HS wrestling: Five pin down Staten Island Coaches first-team, all-star honors – SILive.com

The 2021-22 high school wrestling season had its share of hurdles for all the Staten Island teams.

COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine requirements hindered many wrestlers from competing in dual meets and tournaments. In some leagues it prevented non-vaccinated wrestlers from competing at all. Teams and wrestlers grinded out the season which limited travel to neighboring states and caused many regional and national tournaments to be canceled.

Monsignor Farrell went undefeated against New York City opponents in dual meets and went 5-0 in the Staten Island Duals with just its vaccinated wrestlers. The Lions took second at the Mayors Cup as a last-minute entry with only nine wrestlers.

Farrell had its largest squad in school history with 65 wrestlers last season. The team was led by senior captains Michael Adams and Michael Caserta. The closest dual meet was against Tottenville, which Farrell won, 36-28.

The youthful 2021 Pirates wrestling team never seemed to stop moving forward, getting better as the season progressed. The Pirates completed the year by winning the Public School Athletic League individual team title, and the PSAL Borough title. They finished second in the PSAL dual meet tournament falling to Mayors Cup champion, Eagle Academy. The Pirates will certainly be looking to challenge both programs next year.

As a result, the Lions and Pirates dominated the five first-team all-star selections picked by the coaches of Staten Islands wrestling programs. Plus. wrestlers from those two schools lead the contingent on the second and third teams below.

First Team

Michael Adams -- 118 pounds (Monsignor Farrell):

The last of the Adams brothers (Terry and Daniel prior) to attend the Oakwood school was the overall city champion at 118 pounds, winning the Mayors Cup for the third time by defeating fellow Islander Jacob Levin of Tottenville. The senior also won the prestigious Ironman Invitational for the third time. Adams also won his second CHSAA title, beating Chaminades Shane Meenaghan, a returning state place finisher. He placed seventh at the NYSPHSAA state championships. His record was 37-3, bringing his career mark to 136-18, including 91 pins. He is widely considered one of the best wrestlers in NYC history. He will be continuing his wrestling career at Ursinus College in Pennsylvania, where he will join older brother Terry.

John-Michael Economos -- 145 pounds (Monsignor Farrell)

The junior was the overall city champion and won the Mayors Cup with 15 seconds left in the match. He was down two points to state level wrestler Mitchell Barcus when he secured a takedown and took Barcus directly to his back in what many call the match of the tournament and year in New York City wrestling. Economos is a two-sport athlete, who also competes for the swim team.

McKee/Staten Island Tech's Joseph Masica, center, left, who copped the 189-pound Mayor's Cup title, poses with Seagull coach Charles Brancato. (Family photo)

Joseph Masica -- 189 pounds (McKee/Staten Island Tech)

The senior was the overall city champion at 189 pounds, beating Shaydon Bernadskiy of Tottenville in dominant fashion, 13-2. He also won the Borough Championships and was the PSAL Sectional champion. His season record was 34-3, including 25 pins.

118-pounder Jacob Levin will go down as one of Tottenville's top grapplers. (Photo courtesy of Tottenville wrestling)

Jacob Levin -- 118 pounds (Tottenville)

Heading into the season, the senior was looked at as one of the citys best wrestlers and he certainly delivered. The two-time All-Star won the Eagle Academy Invitational, Murrow Invitational and Tottenville Invitational. Levin captured his third individual Borough championship and second PSAL individual title. The Pirate captain capped his final year with 37 wins (148 career wins in 3 years), scoring bonus points in all the regular season matches he won. He concluded this stellar career by going 2-2 in the NYPHSAA championships. He is considered one of the best wrestlers in the history of the Tottenville program.

Jake Gulino -- 215 pounds (Tottenville)

The senior notched his first All-Star accolades by becoming the dark horse at the PSAL Individual Tournament when he avenged his only two losses of the regular season to capture his first PSAL Individual title. On his way to representing the PSAL at the NYSPHSAA championships, he beat this years Mayors Cup champion, Daniel Abramov of Stuyvesant, by major decision. He concluded his season by going 1-2 in the NYSPHSAA championships.

Staten Island Wrestler of the Year -- Michael Adams

2nd Team

Orlando Suarez 118lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Max Borowiec 126lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Michael Caserta 160lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Dylan Pipitone 172lbs (Tottenville)

Charlie Curry 189lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Shaydon Bernardskiy 189lbs (Tottenville)

Ben Rosa 285lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

3rd Team

Jack Borowiec 102lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Branden Munoz 102lbs (Petrides)

Harrison Zufrani 132lbs (MSIT)

Kyle Jacobs 152lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Nick Gebbia 152lbs (Monsignor Farrell)

Sean Mclaughlin 152lbs (Tottenville)

Alan Pinkasov 160lbs (Tottenville)

Christian Kiste 285lbs (Susan Wagner)

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HS wrestling: Five pin down Staten Island Coaches first-team, all-star honors - SILive.com

When Is Movie Night On Love Island? Viewers Cant Wait For Islanders To See What Really Happened During… – Capital

8 July 2022, 11:51

Movie night led to one of the most dramatic episodes of Love Island last year, but when is it returning to series 8?

Love Island is becoming ever more dramatic by the day, especially after the re-coupling following Casa Amor.

The re-coupling saw Jacques O'Neill stay partnered with Paige Thorne after a romantic fling with bombshell Cheyanne Kerr, while Andrew Le Page re-coupled with Coco Lodge after the Casa Amor girls told him Tasha Ghouri had been lying to him.

How The Love Islanders Keep Their Conversations Off-Camera

As the aftermath of the re-coupling kicks off, viewers are demanding to know when movie night will take place on Love Island, the episode in which the islanders are shown moments from the series that some of their co-stars dont know about.

Last year, movie night saw Faye Winter and Jake Cornish come to blows after a clip was shown of Jake egging the other lads to crack on with the bombshells.

It also led to an explosive row between her and Teddy.

This year, even more couples are facing turmoil, so movie night would definitely be a dramatic one. But will there be movie night on Love Island this year and when will it happen?

Producers havent confirmed whether there will be a movie night on Love Island last year but the feature was a new addition to the series in 2021, so its likely it will return this year too.

ITV2 producers scrapped the postcard in Casa Amor this year, which usually sees photos from each of the villas sent to the boys and girls.

However, the out-of-context snapshots always led to complaints as the photos led the islanders to think their partner was doing something they werent.

This year, movie night might be a replacement for the drama-causing feature.

Movie night could take place the week commencing 11 July, in week six of Love Island series 8. Last year, it took place during week five in the villa, a few days after everyone returned from Casa Amor.

The fallout from the islanders Casa Amor antics is likely to continue for a few episodes, so movie night may just happen next week!

Love Island continues at 9pm on ITV2 and ITV Hub.

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When Is Movie Night On Love Island? Viewers Cant Wait For Islanders To See What Really Happened During... - Capital

‘Love Island’ 2022: Memes & Tweets Reacting To The Post-Casa Amor Recoupling Episode – Bustle

Lets face it, fans of ITVs reality dating smash Love Island are in it for the drama - and Series 8 is most certainly delivering in that department. During episode 37s intense recoupling (July 7) viewers were on the edge of their seats as the infamous Casa Amor twist came to a dramatic end. This years recoupling was so gripping, in fact, that the episode drew in a whopping 3.9 million viewers; the shows biggest overnight audience since the 2019 grand finale according to ITV.

As fans will recall, last week the Love Island girls moved into the Casa Amor villa, while the boys stayed put in the main villa. As usual, the boys and girls were tempted by a string of sizzling newcomers and were forced to decide whether or not to stay loyal to their current partner, or dump them in favour of a Casa Amor newbie. Unfortunately for some of the OG couples, heads were indeed turned, providing standout moments in Thursday nights episode, namely Indiyah Polack's return.

During the emotionally-charged recoupling, the islanders were shocked to learn that Dami Hope had decided to recouple with new arrival Summer Botwe, declaring Summer isn't over. However, Dami wasnt alone in his decision to link up with someone else, and moments later Indiyah returned to the main villa walking hand-in-hand with her new Love Island partner, Deji Adeniyi.

Another highlight from the night came when Jacques ONeill decided to stay in a couple with Paige Thorne, despite being intimate with Casa Amor newbie, Cheyanne Kerr. Following Paige and Jacques villa reunion, Cheyanne revealed to the group that she had shared a bed and a kiss with Jacques, to the shock of her fellow islanders.

As ever, fans had a lot of thoughts on the Casa Amor recoupling drama, with many viewers taking to social media to offer their hot takes on what went down. Do you know what this recoupling is really teaching me? Boys cant dish out what they do to girls. You just recoupled too, one frustrated fan wrote on Twitter, while another viewer commented, this recoupling has rattled everyone.

Keep scrolling for some of the best fan reactions to the dramatic Love Island recoupling.

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'Love Island' 2022: Memes & Tweets Reacting To The Post-Casa Amor Recoupling Episode - Bustle

Marco Island considers short-term rental registration program – ] – Gulfshore Business

Kathy Eil built her dream home on Marco Island four years ago. Little did she know when she and her husband chose the property it would be surrounded by short-term rentals on all sides of her house. Noise quickly became an issue.

We ended up having to buy a noise machine and earplugs because all of our lanais are within 20 feet of each other, Eil said. Whatever [the renters] are doing, we hear it.

Eil is one of many Marco Island residents who have voiced in favor of voting for a short-term rental registration program, a referendum that is appearing on the ballot of the primary general election at the end of August.

This referendum was written by political action committee Take Back Marco, a group established specifically to create the short-term rental registration ordinance.

If the ordinance passes, it will apply to those who rent out their homes for less than 30 days more than three times in a year. This will affect a large portion of the island as 25% of single-family homes are used as rentals.

Marco Island does not have any enforced laws specifically for short-term rentals, besides requirement to be registered with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. The proposed 16-page ordinance for Marco Island, which is almost an exact copy of the Fort Lauderdale rental registration ordinance, creates many new standards needed to operate a vacation rental.

Residents of Marco Island got to the point where they said Hey, we have to get these short-term rentals under control, Take Back Marco member and 24-year resident Ed Issler said. We formed this committee to do some research and we found a good rental registration program that was implemented seven years ago in Fort Lauderdale.

Under the proposed ordinance, the owner of the rental must complete a transient rental registration form and pay a registration fee. The fee has not yet been specified; however, the State of Florida is considering a maximum registration fee of $50 per year for all rental registrations. There will additionally be a program cost administration fee which will fund administrative staff hired to ensure compliance of the new ordinances numerous new rules.

Rentals will have stricter noise laws to abide by compared to full-time residences. No sound can be audible for over a minute 25 feet from the property line between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m., and at a distance of 50 feet from the property during the day.

We just had an incident where people were all out on the neighbors lanai drunk and making a ton of noise, my husband went out and asked them to be quiet because our bedroom was right next to their lanai, Eil said. They did quiet down after about an hour, but you know, its not been pleasant.

