UN negotiations have been recently. In that event, virtual discussions will likely continue.

We are all very exceedingly Zoomed out, said Kalas.

Todd Woody is a California-based environmental journalist who specialises in ocean issues.

This article appears courtesy of China Dialogue Ocean and may be found in its original form here.

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.

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First US Cruise In Over a Year Postponed Due to COVID Outbreak – Inside the Magic

Posted: at 1:16 am

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the past year has been hugely challenging for most industries, but perhaps few have suffered as much as cruise operators.

Related:Chapek Confirms Disney Cruise Lines Second Private Island

Disney Cruise Line, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian Cruise Line, and other cruise companies that make port in the United States have been unable to sail for over a year, leading to huge profit losses and disappointment for cruise vacationers.

Now, however, thanks to increasing COVID-19 vaccination rates throughout the U.S., the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have begun allowing cruise lines to begin the process that will get them back on the high seas.

Related:Disney Cruise Line Considering Sailing Out of Ft. Lauderdale

In the CDCs Conditional Sailing Order (CSO) it is noted that cruise operators must conduct test cruises with a variety of pandemic health and safety protocols in place. This is intended to both allow crew members to get used to these new pandemic-era procedures and to provide proof that the CDCs various requirements have been satisfied.

Royal Caribbean was the first cruise ship company to conduct test cruise trips and, as a result, was expected to launch the first cruise trip from a U.S. port in over a year. However, the itinerary has now been delayed due to a COVID-19 outbreak onboard.

Related:Disney Cruise Lines Test Cruises Are NOT Open to the Public

Orlando News 6s Click Orlando website reports:

Royal Caribbean has suffered a setback in its push to resume cruises from Florida.

Eight workers aboard the Odyssey of the Seas have tested positive for the coronavirus, prompting Royal Caribbean to delay the ships upcoming cruise in early July.

The cruise line said Wednesday that Odyssey of the Seas was scheduled to set sail from Fort Lauderdale on July 3, but that cruise has now been pushed back to the end of July.

Click Orlandos report also noted that the entire crew was vaccinated, but it is believed the eight Royal Caribbean employees contracted COVID-19 prior to their vaccines reaching full effectiveness. At this time, Royal Caribbean intends to conduct its other planned cruises on schedule.

Currently, no other cruise lines including Disney Cruise Line have announced that this news will impact their return to sailing in any way.

Related:Ahoy, Captain Minnie! NEW Nautical Cupcake and Shake on Disney Cruise Line!

Disney has not officially confirmed when the four ships in its existing fleet the Disney Dream, the Disney Fantasy, the Disney Magic, and the Disney Wonder will officially hit the high seas again domestically.

It is worth noting that Disneys Magic at Sea staycation cruises cruises with no ports of call will leave from United Kingdom ports this summer. They are only open to U.K. residents.

However, the company is planning to conduct its first test cruise to the Bahamas on the Disney Dream in July. Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Chapek has expressed optimism for a fall 2021 return to sailing, which seems possible given this test cruise date, although nothing has been announced at this time.

Related:Congress Clears the Way For Disney Cruise Line to Return to Alaska

Unless crew members test positive for COVID-19 following the test cruise next month, it seems unlikely that DCL will have to postpone its return to the water.

Although 2021 sailings are still up-in-the-air at this time, Disney is planning a major return to sailing in 2022 with the maiden voyage of their first Triton Class ship, the Disney Wish, in June of next year.

Related:Disney Launching First-of-Its-Kind Star Wars Hyperspace Lounge!

Are you looking forward to getting back on a Disney Cruise Line ship?

Have a future cruise credit? Want to book a new DCL itinerary? The expert team at Academy Travel can help you plan a magical Disney Cruise Line vacation to anywhere in the world! From a Mexico Disney cruise to a journey to Disneys private island Castaway Cay in the Bahamas, they can make your high seas dreams come true.

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Built to Last: A Reflection on Environmentally Conscientious Woodworking – Southern Fried Science

Posted: at 1:16 am

I make things. I make weird electronic things. I make scientific instrument things. And I make things out of wood. I make a lot of things out of wood.

When Im not working on marine conservation technology, educational programming, or high seas policy, Im usually out back in the woodshop, building furniture, functional art, and other woodcrafts. This probably isnt a surprise. For the last eleven years, one of the most popular articles at Southern Fried Science has been How to build a canoe from scratch on a graduate student stipend.

Every few years, I turn an analytical eye on my hobbies, assessing the lifecycle of the materials I use, the sources of inefficiency, and, most importantly, how the practice of the craft aligns with or deviates from my personal environmental ethic. In other words, I do a sustainability audit on my recreational activities.For the last year, Ive focused on understanding and improving the environmental impacts of my woodworking.

Sustainable is an odd word to describe a hobby. Recreational woodworking isnt necessarily the kind of activity that draws heavy resource demand. It already leaves a fairly light footprint on the planet, and even with herculean efforts to reduce the environmental costs of woodworking, the average hobbyist, working alone in a shed, garage, or basement, will never yield more than a small reduction to the already low impacts of woodworking.But woodworking is unique in that the product of the craft, when produced thoughtfully and with foresight, can benefit the planet for generations.

Woodworking may already leave a light touch on the planet, but it can exact a heavy toll on the person. So far as humans are as much a part of the ecosystem as the forests we draw our trees from, the human health impacts of the materials and consumables we use also contribute to the sustainability of the craft. A solvent thats bad for your brain is no better going down the drain.

Sustainability isnt just a tactic, its an ethic. Fostering an environmental ethic in the hobbies we pursue requires an interrogation of what we value in those hobbies, where trade-offs exist, and how the choices we make can contribute towards a stewardship vision of the future.So, I did what I always do. I made something. And somewhere along the way, this thing became a manifesto for environmentally conscientious woodworking.

Each section ended up being much bigger than our regular blog posts, so rather than drop 10,000 words of lumber musings on you all at once, Ive broken it into manageable chunks to be published periodically over the next week. See you Monday!

