An Insider’s Take on How to Focus on Government’s IT Strengths – Nextgov

For Ed Mullen, a designer who has been around government tech for more than eight years, two things could fundamental change the way governments deliver social services: APIs and a focus on user experience.

As his term with 18F comes to an end, Mullen shared six strengths he sees in the current state and federal tech ecosystem and how he believes these should be leveraged to improve service delivery at every level.

Much of the technology that people use to access safety net programs and that states use to administer these programs is aging and crumbling, despite significant spending and effort to modernize, said Mullen, who began working on federal tech issues during the initial rollout of Healthcare.gov in 2011.

Mullen did a two-year stint with Health and Human Services Department before the creation of the U.S. Digital Service and other similar programs. He later joined one of those programsthe General Services Administrations 18Fin 2016.

The main problem with governments modernization efforts is the process, Mullen says.

We ask over-stretched, insufficiently technical state staff to modernize massively complex computer systems by adhering to federally-provided checklists and oversight regimes, working with massive vendors through multi-year contracts worth tens or hundreds of millions of dollars, he wrote on GitHub. Federal agencies are not well positioned to quickly drive change in the market or provide technical oversight that accelerates modernization rather than impedes it.

Following these processes forces agencies to rely on their weaknesses, rather than their strengths, he argues.

Through his posta sort of self-administered exit interviewMullen attempts to highlight governments strengths and areas where those can be leveraged to support modernization and, more importantly, the delivery of quality services to citizens.

Mullen lists six strengths, though some are targeted more toward state governments. However, as the first strength notes, creating a dividing line between state and federal is often a problem.

Today's rigid separation between federal program/policy design and state technical implementation has bred an ecosystem characterized by stagnation, duplicative effort, system failures, waste and poor outcomes for our neighbors involved at each level, he writes.

Mullen points out that while federal agencies generally set the standards for the kinds of social services states are required to provideincluding for whom and the manner and the kinds of data to be collectedit lands on state governments to build and maintain those systems. The current state of software development makes it easier to create barebones solutions at the federal level that can then be distributed among the states, as needed.

Mullen describes this as a loosely-coupled ecosystem and offers an idea of what that would look like:

This loosely-coupled ecosystem would have new pieces that are operated by the federal government that states can integrate with and use. It would utilize inexpensive commodity tools offered broadly in the private sector. Microservices from companies would be employed where appropriate to provide functionality the companies are uniquely positioned to offer. Custom development would be reserved for situations where other options are not available. Application programming interfaces (APIs) would assemble all the pieces into user-centric products which would be deployed on cloud infrastructure.

Similarly, he argues that federal agencies with the responsibility to set requirements around who is eligible for services should digitize those criteria. Rather than force states to develop individual algorithms to determine eligibility, Mullen suggests feds should build those as APIs that can then be integrated with state-level applications.

In his post, Mullen lays out a five-step process for how this would work.

This suggestion dovetails in the third: collect citizen data once, where appropriate, and share relevant information with other systems.

We know people are frequently eligible for multiple programs designed to address different need. They need the ability to determine eligibility and apply for multiple programs all in one place, in as few steps as possible, he writes. Data should be entered in aggregate for all relevant programs in the most intuitive way for the applicant and then used to determine individual programs behind the scenes.

Mullen also suggests taking the customer experience focus further, citing work done by his colleagues at 18F, as well as the U.S. Digital Service, Code for America and others. The lessons those teams have learned about improving user interfaces and the overall process can be used at the state level, as well.

Mullens fifth point turns the previous suggestion on its head, focusing on the usability of the apps from a state employee perspective.

States dont have the resources or expertise to make these systems modern, usable and empowering, he writes. Its unreasonable to ask states to continuously improve their systems based on continuous user feedback loops with their current mix of staffing and skill. And weve learned incumbent vendors are not incentivized to build great experiences for workers.

The post includes a link to an unfinished prototype of what that employee user experience could look like. Mullen notes this is incomplete and said he is actively looking for feedback on how to improve the prototype.

Finally, Mullen looks at the unwieldy task of modernizing legacy systems. Here, he focuses on the state-level, suggesting governments should unwind their legacy systems through a series of incremental improvements, rather than just ripping and replacing.

While Mullen offers some concrete steps and prototypes for consideration, he admits this is only a starting point that will create as many questions as answers.

At the end of the introduction, he includes a caveat: Grandiose concept pieces like this are always wrong. Or rather, they get a lot of things wrong. The point is to move the conversation along and attract participation in rethinking broad assumptions and conventions.

In an email with Nextgov, Mullen also asserted that his thoughts are not necessarily representative of his employerGSAnor does he claim to represent the entire government technology field.

But as a person who has worked on the issues, I've formed perspectives that I've wanted to share as the ideas of an individual for consideration by the people I have come in contact with, he said.

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An Insider's Take on How to Focus on Government's IT Strengths - Nextgov

Is your bank frightened by the ecosystem? – The Banker

Openbanking is spreading around the world. Banks need to do more than just tick compliance boxes if they are going to stay relevant, writes Brian Caplen.

In the latest World Payments Report from Capgemini, 90% of banks surveyed said that being involved in an ecosystem-based business model is the key to long-term success in the challenging new payments market. But the report also found that only 48% of banks globally are considering launching APIs beyond what is required for compliance withopen banking regulations.

This begs the question as to whether banks will be leaders or followers in the transition to the ecosystem and rekindles concerns that they could lose out to the 'big tech' players. If banks do not become facilitators of platforms and aggregators, they risk ending up as service providers to third parties which control the interface with the customer. This is the infamous back-end role that banks have always feared might be theirs in the digital payments revolution.

If they are to avoid this fate, banks will need to be a lot more proactive. They need to be the orchestrators of greenfield ecosystems as well as participating in systems run by other players. In doing this they face another tough question as to how much the ecosystems they orchestrate should be open to competitors. Only if they are sure of their competitive advantage in all products can they feel secure about this approach.

These are scary times for banks but the problems will not disappear by only doing the minimum required for compliance reasons. Every bank needs a bold digital strategy that takes its products and services to the competition and not the other way round.

Brian Caplen will be chairing a session on the World Payments Report 2019 at Sibos on September 24.

Brian Caplen is the editor ofThe Banker. Follow him on Twitter@BrianCaplen

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Is your bank frightened by the ecosystem? - The Banker

Journey Of A Track: Navigating The Playlist Ecosystem – hypebot.com

Artists and their teams understandably have many playlist performance questions:

Given the current status of my track, what are the best playlists to target?

Given that my track got added toBreaking R&Bon Apple Music, what other playlists usually happens to tracks onBreaking R&Baround the same time?

Given that my track is currently onHits of the Momenton Deezer, what are the odds of it getting onLes titres du moment?

So in an effort to meet these needs, we built two main playlist analytics tools: thePre-Playlist AnalyzerandPost-Playlist Analyzer, which both look at a time-based concept well call a songs Track Journey. Both Analyzers look at the Track Journey of all songs on a target playlist, visualize the tracks commonly occurring playlists and display the percentage overlap between the playlists.

The Pre-Playlist Analyzer looks at the playlist databefore each track gets on the target playlist, whereas the Post-Playlist Analyzer looks at what happened to each trackafter it got added.