The new ordinance has maximum occupancy rules of no more than two people per bedroom in a home, with up to four children under the age of 13 total. No guests are allowed after 10 p.m.

The only way to control the number of people that are using the beach, controlling the traffic, controlling the neighborhood parking is to limit the number of people that can stay in a house, Issler said.

The referendum requires a register of all the current guests within the household at all times to be submitted to the City of Marco Island. The owner of the house must appoint someone that is able to respond to an issue on-site within one hour.

You have to keep a log so that we know you dont have any sex offenders, so we have the names of everybody thats renting on your property, and we know the names of the people that are staying on Marco Island, Issler said.

The first violation of any of the provisions is between $200 and $275, the second violation between $500 and $650, and the third between $1,000 and $1,300. The rental will start being suspended at the fourth violation.

Denis Hanks is the Executive Director of the Florida Alliance for Vacation Rentals, a nonprofit organization that assists cities in adopting local rental registration ordinances. Hanks was involved with Fort Lauderdale when its ordinance was created in 2015, where compliance is now an ongoing issue.

There are a lot of vacation rentals in Fort Lauderdale that continue to not operate in their registration system, Hanks said. They come and go, they put them on the market and off the market.

Marco Islands City Attorney Alan Gabriel addressed Take Back Marcos referendum last month with a list of 19 areas of legal concern. Some of these potential issues stated include the requirement for vacation rental owners to obtain a minimum of $1 million in liability insurance coverage, the requirement to obtain an annual fire inspection for a single-family home and suspension time frames being against state law. According to Gabriels statement, noise regulations that are more restrictive than regulations for rest of the city could be a potential violation of the First Amendment.

Why move forward with something that you know youre going to be sued over or youre going to have a lot of litigation thats going to cost the taxpayers money, Hanks said. It seems kind of crazy.

Marco Island homeowners like Rob Ferrarie rent out their home when on vacation to pay off the mortgage and for renovations. Ferrarie has been renting out his house for 13 years but will stop if this ordinance gets passed.

When I moved here in 2009, the real estate agent told me all about rentals and I thought it was a great idea, this has been around for a long time, Ferrarie said. What theyre trying to do is eliminate something thats been here forever and its wrong.

Ferrarie rents out through Vrbo which has its own safety standards in place.

When I rent to these people, I have all their information, I can look them up and see whos coming into my house, Ferrarie said. We care very much if our house gets wrecked more than we care about anything else. Its the natural law of me caring about my home that makes Marco safe.

Jim Chamberlin and his two sons own Marco Island Bike Rentals. He knows if this ordinance gets passed, he will go out of business since the vast majority of his clientele are people renting a home.

It wouldnt be worth it, we would literally move to where there is a business-friendly place to do something else, Chamberlin said.

Chamberlin sees the potential impact of all local business on the island if this ordinance discourages renters from continuing their services.

Theres the trickle-down effect, when we pick up people were delivering them to the local restaurants and shops, Chamberlin said. Last night we picked up 98 people and not one of them was at a resort or hotel.

For residents like Eil, there is hope that this referendum will stray away at least the nightly rentals.

The people who really want to come here with their families, theyre going to come for a week, Eil said. Theyre not going to come for a night. Its the spring breakers, its the people from the other side of Florida that come over for one night and leak garbage all over the beach and then leave.

Chamberlin thinks this issue is something the residents of Marco can come together to fix without a ballot vote.

Unfortunately, theres probably some poorly run vacation rentals that sour it for a few but its not a huge problem, its a very isolated one, but it is an issue Chamberlin said. I think if everyone worked together and resolve that issue, we wouldnt have a problem. Everybody that came to this island came here on vacation and some people never left, thats why people live here.

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Marco Island considers short-term rental registration program - ] - Gulfshore Business

Islands of Brilliance in Milwaukee gives students with autism a voice – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In February, a group of students got together with family members and mentors over Zoom.

One at a time, the students shared projects on their screensthey had made in programs like Photoshop, Procreate and Illustrator.

There were original drawings of SpongeBob, a Photoshoppedimage of a roller coaster with a student's family members in each seat, picturesof airplanes, rainbows and the moon, and a many-layered illustration of Star Wars characters.

The group's facilitator asked questions about how each student had worked with their mentor and what new skills and tools they had learned to use, while peersand family members complimented their workin the chat.

At the end of each student's presentation, the facilitator asked, "How would you like to celebrate your hard work?"

Some students asked everybody to do their favorite dance move, others requestedthumbs-ups and some just wanted a round of applause.

These presentations came at the end of a series of workshops at Islands of Brilliance, a Milwaukee nonprofit that provides learning experiences for children and young adults on the autism spectrum.They live by the words, "Rather than expect students to adapt to the environment, we create the ideal environment."

The slogan represents theepiphany that came to cofounders Mark and Margaret Fairbanks in 2001 when they found out their almost-3-year-old son, Harry, wason the autism spectrum.

"We accepted the diagnosis," Mark Fairbankssaid. "But it was the prognosis that really got us."

The neurologist told Mark and Margaretthey shouldn't plan on college for Harry; in fact, they shouldn't even plan on him going to first grade.

"We were defiant," said Fairbanks. "We decided we would determine what he was capable of."

They enrolled Harry in early intervention services, where a special education teacher told Margaret how critical it was to figure out how to best communicate with Harry, as many of his behaviors were as a result of his difficulty in expressing his needs.

"Harry's thing was trains, and specifically Thomas the Tank Engine," said Fairbanks. "All day long, that was his world. He was completely on the Island of Sodor."

So one day Margaret decided to "become a train." She picked up one of Harry's trains and talked to it as if she was also a train. "Harry spun around to look at her," said Fairbanks. "He made five seconds of sustained eye contact, the most he had done in 18 months."

At that point, Mark and Margaret decided that trains were "their way in" to Harry's world, that any communication, any education would revolve around Thomas. Trains were how Harry learned math, how he learned to read. He learned how to properly hold a pencil by drawing trains for hours at a time.

"We learned how to leverage his unique subject matter interest to help him. Most kids on the spectrum have something they're into to the exclusion of all else," said Fairbanks. "To help our kids, we'vegot to love what they love, and go all in on it."

Related: MATC is launching a program for autistic students to 'unlock' their skills and launch careers

Related: Parents, you're not alone: For the Crimmins family, having a son with autism means constantly adjusting expectations

In Islands of Brilliance programs, whether students are matched with one-on-one mentors in Foundationsworkshops, taking part in group socialization sessionsor making art in laidback Doodle Lounge virtual rooms, their activities, conversations and learning start with each student's topic of interest. Staff members and volunteers follow the students' lead.

Before joining Islands of Brilliance as the group's director of special education, Jessica Shafe was a special education teacher inpublic schools, where she felt limited in what she could provide for students.

"It's like you're trying to fit kids that are square pegs into round holes," said Shafe. "You're forcing students into spaces they don't belong, and that doesn't feel good."

Shafe appreciates the "topics of interest" focus at Islands of Brilliance because she feels children in traditional schools are forced to avoid their interests during the school day, to the detriment of their self-worth as well as their education.

She said everybody neurodivergent or not has subjects that interest them more than others, but that neurotypical students are more likely to have social skill sets that allow them to "branch out and talk about subjects that don't interest them."

But she also feels that forcing people on the spectrum to stop talking about the things that are their "whole world" can hurt more than help them to attain educational and social goals.

"At Islands of Brilliance, we tell these students, 'No, you don't have to consistently be changing and adapting to us to make us more comfortable. You be you and we will come to you and talk about what you want to talk about,'" Shafesaid. "We see in our programming how good it feels when somebody does talk to them about their interests.It seems to feel so freeing."

Shafe has also seen students naturally improve their ability to talk about different topics and build social skills through their programs. She remembersastudent who was talking about his fascination with puppets while another student who was interested instop-motion animation listened. After a while, the students recognized thesimilarities between their two interests and were able to connect with each other.

Shayne Mack, a 19-year-old Islands of Brilliance student, has been interested in cartoons since he was a child and started imitating the style of his favorite Cartoon Network show, "Ed, Edd 'nEddy," in his own drawings. He said he loved the style and humor of the cartoon, and also was fascinated by Disney animationslike "Beauty and the Beast" and "The Lion King."

He credits his mentors at Islands of Brilliance with giving him encouragement, skills and tools to help take his passion for cartoons to the next level as he has learned to animate his own characters.

"I share the character drawings I've done, and a lot of people at Islands of Brilliance think I usually do a lot of expressive work, like my characters have interesting poses and body movements," said Mack. "That's one of the reasons I want to go into animation as a career, to give me the chance to explore the motion and character expression that I really want to portray."

Dan Augustine, the creative director for Epic Creative, employed Mack as an intern at his company last summer. He has also been facilitating workshops for Islands of Brilliance for several years. Augustinecalled the topics of interest philosophy "foundational" to how volunteers see the students and understand their talents and abilities.

"Rather than forcing them into ways of doing things, we discover things about the students as artists and help them build on their owntalents and skills," said Augustine. "And that is helpful to us too. I've learned new ways of looking at things, and I've learned things from the students."

Augustine remembers working with a student several years ago who would draw "beautiful, elaborate" illustrations in her sketchbook and then erase each one. After watching her erase several creations, Augustineasked her why she was doing it.

The student showed Augustinethat a very faint drawing remained on her paper. She said she wouldgo home and use the pencil impression as a guide as she added ink and color to her artwork.

"What she was doing was like a lo-fi version of Photoshop. She was creating her own layers on a single set of paper which made a flat 2D illustration more textural," said Augustine. "It was so cool, and I've used her technique in my own art since then."

Related: Brewers will offer sensory bags, quiet area at American Family Field for guests with autism and other needs

Islands of Brilliance foundational workshops pair students with mentors to help students learn software such as Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator as they create projects based around the students' topics of interest.

One reason Mark and Margaret Fairbanks decided to focus their workshops on technology was based once again on their experience with Harry.

When Harry was about 8 years old, he was fascinated with stop-motion LEGO videos, which he watched on YouTube and talked about with fellow viewers in the comments.

"He struggled with communicating with his peers at school, but he was fluent when he was able to use a keyboard," said Fairbanks. "Technology was a level setter for him."

That realization was further reinforced for Fairbankswhen he noticed Harry watching him as he worked on Adobe Illustrator. Harry asked his dadif he could try, so Fairbanksgave him a five-minute tutorial, showing him how to draw shapes and change colors.

"A half hour later, he had drawn Percy from Thomas the Tank Engine,"said Fairbanks. "It blew me away because he had intuitively figured out how to use the tools I hadn't taught him to make the things he wanted to make."

That experience would inspire the pilot project for Islands of Brilliance recruiting technology industry volunteers to mentor students with autism which they tested outin the fall of 2012.

At a computer lab at Discovery World, seven kids were matched up with seven mentors the first week, and Fairbankssaid everybody kids and adults loved the class as "the mentors and mentees geeked out together on subject matter."