(Monday, June 21, 2021) Part 1: I turned my woodshop into a personal solar farm.

(Tuesday, June 22, 2021) Part 2: Getting a handle on workworking chemicals, or sometimes we all need to vent.

(Wednesday, June 23, 2021) Part 3: Furniture as Revolution.

(Thursday, June 24, 2021) Afterwards: Reflections and Next Steps

(Friday, June 25, 2021) Resources: Books, Magazines, Tools, and other ephemera

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Encore: The Princess and the Egg – WBUR

Posted: at 1:16 am

Whens the last time you made a promise?

Maybe you gave your word that youd help wash the dinner dishes. Or you borrowed a friends book, and told her youd return it by the end of the week.

When we make promises, were giving the message that well do what we say.

In this favorite tale from Circle Round Season 2, we meet a princess who makes an important promise. But when she tries to keep that promise, shes thrown for a real loop!

Story continues below

Subscribe to the podcast

Our tale is called The Princess and the Egg. Youll hear versions of this story in many places, from Portugal and Denmark in Europe, to the Mediterranean world and Middle East, to the island nation of Haiti!

Voices in this episode include Luis Negron, Jeff Song and Amber Stevens West. Grown-ups, watch for Amber on the CBS sitcom, Happy Together, as well as the Starz comedy, Run the World.

This episode was adapted for Circle Round by Rebecca Sheir. Original music and sound design is by Eric Shimelonis. Our artist is Sabina Hahn.

This episode was originally released on October 23, 2018.

Coloring Page

ADULTS! PRINT THISso everyone can color while listening. Were also keeping an album so share your picture on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and tag it with #CircleRound. We'd love to see it! To access all the coloring pages for past episodes click HERE. Our resident artist is Sabina Hahn and you can learn more about her HERE.

Things To Think About After Listening

Think of a promise youve made.

What was your promise?

And who did you make it to?

Now, find someone you like to have fun with a family member or friend and tell that person all about your promise and whether you did, indeed, follow through!

Musical Spotlight: Harpsichord

The stringed keyboard instrument known as the harpsichord is shaped like a grand piano, and most likely was developed in the late Middle Ages.

The harpsichord can have one keyboard or two; either way, when you hit a key, a small piece of material known as a plectrum plucks a metal string and voila! You have sound. The problem is, you dont have control over how loud or soft that sound is, so when the more dynamic piano came along, that more modern instrument pretty much superseded the harpsichord. Still, youll hear plenty of the harpsichords charming, elegant, even formal sound in renaissance and baroque music and in 1960s baroque pop songs by such bands as The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.

Script:

NARRATOR: All her life Princess Pearl dreamed of traveling the world. She wanted to see new places, try new foods, and meet new friends.

But what she didnt want was to have people bowing down to her at every port of call, just because she was royalty. So she swore that when she finally got to embark on her adventure, she would never wear her crown. No one would know she was a princess.

Once Princess Pearl finished all of her schooling, the King and Queen surprised their daughter with a swift, sturdy sailboat to whisk her around the high seas, and a brand new atlas, so she wouldnt lose her way.

PEARL: Oh, Mother! Father! Thank you for these gifts! I cant wait to start my journey. I promise Ill send you a letter from every port I visit!

NARRATOR: But Princess Pearl was not able to fulfill that promise.

On her very first night at sea, do you know what happened? A massive storm blew in, and gusts of wind and rain tossed her sailboat this way and that!

Pearl clung to the boats ropes as wave after wave frothed and foamed across the deck. The next thing she knew, it was morning and she and her ship were washed up on an empty beach.

PEARL: Well, this trip isnt off to a very good start. (as she looks at boat) Yikes - look at this boat! What a wreck. I should thank my lucky stars it got me to shore!

NARRATOR: Pearl pulled off her soggy shoes and jumped down from the splintered remains of her sailboat. As her bare feet touched the soft, warm sand, the princess looked around her. Her heart leapt when she spotted a quaint seaside town in the distance.

PEARL: Oh boy! Civilization!

NARRATOR: Pearl sprinted across the beach. When she got to town, she stepped inside the first establishment she saw: a tiny little bed and breakfast. Thats a small hotel, or inn, where people can spend the night and enjoy a nice morning meal.

The innkeeper narrowed his eyes as Pearl entered. He wrinkled his nose as he beheld her torn, drenched clothing and bare feet - not to mention the seashells and seaweed sticking out of her soaking-wet hair!

INNKEEPER: May I help you?

NARRATOR: Pearl flashed her warmest smile.

PEARL: Why, yes, you may - thank you! Do you serve breakfast? Im so hungry I could eat a life preserver!

NARRATOR: The innkeeper sniffed.

INNKEEPER: Well, it just so happens we do serve breakfast... given that were a bed and breakfast and all. But were about to close the kitchen.

NARRATOR: One thing you should know about the innkeeper: he was a very greedy man. So although the kitchen was closing, he suddenly realized he had one last chance to make a few extra bucks. He softened his tone.

INNKEEPER: Look. I tell you what. Ill have the cook whip up something for you - something fast and simple. How about... a scrambled egg?

NARRATOR: Pearls mouth watered.

PEARL: Oh - that would be lovely! My stomachs rumbling so loudly, youd think Ive got an orchestra in there! Not a very good one... the timpani is way too loud and the tuba is hopelessly out of tune... but -

INNKEEPER: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Have a seat. One scrambled egg, coming right up.

NARRATOR: As you can imagine, that one scrambled egg was the best scrambled egg Pearl had ever tasted! Within seconds, her plate was empty. She raised her hand and called the innkeeper over.

INNKEEPER: What now?

PEARL: Well, first, thank you for the egg, sir. It was delicious! But, you see, when I rushed over here for breakfast, I kind of forgot one teensy-weeny little thing. I dont have any money.

NARRATOR: The innkeepers eyebrows shot up so high, they disappeared into his hairline.

INNKEEPER: Come again?