We are capable of analyzing any playlist on Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, Amazon, and YouTube, but for now, we will focus on a few of the patterns we discovered onSpotify,Apple MusicandDeezer.

Lets start with a Spotifyfrontlineplaylist from the Pop genre that constantly updates:Pop Rising.

What kind of journey did tracks take before arriving on this target playlist? To answer this question, we analyzed the historical data of 175 tracks that went throughPop Risingbetween a 30-day period (20190614 to 20190714), and identified the playlists that added those tracks in the past.

A few definitions: A co-occurring playlist is one that has one or more tracks in common with the target playlist. The average_timegap column denotes the average number of days between the date that a track got added to a co-occurring playlist, and date the track got added on the target playlist. The percent_overlap corresponds to the percentage of tracks onPop Risingthat appeared on each co-occurring playlist.

The obvious takeaway is the remarkableoverlap between officialNew Music Friday(or new release-based) playlists, which orients us to the fact thatPop Risingis highly correlated with new music. It conceivably could have been a playlist that listed viral pop songs that got big on social media, but were not necessarily new releases.

We can also see thatroughly 1 in every 3 tracks (31%) that made it toPop Risingwere added toPop n Fresh(orange box) 3 days earlier (on average). Now that we know a little of what feeds intoPop Rising, lets look at what happens to these tracks afterPop Rising.

The above plot shows the Post-Playlist journeys of tracks that got added toPop Rising. Note that day 0 is the day the tracks got added to the target playlist. Tracks may have gotten added to the target playlist on different dates, so we time-shifted all tracks added date to align at day 0 for comprehensibility purposes.

The y-axis (labelled Percent Overlap) represents a percentage of how many tracks get added to a particular co-occurring playlist after getting on our target playlist. For example, the top line of the plot shows that about33% of the tracks that made it toPop Rising, later made it toIts a Hit!

There aremultiple data pointsto observe in this interactive chart: if you hover over each bubble, youll seebasic playlist informationas well as thenumber of tracksthat were added at each Time Gap, or number of days after they got added to the target playlist (negative values are leading to the current target playlist, while positive values show Track Journeys after the target playlist). Theopacityof each bubble represents how much track overlap happens at a specific Time Gap (darker = more overlap, relative to each co-occurring playlist). Thesizeof the bubbles represent the number of followers each playlist has.

Notice that17% ofPop Risingstracks end up on Spotifys most followed playlist,Todays Top Hits (TTH), at some point after. More specifically, most of this sequence happenswithin a weekafter the tracks were added toPop Rising.

So while its certainly debatable if Spotify curators vet a certain track for likability before including it on a more popular playlist, if it does, it seems to happen quite quicklyeven a matter of days.

Next, lets switch genres and apply the Playlist Analyzers to the top Country music playlist on Spotify:Hot Country.

We naturally spot some genre-dependent co-occurring playlists likeNext from Nashville,All About Country,New Boots,Wild Country,Breakout Country, but additionally find the genre-agnosticNew Music Fridayhaving significant track overlap withHot Country.

This time however, we performed deeper Pre-Playlist Analysis on some of these co-occurring playlists themselves, and visualized the track flow between any two of them having at least 10% overlap.

Even starting with the two of the most highly followed of the bunch, it still seems there is a relatively low chance of getting on Hot Country even if a track managed to get onWild Country(787K followers, 10% chance) orNew Boots(654K followers, 13% chance). Nevertheless,New Music Nashville(blue) seems to be a decent bet to get on either these six-digit follower playlists (popular playlists themselves), whileNext From Nashville(green) is an even better one.

DespiteNext From Nashville(NFN) having only 80K followers, roughly 1 out of every 5 tracks added toNFNmade it toWild CountryorNew Boots.Given thatWild CountryandNew Bootshave more than half a million followers each,NFNseems to work well as a gateway to bigger country playlists.

We also see that1 out of every 3 songs featured onNFNended up onBreakout Country(123K followers),which itself is a great place for mid-tier playlist exposure.Its certainly a sweet bonus thatBreakout Countrys tracks themselves had almost a 20% chance of getting onHot Countrywith its whopping 5.5M followers.

So if youre an emerging country artist looking for lower-profile playlist within placement reachwhy not try a playlist likeNext from Nashville?

Another type of playlist thats interesting to dissect arecontext-based playlists. These playlists tend to offer back catalog tracks more spins in the long run and focus on the users life context (e.g., going for a run, having a romantic dinner), rather than the music itself (e.g., rock music, Spanish-language music).

Lets take a look at Spotifys 3rd most-followed contextual playlist at the time of writing,Songs to Sing in the Showerat 5.1M followers. 🙂

From the above journey plot, youll see that there is a~70% chance that if a track has already featured onSongs to Sing in the Shower(SSS)it may be placed on it again later! While this may seem like an odd thing to point out, remember that tracks are constantly being added and removed from playlists.

So especially for a context-based, catalog-focused one likeSSSthat is frequently refreshed,music can find its way on and off at various times, which is great motivation for artists to get placed here for random (and welcomed) spikes of unexpected long-tail streaming revenue down the road.

Our Analyzer Tools differentiate theseadded/then removed/then added againevent sequences from simply being on that playlist continuously. (Note thatSSSis a personalized Spotify playlist which shuffles a larger list of tracks for each individual user, so we are using the default,public URL playlistversion at all times.)

Whats also interesting is that there seems to be quite a fewcircular relationships between multiple Spotify contextual/mood playlists.This means that once a track places onSSS, it has a chance of bouncing from playlist to playlist and enjoy long term success.

Among the list of playlists thatSSShas a tight relationship with, there are a couple that unsurprisingly stood out:Canta Sotto La DocciaandCanta en la Ducha, the Italian and Spanish translations ofSongs to Sing in the Shower.

This would make sense, as Spotify has historically shown (at least in theirTop 200 charts) that it does a great job of globalizing and keeping A-list English-speaking artist content front and center, as opposed to other platforms like Deezer thatexcel at showcasing domestic market content.

Despite bothSSSandSongs to Sing in the Car (SSCat 8.6M followers)being highly-followed contextual playlists, the tracks landing on these playlists show very different journeys: for example, asignificant amount of tracks seem to have appeared on many non-editorial playlists(such asCleaning the Houseby curator Dancing Playlists at 87K followers)before ending up onSSC.

In contrary,tracks onSSSseem to have gone through mostly editorial playlists(such as SpotifysGuilty PleasuresorSing Through the Decades) before ending up onSSS.

For this reason, even thoughSSChas ~3.5M more followers thanSSS, placing your music onSSCmay well be the easier effort if you were to first pursue pitching to some of its feeder playlists likeMost Popular Songs of All Timethat are not controlled by Spotify itself.

As forSSS, if you are connected to Spotifys curators, first pursuing smaller editorial playlists such asHappy PoporGuilty Pleasurescould potentially be an easier sell than getting your track onSSSdirectly.

Lets say were now interested in how to get a track on Apple Musics top R&B playlist,TheA-List: R&B.

Using the Post-Playlist Analyzer, we looked at all co-occurring playlists with higher than 10% overlap. Note that we did not include major-label owned playlists in the analysis (Digster, Filtr and Topsify), though we did include Apple editorial playlists. For example, one of the playlists we analyzed was ApplesBreaking R&B.