"The following week, five of the seven students had already gotten there 15 minutes ahead of time and found their mentors to start work," said Fairbanks. "We couldn't believe the kids' engagement and focus. It was that combination of subject matter interest, a mentor that shared their interest and the technology. That's when we knew we had something."

Islands of Brilliance opened as a nonprofit in 2015, offering programs for students and their one-on-one mentors.

When a parent calls Islands of Brilliance, staff members talk with them to learn about the student and what their interests are. Then they match them with one of their volunteer mentors.

When the mentor meets with the student for the first time, they'll talk about that interest and brainstorm ways to use technology to create a project. One end result of each project is the poster thatstudents present to their groups at the end of each several-week session.

"If we find out that a student is really into animation, we'll pass that along to the mentor and when the mentor starts working with them, they can right off the bat say, 'Let's talk about animation,'" said Shafe. "They'll talk about the specific parts of animation the student likes and ask if they want to create their own, and then the mentor pulls from that to develop the student's project."

Mackhas been mentored by people with experience in animation, who have encouraged his creativity and talent, as well as taught him how to use the tools.

"Now I'll see an animal and instead of just drawing it, I think, 'maybe I could make a character out of it,'" said Mack. "And I think of how it would look, how it would talk, what its personality would be."

Much of the encouragement for Mack's drawings, animations and character styles has come not just from the more formal one-on-one mentor workshops, but from more laidback virtual social gatherings anexpansion of Islands of Brilliance offerings that was necessary during the pandemic.

By 2019, Islands of Brilliance had grown to 500 enrollments in their technology-based, topics of interest-focused workshops. Then the pandemic happened, and all the sessions had to be canceled.

Islands of Brilliance workshops all start with a question of the day, so the Fairbanks decided to launch a question of the day YouTube series. They asked questions like "Who's your favorite superhero?" and invited their students to send in responses through creative means a drawing, an animation, a story.

"We filmed all the episodes in our attic and we made 80 episodes," said Fairbanks. "The amount of views and interactions were just amazing. It kept us connected as a community, and our community needed that."

The series also bought them some time to figure out how to pivot their programming during the pandemic. It had to be virtual, and their "Question of the Day" series experience inspired them to make it both casual and social.

In Doodle Lounge, students meet with facilitators in a Zoom room and draw together, share their artwork with each other and just talk. In Natterdays sessions, students and staff work together to collaboratively tell a story and do a lot of laughing.

"You hear a lot about how virtual doesn't work for students with special needs, and that's true for some people. But for a lot of the kids, they're digital natives, they're comfortable in that environment," said Fairbanks. "Technology allowed students to see each other on a daily basis. Prior to that, their relationships had been more with mentors, but now they had friends who they were sharing memes and art and interests with."

In a recent Doodle Lounge, Mackshared a drawing he had animated, as students complimented himin the chat and Islands of Brilliance facilitators asked him to zoom in on specific details.

After Macktalked about how he created his animation and where the ideas came from, another student took his turn, sharing a drawing of Thomas the Tank Engine and a Coca Cola can with an angry face. One of the facilitators said they were impressed by theexpression in the face and asked to take a screen shot.

Before ending the session, one more student shared a caricature of SpongeBob he had drawn. "Holy moley, that is a perfect SpongeBob," commented facilitator Natalie Derr. "Did you do that from your brain or reference an image?"

"It was from my head," the student answered.

Derr works as a creative technologist at Islands of Brilliance. Much of her day-to-day workis focused around the casual artsy virtual gatherings.

"A lot of students come to us because they're inherently creative, and when they come to Doodle Lounge, they can draw the thing that interests them every time they come if they want," said Derr. "They can bring who they are to Doodle Lounge, and we will make that environment suited to whoever comes. At the end of the day, the goal is community."

She also noted that, although the gatherings have a loose theme, the students don't have to follow it or even focus on art. Derrsaid some people like to talk about the worlds they're creating in Minecraft or the progress they've made in Beat Saber, and they're welcome to do so.

"Some people come in to talk about movies," she said. "A couple of students are our movie gurus. They go back and forth about what movies are the best, and I've learned a lot of interesting things that way."

Charlie Fairbanks Mark and Margaret's other son, who started working with Islands of Brilliance near the start of the pandemicoften co-facilitates the sessions with Derr. Hesaid they work to establish a positive and welcoming atmosphere and that students naturally encourage each other and inspire each other's confidence when they see the cool projects their peers are working on.

Mack said he's learned about his classmates' interests through the casual sessions, including many who are interested in cartoons like he is, and that he hangs out on Discord with themoutside of Islands of Brilliance, often talking about other topics like 3D art and cars.

"Islands of Brilliance has helped me to be more comfortable talking about my ideas with other people," Macksaid. "I used to not work well with people; most of the time, I'd just do my own thing. Now I've learned to become more of a team player."

Contact Amy Schwabe at (262) 875-9488 or amy.schwabe@jrn.com. Follow her on Twitter at @WisFamilyJS, Instagram at @wisfamilyjs or Facebook at WisconsinFamily.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

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Islands of Brilliance in Milwaukee gives students with autism a voice - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Body recovered near Boulder Islands at Lake Mead National Recreation Area – KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas

BOULDER CITY, Nev. (KTNV)A body has been recovered near the Boulder Islands on Lake Mead where an adult female went missing on June 30.

The adult female was reported missing after falling off a jet ski with another adult male, who was located alive shortly after.

RELATED: Search underway for missing female jet skier at Lake Mead

The adult female is only known at this point as "Lily," according to National Park Services.

National Park Service rangers and Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Departments Search and Rescue Unit located and recovered the body with the use of a remotely operated vehicle (ROV).

The Clark County Medical Examiner has been contacted and is en route to the scene to confirm the victims identity and determine the cause of death.

The incident is currently under investigation.

RELATED: Authorities continue search for missing female jet skier at Lake Mead

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Body recovered near Boulder Islands at Lake Mead National Recreation Area - KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas

Rare wild ancestors of domestic pigeon found on Scottish islands – The Guardian

Colonies of extremely rare and endangered birds that are the wild ancestors of domestic and feral pigeons have been found on secluded Scottish islands.

Researchers have spoken of their excitement and surprise at discovering small populations of wild rock doves in places that include the Outer Hebrides.

It is thought rock doves were domesticated, originally to provide food, between 5,000 and 10,000 years ago making them some of the first domesticated birds.

Feral pigeons originate from escaped domestic birds and can be seen in towns and cities everywhere. As feral pigeons thrived, rock doves partly because of extensive interbreeding declined around the world.

Will Smith, an Oxford University DPhil student and lead author of a new study, said there had been lots of research into Scottish wildcats and how hybridisation with feral cats had pushed the species to the brink of extinction. But there was hardly any into rock doves and their similar trajectory because of feral pigeons.

If you ask most bird watchers in the UK about rock doves they will say theyve been hybridised out of existence by feral pigeons, he said.

The Oxford research team identified relict populations of rock doves and then set about analysing their DNA to determine whether the birds were truly wild.

This is the first genomic study that proves there are undomesticated rock doves that are relatively isolated from feral pigeons, said Smith. It was quite a surprise. It is exciting. It is also kind of weird that its in the UK because there are so many feral pigeons here. I guess places like the Outer Hebrides are far enough away from from towns and cities that theres less gene flow.

To the untrained eye, rock doves look similar to pigeons. The biggest difference is that if you see a flock of pigeons there will be many different colours whereas rock doves are identical with the same plumage.

The rock dove is like a wolf, said Smith, in that all wolves kind of look the same colour-wise, whereas feral pigeons are like dogs and all look different.

The Scottish rock doves live in sea caves and ruins. To see flocks of them flying from their nests to feed in flower meadows is, said Smith, a really lovely experience to see that happening every morning and every night, flying back and forwards.

It is the sort of movement that is less obvious in feral pigeons because they might move from one street to a different street, or from McDonalds to Waitrose.

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The research team managed to confirm that its rock doves were descended from the undomesticated lineage from which all feral pigeons originate.

Some of the rock doves the team examined in Orkney had experienced extensive interbreeding with pigeons. But the Outer Hebridean rock doves showed negligible signs of hybridisation, said Smith.

The team hopes the conclusions, published in the journal iScience, will encourage research into potential wild rock dove populations in other parts of the world.

Also increasing understanding of extinction by hybridisation will, said Smith, help efforts to prevent other plants and animals undergoing the same fate as the rock dove.

Continued here:

Rare wild ancestors of domestic pigeon found on Scottish islands - The Guardian

Ecosystem – Wikipedia

Community of living organisms together with the nonliving components of their environment

An ecosystem (or ecological system) consists of all the organisms and the physical environment with which they interact.[2]:458 These biotic and abiotic components are linked together through nutrient cycles and energy flows. Energy enters the system through photosynthesis and is incorporated into plant tissue. By feeding on plants and on one another, animals play an important role in the movement of matter and energy through the system. They also influence the quantity of plant and microbial biomass present. By breaking down dead organic matter, decomposers release carbon back to the atmosphere and facilitate nutrient cycling by converting nutrients stored in dead biomass back to a form that can be readily used by plants and microbes.

Ecosystems are controlled by external and internal factors. External factors such as climate, parent material which forms the soil and topography, control the overall structure of an ecosystem but are not themselves influenced by the ecosystem. Internal factors are controlled, for example, by decomposition, root competition, shading, disturbance, succession, and the types of species present. While the resource inputs are generally controlled by external processes, the availability of these resources within the ecosystem is controlled by internal factors. Therefore, internal factors not only control ecosystem processes but are also controlled by them.

Ecosystems are dynamic entitiesthey are subject to periodic disturbances and are always in the process of recovering from some past disturbance. The tendency of an ecosystem to remain close to its equilibrium state, despite that disturbance, is termed its resistance. The capacity of a system to absorb disturbance and reorganize while undergoing change so as to retain essentially the same function, structure, identity, and feedbacks is termed its ecological resilience. Ecosystems can be studied through a variety of approachestheoretical studies, studies monitoring specific ecosystems over long periods of time, those that look at differences between ecosystems to elucidate how they work and direct manipulative experimentation. Biomes are general classes or categories of ecosystems. However, there is no clear distinction between biomes and ecosystems. Ecosystem classifications are specific kinds of ecological classifications that consider all four elements of the definition of ecosystems: a biotic component, an abiotic complex, the interactions between and within them, and the physical space they occupy.