PEARL: I said, I dont have any money. You see, yesterday, I set out on a sailing trip around the world. Then this massive storm blew in, and I was sure I was a goner. But the winds blew me to your lovely town... and when I came to your inn for breakfast, I didnt even think about the fact that my money everything I own, actually got lost at sea!

NARRATOR: The innkeeper took a deep breath.

INNKEEPER: Okay So how, then, do you propose paying for that one scrambled egg? It costs two gold coins, you know!

PEARL: I know. And I promise: I will return to this town, and when I do, you will get your money.

NARRATOR: The innkeeper glanced again at Pearls bare feet and soggy clothing and the seashells and seaweed sticking out of her hair.

INNKEEPER: And why should I believe youll actually come back and pay up?

NARRATOR: Pearl shrugged.

PEARL: Lets just say I have some savings back home. Thanks again for the egg, sir. Have a good day!

NARRATOR: As Pearl waltzed out of the bed and breakfast and onto the street, the innkeeper grumbled to himself.

INNKEEPER: I have some savings back home. Sure ya do! Ugh. What a waste of a perfectly good egg. I bet Ill never see that ragamuffin again!

NARRATOR: As it turns out, the innkeeper was right and very, very wrong.

NARRATOR: What do you think will happen? Will the princess come back to settle her debt?

Well find out, after a quick break.

[MIDROLL]

NARRATOR: Welcome back to Circle Round. Im Rebecca Sheir. Today our story is called The Princess and the Egg." When we left off, Princess Pearl had promised a greedy innkeeper that shed come back and pay for one scrambled egg. Her sailboat had crashed in the innkeepers quaint seaside town, so she wasnt able to give him the two gold coins necessary to cover the meal.

After her shipwreck, Princess Pearl eventually found her way back to her own kingdom. The king and queen hugged their daughter extra tight when she got home. Then they surprised her with an even bigger boat, with even more sails so that she could try again with her world travels.

And she did.

Several months into her journey, she found herself back at the quaint seaside town: the one where shed been shipwrecked and where she had a debt to settle with the owner of the bed and breakfast.

But this time when she stepped into the cafe, she was not barefoot; on her feet she wore a pair of fine leather boots. Her clothing was well-tailored and trim. And her hair wasnt disheveled and strewn with sea life; it was tucked neatly beneath a green velvet cap.

As you can imagine, the innkeeper did not recognize her.

INNKEEPER: May I help you?

PEARL: Yes, I think you may! Several months ago, I got into a shipwreck and was unable to pay you for one scrambled egg: a humble breakfast that cost two gold coins. I promised Id come back and pay for that delicious meal. And... here I am!

NARRATOR: The innkeeper stared at Pearl with disbelief. Was this really the same ragamuffin from all those months ago? She looked so fancy, so elegant!

PEARL: And further, sir, to thank you for your generosity and your patience I intend to pay you double. No - make it quadruple. So, instead of two gold coins, that would be, what, eight?

NARRATOR: The innkeeper thought for a moment. Why should this prosperous woman pay a mere eight gold coins when obviously she could pay so much more?

INNKEEPER: Im sorry. Eight gold coins, you say? No, no! You owe me far more than eight gold coins.

NARRATOR: Pearl was confused.

PEARL: I do?

INNKEEPER: You bet you do! Think about it. If I hadnt served you that one scrambled egg, that egg would have hatched into a chick! And then that chick would have grown up and laid eggs and hatched a dozen more chicks! And each one of those chicks would have gone on to lay eggs and hatch a dozen more chicks! You see where Im going with this?

NARRATOR: Pearl shook her head.

PEARL: Um, Im not sure I -

INNKEEPER: Long story short... you dont owe me eight gold coins. You owe me

NARRATOR: He pulled out a pencil, grabbed a napkin, and began scribbling.

INNKEEPER: (to himself, as he scribbles his calculations on the napkin) Lets see multiply this times this, add up that and that Okay uh-huh alright. You owe me eight-million gold coins.

PEARL: Im sorry eight-million?!?!

INNKEEPER: Yup! Eight-million! I mean, give or take a few thousand. I rounded down. Figured Id give you a bit of a discount.

NARRATOR: Pearl could hardly believe what she was hearing.

PEARL: But sir, I cant pay you eight-million gold coins!

NARRATOR: The innkeeper scowled.

INNKEEPER: Really? You cant pay?

NARRATOR: He gestured toward Pearls fancy clothes and shoes.

INNKEEPER: ...or you wont pay?

NARRATOR: Pearls mind raced. She reached into her purse.

PEARL: Look. What do you say I give you a hundred gold coins and we call it a deal.

NARRATOR: The innkeeper fixed Pearl with a steely gaze. He crossed his arms.

INNKEEPER: Nope. Eight-million gold coins, or I see you in court. Tomorrow.

NARRATOR: Pearl sighed.

PEARL: Alright, then. See you in court.

NARRATOR: As Pearl sat down to dinner that night in another hotel, blocks away from the bed and breakfast she was so distraught could hardly eat. She picked at her boiled peas took half-hearted nibbles of her steamed corn and by the time dessert was served a warm bowl of roasted chestnuts she couldnt even take a bite.

She stared at her plate of food, wondering what in the world she would do tomorrow in court.

Then, suddenly, it hit her.

PEARL: Ive got it! The answer is in the peas! And the corn! And the chestnuts! Id better get some sleep; tomorrow is going to be a big day.

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Prince George the focus of arts discussion – Prince George Citizen

Posted: at 1:16 am

As one local resident headed to Vancouver and ultimately to Toronto to pursue his career as dancer, actor, video editor, another took to the high seas to entertain on cruises and appears as part of a dance troupe on a popular television series.

As one local resident headed to Vancouver and ultimately to Toronto to pursue his career as dancer, actor, video editor, another took to the high seas to entertain on cruises and appears as part of a dance troupe on a popular television series.

Other local artists chose not to leave Prince George while yet another came from a large urban centre to find success here.