Notice that about14% of the tracks that went throughBreaking R&Bgot added toThe A-List: R&Bat some point later. Most co-occurrences happenedwithin 10 daysafter the tracks appeared onBreaking R&B. By running the the same type of analysis on the rest of the co-occurring playlists described earlier, we compiled the results into the flow diagram below that summarizes the Post-Playlist journeys of all tracks on these co-occurring playlists (over 1000 tracks analyzed).

Roughly14% and 16% of the tracks onBreaking R&BandMe and Baegot onThe A-List R&Bsometime later. Most of the co-occurrences happenwithin 7 daysafter tracks got added on these two playlists. More interestingly, the playlist adds onBreaking R&BandMe and Baehappened around the same time as other popular playlists such asBeats of the Week,Brown SugarandMoodand#OnRepeat. For this reason, these playlists make good candidates for additional targets once your track made it toBreaking R&BandMe and Bae.

Additionally,Me and Baeand#OnRepeathave their own sets of playlists they co-occurred with frequently. As we saw earlier in the playlist analysis on Spotify, contextual playlists offer tracks continuing success by recycling them within the contextual playlists ecosystem. From this Apple diagram,#OnRepeatalso has decent flows to contextual playlists such as Summer Heat and Gym Flow.So if Apples contextual playlists also draw lots of user consumption, getting on#OnRepeatcan help establish a long-tail of streaming revenue for any artist lucky enough to get on it.

Lets say your ultimate goal is to reachLes titres du moment(LTDM), the most highly-followed playlist on Deezer (9.9M fans).

True to its reputation as a domestic-market first platform,most of the tracks onLTDMhave gone through one of the editorial, market-based Deezer Chart playlists first. One exception would be the Track Journey throughHits of the Momentat 1.2M fans, one of the platforms top playlists. Like before, we used the Playlist Analyzer tools and identified interesting Track Journeys leading toLTDM.

Before ending up onHits of the Moment, the tracks have usually gone through one of the market-based Deezer Chart playlists, with the exceptions ofTodays Best Pop(600K fans), Hits du Moment(485K fans) and a few others.

Looking back further,Pop Fresh(blue node),This is pop(150K fans) andRadar Weekly(146K fans) seem to feedTodays Best Pop(600K fans). So with only 9.6K fans,Pop Freshis certainly worth investigating as low-hanging playlist fruit.

Given that 1827% of tracks onPop Freshend up on bigger feeder playlists such asThis is PopandTodays Best Pop, we may find here a few lower-profile gateway playlists that could lead your music to higher-profile ones.

The interesting patterns we discussed here are only the tip of the playlist iceberg! There is so much more to explore and we cant wait to see what findings you will discover with these Playlist Analyzer tools.

Coming soonChartmetricsPlaylist Analyzertools!

We will be making these tools live asPremium features onChartmetricvery soon. Stay tuned!

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Journey Of A Track: Navigating The Playlist Ecosystem - hypebot.com

SmartNews’ head of product on how the news discovery app wants to free readers from filter bubbles – TechCrunch

Since launching in the United States five years ago, SmartNews, the news aggregation app that recently hit unicorn status, has quietly built a reputation for presenting reliable information from a wide range of publishers. The company straddles two very different markets: the U.S. and its home country of Japan, where it is one of the leading news apps.

SmartNews wants readers to see it as a way to break out of their filter bubbles, says Jeannie Yang, its senior vice president of product, especially as the American presidential election heats up. For example, it recently launched a feature, called News From All Sides, that lets people see how media outlets from across the political spectrum are covering a specific topic.

The app is driven by machine-learning algorithms, but it also has an editorial team led by Rich Jaroslovsky, the first managing editor of WSJ.com and founder of the Online News Association. One of SmartNews goal is to surface news that its users might not seek out on their own, but it must balance that with audience retention in a market that is crowded with many ways to consume content online, including competing news aggregation apps, Facebook and Google Search.

In a wide-ranging interview with Extra Crunch, Yang talked about SmartNews place in the media ecosystem, creating recommendation algorithms that dont reinforce biases, the difference between its Japanese and American users and the challenges of presenting political news in a highly polarized environment.

Catherine Shu: One of the reasons why SmartNews is interesting is because there are a lot of news aggregation apps in America, but there hasnt been one huge breakout app like SmartNews is in Japan or Toutiao in China. But at the same time, there are obviously a lot of issues in the publishing and news industry in the United States that a good dominant news app might be able to help, ranging from monetization to fake news.

Jeannie Yang: I think thats definitely a challenge for everybody in the U.S. With SmartNews, we really want to see how we can help create a healthier media ecosystem and actually have publishers thrive as well. SmartNews has such respect for the publishers and the industry and we want to be good partners, but also really understand the challenges of the business model, as well as the challenges for users and thinking of how we can create a healthier ecosystem.

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SmartNews' head of product on how the news discovery app wants to free readers from filter bubbles - TechCrunch

ecosystem | Definition, Components, & Structure …

Ecosystem, the complex of living organisms, their physical environment, and all their interrelationships in a particular unit of space.

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conservation: The loss of ecosystems

) Conservation justifiably prioritizes tropical moist forests (see tropical forest) because they hold such a large fraction

A brief treatment of ecosystems follows. For full treatment, see biosphere.

Britannica Quiz

Ecosystems

Mangrove forests are found along the borders of high-elevation deserts.

An ecosystem can be categorized into its abiotic constituents, including minerals, climate, soil, water, sunlight, and all other nonliving elements, and its biotic constituents, consisting of all its living members. Linking these constituents together are two major forces: the flow of energy through the ecosystem, and the cycling of nutrients within the ecosystem.

The fundamental source of energy in almost all ecosystems is radiant energy from the Sun. The energy of sunlight is used by the ecosystems autotrophic, or self-sustaining, organisms. Consisting largely of green vegetation, these organisms are capable of photosynthesisi.e., they can use the energy of sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into simple, energy-rich carbohydrates. The autotrophs use the energy stored within the simple carbohydrates to produce the more complex organic compounds, such as proteins, lipids, and starches, that maintain the organisms life processes. The autotrophic segment of the ecosystem is commonly referred to as the producer level.

Organic matter generated by autotrophs directly or indirectly sustains heterotrophic organisms. Heterotrophs are the consumers of the ecosystem; they cannot make their own food. They use, rearrange, and ultimately decompose the complex organic materials built up by the autotrophs. All animals and fungi are heterotrophs, as are most bacteria and many other microorganisms.

Together, the autotrophs and heterotrophs form various trophic (feeding) levels in the ecosystem: the producer level, composed of those organisms that make their own food; the primary consumer level, composed of those organisms that feed on producers; the secondary consumer level, composed of those organisms that feed on primary consumers; and so on. The movement of organic matter and energy from the producer level through various consumer levels makes up a food chain. For example, a typical food chain in a grassland might be grass (producer) mouse (primary consumer) snake (secondary consumer) hawk (tertiary consumer). Actually, in many cases the food chains of the ecosystem overlap and interconnect, forming what ecologists call a food web. The final link in all food chains is made up of decomposers, those heterotrophs that break down dead organisms and organic wastes. A food chain in which the primary consumer feeds on living plants is called a grazing pathway; that in which the primary consumer feeds on dead plant matter is known as a detritus pathway. Both pathways are important in accounting for the energy budget of the ecosystem.