Ecosystems provide a variety of goods and services upon which people depend. Ecosystem goods include the "tangible, material products" of ecosystem processes such as water, food, fuel, construction material, and medicinal plants. Ecosystem services, on the other hand, are generally "improvements in the condition or location of things of value". These include things like the maintenance of hydrological cycles, cleaning air and water, the maintenance of oxygen in the atmosphere, crop pollination and even things like beauty, inspiration and opportunities for research. Many ecosystems become degraded through human impacts, such as soil loss, air and water pollution, habitat fragmentation, water diversion, fire suppression, and introduced species and invasive species. These threats can lead to abrupt transformation of the ecosystem or to gradual disruption of biotic processes and degradation of abiotic conditions of the ecosystem. Once the original ecosystem has lost its defining features, it is considered "collapsed". Ecosystem restoration can contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

An ecosystem (or ecological system) consists of all the organisms and the abiotic pools (or physical environment) with which they interact.[3][4]:5[2]:458 The biotic and abiotic components are linked together through nutrient cycles and energy flows.[5]

"Ecosystem processes" are the transfers of energy and materials from one pool to another.[2]:458 Ecosystem processes are known to "take place at a wide range of scales". Therefore, the correct scale of study depends on the question asked.[4]:5

The term "ecosystem" was first used in 1935 in a publication by British ecologist Arthur Tansley. The term was coined by Arthur Roy Clapham, who came up with the word at Tansley's request.[6] Tansley devised the concept to draw attention to the importance of transfers of materials between organisms and their environment.[4]:9 He later refined the term, describing it as "The whole system, ... including not only the organism-complex, but also the whole complex of physical factors forming what we call the environment".[3] Tansley regarded ecosystems not simply as natural units, but as "mental isolates".[3] Tansley later defined the spatial extent of ecosystems using the term "ecotope".[7]

G. Evelyn Hutchinson, a limnologist who was a contemporary of Tansley's, combined Charles Elton's ideas about trophic ecology with those of Russian geochemist Vladimir Vernadsky. As a result, he suggested that mineral nutrient availability in a lake limited algal production. This would, in turn, limit the abundance of animals that feed on algae. Raymond Lindeman took these ideas further to suggest that the flow of energy through a lake was the primary driver of the ecosystem. Hutchinson's students, brothers Howard T. Odum and Eugene P. Odum, further developed a "systems approach" to the study of ecosystems. This allowed them to study the flow of energy and material through ecological systems.[4]:9

Ecosystems are controlled by both external and internal factors. External factors, also called state factors, control the overall structure of an ecosystem and the way things work within it, but are not themselves influenced by the ecosystem. On broad geographic scales, climate is the factor that "most strongly determines ecosystem processes and structure".[4]:14 Climate determines the biome in which the ecosystem is embedded. Rainfall patterns and seasonal temperatures influence photosynthesis and thereby determine the amount of energy available to the ecosystem.[8]:145

Parent material determines the nature of the soil in an ecosystem, and influences the supply of mineral nutrients. Topography also controls ecosystem processes by affecting things like microclimate, soil development and the movement of water through a system. For example, ecosystems can be quite different if situated in a small depression on the landscape, versus one present on an adjacent steep hillside.[9]:39[10]:66

Other external factors that play an important role in ecosystem functioning include time and potential biota, the organisms that are present in a region and could potentially occupy a particular site. Ecosystems in similar environments that are located in different parts of the world can end up doing things very differently simply because they have different pools of species present.[11]:321 The introduction of non-native species can cause substantial shifts in ecosystem function.[12]

Unlike external factors, internal factors in ecosystems not only control ecosystem processes but are also controlled by them.[4]:16 While the resource inputs are generally controlled by external processes like climate and parent material, the availability of these resources within the ecosystem is controlled by internal factors like decomposition, root competition or shading.[13] Other factors like disturbance, succession or the types of species present are also internal factors.

Primary production is the production of organic matter from inorganic carbon sources. This mainly occurs through photosynthesis. The energy incorporated through this process supports life on earth, while the carbon makes up much of the organic matter in living and dead biomass, soil carbon and fossil fuels. It also drives the carbon cycle, which influences global climate via the greenhouse effect.

Through the process of photosynthesis, plants capture energy from light and use it to combine carbon dioxide and water to produce carbohydrates and oxygen. The photosynthesis carried out by all the plants in an ecosystem is called the gross primary production (GPP).[8]:124 About half of the gross GPP is respired by plants in order to provide the energy that supports their growth and maintenance.[14]:157 The remainder, that portion of GPP that is not used up by respiration, is known as the net primary production (NPP).[14]:157 Total photosynthesis is limited by a range of environmental factors. These include the amount of light available, the amount of leaf area a plant has to capture light (shading by other plants is a major limitation of photosynthesis), the rate at which carbon dioxide can be supplied to the chloroplasts to support photosynthesis, the availability of water, and the availability of suitable temperatures for carrying out photosynthesis.[8]:155

Energy and carbon enter ecosystems through photosynthesis, are incorporated into living tissue, transferred to other organisms that feed on the living and dead plant matter, and eventually released through respiration.[14]:157 The carbon and energy incorporated into plant tissues (net primary production) is either consumed by animals while the plant is alive, or it remains uneaten when the plant tissue dies and becomes detritus. In terrestrial ecosystems, the vast majority of the net primary production ends up being broken down by decomposers. The remainder is consumed by animals while still alive and enters the plant-based trophic system. After plants and animals die, the organic matter contained in them enters the detritus-based trophic system.[15]

Ecosystem respiration is the sum of respiration by all living organisms (plants, animals, and decomposers) in the ecosystem.[16] Net ecosystem production is the difference between gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration.[17] In the absence of disturbance, net ecosystem production is equivalent to the net carbon accumulation in the ecosystem.

Energy can also be released from an ecosystem through disturbances such as wildfire or transferred to other ecosystems (e.g., from a forest to a stream to a lake) by erosion.

In aquatic systems, the proportion of plant biomass that gets consumed by herbivores is much higher than in terrestrial systems.[15] In trophic systems, photosynthetic organisms are the primary producers. The organisms that consume their tissues are called primary consumers or secondary producersherbivores. Organisms which feed on microbes (bacteria and fungi) are termed microbivores. Animals that feed on primary consumerscarnivoresare secondary consumers. Each of these constitutes a trophic level.[15]

The sequence of consumptionfrom plant to herbivore, to carnivoreforms a food chain. Real systems are much more complex than thisorganisms will generally feed on more than one form of food, and may feed at more than one trophic level. Carnivores may capture some prey that is part of a plant-based trophic system and others that are part of a detritus-based trophic system (a bird that feeds both on herbivorous grasshoppers and earthworms, which consume detritus). Real systems, with all these complexities, form food webs rather than food chains.[15]

The carbon and nutrients in dead organic matter are broken down by a group of processes known as decomposition. This releases nutrients that can then be re-used for plant and microbial production and returns carbon dioxide to the atmosphere (or water) where it can be used for photosynthesis. In the absence of decomposition, the dead organic matter would accumulate in an ecosystem, and nutrients and atmospheric carbon dioxide would be depleted.[18]:183

Decomposition processes can be separated into three categoriesleaching, fragmentation and chemical alteration of dead material. As water moves through dead organic matter, it dissolves and carries with it the water-soluble components. These are then taken up by organisms in the soil, react with mineral soil, or are transported beyond the confines of the ecosystem (and are considered lost to it).[19]:271280 Newly shed leaves and newly dead animals have high concentrations of water-soluble components and include sugars, amino acids and mineral nutrients. Leaching is more important in wet environments and less important in dry ones.[10]:6977

Fragmentation processes break organic material into smaller pieces, exposing new surfaces for colonization by microbes. Freshly shed leaf litter may be inaccessible due to an outer layer of cuticle or bark, and cell contents are protected by a cell wall. Newly dead animals may be covered by an exoskeleton. Fragmentation processes, which break through these protective layers, accelerate the rate of microbial decomposition.[18]:184 Animals fragment detritus as they hunt for food, as does passage through the gut. Freeze-thaw cycles and cycles of wetting and drying also fragment dead material.[18]:186

The chemical alteration of the dead organic matter is primarily achieved through bacterial and fungal action. Fungal hyphae produce enzymes that can break through the tough outer structures surrounding dead plant material. They also produce enzymes that break down lignin, which allows them access to both cell contents and the nitrogen in the lignin. Fungi can transfer carbon and nitrogen through their hyphal networks and thus, unlike bacteria, are not dependent solely on locally available resources.[18]:186

Decomposition rates vary among ecosystems.[20] The rate of decomposition is governed by three sets of factorsthe physical environment (temperature, moisture, and soil properties), the quantity and quality of the dead material available to decomposers, and the nature of the microbial community itself.[18]:194 Temperature controls the rate of microbial respiration; the higher the temperature, the faster the microbial decomposition occurs. Temperature also affects soil moisture, which affects decomposition. Freeze-thaw cycles also affect decompositionfreezing temperatures kill soil microorganisms, which allows leaching to play a more important role in moving nutrients around. This can be especially important as the soil thaws in the spring, creating a pulse of nutrients that become available.[19]:280

Decomposition rates are low under very wet or very dry conditions. Decomposition rates are highest in wet, moist conditions with adequate levels of oxygen. Wet soils tend to become deficient in oxygen (this is especially true in wetlands), which slows microbial growth. In dry soils, decomposition slows as well, but bacteria continue to grow (albeit at a slower rate) even after soils become too dry to support plant growth.[18]:200

Ecosystems are dynamic entities. They are subject to periodic disturbances and are always in the process of recovering from past disturbances.[21]:347 When a perturbation occurs, an ecosystem responds by moving away from its initial state. The tendency of an ecosystem to remain close to its equilibrium state, despite that disturbance, is termed its resistance. The capacity of a system to absorb disturbance and reorganize while undergoing change so as to retain essentially the same function, structure, identity, and feedbacks is termed its ecological resilience.[22][23] Resilience thinking also includes humanity as an integral part of the biosphere where we are dependent on ecosystem services for our survival and must build and maintain their natural capacities to withstand shocks and disturbances.[24] Time plays a central role over a wide range, for example, in the slow development of soil from bare rock and the faster recovery of a community from disturbance.[14]:67

Disturbance also plays an important role in ecological processes. F. Stuart Chapin and coauthors define disturbance as "a relatively discrete event in time that removes plant biomass".[21]:346 This can range from herbivore outbreaks, treefalls, fires, hurricanes, floods, glacial advances, to volcanic eruptions. Such disturbances can cause large changes in plant, animal and microbe populations, as well as soil organic matter content. Disturbance is followed by succession, a "directional change in ecosystem structure and functioning resulting from biotically driven changes in resource supply."[2]:470

The frequency and severity of disturbance determine the way it affects ecosystem function. A major disturbance like a volcanic eruption or glacial advance and retreat leave behind soils that lack plants, animals or organic matter. Ecosystems that experience such disturbances undergo primary succession. A less severe disturbance like forest fires, hurricanes or cultivation result in secondary succession and a faster recovery.[21]:348 More severe and more frequent disturbance result in longer recovery times.