All of these perspectives were explored during a Zoom event called Following Creative Paths: Recentering Northern Artistic Life presented by ArtsUNITE from Ontario where panelists from Prince George discussed several topics including their decisions on what path they chose to achieve their own measure of success.

The panelists were Izaak Smith, who ultimately moved to Toronto to pursue his career, Tristan Ghostkeeper, who moved to Vancouver to pursue his career, local artists Elmer Gunderson and Clayton Gauthier, who both stayed in Prince George and Aidyl Jago who came to PG from an urban centre to open a music school.

Smith, a dancer, actor and now video editor, who appeared in the first season of So You Think You Can Dance Canada, movies and commercials said he carries his Prince George-ness around with him everywhere he goes.

His dance training was with Judy Russell at her Enchainement Dance Studio and he credits that opportunity with a lot of his success.

I think people under rate the art scene in Prince George as maybe being too northern or reclusive or hokey and I experienced a really big culture shock when coming to the big city, Smith said. Theres a different interaction with art and story telling and I think what we have in northern BC is special and I think its something that more people want.

Smith said Prince George offered him a great base to launch his career.

Tristan Ghostkeeper couldnt say enough about Judy Russell and the training he received at her dance studio.

He takes all the knowledge he garnered from that experience and carries it into all his career opportunities, he said.

As part of the discussion, the topic of the life/art divide and how Prince George takes up space in their artwork was put forward.

For me art has been something I have needed everyday and its medicine too, Clayton Gauthier said. Growing up in Prince George I wondered why there wasnt any art around. Wheres the art? Because art changes the energy in the room. When you see art its so beautiful. Its about people sharing their art with others and sharing their stories through art. Its such a beautiful thing to feel so that was my motivation to keep doing this art and I want to see it all through the community and thats a big part of growing up in a small community. When you dont see that art around on a regular basis you have a motivation - OK, I can do this and be a part of it and share my art with the kids and pass it on. I feel its powerful. Art does such beautiful things.

The event took place over two hours and explored many other aspects of the arts including grassroots versus institutional community development while bringing culture conversations away from larger metropolitan cities and toward more remote regions. This event explored the lived experience of the unique artistic community of Prince George, focusing on the challenges, concerns, differences, and future development.

The Prince George & District Community Arts Council (CAC) was instrumental in putting the event together and is the umbrella organization for the arts in Northern BC.

Sean Farrell, executive director for the CAC, said hes seen a shift in the culture in Prince George in the last couple of years where there are a lot of plans for the city that include the arts and making space for it in the community.

I think right now there is an incredible energy happening at our city hall that has finally recognized art and culture isnt just a secondary recreational thing and could be a core piece of urban planning, Farrell said.

During a recent city council meeting, an hour was spent talking about how to make arts and culture a more predominant part of the citys landscape, he added.

There was a consensus during the meeting that weve kicked this can too long down the road and we missed opportunities and were not going to miss those opportunities any more. We can see there is a recognition now that this needs to happen and I think there is a political will now for that to happen. I think timing is always really important and these issues that were talking about are actually being heard.

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Father’s Day 2021: Things to do in L.A. and Orange County – Los Angeles Times

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With the state reopening, Fathers Day 2021 is looking a whole lot different from last year. Restaurants are expected to operate at full capacity, music festivals are back on the calendar and fully vaccinated Californians have been given the green light to ditch their face masks at many (but not all) places. For those eager to break out of their pandemic shells and maybe brave the return of packed crowds (and yes, traffic), Los Angeles has Fathers Day weekend events that go beyond ballgames and beer.

Go to the drive-in movies at the Santa Monica Airport: They were a welcome revival during the era of social distancing, and drive-in movies are still an option for those who need a minute before returning to indoor theaters or those who simply enjoy the experience of watching films outside. The drive-in at airport has a few shows, including Taken, a movie technically about a father-daughter relationship. More info on this location; there are also rooftop movies in El Segundo.)

Paint in Leimert Park: Channel your inner artist this weekend with Sip N Paint in Leimert Park, hosted by Da Art Haus. Create a piece of art to take home in a laid-back atmosphere. The event takes place from noon to 7 p.m. Sunday at the Leimert Park Village Merchants Assn. The $25 ticket includes a canvas, easel, apron, paints and paintbrushes. More info

See environmental art in Long Beach: The Long Beach Museum of Arts exhibition Earth, Every Day has been extended through June 27 and features the work of high school students from the city. See how topics like pollution, renewable energy and climate change are explored. The museum sits on a beachside bluff overlooking the Pacific and has an outdoor restaurant to make more of the visit. The museum is also holding its Art Auction XIX; if youre in a position to splurge, you might be able to pick up a gift as well. Advance tickets ($8 to $10; children 12 and younger are free) are required. More info

Catch up with Made in L.A.: The COVID-19-postponed biennial is still open at the Hammer Museum in Westwood and the Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in San Marino. Made in L.A. 2020: a version brings together 30 Los Angeles-based artists across two institutions a show that spans L.A. in more ways than one. As of Wednesday afternoon, Fathers Day reservations were still available at the Hammer (free admission) and the Huntington ($13 to $29; children younger than 4 are free). More info

Get classical at the Getty Villa: Looking for something more old school? Celebrate Dad a little early and head over to the Getty Villa on Friday. The Malibu institution is home to ancient Greek and Roman art, with tranquil gardens that make the Italian countryside feel as close as Pacific Coast Highway. Tickets for Saturday and Sunday appeared sold out, but plenty of spots were available for Friday, and the best part: Admission is free. More info

Gear up at the Petersen Automotive Museum: If youve got F9" fever, try an afternoon at the Petersen, across the street from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. It boasts of having one of the worlds largest car collections, with modern racers, vintage high-performance vehicles, sci-fi designs and more on view. Advance tickets ($11 to $16) are still available for this weekend. More info