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ecosystem | Definition, Components, & Structure ...

ecosystem | National Geographic Society

An ecosystem is a geographic area where plants, animals, and other organisms, as well as weather and landscape, work together to form a bubble of life. Ecosystems contain biotic or living, parts, as well as abiotic factors, or nonliving parts. Biotic factors include plants, animals, and other organisms. Abiotic factors include rocks, temperature, and humidity.

Every factor in an ecosystem depends on every other factor, either directly or indirectly. A change in the temperature of an ecosystem will often affect what plants will grow there, for instance. Animals that depend on plants for food and shelter will have to adapt to the changes, move to another ecosystem, or perish.

Ecosystems can be very large or very small. Tide pools, the ponds left by the ocean as the tide goes out, are complete, tiny ecosystems. Tide pools contain seaweed, a kind of algae, which uses photosynthesis to create food. Herbivores such as abalone eat the seaweed. Carnivores such as sea stars eat other animals in the tide pool, such as clams or mussels. Tide pools depend on the changing level of ocean water. Some organisms, such as seaweed, thrive in an aquatic environment, when the tide is in and the pool is full. Other organisms, such as hermit crabs, cannot live underwater and depend on the shallow pools left by low tides. In this way, the biotic parts of the ecosystem depend on abiotic factors.

The whole surface of Earth is a series of connected ecosystems. Ecosystems are often connected in a larger biome. Biomes are large sections of land, sea, or atmosphere. Forests, ponds, reefs, and tundra are all types of biomes, for example. They're organized very generally, based on the types of plants and animals that live in them. Within each forest, each pond, each reef, or each section of tundra, you'll find many different ecosystems.

The biome of the Sahara Desert, for instance, includes a wide variety of ecosystems. The arid climate and hot weather characterize the biome. Within the Sahara are oasis ecosystems, which have date palm trees, freshwater, and animals such as crocodiles. The Sahara also has dune ecosystems, with the changing landscape determined by the wind. Organisms in these ecosystems, such as snakes or scorpions, must be able to survive in sand dunes for long periods of time. The Sahara even includes a marine environment, where the Atlantic Ocean creates cool fogs on the Northwest African coast. Shrubs and animals that feed on small trees, such as goats, live in this Sahara ecosystem.

Even similar-sounding biomes could have completely different ecosystems. The biome of the Sahara Desert, for instance, is very different from the biome of the Gobi Desert in Mongolia and China. The Gobi is a cold desert, with frequent snowfall and freezing temperatures. Unlike the Sahara, the Gobi has ecosystems based not in sand, but kilometers of bare rock. Some grasses are able to grow in the cold, dry climate. As a result, these Gobi ecosystems have grazing animals such as gazelles and even takhi, an endangered species of wild horse.

Even the cold desert ecosystems of the Gobi are distinct from the freezing desert ecosystems of Antarctica. Antarcticas thick ice sheet covers a continent made almost entirely of dry, bare rock. Only a few mosses grow in this desert ecosystem, supporting only a few birds, such as skuas.

Threats to Ecosystems

For thousands of years, people have interacted with ecosystems. Many cultures developed around nearby ecosystems. Many Native American tribes of North Americas Great Plains developed a complex lifestyle based on the native plants and animals of plains ecosystems, for instance. Bison, a large grazing animal native to the Great Plains, became the most important biotic factor in many Plains Indians cultures, such as the Lakota or Kiowa. Bison are sometimes mistakenly called buffalo. These tribes used buffalo hides for shelter and clothing, buffalo meat for food, and buffalo horn for tools. The tallgrass prairie of the Great Plains supported bison herds, which tribes followed throughout the year.

As human populations have grown, however, people have overtaken many ecosystems. The tallgrass prairie of the Great Plains, for instance, became farmland. As the ecosystem shrunk, fewer bison could survive. Today, a few herds survive in protected ecosystems such as Yellowstone National Park.

In the tropical rain forest ecosystems surrounding the Amazon River in South America, a similar situation is taking place. The Amazon rain forest includes hundreds of ecosystems, including canopies, understories, and forest floors. These ecosystems support vast food webs.

Canopies are ecosystems at the top of the rainforest, where tall, thin trees such as figs grow in search of sunlight. Canopy ecosystems also include other plants, called epiphytes, which grow directly on branches. Understory ecosystems exist under the canopy. They are darker and more humid than canopies. Animals such as monkeys live in understory ecosystems, eating fruits from trees as well as smaller animals like beetles. Forest floor ecosystems support a wide variety of flowers, which are fed on by insects like butterflies. Butterflies, in turn, provide food for animals such as spiders in forest floor ecosystems.

Human activity threatens all these rain forest ecosystems in the Amazon. Thousands of acres of land are cleared for farmland, housing, and industry. Countries of the Amazon rain forest, such as Brazil, Venezuela, and Ecuador, are underdeveloped. Cutting down trees to make room for crops such as soy and corn benefits many poor farmers. These resources give them a reliable source of income and food. Children may be able to attend school, and families are able to afford better health care.

However, the destruction of rain forest ecosystems has its costs. Many modern medicines have been developed from rain forest plants. Curare, a muscle relaxant, and quinine, used to treat malaria, are just two of these medicines. Many scientists worry that destroying the rain forest ecosystem may prevent more medicines from being developed.

The rain forest ecosystems also make poor farmland. Unlike the rich soils of the Great Plains, where people destroyed the tallgrass prairie ecosystem, Amazon rain forest soil is thin and has few nutrients. Only a few seasons of crops may grow before all the nutrients are absorbed. The farmer or agribusiness must move on to the next patch of land, leaving an empty ecosystem behind.

Rebounding Ecosystems

Ecosystems can recover from destruction, however. The delicate coral reef ecosystems in the South Pacific are at risk due to rising ocean temperatures and decreased salinity. Corals bleach, or lose their bright colors, in water that is too warm. They die in water that isnt salty enough. Without the reef structure, the ecosystem collapses. Organisms such as algae, plants such as seagrass, and animals such as fish, snakes, and shrimp disappear.

Most coral reef ecosystems will bounce back from collapse. As ocean temperature cools and retains more salt, the brightly colored corals return. Slowly, they build reefs. Algae, plants, and animals also return.

Individual people, cultures, and governments are working to preserve ecosystems that are important to them. The government of Ecuador, for instance, recognizes ecosystem rights in the countrys constitution. The so-called Rights of Nature says Nature or Pachamama [Earth], where life is reproduced and exists, has the right to exist, persist, maintain and regenerate its vital cycles, structure, functions and its processes in evolution. Every person, people, community or nationality, will be able to demand the recognitions of rights for nature before the public bodies. Ecuador is home not only to rain forest ecosystems, but also river ecosystems and the remarkable ecosystems on the Galapagos Islands.

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ecosystem | National Geographic Society

Ecosystem – Ecosystem

An ecosystem is a system which is formed when a community of organisms interacts with the environment.

An ecosystem is basically an organism community which interacts with one another and their environment in such a way that energy is transferred between them and system-level processes like the cycle of elements emerge.