From one year to another, ecosystems experience variation in their biotic and abiotic environments. A drought, a colder than usual winter, and a pest outbreak all are short-term variability in environmental conditions. Animal populations vary from year to year, building up during resource-rich periods and crashing as they overshoot their food supply. Longer-term changes also shape ecosystem processes. For example, the forests of eastern North America still show legacies of cultivation which ceased in 1850 when large areas were reverted to forests.[21]:340 Another example is the methane production in eastern Siberian lakes that is controlled by organic matter which accumulated during the Pleistocene.[25]

Ecosystems continually exchange energy and carbon with the wider environment. Mineral nutrients, on the other hand, are mostly cycled back and forth between plants, animals, microbes and the soil. Most nitrogen enters ecosystems through biological nitrogen fixation, is deposited through precipitation, dust, gases or is applied as fertilizer.[19]:266 Most terrestrial ecosystems are nitrogen-limited in the short term making nitrogen cycling an important control on ecosystem production.[19]:289 Over the long term, phosphorus availability can also be critical.[26]

Macronutrients which are required by all plants in large quantities include the primary nutrients (which are most limiting as they are used in largest amounts): Nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium.[27]:231 Secondary major nutrients (less often limiting) include: Calcium, magnesium, sulfur. Micronutrients required by all plants in small quantities include boron, chloride, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, zinc. Finally, there are also beneficial nutrients which may be required by certain plants or by plants under specific environmental conditions: aluminum, cobalt, iodine, nickel, selenium, silicon, sodium, vanadium.[27]:231

Until modern times, nitrogen fixation was the major source of nitrogen for ecosystems. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria either live symbiotically with plants or live freely in the soil. The energetic cost is high for plants that support nitrogen-fixing symbiontsas much as 25% of gross primary production when measured in controlled conditions. Many members of the legume plant family support nitrogen-fixing symbionts. Some cyanobacteria are also capable of nitrogen fixation. These are phototrophs, which carry out photosynthesis. Like other nitrogen-fixing bacteria, they can either be free-living or have symbiotic relationships with plants.[21]:360 Other sources of nitrogen include acid deposition produced through the combustion of fossil fuels, ammonia gas which evaporates from agricultural fields which have had fertilizers applied to them, and dust.[19]:270 Anthropogenic nitrogen inputs account for about 80% of all nitrogen fluxes in ecosystems.[19]:270

When plant tissues are shed or are eaten, the nitrogen in those tissues becomes available to animals and microbes. Microbial decomposition releases nitrogen compounds from dead organic matter in the soil, where plants, fungi, and bacteria compete for it. Some soil bacteria use organic nitrogen-containing compounds as a source of carbon, and release ammonium ions into the soil. This process is known as nitrogen mineralization. Others convert ammonium to nitrite and nitrate ions, a process known as nitrification. Nitric oxide and nitrous oxide are also produced during nitrification.[19]:277 Under nitrogen-rich and oxygen-poor conditions, nitrates and nitrites are converted to nitrogen gas, a process known as denitrification.[19]:281

Mycorrhizal fungi which are symbiotic with plant roots, use carbohydrates supplied by the plants and in return transfer phosphorus and nitrogen compounds back to the plant roots.[28][29] This is an important pathway of organic nitrogen transfer from dead organic matter to plants. This mechanism may contribute to more than 70 Tg of annually assimilated plant nitrogen, thereby playing a critical role in global nutrient cycling and ecosystem function.[29]

Phosphorus enters ecosystems through weathering. As ecosystems age this supply diminishes, making phosphorus-limitation more common in older landscapes (especially in the tropics).[19]:287290 Calcium and sulfur are also produced by weathering, but acid deposition is an important source of sulfur in many ecosystems. Although magnesium and manganese are produced by weathering, exchanges between soil organic matter and living cells account for a significant portion of ecosystem fluxes. Potassium is primarily cycled between living cells and soil organic matter.[19]:291

Biodiversity plays an important role in ecosystem functioning.[31]:449453 Ecosystem processes are driven by the species in an ecosystem, the nature of the individual species, and the relative abundance of organisms among these species. Ecosystem processes are the net effect of the actions of individual organisms as they interact with their environment. Ecological theory suggests that in order to coexist, species must have some level of limiting similaritythey must be different from one another in some fundamental way, otherwise, one species would competitively exclude the other.[32] Despite this, the cumulative effect of additional species in an ecosystem is not linear: additional species may enhance nitrogen retention, for example. However, beyond some level of species richness,[11]:331 additional species may have little additive effect unless they differ substantially from species already present.[11]:324 This is the case for example for exotic species.[11]:321

The addition (or loss) of species that are ecologically similar to those already present in an ecosystem tends to only have a small effect on ecosystem function. Ecologically distinct species, on the other hand, have a much larger effect. Similarly, dominant species have a large effect on ecosystem function, while rare species tend to have a small effect. Keystone species tend to have an effect on ecosystem function that is disproportionate to their abundance in an ecosystem.[11]:324

An ecosystem engineer is any organism that creates, significantly modifies, maintains or destroys a habitat.[33]

Ecosystem ecology is the "study of the interactions between organisms and their environment as an integrated system".[2]:458 The size of ecosystems can range up to ten orders of magnitude, from the surface layers of rocks to the surface of the planet.[4]:6

The Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study started in 1963 to study the White Mountains in New Hampshire. It was the first successful attempt to study an entire watershed as an ecosystem. The study used stream chemistry as a means of monitoring ecosystem properties, and developed a detailed biogeochemical model of the ecosystem.[34] Long-term research at the site led to the discovery of acid rain in North America in 1972. Researchers documented the depletion of soil cations (especially calcium) over the next several decades.[35]

Ecosystems can be studied through a variety of approachestheoretical studies, studies monitoring specific ecosystems over long periods of time, those that look at differences between ecosystems to elucidate how they work and direct manipulative experimentation.[36] Studies can be carried out at a variety of scales, ranging from whole-ecosystem studies to studying microcosms or mesocosms (simplified representations of ecosystems).[37] American ecologist Stephen R. Carpenter has argued that microcosm experiments can be "irrelevant and diversionary" if they are not carried out in conjunction with field studies done at the ecosystem scale. In such cases, microcosm experiments may fail to accurately predict ecosystem-level dynamics.[38]

Biomes are general classes or categories of ecosystems.[4]:14 However, there is no clear distinction between biomes and ecosystems.[39] Biomes are always defined at a very general level. Ecosystems can be described at levels that range from very general (in which case the names are sometimes the same as those of biomes) to very specific, such as "wet coastal needle-leafed forests".

Biomes vary due to global variations in climate. Biomes are often defined by their structure: at a general level, for example, tropical forests, temperate grasslands, and arctic tundra.[4]:14 There can be any degree of subcategories among ecosystem types that comprise a biome, e.g., needle-leafed boreal forests or wet tropical forests. Although ecosystems are most commonly categorized by their structure and geography, there are also other ways to categorize and classify ecosystems such as by their level of human impact (see anthropogenic biome), or by their integration with social processes or technological processes or their novelty (e.g. novel ecosystem). Each of these taxonomies of ecosystems tends to emphasize different structural or functional properties.[40] None of these is the best classification.

Ecosystem classifications are specific kinds of ecological classifications that consider all four elements of the definition of ecosystems: a biotic component, an abiotic complex, the interactions between and within them, and the physical space they occupy.[40] Different approaches to ecological classifications have been developed in terrestrial, freshwater and marine disciplines.

The following articles are examples of ecosystems for particular regions, zones or conditions:

Human activities are important in almost all ecosystems. Although humans exist and operate within ecosystems, their cumulative effects are large enough to influence external factors like climate.[4]:14

Ecosystems provide a variety of goods and services upon which people depend.[41] Ecosystem goods include the "tangible, material products" of ecosystem processes such as water, food, fuel, construction material, and medicinal plants.[42][43] They also include less tangible items like tourism and recreation, and genes from wild plants and animals that can be used to improve domestic species.[41]

Ecosystem services, on the other hand, are generally "improvements in the condition or location of things of value".[43] These include things like the maintenance of hydrological cycles, cleaning air and water, the maintenance of oxygen in the atmosphere, crop pollination and even things like beauty, inspiration and opportunities for research.[41] While material from the ecosystem had traditionally been recognized as being the basis for things of economic value, ecosystem services tend to be taken for granted.[43]

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment is an international synthesis by over 1000 of the world's leading biological scientists that analyzes the state of the Earth's ecosystems and provides summaries and guidelines for decision-makers. The report identified four major categories of ecosystem services: provisioning, regulating, cultural and supporting services.[44] It concludes that human activity is having a significant and escalating impact on the biodiversity of the world ecosystems, reducing both their resilience and biocapacity. The report refers to natural systems as humanity's "life-support system", providing essential ecosystem services. The assessment measures 24 ecosystem services and concludes that only four have shown improvement over the last 50 years, 15 are in serious decline, and five are in a precarious condition.[44]:619

The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) is an intergovernmental organization established to improve the interface between science and policy on issues of biodiversity and ecosystem services.[45] It is intended to serve a similar role to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.[46] The conceptual framework of the IPBES includes six primary interlinked elements: nature, natures benefits to people, anthropogenic assets, institutions and governance systems and other indirect drivers of change, direct drivers of change, and good quality of life.[47]

Ecosystem services are limited and also threatened by human activities.[48] To help inform decision-makers, many ecosystem services are being assigned economic values, often based on the cost of replacement with anthropogenic alternatives. The ongoing challenge of prescribing economic value to nature, for example through biodiversity banking, is prompting transdisciplinary shifts in how we recognize and manage the environment, social responsibility, business opportunities, and our future as a species.[48]

As human population and per capita consumption grow, so do the resource demands imposed on ecosystems and the effects of the human ecological footprint. Natural resources are vulnerable and limited. The environmental impacts of anthropogenic actions are becoming more apparent. Problems for all ecosystems include: environmental pollution, climate change and biodiversity loss. For terrestrial ecosystems further threats include air pollution, soil degradation, and deforestation. For aquatic ecosystems threats also include unsustainable exploitation of marine resources (for example overfishing), marine pollution, microplastics pollution, the effects of climate change on oceans (e.g. warming and acidification), and building on coastal areas.[50]

Many ecosystems become degraded through human impacts, such as soil loss, air and water pollution, habitat fragmentation, water diversion, fire suppression, and introduced species and invasive species.[51]:437

These threats can lead to abrupt transformation of the ecosystem or to gradual disruption of biotic processes and degradation of abiotic conditions of the ecosystem. Once the original ecosystem has lost its defining features, it is considered collapsed (see also IUCN Red List of Ecosystems).[52] Ecosystem collapse could be reversible and in this way differs from species extinction.[53] Quantitative assessments of the risk of collapse are used as measures of conservation status and trends.

When natural resource management is applied to whole ecosystems, rather than single species, it is termed ecosystem management.[54] Although definitions of ecosystem management abound, there is a common set of principles which underlie these definitions: A fundamental principle is the long-term sustainability of the production of goods and services by the ecosystem;[51] "intergenerational sustainability [is] a precondition for management, not an afterthought".[41] While ecosystem management can be used as part of a plan for wilderness conservation, it can also be used in intensively managed ecosystems[41] (see, for example, agroecosystem and close to nature forestry).