Marvel at maritime wonders in Oxnard: If seaside treasures are more your thing, a nice Sunday drive to the Channel Islands Maritime Museum might do the trick. Its Fathers Day event will feature vintage boats, classic cars, ship models and even knot-tying demonstrations for those whove always wanted to explore the high seas. Regular admission ($3 to $7; children 6 and younger are free) apply. More info

Jam out at the Grammy Museum: More than just dad music, the Grammy Museum is reopening just in time for Fathers Day weekend. The downtown L.A. institution has three new exhibits, which are centered on Motown, the Dave Matthews Band and Marco Antonio Sols. Reserve advance tickets ($13 to $15; children 5 and younger are free). More info

Uncover the secrets of the Madcap Hotel: Its not exactly Hotel California, but its something close. The Madcap Motel in downtown L.A.'s Arts District has the oddities you need to feel like youve entered another dimension. The immersive show, modeled after a 1960s motel, invites you into a mystery of bizarre installations and photo ops. Timed tickets ($36.90 to $47.25)required. More info

Explore L.A.'s great outdoors on a hike: Sometimes its hard to beat quality time spent outdoors with your loved ones. Check out The Times guide to the 50 best hikes in L.A., where you can get the scoop on the best hiking experiences the region has to offer, with details about trail length and difficulty. Directions also included.

Visit some of our 101 Best Restaurants picks: Indulge in the reopenings of eateries around Los Angeles by perusing our annual list of 101 restaurants. The list not only includes reviews but also highlights Angelenos who helped to make a difficult year a little bit brighter. Check individual listings for Fathers Day weekend availability.

Tune into opera: A Fathers Day virtual recital will take place from 3 to 5 p.m., hosted by the African Americans for L.A. Opera chapter of the Opera League of Los Angeles. Featuring the voices of Derrell Acon and Leonard Hayes, the free performance just may to tug at your heartstrings. More info

Dive into coral reefs: The Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach is inviting kids and their families for a guided art lesson about coral reefs Saturday. Parents looking for family fun can get the kids engaged with the thousands of animals that call coral reefs home, all while staying in the comfort of your own. Tickets are $10 per household. More info

Make a tasty treat with virtual cooking classes: BLVD Kitchens online cooking school has a stacked schedule of classes for kids and their parents. This weekend features lessons for little ones on how to make brownies and strawberry jam perfect for Sunday brunch treats. Paid reservations required. More info

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Adventure of the Seas Live Blog – Day 5 – Cozumel – Royal Caribbean Blog

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Adventure of the Seas made its first port of call stop not at a private island on this sailing, when we arrived in Cozumel.

Unfortunately the weather forecast was not favorable, but you gotta make do with what you get.

Since it was overcast and looked like it might rain a lot, we decided to go downtown and have lunch instead of doing an excursion or going to the beach.

I was curious to see what Cozumel is like after all these months without cruise ships and the tourists they bring. While so much attention is given to the plight of the cruise lines during the shutdown, ports like Cozumel have been suffering without the daily flow of tourists.

I was surprised to see most of the shops and restaurants open for business. Perhaps they all just closed up until today, but the stores were ready for tourists.

In fact, many of the people working at these shops were surprised to see cruise ship visitors. Some told us they had heard cruise ship guests would be limited to cruise line excursions, or were simply unaware a ship was back.

In Cozumel, you have to wear a mask inside and outside, regardless of if you are vaccinated or not. It's a federal law, so it definitely made walking around a little more uncomfortable since the humidity was extremely high.

Besides wearing masks, the experience being back downtown was the same as in the past. Lots of people encouraging you to stop in and shop, restaurants open, and taxis all over the place.

We had lunch in a restaurant we had never been to before north of downtown, but the food was disappointing. It just was nothing special.

We then headed to a new coffee shop that I had never seen before,Aqui + Ahora Coffee.

The place had a great vibe to it, and a nice assortment of coffees, snacks, and some light food too.

Afterwards, we decided to head back to the ship and relax in our (air conditioned) cabin.

Overall, Cozumel looked better than I expected. I thought perhaps only a fraction of the stores or restaurants would be open, but a surprisingly large number of venues were open.

When we come back next week, our plan is to visit an old favorite, Paradise Beach, and see what that experience is like now.

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Russia, US And The Churning Arctic Geopolitics Analysis – Eurasia Review

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The Arctic geopolitics has become one of the strategic policy planks of big powers. This has been reflected in the separate statements issued by the Russian President Vladimir Putin and the U.S. President Joe Biden after the US-Russia summit in Geneva on Wednesday.

Putin told reporters that Moscow and Washington should interact on issues related to the Arctic region. He said: Russia and the United States are among the eight members of the Arctic Council; Russia chairs the Arctic Council this year. Moreoverthere is a strait between Alaska and Chukotka, the United States is on one side and Russia is on the other. All this together should push us to join efforts (The TASS News 16 June 2021).

Dismissing American concerns about Russias alleged engagement in the militarization of the Arctic region, Putin said: we discussed this issue inabroad format andinsome detail. This is ahighly important andinteresting issue asthedevelopment oftheentire Arctic region andtheNorthern Sea Route inparticular has tremendous economic significance formany countries intheregion andbeyond it. TheUS concerns regarding militarisation are absolutely groundless. We are not doing anything new there compared totheSoviet era. We are restoring thelocal infrastructure that was lost anddemolished completely some time ago. we are doing this using up-to-date technology. We are restoring themilitary andborder control infrastructure, andwe are creating nature conservation infrastructure, which has never been done inthepast. We are creating arelevant base fortheEmergencies Ministry, which will give us theopportunity toconduct high-seas rescue missions incase ofemergency andtoprotect theenvironment (President of Russia, 16 June 2021).

Putin pointed out that Russia would be ready toassist all theinterested countries andcompanies indeveloping theNorthern Sea Route. He said that thenavigation season intheregion is much longer, andit will become practically year-round due toclimate change andaswe launch our new icebreakers, including theLider. Russia has themost powerful nuclear icebreaker fleet which is inhigh demand here (Ibid).