The ecosystem is the core concept in Ecology and Biology, and serves as the building block of biological organization where organisms interact with each other simultaneously and with the environment as well. Therefore, ecosystems are a step after the ecological community level ( in which organisms of different species interact with one another) and are at a stage below or equal to the biosphere and biomes. Essentially, they are regional ecosystems, while the biosphere is larger than all the possible ecosystems.

Ecosystems include the living organisms alonside the dead organic matter which they produce, the abiotic environment which these organisms inhabit and exchange elements, for example, soils, water, the atmosphere, etc, and the interactions with the components. Ecosystems follow the concept that the living organisms must continually interact with one another and with their environment to create complex systems with different emergent properties, like that "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts" or "everything is connected".

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Ecosystem - Ecosystem

UK NEA

New publications from the UK NEA Follow-on Phase, 26 June 2014

Findings of the interdisciplinary research conducted under the UK NEA Follow-on Phase were released today at an event hosted by the Living With Environmental Change. The event combines the launch of the Follow-on publications with a workshop, facilitated by the Ecosystems Knowledge Network, on sharing experiences of implementing the ecosystem approach.

The Synthesis and Technical reports of the UK NEA Follow-on can be downloaded from here.

UK NEA Follow-on Phase: New report released, 16 July 2013

The value of potential marine protected areas in the UK to divers and sea anglers - Final Report. Read more

Announcement of Opportunity for BESS workshops, 19 Feb 2013

The BESS (Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Sustainability) programme is a 6-year, 13 million research programme addressing NERC strategic challenges and societal needs and the UK Governments strategic priorities with respect to biodiversity, ecosystems and their services. This funding call is for workshops which contribute to the goals of the BESS programme, with an indicative cost of up to 8000 per workshop or series of workshops.

More information | Application proforma

National Ecosystem Assessment achieves international impact, 24 April 2012

LWEC has published an article on how the UK NEA is continuing to generate international interest and is proving influential in the way other nations approach their own assessments.

Environment Secretary unveils the UK NEA follow-up phase, 27 March 2012

Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman spoke of the UK NEA follow-up phase in her speech at the Planet Under Pressure conference in London.

The Guardian | Speech | Business Green

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Excerpt from:

UK NEA

Puget Sound Nearshore Ecosystem Restoration Project

Puget Sound Nearshore Ecosystem Restoration Project

Puget Sound Nearshore Ecosystem Recovery

ThePuget Sound Nearshore Ecosystem Restoration Project(PSNERP) is a comprehensive assessment of Puget Sounds 2,500 miles of shoreline to understand how humans have impacted the nearshore zone our beaches, bluffs, inlets and river deltas - and what opportunities exist to improve the health of the nearshore zone and its ability to support biological features humans value such as shorebirds, shellfish, salmon, orcas and great blue herons.

As a partnership between the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps), staff and many partners have worked since 2001 to complete the feasibility phase of a Corps General Investigation study of Puget Sounds nearshore zone. The Corps recognition of the importance of Puget Sound and its nearshore zone can bring Federal funds to Washington State to complete projects that will restore the health of the nearshore zone.

TheEstuary and Salmon Restoration Program(ESRP) is a grant program developed in 2006 that is based on the principles developed by PSNERP and rooted in the scientific foundation of process-based ecosystem restoration. The ESRP grant program is a cooperative initiative between Washington States Department of Fish and Wildlife, Recreation and Conservation Office, and Puget Sound Partnership.

Together, the PSNERP and ESRP, along with work focused understanding shoreline armoring in Puget Sound, make up WDFWs Nearshore Section.

Nearshore restoration benefits public access to beaches as well as Puget Sound nearshore ecosystems. The Seahurst Park Shoreline Restoration Project is more than improving a local treasure, its a piece of Puget Sound recovery.

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Puget Sound Nearshore Ecosystem Restoration Project

Ecosystem Marketplace – Making the Priceless Valuable

More Evidence Companies Wont Meet 2020 Deforestation Targets

03/21/2019Hundreds of companies have pledged to purge deforestation from their supply chains, but research by Climate Focus, TFA 2020, and the Forest Trends Supply Change initiative have long indicated ...Read More...

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03/18/2019The Green New Deal Resolution has been alternately vilified, glorified, and dismissed since freshman CongresswomanAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez and veteran Senator Ed Markey unveiled it last month. ...Read More...

03/08/2019The Paris Climate Agreement covers greenhouse-gas emissions from countries, but emissions from flights between countries are a different matter. Theyre covered under the notoriously opaque ...Read More...

03/08/2019When Jair Bolsonaro defanged Brazil's federal environmental regulatory apparatus, hope fell to international commodity buyers and individual Brazilian states. Although neither can substitute for ...Read More...

03/07/2019After Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro withdrew his offer to host the 25th year-end climate conference, Costa Rica and Chile agreed to split the responsibilities. Now we have an official date ...Read More...

01/25/2019Over a dozen people have joined the race to become the Democratic nominee for President of the United States, and all of them in contrast with their sole Republican counterpart acknowledge ...Read More...

03/04/2019Run out of water? Is it possible for a source of water to just dry up, or for water supplies for a city to be affected in quantity or quality to the point of being unusable for human consumption? ...Read More...

03/01/2019Human civilization depends on Earths rapidly-deteriorating ecosystems, which cleanse our water, purify our air, and regulate our climate. Today, the United Nations General Assembly launched a ...Read More...

03/01/2019For decades, the federal government has protected wetlands and tributaries that flow into rivers, streams, and lakes of the United States. Now President Donald Trump and EPA Administrator Andrew ...Read More...

04/12/2013 12 April 2013 | Christian Schadendorf says he was taken aback when he read An Audit of Carbon-Neutral Government, the provincial Auditor Generals (AG) much-ballyhooed take-down of ...Read More...

02/28/2019Aviation is one of the fastest-growing sources of greenhouse gas emissions, and will triple by 2050 if current trends continue. Flights between countries, however, aren't covered by the Paris ...Read More...

02/28/2019The Paris Agreement confounds those looking for a top-down, one-size-fits all global solution. That's because it's a framework within which workable solutions can emerge, and a recent analysis ...Read More...

08/03/2018This story originally appeared on the EDF Blog Economic development while also conserving forests is not easy. Building infrastructure and increasing production often entails forest degradation ...Read More...

02/25/2019The forests, farms, and fields of the United States mop up a staggering 15 percent of the country's industrial greenhouse-gas emissions, but this capacity will plunge as the climate changes. ...Read More...

02/20/2019Mitigation banking is built on the premise of "no net loss", which means people who damage nature must fix what they break, usually with the aim of improving more degraded nature than they ...Read More...

02/12/2019For four tumultuous years, Yvo de Boer was the public face of global climate talks, but since 2010 hes been working quietly on low-profile projects that he hopes will have a high impact on ...Read More...

02/08/2019The Green New Deal has high ambitions and high costs, but the mechanisms for covering those costs already exist, and they pale in comparison to the cost of doing nothing. Here's how the ...Read More...

02/07/2019The emerging "Green New Deal" seems to offer something for everyone except climate-science deniers. Criticized by some for being short on details, the proposal actually seems designed to propel ...Read More...