Ecosystem restoration will contribute to all 17 Sustainable Development Goals, in particular to SDG 2 (Zero Hunger), SDG 6 (Clean Water and Sanitation), SDG 14 (Life below water) and SDG 15 (Life on Land).[55][56] Paragraph 27 of the Ministerial Declaration of the High-Level Political Forum on the SDGs held in July 2018 sets out commitments made to achieve sustainable management of all types of forests, halt deforestation, restore degraded forests, and substantially increase afforestation and reforestation globally by 2020.[57]

Integrated conservation and development projects (ICDPs) aim to address conservation and human livelihood (sustainable development) concerns in developing countries together, rather than separately as was often done in the past.[51]:445

Ecosystems in specific regions of the world:

Ecosystems grouped by condition:

Read the original:

Ecosystem - Wikipedia

Team at Atlantic Data Forensics Joins Surefire Cyber, Adding Forensic Expertise and 15-Year Track Record to Newly Launched Incident Response Firm – PR…

Digital forensics experts bring experience with thousands of investigations and incident response cases

ELKRIDGE, Md., June 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --Surefire Cyber today announced the hiring of the team at Atlantic Data Forensics, a highly-capable forensics firm with deep expertise helping clients and law firms. Since its founding by Brian Dykstra in 2007, Atlantic Data Forensics has provided expert digital forensic services in support of cyber incident response, criminal and civil litigation, and expert witness testimony.

Surefire Cyber's CEO and Founder Billy Gouveia stated, "Brian and the team at Atlantic Data Forensics bolster our ability to help cyber insurers, brokers, law firms, and the organizations they support to better manage cyber events such as ransomware, email compromise, and other cybercrimes. They provide highly sought and specialized expertise as well as a strong track record of helping clients with thousands of responses and investigations over the past 15 years."

Brian Dykstra, Founder of Atlantic Data Forensics and now Surefire Cyber's Director of Forensics, comments that, "Atlantic Data Forensics is pleased to take our years helping large enterprises and law firms with high-quality incident response and expert digital forensics into the cyber insurance ecosystem. I'm very excited about combining our capabilities and experience with Surefire Cyber's strong connections throughout the cyber insurance eco-system."

Surefire Cyber launched earlier this year with support from Forgepoint Capital, the world's most active early-stage venture capital firm focused on cybersecurity. Surefire Cyber is a purpose-built response firm that leverages a proven team and a tech-enabled platform to improve transparency, accelerate decision making, reduce business interruption, and guide organizations from recovery through to long term resilience.

To learn more, please visit http://www.surefirecyber.com.

About Surefire Cyber

Surefire Cyber delivers swift, strong response to cyber incidents such as ransomware, email compromise, malware, data theft, and other threats with end-to-end response capabilities. Surefire Cyber was founded to provide clients confidence by helping them prepare, respond, and recover from cyber incidentsand to fortify their cyber resilience after an incident. To learn more, please visit: http://www.surefirecyber.com or follow us on LinkedIn.

Media ContactBilly Gouveia for Surefire Cyber[emailprotected]

SOURCE Surefire Cyber

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Team at Atlantic Data Forensics Joins Surefire Cyber, Adding Forensic Expertise and 15-Year Track Record to Newly Launched Incident Response Firm - PR...

Explained: Why telecom companies are eying the 5G band of 3.5K-3.6K MHz – Business Standard

Telcos say that currently the eco system for equipment in this band (between 3600-3630 MHz) is not available globally and it will take at least three to four quarters for its commercial deployment

Topics 5G|5G spectrum|5G in India

Telecom companies are preparing to grab the position of the top rank bidder in each local service area in the upcoming auctions in order to be assigned the best unencumbered spectrum in the 3.5 GHz 5G band which will give them a substantial advantage over their rivals.

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First Published: Tue, June 28 2022. 01:04 IST

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Explained: Why telecom companies are eying the 5G band of 3.5K-3.6K MHz - Business Standard

Cantourage UK brings Together Pharma’s Uganda-grown medical cannabis to the United Kingdom – PR Newswire

Cantourage UK, a subsidiary of Berlin-based European medical cannabis leader Cantourage, has successfully imported the dried flower products from Germany. Cantourage UK will offer Together Pharma's high-THC, non-irradiated medical cannabis flowers to patients immediately through Cantourage Clinic.

Together Pharma is the only cultivator of medical cannabis in Uganda. Its Ugandan farm extends over some approx. 30,000 sqm Greenhouses and has a full production capacity of more than 15 tonnes annually, including a range of innovative cultivars which will be introduced into the UK's medical cannabis market over the next few months.

As of today, Cantourage has signed contracts with over 20 leading cultivators from 13 different countries. Together Pharma is the first company to launch products grown in Africa via Cantourage's Fast Track Access Platform.

Niall Ivers, COO at Cantourage UK: "We're delighted to be extending our successful partnership with Together Pharma into the UK. Together Pharma is a market leader in the Israeli domestic market with extensive knowledge and international experience in delivering high-quality, great-value medicines to patients. We're confident the introduction of these first two varieties will assist in building a sustainable eco-system for UK patients."

Nir Sosinsky, Managing Director of Together Pharma, added: "Our extended partnership with Cantourage UK is extremely exciting for Together Pharma and a new stage in the expansion of our global reach. It strengthens our position in the UK and Europe, while at the same time underpinning our commitment to Uganda's cannabis industry, which holds great future potential for the country. The United Kingdom is an extremely important market for us. We are glad that our medical-grade cannabis flowers are being made available through Cantourage UK and Cantourage Clinic, allowing for a reliable supply to the benefit of patients across the country."

About Cantourage

Cantourage GmbH is a leading European medical cannabis company. The Berlin-based company was founded in 2019 by industry pioneers Dr Florian Holzapfel, Norman Ruchholtz and Patrick Hoffmann.

With its unique Fast Track Access platform, Cantourage enables producers from across the world to become part of the rapidly growing European medical cannabis market. Cantourage focuses on long-term collaborations and strategic partnerships: each partner along the value chain can focus on what they do best from growers to logistics, manufacturers to pharmacies and wholesalers. All with one clear goal in mind: to provide patients in Europe with an unprecedented selection of the highest quality cannabis medicines at affordable prices. Cantourage offers products in all relevant market segments: dried flowers, extracts, Dronabinol and pharma-grade Cannabidiol.

Cantourage UK was formed in January 2021 as a joint venture between Cantourage GmbH and NICE Partners, a London-based cannabis company, founded in 2019 by Benjy Cuby, Gabriel Newman, Joshua Cuby and Niall Ivers. The company specialises in developing strategic alliances, business development and compliance in the European cannabis market. Cantourage UK imports medical cannabis products from Germany into the UK and Channel Islands, supplying a broad range of products to patients throughout the country.

About Together Pharma Holdings Inc.

Together Pharma is a public company traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE). The company has a subsidiary Globus Pharma Ltd., which holds the franchise, (both directly and through subsidiaries), to grow, produce, and distribute medical cannabis products.

The company operates 2 farms of the world's most advanced agricultural cultivation systems, one in Israel and the second in Uganda, which allow the control and supervision of cannabis plants using the latest technologies, developing them into quality plants suitable for supervised medical use according to the strict IMC-GAP and GACP standards. The company has also a pharmaceutical factory, which meet all the required strict conditions for manufacturing medical products according to the IMC-GMP standard.

Photo- https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1847608/Together_Pharma.jpgPhoto- https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1847606/CAN_UK_team.jpgPhoto- https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1847607/Nir_Sosinsky.jpgLogo- https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1807078/Cantourage_Logo.jpg

SOURCE Cantourage UK

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Layer Three Ventures Announces $30M Web3 Crypto Fund and Accelerator – FinTech Futures

Layer Three Ventures, a sustainable and ethical web3 investment fund and accelerator launched this month targeting $30M for its first fund. This new Web3 venture fund takes a customized approach to sourcing, supporting, launching, and funding the next generation of successful Web3 startups.

Founder, Taylor Ryan

SAN FRANCISCO, June 27, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) With strategic and eco-system partners Near Nordic, Klint, and Growth Secrets, the pre-seed fund aims to support utility-focused decentralized applications (Dapps) across a variety of industries.

What is Web3?Web3 refers to blockchain technology and its fundamentals as they relate to decentralization and token-based economics.

The Layer Three Ventures Accelerator ProgramFunding for Layer Three Ventures is allocated towards running two 12-week accelerator programs, supporting staff, and investing in 10 startups per cohort.

The Layer Three Ventures Accelerator Program includes:

After finalizing the limited partners this summer, the first accelerator cohort is expected to be completed in late in December of 2022.

Theres a largely underserved market. Prior to the recent crash, Layer 1 blockchains accounted for 78% of all blockchain revenue. This suggests that the majority of investment and revenue is still speculative in nature, says Taylor Ryan, Founder of Layer Three Ventures.

The infrastructure exists. Its like having roads but nobody has built the cars yet. The startups that get it right will become the next generation of unicorns, Ryan notes in an interview.

The Web3 Market:While many investors are waiting to see how the market performs, the early movers are hard at work to get ahead while they can. TheGreed and Fear Index, measures a multi-factoral sentiment of the market such as volatility, market volume, social media, etc. The last few weeks have seen some of the highest scores in the market, which is labeled as Extreme Fear.

Were counting on the fact that when the market bounces back, well have the early-mover advantage, says Ryan.

Many of the most recognizable names in venture capital are allocating funds for future investment.Andreessen Horowitz recently announced a $4.5B Crypto Fund, its fourth. Meanwhile, the crypto market has seen significant volatility since May after thehistoric crash of Luna.

Connect with Layer Three Ventures:If you are an investor and interested in participating in the first funding round of Layer Three Ventures, there are still limited partner tickets available starting at $1M. Startups are encouraged to apply now as there are only 10 spots allocated to startups in the accelerator.

Layer Three Ventures is building up an impressive rolodex of investors, advisors, and talented founders with ambitious web3 projects across the globe.

Go toLayerThreeVentures.com or send an email to[emailprotected] to get in touch or learn more.

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Heading back to nature this summer? Tread lightly, say outdoor experts – CBC.ca

Conservation groups have been doing a lot of work lately to give people virtual access to important ecological areas in the Maritimes, but if that's given you the itch to go in person this summer, there are special precautions to take, according to two people who make a living promoting outdoor adventures.

"These are not the places we want to start going bushwhacking," said Jan-Sebastian LaPierre, of Dartmouth-based marketing company A For Adventure.

You probably should not go with a big group, said LaPierre, and you should try to "exercise the lightest touch possible."

The public can visit many ecologically sensitive areas, he said, if there's the right infrastructure, such as boardwalks and trails.

LaPierre's business partner Chris Surette said he's noticed a trend lately of conservation groups creating interactive maps and videos to try to get people to know and love wetlands and rare habitats.

The Nature Trust of New Brunswick has done lots of mapping, he said.

One "cool" example is the Meduxnekeag Valley Nature Preserve.

The Meduxnekeag is a tributary of the St. John River, he noted, and the preserve includes over 1,000 acres of rare Appalachian hardwood forest.

More than 180 species of trees, plants, lichen and mosses live there, according to the Nature Trust including 43 rare species and many found nowhere else in Atlantic Canada.