Putin also reminded that theUN Convention ontheLaw oftheSea (UNCLOS) describes thelegal regime ininternational waters, including internal waters, theinland sea, theterritorial sea, thecontiguous zone, theexclusive economic zone andtheopen high seas. Aninland sea is located inside acountrys territory It is covered byaspecial regime, andwe dont have toprovide anyone with any privilege here. It is our sovereign right toallow ornot toallow foreign ships tosail there. But we do not abuse this right, andwe grant free passage toeveryone (Ibid; The TASS News 16 June 2021).

President Biden in his press conference in Geneva said that there is a long list of issues they spent time on and this obviously included the question of the Arctic. Biden said that they discussed how both the U.S and Russia can ensure the Arctic as a region of cooperation rather than conflict. According to him, I caught part of Presidents Putins press conference, and he talked about the need for us to be able to have some kind of modus operandi where we dealt with making sure the Arctic was, in fact, a free zone (The White House, 16 June 2021).

A month before the U.S.-Russia summit, President Biden, addressing at the United States Coast Guard Academys 140th Commencement Exercises, said that in the Arctic, the Coast Guard is the prow of American presence in the region, rapidly growing in strategic importance as ice recedes and new sea lanes open. We, the United States, are an Arctic nation, and the United States must demonstrate our leadership and engagement, our diplomacy, and our operational skill. And we have to make sure that every country respects these international norms. So, we need them we need modern ice breakers, yes, but just as critically, we need to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with those Allies and partners who share our values, including Indigenous communities who are the keepers of traditional knowledge about the Arctic waters (The White House 19 May 2021).

A day after Bidens statement came the 12th Ministerial meeting of the Arctic Council which marked Russia assuming Chairmanship of the Council. The Council meeting was held on 20 May 2021 in Reykjavik, Iceland. That was the time when Washington was set to begin a fresh round of campaign against Russian efforts to hold sway over the Arctic shipping lanes and reinstate a military component in the discussions underway over issues in the region. There were reports about the U.S. and its NATO allies opposition to Russias attempts to control Northern Sea Route. Moscow was, in fact, keen on resuming high-level military dialogues within the Council, but it got deferred following the Ukraine issue in 2014. Moscow was equally suspicious about NATOs strategy in the Arctic.

At the Arctic Council foreign ministers meeting in Reykjavik, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the Council should focus on peaceful cooperation on environmental issues, maritime safety and the well-being of indigenous people in the region. He told that the Arctic is a region for strategic competition that has seized the worlds attention. But the Arctic is more than a strategically or economically significant region. Its home to our people, its hallmark has been and must remain peaceful cooperation. Its our responsibility to protect that peaceful cooperation and to build on it. Blinken alsounderlined the importance of sustaining effective governance and the rule of law to ensure that the Arctic remains a region free of conflict where countries act responsibly. He had also challenged the legality of the proposed Russian maritime rules and expressed deep reservations about Russias military activity in the far North (ABC News 21 May 2021).

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov challenged NATOs motives in deployments of bombers and submarines to the area. It is therefore important to extend the positive relations we have within the Arctic Council to encompass the military sphere as well, first of all by revitalizing multilateral dialogue on military issues between the general staffs of the Arctic states, Lavrov said. Moscows anxieties also found expression in Lavrovs statement on Norway. He said: Our Norwegian neighbours, who have never had the principle of the permanent presence of foreign military personnel enshrined in their laws, are now amending their legislation In fact, things are moving towards what US Secretary of State Antony Blinken once called presence on a persistent rotational basis. We see this presence in other parts of Europe as well Mainly, we are worried about what is happening near our borders. Norway is our close neighbour with which we enjoy good relations. But the problems associated with the escalation of military and political tensions due to deployment of foreign troops in Norway and the Baltic states remain (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, 20 May 2021).

Earlier, Nick Paton Walsh (CNN) wrote that Russia was amassing unprecedented military might in the Arctic and testing its newest weapons in a region freshly ice-free due to the climate emergency, in a bid to secure its northern coast and open up a key shipping route from Asia to Europe. There were also reports of concern voiced by experts about Russian super-weapon, the Poseidon 2M39 torpedo. Walsh said that this unmanned stealth torpedo was powered by a nuclear reactor and intended by Russian designers to sneak past coastal defenseslike those of the U.S.on the sea floor (Nick Paton Walsh 2021). It was aimed to deliver a warhead of multiple megatons, according to Russian officials, causing radioactive waves that would render swathes of the target coastline uninhabitable for decades. Christopher A Fordthen assistant secretary of state for International Security and Non-Proliferationwas quoted saying that the Poseidon is designed to inundate U.S. coastal cities with radioactive tsunamis. Similarly, Vice Admiral Nils Andreas Stensnes, head of Norwegian intelligence was reported to have said that his agency had assessed the Poseidon as part of the new type of nuclear deterrent weapons. And it is in a testing phase. But its a strategic system and its aimed at targets and has an influence far beyond the region in which they test it currently (Ibid).

According to Walsh, the Russian military build-up has been rivaled by NATO and U.S. troop and equipment mobilisation. For instance, the U.S. B-1 Lancer bombers positioned in Norways rland air base were completed missions in the eastern Barents Sea. The US militarys stealth Seawolf submarine was conceded by American officials as being in the area. A State Department official was reported to have told CNN: Theres clearly a military challenge from the Russians in the Arctic, including their refitting of old Cold War bases and build-up of new facilities on the Kola Peninsula near the city of Murmansk. The senior official said, That has implications for the United States and its allies, not least because it creates the capacity to project power up to the North Atlantic (Ibid). Lt. Col. Thomas Campbell, a Pentagon spokesman, was quoted saying that Russia is refurbishing Soviet-era airfields and radar installations, constructing new ports and search-and-rescue centers, and building up its fleet of nuclear-and conventionally-powered icebreakers. It is also expanding its network of air and coastal defense missile systems, thus strengthening its anti-access and area-denial capabilities over key portions of the Arctic, he noted (Ibid).