02/06/2019The US House of Representatives is holding its first hearings on climate change in over a decade this morning. Here's how you can watch them remotely.

01/31/2019Ten years ago, US environmental regulators, drawing on a decade of research, endorsed the practice of mitigation banking as a way to support healthy rivers, streams, and wetlands while enabling ...Read More...

01/29/2019For centuries, farmers have worked to make their fields more productive, usually by relying on trusted rhythms that only occasionally got out of whack. Global warming changes that, with ...Read More...

01/28/2019The Oregon state legislature is considering a cap and invest bill that promises to place a firm limit on the states greenhouse gasses while ensuring continued investments in resilient ...Read More...

01/24/2019Agriculture, deforestation, and forest fires generate up to 40 percent of all man-made greenhouse gasses, but farmers are only now beginning to play a role in global talks through a process known ...Read More...

01/19/2019It's been almost a decade since global companies pledged to slow climate change by purging deforestation from their supply chains, and those pledges have led to unprecedented transparency and ...Read More...

01/18/2019UN Secretary-General Antnio Guterres and UN General Assembly President Mara Fernanda Espinosa Garchas have both called for dramatically accelerating efforts to slow climate change and achieve ...Read More...

01/09/2019The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says we need carbon sinks if we're to meet the climate challenge, and farmers have the ability to turn forests, fields, and farms into just ...Read More...

01/03/2019Natural climate solutions can get us 37 percent of the way to meeting the Paris Agreement's 2-degree target, and farmers are key to implementing those solutions, writes California farmer A. G. ...Read More...

12/21/2018The Paiter-Suru indigenous people of the Brazilian Amazon have long used modern tools to support their traditional way of life, and the cultivation of babassu nuts is part of that tradition. To ...Read More...

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The rest is here:

Ecosystem Marketplace - Making the Priceless Valuable

Ecosystem – Official Site

An ecosystem is a system which is formed when a community of organisms interacts with the environment.

An ecosystem is basically an organism community which interacts with one another and their environment in such a way that energy is transferred between them and system-level processes like the cycle of elements emerge.

The ecosystem is the core concept in Ecology and Biology, and serves as the building block of biological organization where organisms interact with each other simultaneously and with the environment as well. Therefore, ecosystems are a step after the ecological community level ( in which organisms of different species interact with one another) and are at a stage below or equal to the biosphere and biomes. Essentially, they are regional ecosystems, while the biosphere is larger than all the possible ecosystems.

Ecosystems include the living organisms alonside the dead organic matter which they produce, the abiotic environment which these organisms inhabit and exchange elements, for example, soils, water, the atmosphere, etc, and the interactions with the components. Ecosystems follow the concept that the living organisms must continually interact with one another and with their environment to create complex systems with different emergent properties, like that "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts" or "everything is connected".

The rest is here:

Ecosystem - Official Site

Ecosystem services – Wikipedia

Ecosystem services are the many and varied benefits that humans freely gain from the natural environment and from properly-functioning ecosystems. Such ecosystems include, for example, agroecosystems, forest ecosystems, grassland ecosystems and aquatic ecosystems. Collectively, these benefits are becoming known as 'ecosystem services', and are often integral to the provisioning of clean drinking water, the decomposition of wastes, and the natural pollination of crops and other plants.

While scientists and environmentalists have discussed ecosystem services implicitly for decades, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) in the early 2000s popularized the concept.[1] There, ecosystem services are grouped into four broad categories: provisioning, such as the production of food and water; regulating, such as the control of climate and disease; supporting, such as nutrient cycles and oxygen production; and cultural, such as spiritual and recreational benefits. To help inform decision-makers, many ecosystem services are being assigned economic values.

While the notion of human dependence on Earth's ecosystems reaches to the start of Homo sapiens' existence, the term 'natural capital' was first coined by E.F. Schumacher in 1973 in his book Small is Beautiful [2]. Recognition of how ecosystems could provide complex services to humankind date back to at least Plato (c. 400 BC) who understood that deforestation could lead to soil erosion and the drying of springs.[3][pageneeded] Modern ideas of ecosystem services probably began when Marsh challenged in 1864 the idea that Earth's natural resources are unbounded by pointing out changes in soil fertility in the Mediterranean.[4][pageneeded] It was not until the late 1940s that three key authorsHenry Fairfield Osborn, Jr,[5] William Vogt,[6] and Aldo Leopold [7]promoted recognition of human dependence on the environment.

In 1956, Paul Sears drew attention to the critical role of the ecosystem in processing wastes and recycling nutrients.[8] In 1970, Paul Ehrlich and Rosa Weigert called attention to "ecological systems" in their environmental science textbook[9] and "the most subtle and dangerous threat to man's existence... the potential destruction, by man's own activities, of those ecological systems upon which the very existence of the human species depends".

The term "environmental services" was introduced in a 1970 report of the Study of Critical Environmental Problems,[10] which listed services including insect pollination, fisheries, climate regulation and flood control. In following years, variations of the term were used, but eventually 'ecosystem services' became the standard in scientific literature.[11]

The ecosystem services concept has continued to expand and includes socio-economic and conservation objectives, which are discussed below. A history of the concepts and terminology of ecosystem services as of 1997, can be found in Daily's book "Nature's Services: Societal Dependence on Natural Ecosystems".[3]

While Gretchen Daily's original definition distinguished between ecosystem goods and ecosystem services, Robert Costanza and colleagues' later work and that of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment lumped all of these together as ecosystem services.[12][13]

Per the 2006 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA), ecosystem services are "the benefits people obtain from ecosystems". The MA also delineated the four categories of ecosystem servicessupporting, provisioning, regulating and culturaldiscussed below.

By 2010, there had evolved various working definitions and descriptions of ecosystem services in the literature.[14] To prevent double counting in ecosystem services audits, for instance, The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) replaced "Supporting Services" in the MA with "Habitat Services" and "ecosystem functions", defined as "a subset of the interactions between ecosystem structure and processes that underpin the capacity of an ecosystem to provide goods and services".[15]

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) report 2005 defines Ecosystem services as benefits people obtain from ecosystems and distinguishes four categories of ecosystem services, where the so-called supporting services are regarded as the basis for the services of the other three categories.[1]

These include services such as nutrient recycling, primary production, soil formation, habitat provision and pollination.[16] These services make it possible for the ecosystems to continue providing services such as food supply, flood regulation, and water purification.

There is discussion as to how the concept of cultural ecosystem services can be operationalized. A good review of approaches in landscape aesthetics, cultural heritage, outdoor recreation, and spiritual significance to define and assess cultural values of our environment so that they fit into the ecosystem services approach is given by Daniel et al.[17] who vote for models that explicitly link ecological structures and functions with cultural values and benefits.There also is a fundamental critique of the concept of cultural ecosystem services that builds on three arguments:[18]

The following examples illustrate the relationships between humans and natural ecosystems through the services derived from them:

Understanding of ecosystem services requires a strong foundation in ecology, which describes the underlying principles and interactions of organisms and the environment. Since the scales at which these entities interact can vary from microbes to landscapes, milliseconds to millions of years, one of the greatest remaining challenges is the descriptive characterization of energy and material flow between them. For example, the area of a forest floor, the detritus upon it, the microorganisms in the soil and characteristics of the soil itself will all contribute to the abilities of that forest for providing ecosystem services like carbon sequestration, water purification, and erosion prevention to other areas within the watershed. Note that it is often possible for multiple services to be bundled together and when benefits of targeted objectives are secured, there may also be ancillary benefitsthe same forest may provide habitat for other organisms as well as human recreation, which are also ecosystem services.