"These forests have been nearly eradicated from their natural range in Carleton and Victoria counties," says the group's website.

Thanks to trails and light infrastructure more than 3,000 students a year can visit the preserve, he said. They have fun identifying plants using the iNaturalist app or geocaching and also learn something in the process.

Ultimately it's teaching them about nature, said Surette, and creating a culture of understandingthe importance of conservation.

The St. Mary's River Association in Nova Scotia just started an online map project as well, said LaPierre.

The Canadian Heritage River nominee is well known for salmon fishing, he said, but is home to many other species and has beautiful "rolling hills" along its banks.

It hastaken decades to shore up some of the properties, he said, on a mix of private and public land, but there are now many access points for those wanting to travel by boat, bike or on foot.

"They've done a remarkable job," said LaPierre, "to make something that's hopefully going to last for generations and generations."

Surette and LaPierre have been personally involved in a couple of other mapping projects, in collaboration with the Canadian Wildlife Service.

One of them features Big Glace Bay Beach, which is surrounded by the community of Glace Bay, Nova Scotia.

It's "very, very important," nesting grounds for piping plovers, said LaPierre, as well as a host of other shore birds that pass through.

All ecosystems are fragile, said LaPierre, including the ones that we're closest to.

"It's easy to get excited about waterfalls and lush valleys," he said, "whereas the ones we visit more often probably most need our help."

Another of the mapping projects they worked on looks at Shepody Hills south of Moncton on the Fundy shore.

They created the above video in collaboration with naturalist, poet and author Harry Thurston.

Shepody Hills had a lot of human habitation for a long time, said LaPierre, and has now returned to a more natural state.

Another important natural area is nestled next to the community of Kentville, said Surette, in Nova Scotia's fertile Annapolis Valley.

Ducks Unlimited is piloting an interactive map project there of Miner's Marsh.

It used to be farmland, said Surette, but it was wet "all the time." The Miner family worked out a deal to transfer the land and have it restored to its natural state and protected.

It opened as a nature preserve in 2010, said Surette, and is "absolutely thriving."

Hundreds of people visit daily, he said, using its walking and biking trails.

When you zoom out on the Ducks Unlimitedinteractive map, you can see how much water it holds, right next to the town.

The most sensitive areas are "usually the unsexy ones," said Surette.

Peat wetlands and salt marshes "don't get a whole lot of love," he said.

They're seen as "mosquito ridden" places that are "boggy and kind of stinky."

But they are "unsung heroes" of the natural world.

They prevent flooding, hold and purify water, are "really great" at capturing carbon and provide "amazing infrastructure" for plants and animals.

"We're trying to keep those systems intact," said LaPierre.

"The leave-no-trace principles absolutely matter here."

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Heading back to nature this summer? Tread lightly, say outdoor experts - CBC.ca

Jute Bags Market is expected to grow by USD 3.83 Billion during 2027, progressing at a CAGR of 8.90% During the Forecast Period – Digital Journal

TheJute Bags Marketwas valued at US$ 2.3 Bn. in 2021. Jute Bags Market size is estimated to grow at a CAGR of 8.90% over the forecast period.

According to a new report published by Maximize Market Research titledJute Bags Marketby Product Type, Price, End-Use, and Region: Industry Overview and Forecast, the Jute Bags Market size is expected to reach USD 3.83 billion by 2027 at a CAGR of 8.90 percent. The report provides clients with a thorough understanding of the Markets PORTER and PESTLE scenarios. The research is based on a thorough examination of the socioeconomic impact of the COVID 19 pandemic and the resulting worldwide economic crisis.

Jute is made from the strip and stem of jute fiber, a natural fiber. Jute bags are commonly used to store and carry a range of items in food, agriculture, domestic, and other industries. The jute bags are long-lasting and may be reused for storing and transporting things after usage. Major retailers avoid using plastic bagscreating a market potential for the jute bag sector. Overall, the market for jute bags seems to be rapidly developing in the forecasted period owing to the increasing use of jute bags in the food, chemical, and domestic sectors as well as the product customization offered by jute bag manufacturers.

To get Sample Copy ofJute Bags Market, Click here:@https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/request-sample/146633

Jute Bags MarketDynamics:

Jute bags are frequently used as a substitute for plastic carry bags. This is of great use in shopping malls and other urban settings where Jute Bags are aggressively replacing their plastic-based equivalents to transport groceries, books, and other products utilized by city people. As a result of the improved lifestyle and rise in disposable money, the Jute Bags Market is growing. Jute bags are also utilized by college students and other consumer groups as college bags, haversacks, purses, and sling bags.

Jute bag demand is increasing due to their low cost and increasing use in textiles and homewares. Growing sustainability concerns about the usage of plastic as well as the governments attitude to the health eco-system are driving theJute Bags Market. Manufacturers of jute bags and shopping bags are looking to growing countries such as India, where jute is becoming more popular in the agriculture and fashion industries. In addition, as the use of plastic bags is prohibited, prominent firms in Europe are offering new products.

Furthermore, the benefits of jute bags such as biodegradability, cheap cost, and high strength, have contributed to the growth of the jute bag market.

Jute Bags MarketInsights:

The Asia Pacific region dominates the Jute Bags market. This is because the area is the worlds largest producer of jute. India is the worlds biggest producer of jute bags which are used in a variety of sectors such as agriculture, retail, and so on. Jute bags are also employed throughout the nation as traditional handicraft products. This is followed by China and Bangladesh, which are trying to boost their production capacity due to the products low production cost.

The Europe area has seen an increase in demand for the Jute Bags Market which may be due to increased environmental consciousness and activism as well as acceptance of jute bags.

Jute Bags MarketKey Players:

To get a detailed report summary and research scope of theJute Bags Market, click here:@https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/market-report/jute-bags-market/146633/

Jute Bags MarketSegmentation:

By Product Type:

By End-use:

By Price:

About Maximize Market Research:

Maximize Market Research, a global market research company with a dedicated team of specialists and data has conducted thorough research on theJute Bags Market. For companies in the chemical, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, electronics, and communications, internet of things, food and beverage, aerospace and defense, and other manufacturing sectors, Maximize Market Research offers syndicated and custom B2B and B2C business and market research on 12,000 high-growth emerging technologies, opportunities, and threats. Maximize Market Research is well-positioned to assess and forecast market size while also taking the competitive landscape of the sectors into account.

Contact Maximize Market Research:

3rd Floor, Navale IT Park, Phase 2

Pune Banglore Highway, Narhe,

Pune, Maharashtra 411041, India

[emailprotected]

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Jute Bags Market is expected to grow by USD 3.83 Billion during 2027, progressing at a CAGR of 8.90% During the Forecast Period - Digital Journal

Introducing the Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace: A Comprehensive Transportation and Logistics Ecosystem – Benzinga

BOISE, Idaho, June 28, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- In recognition of National Logistics Day and National Insurance Day taking place today, Truckstop.com announced the launch of the Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace. The comprehensive transportation and logistics marketplace provides a trusted ecosystem of products, solutions, and integrations that is designed to help partners, carriers, brokers and shippers keep their businesses moving forward.

The Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace is comprised of both industry and technology partners in several business categories including financial services, insurance providers, TMS (Transportation Management System) integrations, fuel card providers and more.

"Truckstop.com has a rich history of building strong relationships which span technology and industry partners. For more than 27 years we have established ourselves as the most trusted solutions provider for carriers, brokers and shippers," said Craig Varljen, vice president partnerships and alliances, Truckstop.com. "The Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace is a new ecosystem of partner driven solutions that add value to the entire freight and logistics industry. This creates synergies at the center of the entire transportation market."

Truckstop.com has proven to be a trusted service and industry partner since its inception, with the new Partner Marketplace providing a convenient rolodex of other reputable businesses in the industry benefiting carriers, brokers and shippers.

"A unique aspect of the freight transportation industry is that it's collegial in nature," said Bruno Stanziale, chief executive officer and chairman of GoToro. "Nobody exemplifies this united purpose more than Truckstop.com and by joining their partner marketplace we are able to better serve this community together."

Initial marketplace offerings and partnerships include, but are not limited to, the following:

Partners can choose from three listing tiers each designed to provide a curated benefits package. This can include an array of benefits ranging from a partner listing in the Partner Marketplace portal to mutual enablement and co-marketing activities.

Mobile users will be able to access the Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace from the Truckstop Go mobile app.

For more information about the Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace or how to become a partner, please visit https://marketplace.truckstop.com.

About Truckstop.comTruckstop.com is a trusted partner for carriers, brokers, and shippers empowering the freight community through a platform of innovative solutions for the entire freight lifecycle to increase efficiency, automate processes, and accelerate growth. As one of the industry's largest neutral freight marketplaces, Truckstop.com provides the customer service as well as scale of quality loads and trucks to give customers of all sizes, whether on the road or in the office, the transparency and freedom to build lasting relationships and grow their businesses. To learn how Truckstop.com is helping move the freight community forward, visit https://truckstop.com.

SOURCE Truckstop Group LLC

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Introducing the Truckstop.com Partner Marketplace: A Comprehensive Transportation and Logistics Ecosystem - Benzinga

Limitless X Anticipates Strong Sales and Earnings in the Current Fiscal Year – GuruFocus.com

Company provides net revenue guidance in the range of $40 million for fiscal year 2022

LOS ANGELES, June 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Limitless X Inc., (OTCQB: BLAB) ("the Company"), a creative and empowering lifestyle agency, today announced that it anticipates strong preliminary sales and earnings in the current fiscal year 2022. Limitless X recently acquired public company Bio Lab Naturals, bringing together a strong management team within the health and wellness industry. The new management will be led by Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Jas Mathur, a successful entrepreneur, investor, and venture capitalist. Mr. Mathur has strong expertise is in ecommerce and product development and has created multiple brands in the marketing, health and wellness spaces generating hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue each year. Mr. Mathur has invested approximately $5.1 million into Limitless X and has converted the loan into preferred stock to remove debt from the Company, leaving the Company with zero debt on its balance sheet. Additionally Mr. Mathur will be taking a nominal cash salary for his duties as Chairman and CEO of the Company.

As part of the Company's growth strategy, Limitless plans to generate organic growth while also seeking to target industry relevant companies for acquisitions to further expand its product line and operational footprint domestically and eventually internationally.

Limitless X's Chief Financial Officer, Benjamin Chung, with significant public company experience and formerly a partner at BDO and with prior experience at PwC and Ernst & Young, has reported that the Company anticipates net revenues in the range of $40 million for fiscal year 2022 with a strong product gross profits. The Company maintains a positive outlook for future and continued earnings.

About Jas Mathur Jas Mathuris an investor and entrepreneur who has developed multiple brands in the marketing, health and wellness spaces generating tens to hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue each year. The digital marketing and branding firm he founded, Limitless, has launched numerous industry-leading products in the dietary and CBD supplement sectors. He is a trendsetter with more than 7 million Instagram followers and frequently collaborates with leaders in the sports and entertainment industries.