Washington is evidently uneasy about Russias attempts to influence the Northern Sea Routea shipping lane that stretches from Norway and Alaska, along Russias northern coast, across to the North Atlantic. The NSR is expected to reduce the travel time it presently takes shipping containers to reach Europe from Asia via the Suez Canal.

According to an official of the Ministry for the Development of the Russian Far East, the volume of cargo shipping along the NSR is expected to increase to 100 mln tonnes by 2030. Another Russian official said that the NSR would be a more environmentally friendly route than transport routes located to the south, since Russia prioritizes the environmental safety of cargo transportation in the development of the Arctic route and focuses on ships using appropriate types of fuel (TASS 12 May 2021).

In April this year, the Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said that Russia will continue developing its military infrastructure in the Arctic and on the coast of the Arctic Ocean. According to him, It is important to say that the Northern Fleet is constantly practicing employing fighter aviation from the airfields of Arctic archipelagos. The military infrastructure continues to be developed on Arctic islands and the coastline of the Arctic Ocean (TASS 20 April 2021).

Plausibly, the U.S. and the NATO allies are set to become increasingly active in the region. The U.S. contends that the Arctic is now caught in an economic and military competition from Moscow and Beijing. The emerging role of China in the region is also viewed with increasing suspicion, particulate after its proclamation of the Arctic Policy (The Peoples Republic of China 2018). Beijings self-styled status as a near-Arctic state with its polar silk road project raised new concerns in the West, particularly in the background of mounting tensions between the U.S and China (Seethi 2021).

Meanwhile, Moscow was increasingly worried about the attempts to make the region a potentially dangerous terrain of the Wests military exercises. The Russian Embassy in Washington said: The Arctic Challenge military exercises involving the United States are provocative, do not establish any framework for mutual trust in Europe, and contradict (the) peaceful and sustainable development of the Arctic region. The drills are held twice a year under the auspices of Nordic Defence Cooperation, which included a contingent of 250 US Marines, ten F/A-18 Hornet multirole combat jets, as well as KC-130 tankers and transport aircraft. Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said that a total of 40,000 troops and 15,000 pieces of weapons and equipment, including strategic aviation, were concentrated near Russias borders in the west and south, even as the NATO reconnaissance flights had doubled in the first three months of 2021 compared to 2020 (Sputnik News, 8 June 2021).

It was in the background of big power games that Russias foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov said that Russia controls the Arctic. It has been absolutely clear for everyone for a long time that this is our territory, he said. A report in The Economist says: Russian land makes up 53% of the Arctic coastline. Russia has also ramped up its military investment in the region: since 2007 at least 50 Soviet-era military outposts have reopened. But the other Arctic states see things differently. In 2018 NATO sent an aircraft carrier into the Arctic Circle for the first time in 27 years. Last year British and American warships entered the Barents Sea, north of Norway and close to Russias key naval bases, for the first time since the 1980s. Next year Norway will carry out its biggest military exercise inside the Arctic Circle since the cold war. (The Economist 14 June 2021).

Looking at the Arctic geopolitics within a framework of big power rivalry, it is plausible to say, as a Carnegie Endowment paper underlined, that Moscows ambitious programmes in the Arctic amount to a renewal of its Cold War posture centred around long-standing missions of protecting the sanctuaries of its ballistic missile submarine fleet and operations in the North Atlantic in the event of a war in Europe. But the paper warns that the Russian military is resuming these missions with fewer resources and facing a more formidable array of adversary capabilities than during the Cold War. This might again make a room for suspicion if the task before Moscow is to recoup economically capable partners like China in its Arctic geopolitical objectives. Chinawhich is palpably worried about the Indo-Pacific strategy of the U.S. and its partners in a wider regionis all set to bolster its Belt-Road Initiative, and the Polar Silk Road is perceptibly Beijings dream project in the coming years. Russias Chairmanship of the Arctic Council is therefore seen as a major challenge for other Arctic States like the U.S., Canada, Norway etc. with China emerging as an important stakeholder in the region.

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deCODE genetics: Predicting the probability of death – BioSpace

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REYKJAVIK, Iceland, June 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Scientists from deCODE genetics have developed a predictor based on protein measurements in blood samples that predicts the time to all-cause death better than traditional risk factors.

In a paper published today in Communications Biology, scientists from deCODE genetics, a subsidiary of Amgen, describe how they developed predictor of how much is left of the life of a person.

Using a dataset of ~5000 protein measurements in 22,913 Icelanders, of whom 7,061 died during the study period, the scientists developed a predictor of the time to death that can outperform predictors based on multiple known risk factors. The predictor can identify the 5% at highest risk in a group of 60-80 year olds, where 88% died within ten years and the 5% at lowest risk where only 1% died within ten years.

The scientists explored how individual proteins associate with mortality and various causes of death and found most causes of death to have similar protein profiles. In particular, they found growth/differentiation factor 15 (GDF15), which has been associated with mortality and ageing before, to be an important predictor of all-cause mortality. Furthermore, they found that, on average, participants predicted at high risk of death within a short period of time had less grip strength and performed worse on an exercise tolerance test and a test of cognitive function than those predicted at lower risk.

"The predictor gives a good estimate of general health from a single blood draw," says Thjodbjorg Eiriksdottir scientist at deCODE genetics and author on the paper.

"This is pretty cool but also scary and hopefully somewhat useful", says Kari Stefansson a senior author on the paper . "This shows that our general health is reflected in the plasma proteome. Using just one blood sample per person you can easily compare large groups in a standardized way, for example, to estimate treatment effects in clinical trials."

Based in Reykjavik, Iceland, deCODE is a global leader in analyzing and understanding the human genome. Using its unique expertise in human genetics combined with growing expertise in transcriptomics and population proteomics and vast amount of phenotypic data, deCODE has discovered risk factors for dozens of common diseases and provided key insights into their pathogenesis. The purpose of understanding the genetics of disease is to use that information to create new means of diagnosing, treating and preventing disease. deCODE is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Amgen (NASDAQ: AMGN).