The complexity of Earth's ecosystems poses a challenge for scientists as they try to understand how relationships are interwoven among organisms, processes and their surroundings. As it relates to human ecology, a suggested research agenda [22] for the study of ecosystem services includes the following steps:

Recently, a technique has been developed to improve and standardize the evaluation of ESP functionality by quantifying the relative importance of different species in terms of their efficiency and abundance.[28] Such parameters provide indications of how species respond to changes in the environment (i.e. predators, resource availability, climate) and are useful for identifying species that are disproportionately important at providing ecosystem services. However, a critical drawback is that the technique does not account for the effects of interactions, which are often both complex and fundamental in maintaining an ecosystem and can involve species that are not readily detected as a priority. Even so, estimating the functional structure of an ecosystem and combining it with information about individual species traits can help us understand the resilience of an ecosystem amidst environmental change.

Many ecologists also believe that the provision of ecosystem services can be stabilized with biodiversity. Increasing biodiversity also benefits the variety of ecosystem services available to society. Understanding the relationship between biodiversity and an ecosystem's stability is essential to the management of natural resources and their services.

The concept of ecological redundancy is sometimes referred to as functional compensation and assumes that more than one species performs a given role within an ecosystem.[29] More specifically, it is characterized by a particular species increasing its efficiency at providing a service when conditions are stressed in order to maintain aggregate stability in the ecosystem.[30] However, such increased dependence on a compensating species places additional stress on the ecosystem and often enhances its susceptibility to subsequent disturbance[citation needed]. The redundancy hypothesis can be summarized as "species redundancy enhances ecosystem resilience".[31]

Another idea uses the analogy of rivets in an airplane wing to compare the exponential effect the loss of each species will have on the function of an ecosystem; this is sometimes referred to as rivet popping.[32] If only one species disappears, the loss of the ecosystem's efficiency as a whole is relatively small; however, if several species are lost, the system essentially collapsessimilar to an airplane that lost too many rivets. The hypothesis assumes that species are relatively specialized in their roles and that their ability to compensate for one another is less than in the redundancy hypothesis. As a result, the loss of any species is critical to the performance of the ecosystem. The key difference is the rate at which the loss of species affects total ecosystem functioning.

A third explanation, known as the portfolio effect, compares biodiversity to stock holdings, where diversification minimizes the volatility of the investment, or in this case, the risk of instability of ecosystem services.[33] This is related to the idea of response diversity where a suite of species will exhibit differential responses to a given environmental perturbation. When considered together, they create a stabilizing function that preserves the integrity of a service.[34]

Several experiments have tested these hypotheses in both the field and the lab. In ECOTRON, a laboratory in the UK where many of the biotic and abiotic factors of nature can be simulated, studies have focused on the effects of earthworms and symbiotic bacteria on plant roots.[32] These laboratory experiments seem to favor the rivet hypothesis. However, a study on grasslands at Cedar Creek Reserve in Minnesota supports the redundancy hypothesis, as have many other field studies.[35]

There are questions regarding the environmental and economic values of ecosystem services.[36] Some people may be unaware of the environment in general and humanity's interrelatedness with the natural environment, which may cause misconceptions. Although environmental awareness is rapidly improving in our contemporary world, ecosystem capital and its flow are still poorly understood, threats continue to impose, and we suffer from the so-called 'tragedy of the commons'.[37] Many efforts to inform decision-makers of current versus future costs and benefits now involve organizing and translating scientific knowledge to economics, which articulate the consequences of our choices in comparable units of impact on human well-being.[38] An especially challenging aspect of this process is that interpreting ecological information collected from one spatial-temporal scale does not necessarily mean it can be applied at another; understanding the dynamics of ecological processes relative to ecosystem services is essential in aiding economic decisions.[39] Weighting factors such as a service's irreplaceability or bundled services can also allocate economic value such that goal attainment becomes more efficient.

The economic valuation of ecosystem services also involves social communication and information, areas that remain particularly challenging and are the focus of many researchers.[40] In general, the idea is that although individuals make decisions for any variety of reasons, trends reveal the aggregative preferences of a society, from which the economic value of services can be inferred and assigned. The six major methods for valuing ecosystem services in monetary terms are:[41]

A peer-reviewed study published in 1997 estimated the value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capital to be between US$1654 trillion per year, with an average of US$33 trillion per year.[42] However, Salles (2011) indicates 'The total value of biodiversity is infinite, so having debate about what is the total value of nature is actually pointless because we can't live without it'.

Although monetary pricing continues with respect to the valuation of ecosystem services, the challenges in policy implementation and management are significant and multitudinous. The administration of common pool resources is a subject of extensive academic pursuit.[43][44][45][46][47] From defining the problems to finding solutions that can be applied in practical and sustainable ways, there is much to overcome. Considering options must balance present and future human needs, and decision-makers must frequently work from valid but incomplete information. Existing legal policies are often considered insufficient since they typically pertain to human health-based standards that are mismatched with necessary means to protect ecosystem health and services. To improve the information available, one suggestion has involved the implementation of an Ecosystem Services Framework (ESF[48]), which integrates the biophysical and socio-economic dimensions of protecting the environment and is designed to guide institutions through multidisciplinary information and jargon, helping to direct strategic choices.

Novel and expedient methods are needed to deal with managing Earth's ecosystem services. Local to regional collective management efforts might be considered appropriate for services like crop pollination or resources like water.[22][43] Another approach that has become increasingly popular over the last decade is the marketing of ecosystem services protection. Payment and trading of services is an emerging worldwide small-scale solution where one can acquire credits for activities such as sponsoring the protection of carbon sequestration sources or the restoration of ecosystem service providers. In some cases, banks for handling such credits have been established and conservation companies have even gone public on stock exchanges, defining an evermore parallel link with economic endeavors and opportunities for tying into social perceptions.[38] However, crucial for implementation are clearly defined land rights, which is often lacking in many developing countries.[49] In particular, many forest-rich developing countries suffering deforestation experience conflict between different forest stakeholders.[49] In addition, concerns for such global transactions include inconsistent compensation for services or resources sacrificed elsewhere and misconceived warrants for irresponsible use. Another approach has been focused on protecting ecosystem service 'hotspots'. Recognition that the conservation of many ecosystem services aligns with more traditional conservation goals (i.e. biodiversity) has led to the suggested merging of objectives for maximizing their mutual success. This may be particularly strategic when employing networks that permit the flow of services across landscapes, and might also facilitate securing the financial means to protect services through a diversification of investors.[50][51]

For example, in recent years there has been interest in the valuation of ecosystem services provided by shellfish production and restoration.[52] A keystone species, low in the food chain, bivalve shellfish such as oysters support a complex community of species by performing a number of functions essential to the diverse array of species that surround them. There is also increasing recognition that some shellfish species may impact or control many ecological processes; so much so that they are included on the list of "ecosystem engineers"organisms that physically, biologically or chemically modify the environment around them in ways that influence the health of other organisms.[53] Many of the ecological functions and processes performed or affected by shellfish contribute to human well-being by providing a stream of valuable ecosystem services over time by filtering out particulate materials and potentially mitigating water quality issues by controlling excess nutrients in the water.