Jas' passion is helping accelerate the achievement of people's health, wellness and business goals, inspired by his personal transformation story of losing over 250lbs in his twenties. Now a sought-after expert in developing fitness and training programs, he's helped many high-profile figures embark on their own health journeys and seeks to do the same for today's youth. Suitably, he recently partnered with Dr. Oz's nonprofit, Healthcorps, to jumpstart health and wellness programs targeted at teens and young adults.

As Jas transformed his life and body, he applied his newfound passion for health and wellness to launch Limitless. Prospective services he is blueprinting for the company include personality development, life coaching and educational platforms, in addition to the brand portfolio.

About Limitless X Limitless X is a creative and empowering lifestyle agency specializing in the full spectrum of digital advertising and marketing. The Company has global eco-system with three verticals and a series of unique product and service-oriented businesses within each, focused on the Health & Wellness, Beauty & Skincare, and CBD Industry.

Media Contact: [emailprotected]

Investor Relations Contact: 800-736-2030 [emailprotected]

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SEC will be strengthened to reposition Nigeria’s capital market, says Finance Minister | The ICIR – ICIR

THE Federal Government has said it would strengthen the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to reposition the Nigerias capital market to be at par with its peers globally.

The Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed, made the commitment today in Abuja when she received the Revised Nigerian Capital Market Master Plan (2021-2025).

The plan was submitted to the minister by the Capital Market Master Plan Implementation Council, led by the Director-General of SEC, Lamido Yuguda, and other top officials of the Commission.

The minister said the review of the capital market masterplan underscored the fact that capital market growth resonates with the current administrations unwavering commitment to deepening and re-positioning the countrys financial markets as a key anchor to achieving a private sector-led development of the economy as encapsulated in the National Development Plans objectives.

She said that under her watch, the finance ministry had supported efforts at implementing the masterplan since inception, adding that the plan represented the collective aspirations of the capital market community.

The aspirations, she said, were focused on driving initiatives geared towards growing and deepening the market.

She said the initiatives were being implemented with the ultimate goal of accelerating the emergence of Nigeria as a top 20 global economy by the year 2025.

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Ahmed commended the implementation committee and other stakeholders in the implementation journey, especially in the areas of dematerialization of share certificates, e-dividend mandate, facilitation of access to alternative investments like Sukuk and Specialized Funds, review of CAMA and ongoing review of the ISA, demutualization of the Nigeria Stock Exchange, enhancing the commodities eco-system and design of a National Savings Strategy, among others.

The finance minister said, Our capital market is growing and evolving. To sustain this growth and eventually transform to a world class capital market, transparency and investor confidence is key.

Investor confidence will accelerate the growth of our market and increase both domestic and foreign investor participation. To this end, we will continue to support and strengthen the regulator to effectively do its job of regulating and developing the capital market.

I see the capital market as an important driver of our economic growth objectives and we will continue to support efforts to position our market where it deserves to be a capital market that will broaden access to economic prosperity by enabling the emergence of financially responsible citizens, accelerate wealth creation and wealth distribution, provide capital to small and medium scale enterprises, and catalyze housing finance.

Yuguda said at the event that during the implementation of the 10-year Nigeria Capital Market Master Plan (2015-2025), the Commission established the Commodities Trading Ecosystem, and the West African Securities Regulators Association (WASRA) to encourage integration of capital markets in West Africa.

He added the masterplan document recommended a periodic review of the assumptions, goals and objectives of the plan to align it better with current realities and innovations in the global financial system.

The main objective of reviewing the masterplan is to produce an updated version of the document primarily to engage stakeholders on the current level of market development and opportunities for further capital growth; review and update the assumptions and vision of the CMMP and develop targets for the various thematic areas of the CMMP.

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The SEC Director-General said the comprehensive review of the masterplan had been completed and a revised capital market masterplan produced.

He said, The revised plan has incorporated the views and aspirations of stakeholders in our market, as well as incorporated best practices globally to produce a well-articulated strategic plan for the next four years.

The revised capital market masterplan is designed to chart the strategic position and future direction of the capital markets, while providing both the SEC and market participants clarity on the vision of the capital market and the road map required to facilitate a conducive business environment to encourage innovation, investment, growth and expansion of economic and employment opportunities in our country.

Our vision is to be Africas most modern, efficient, and internationally competitive market that catalyses Nigerias economic growth and development. We believe the Plan provides a solid roadmap for achieving this vision as we collaborate with all our stakeholders under your continued support and proven leadership.

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SEC will be strengthened to reposition Nigeria's capital market, says Finance Minister | The ICIR - ICIR

Broadband Stakeholder Group Replaced by UK Digital Connectivity Forum – ISPreview.co.uk

The Broadband Stakeholder Group (BSG), which is a think-tank that advises the UK Government on various related areas of telecommunications policy, is no more and has been replaced by the Digital Connectivity Forum (DCF). The new group touts a redefined mission and vision that has been crafted with industry stakeholders.

The BSG, which was housed by techUK a trade body for the UKs technology sector, has in the past acted as a neutral forum for related organisations (e.g. broadband ISPs, regulators and mobile operators) to help shape future policy, regulatory and commercial issues (e.g. they helped shape the UK Open Internet Code of Practice and the new Gigabit broadband focus).

The new DCF intends to build on what the BSG was doing before, albeit alongside a refreshed identity, vision and mission to actively address the transformed connectivity value chain. The new vision will be focused on ensuring that the UK has an economy and society empowered by seamless digital connectivity, which some may view as an veiled reference toward more network convergence.

The groups new mission is also to be the primary advisory body on the provision of seamless connectivity, which shouldnt be too difficult, as were not sure if anybody else even holds that role today. Theres also talk of creating a distinct technology neutral work programme (i.e. its clearly not a fibre-only club), concentrating on content demand and network design.

Stephanie Liston, Chair of the Digital Connectivity Forum, said:

The last two decades have seen a dramatic transformation in the UKs digital eco-system. Consumers and businesses today enjoy a huge number of internet-enabled services delivered over a variety of networks. Working with industry, government and others we are today launching the Digital Connectivity Forum with an expanded and ambitious agenda to meet the challenges and exploit the opportunities of the next 20 years.

Personally speaking, Im not a huge fan of the move toward convergence. Indeed, people like myself much prefer our mobile, phone, TV and fixed broadband services to be entirely separate, so that we can benefit from greater choice and flexibility when moving between providers. Some may of course prefer the simplicity of a single package, which is understandable.

On the other hand, its plausible for the seamless connectivity benefits of convergence to still exist across different suppliers and networks (very complex), which is perhaps something that the DCF might be able to facilitate through new agreements. But at this stage well have to wait for some of the DCFs first work output before being able to tell just how far they might be able to take all this, or even if this is actually what they mean.

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ICAB and BIDA signs MoU on DVS – The Business Standard

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bangladesh (ICAB) and the Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (BIDA) of the Prime Minister's Office have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) at a ceremony held at latter's premises on Tuesday, 28 June 2022.

Under this MoU BIDA will get access to use documents verification system (DVS) for verifying the authenticity of audited financial statements of different entities, reads a press release.

Md. Shahadat Hossain FCA, President, ICAB and Mohsina Yasmin, Executive Member (International Investment Promotion), BIDA have signed the MoU from their respective sides.

Md. Sirazul Islam, Executive Chairman, Bangladesh Investment Development Authority (BIDA), Prime Minister's Office, GoB graced the occasion present as the chief guest. ICAB Vice President Fouzia Haque FCA, BIDA Director General Shah Mohammad Mahboob, and Executive Member Mohsina Yasmin also spoke on the occasion.

ICAB Vice President NKA Mobin FCA, Council Members, Md. Moniruzzaman FCA, Sabbir Ahmed FCA, Chief Executive Officer Shubhashish Bose, Chief Operating Officer Mahbub Ahmed Siddique FCA, among others were present in the occasion.

DVS has already become quite acceptable to the business community and other regulatory bodies. ICAB has similar arrangement with National Board of Revenue (NBR), Financial Reporting Council (FRC), Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC), NGOs Affairs Bureau and Registrar of Joint Stock Companies and Firms (RJSC).

ICAB has developed the Document Verification System (DVS) to authenticate the audited financial statements of different entities.

DVS will make the accounting system more acceptable and reliable. ICAB introduced this software data base document verification system (DVS) from 1 December 2020 to curb malpractice of producing multiple financial statements and to establish transparency and accountability in the financial statements of different entities.

Highlighting the purposes of launching of document verification system(DVS), ICAB Council Member Mohammed Forkan Uddin FCA said, foreign investors see first the audited financial statements of a company before making a decision for cross boarder investment, National Board of Revenue (NBR) needs audited financial statements for revenue assessment, and the Banks require it for sanctioning loan.

ICAB's Document Verification System (DVS) will ensure the authenticity of this audited financial statements which will ultimately reduce the number of loan defaulters and bring confidence for foreign investment, he added and said, it will also enhance the revenue and thereby change the financial eco-system of the country.

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ICAB and BIDA signs MoU on DVS - The Business Standard

Novartis hunting for sickle cell cure with Precision deal – BioPharma Dive

Dive Brief:

Sickle cell and beta thalassemia, both rare, life-threatening diseases caused by mistakes in DNA, are top targets for biotech and pharma companies working in the genetic medicine field. Several of those efforts have advanced to, or will soon reach, the Food and Drug Administration.

Earlier this month, advisers to the agency recommended approval for a cell-based gene therapy designed by Bluebird bio to treat beta thalassemia. Partners Vertex and CRISPR Therapeutics, meanwhile, plan to later this year submit for approval a CRISPR gene editing treatment that can treat both conditions.

Novartis is already working on a similar treatment through a partnership with the CRISPR biotech Intellia Therapeutics. Early clinical testing of their therapy began in 2020. The Swiss drugmaker also won approval in 2019 for a drug designed to limit the blood vessel blockages that cause severe pain crises in sickle cell patients.

Still, Novartis is exploring other approaches, recently joining forces with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and, on Tuesday, partnering with Precision.

Precision specializes in a type of gene editing technology it calls ARCUS. While the technology shares a similar concept to the better-known CRISPR, it uses a different type of nuclease, or DNA-cutting enzyme. Under the deal with Novartis, Precision will build a custom ARCUS nuclease for use in sickle cell and beta thalassemia. Once thats developed, Novartis will handle R&D, manufacturing and, if research succeeds, commercialization.

In announcing the deal, the companies acknowledged the competition, but noted how their work will focus on a treatment that can be used inside the body, or in vivo.

The in vivo gene editing approach that we are pursuing for sickle cell disease could have a number of significant advantages over other ex vivo gene therapies currently in development, said Derek Jantz, Precisions chief scientific officer, in a statement. Perhaps most importantly, it could open the door to treating patients in geographies where stem cell transplant is not a realistic option.

For Precision, the cash infusion from Novartis will also help extend its operating runway into the second quarter of 2024. Also on Tuesday, the biotech announced it would raise a further $50 million through the sale of nearly 36 million shares.

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Novartis hunting for sickle cell cure with Precision deal - BioPharma Dive