Contact:

Thora Kristin AsgeirsdottirPR and CommunicationsdeCODE geneticsthoraa@decode.is354 894 1909

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Tracing the Origins of Medical Media Hype: Failing to Mention Mice – DNA Science – PLoS Blogs

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Reading a breathless account of an amazing new medical treatment, lured in by an exciting headline, only to discover a few paragraphs in that the findings are in rodents, can at best be annoying, and at worst raise false hopes for patients and their families. A new study, long overdue, pins down one source of this common error of omission: leaving out mice in the titles of technical articles.

A chain reaction of mangled communication is at fault.

Leaving Out the Rodents

Missing mice happen at several points in the medical news trajectory.

Failure to mention that an experiment was done on non-human animals in a technical articles title can reverberate as a news release and then echo in media reports, tweets, and memes. Or, the headline of a news release or its content can ignore the mice, even if the journal article mentions them.

In yet another scenario, the reporter can omit the rodents. Journalists are sometimes so rushed with deadlines that they may modify a news release rather than take the time to read the technical report behind it that may indeed credit the mice and rats. Another source of the error: editors who write the headlines of news articles, omitting the mention (writers rarely write the headlines).

Many science journalists get ideas from the dozens of news releases posted daily at Eurekalert.org, from institutions and companies all over the world. And some releases only mention mice a few paragraphs in or not at all.

Hype resulting from mouse-deficient headlines has bugged me for a long time. When I edit abstracts for a medical journal, one of my regular gigs, I alert authors who leave out model organisms from article titles.

So I was happy to read, ironically in a news release, that Marcia Triunfol at Humane Society International in Washington, DC and Fabio Gouveia at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in Rio de Janeiro have investigated whether mention of mice in news release headlines dampens media coverage.

The findings described in Whats not in the news headlines or titles of Alzheimer disease articles? #InMice, published in PLOS Biology, arent surprising: when a scientific papers title omits the rodent connection, journalists reporting on the paper tend to do the same. And reporters are more likely to cover papers without mice in their titles.

Id never pitch an idea based only on mouse work to Medscape or MedPage Today, whose readers are clinicians. And I dont include such studies in my human genetics textbook.

A Mouse Isnt a Little Human

Mice are terrific models of some human diseases. Their anatomical, physiological, and genomic similarities to us make them useful in preclinical studies emphasis on the PRE.

Testing a new treatment in mice is great for amassing large numbers, implementing several control groups, and doing things that one wouldnt or couldnt do to people, like yanking out a liver or slicing up a brain to study effects of a drug. Mice in particular are useful for studying aging, collapsing the timeframe of a lifetime from 80 years to 2.

For some diseases, exploring treatments first in a model organism makes sense. But the differences among species must be considered to jump from preclinical study to clinical trial. The correspondence can come down to a single gene. According to Why Mouse Matters at the NIHs Genome.gov, on average, the protein-coding regions of the mouse and human genomes are 85 percent identical; some genes are 99 percent identical while others are only 60 percent identical.

Evolution has conserved large swathes of mammalian genomes. We use versions of the same molecules for the same things. But even when human genes are swapped into or added to rodent or monkey genomes, creating humanized creatures, differences in development impinge upon the extrapolation and interpretation of experimental results. This is particularly true for syndromes that unfurl according to a distinctive timetable, like genetic diseases with characteristic developmental delays or loss of milestones, and common chronic diseases that emerge and worsen over a lifetime, like diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

The imperfection of animal models isnt a new idea.

A study of studies from 2005, Of Mice and Men, by Lloyd Demetrius, published in EMBO Reports, has a one-sentence abstract: When it comes to studying ageing and the means to slow it down, mice are not just small humans.

Demetrius examined the misplaced use of rodents in investigating aging and caloric restriction the idea that near-starvation extends life. Theres evidence for the connection if youre a rat. For people, not so much, although reducing eating may lower weight and blood pressure and cholesterol and glucose levels in the blood, which lowers risk of chronic conditions. He argued that the different developmental timetables of rodents and us reflect differences in the aging process itself, specifically metabolic responses to stress.

So you cant extrapolate from mice living longer on a kale diet compared to littermates eating regular grub, to people making different dietary choices.

Considering Alzheimers

The new study probes the effect on media coverage of including, or not including, in mice in the title of a technical report about Alzheimers disease. They chose Alzheimers because its an exclusively human condition, but for which hundreds of mouse models have been developed to probe specific physiological responses not related to the passage of time.

The investigators divided 623 scientific reports published in 2018 and 2019 that used mice in Alzheimers disease research into those that outed the rodents in the title and those that didnt. Then they tracked the news stories appearing in the wake of publication of each study.

The papers that left out mice received more media coverage and were significantly more highly tweeted. The authors expressed concern at the misleading of the public, even if unintentional.

Most people only read the headlines of news stories. If the headline omits that the Alzheimers study was done in mice, most keep the impression that the study findings apply to humans, which is not true. We now know that virtually all findings obtained in animal studies in Alzheimers disease do not replicate to humans, said Triunfol in the news release.

Alzheimers is only one example, but the failure to identify model organisms is pervasive and a practice not likely to fade away anytime soon. In fact, when I saw the news release that inspired this post, on EurekAlert, I read another, guilty of the mouse sin: Plant-based diet protects from hypertension, preeclampsia.

But heres the first two sentences: A plant-based diet appears to afford significant protection to rats bred to become hypertensive on a high-salt diet, scientists report. When the rats become pregnant, the whole grain diet also protects the mothers and their offspring from deadly preeclampsia.

Will that headline alone trickle into news reports? Inspire tweets or Facebook memes? Probably. But the example of hypertension is less disturbing than Alzheimers blood pressure is controllable in many ways, altering diet among them.

Headlines and news reports sensationalized, perhaps inadvertently, by errors of omission, will continue. So its up to readers to realize that dramatic claims of medical advances might not apply to people caveat emptor.

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