Ecosystem-based adaptation or EbA is an emerging strategy for community development and environmental management that seeks to use an ecosystem services framework to help communities adapt to the effects of climate change. The Convention on Biological Diversity currently defines Ecosystem-Based Adaptation as "the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to the adverse effects of climate change", which includes the use of "sustainable management, conservation and restoration of ecosystems, as part of an overall adaptation strategy that takes into account the multiple social, economic and cultural co-benefits for local communities".[54]

In 2001, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment announced that humanity's impact on the natural world was increasing to levels never before seen, and that the degradation of the planet's ecosystems would become a major barrier to achieving the Millennium Development Goals. In recognition of this fact, Ecosystem-Based Adaptation seeks to use the restoration of ecosystems as a stepping-stone to improving the quality of life in communities experiencing the impacts of climate change. Specifically, this involves the restoration of ecosystems that provide the community with essential services, such as the provisioning of food and water and protection from storm surges and flooding. EbA interventions typically combine elements of both climate change mitigation and adaptation to global warming to help address the community's current and future needs.[55]

Collaborative planning between scientists, policy makers, and community members is an essential element of Ecosystem-Based Adaptation. By drawing on the expertise of outside experts and local residents alike, EbA seeks to develop unique solutions to unique problems, rather than simply replicating past projects.[54]

Ecosystem services are defined as the gains acquired by humankind from surroundings ecosystems. Four different types of ecosystem services have been distinguished by the scientific body: regulating services, provisioning services, cultural services and supporting services. An ecosystem does not necessarily offer all four types of services simultaneously; but given the intricate nature of any ecosystem, it is usually assumed that humans benefit from a combination of these services. The services offered by diverse types of ecosystems (forests, seas, coral reefs, mangroves, etc.) differ in nature and in consequence. In fact, some services directly affect the livelihood of neighboring human populations (such as fresh water, food or aesthetic value, etc.) while other services affect general environmental conditions by which humans are indirectly impacted (such as climate change, erosion regulation or natural hazard regulation, etc.).[56]

Estuarine and coastal ecosystems are both marine ecosystems. An estuary is defined as the area in which a river meets the sea or the ocean. The waters surrounding this area are predominantly salty waters or brackish waters; and the incoming river water is dynamically motioned by the tide. An estuary strip may be covered by populations of reed (or similar plants) and/or sandbanks (or similar form or land).[citation needed]

A coastal ecosystem occurs in areas where the sea or ocean waters meet the land.[citation needed]

Regulating services are the "benefits obtained from the regulation of ecosystem processes".[57] In the case of coastal and estuarine ecosystems, these services include climate regulation, waste treatment and disease control and natural hazard regulation.

Both the biotic and abiotic ensembles of marine ecosystems play a role in climate regulation. They act as sponges when it comes to gases in the atmosphere, retaining large levels of CO2 and other greenhouse gases (methane and nitrous oxide). Marine plants also use CO2 for photosynthesis purposes and help in reducing the atmospheric CO2. The oceans and seas absorb the heat from the atmosphere and redistribute it through the means of water currents, and atmospheric processes, such as evaporation and the reflection of light allow for the cooling and warming of the overlying atmosphere. The ocean temperatures are thus imperative to the regulation of the atmospheric temperatures in any part of the world: "without the ocean, the Earth would be unbearably hot during the daylight hours and frigidly cold, if not frozen, at night".[58]

Another service offered by marine ecosystem is the treatment of wastes, thus helping in the regulation of diseases. Wastes can be diluted and detoxified through transport across marine ecosystems; pollutants are removed from the environment and stored, buried or recycled in marine ecosystems: "Marine ecosystems break down organic waste through microbial communities that filter water, reduce/limit the effects of eutrophication, and break down toxic hydrocarbons into their basic components such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen, phosphorus, and water".[58] The fact that waste is diluted with large volumes of water and moves with water currents leads to the regulation of diseases and the reduction of toxics in seafood.

Coastal and estuarine ecosystems act as buffer zones against natural hazards and environmental disturbances, such as floods, cyclones, tidal surges and storms. The role they play is to "[absorb] a portion of the impact and thus [lessen] its effect on the land".[58] Wetlands, for example, and the vegetation it supports trees, root mats, etc. retain large amounts of water (surface water, snowmelt, rain, groundwater) and then slowly releases them back, decreasing the likeliness of floods.[59] Mangrove forests protect coastal shorelines from tidal erosion or erosion by currents; a process that was studied after the 1999 cyclone that hit India. Villages that were surrounded with mangrove forests encountered less damages than other villages that weren't protected by mangroves.[60]

Provisioning services consist of all "the products obtained from ecosystems". Marine ecosystems provide people with: wild & cultured seafood, fresh water, fiber & fuel and biochemical & genetic resources.[citation needed]

Humans consume a large number of products originating from the seas, whether as a nutritious product or for use in other sectors: "More than one billion people worldwide, or one-sixth of the global population, rely on fish as their main source of animal protein. In 2000, marine and coastal fisheries accounted for 12 per cent of world food production".[61] Fish and other edible marine products primarily fish, shellfish, roe and seaweeds constitute for populations living along the coast the main elements of the local cultural diets, norms and traditions. A very pertinent example would be sushi, the national food of Japan, which consists mostly of different types of fish and seaweed.

Water bodies that are not highly concentrated in salts are referred to as 'fresh water' bodies. Fresh water may run through lakes, rivers and streams, to name a few; but it is most prominently found in the frozen state or as soil moisture or buried deep underground. Fresh water is not only important for the survival of humans, but also for the survival of all the existing species of animals, plants.[citation needed]

Marine creatures provide us with the raw materials needed for the manufacturing of clothing, building materials (lime extracted from coral reefs), ornamental items and personal-use items (luffas, art and jewelry): "The skin of marine mammals for clothing, gas deposits for energy production, lime (extracted from coral reefs) for building construction, and the timber of mangroves and coastal forests for shelter are some of the more familiar uses of marine organisms. Raw marine materials are utilized for non-essential goods as well, such as shells and corals in ornamental items".[61] Humans have also referred to processes within marine environments for the production of renewable energy: using the power of waves or tidal power as a source of energy for the powering of a turbine, for example.[citation needed] Oceans and seas are used as sites for offshore oil and gas installations, offshore wind farms.[citation needed]

Biochemical resources are compounds extracted from marine organisms for use in medicines, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and other biochemical products. Genetic resources are the genetic information found in marine organisms that would later on be used for animal and plant breeding and for technological advances in the biological field. These resources are either directly taken out from an organism such as fish oil as a source of omega3 , or used as a model for innovative man-made products: "such as the construction of fiber optics technology based on the properties of sponges. ... Compared to terrestrial products, marine-sourced products tend to be more highly bioactive, likely due to the fact that marine organisms have to retain their potency despite being diluted in the surrounding sea-water".[61]

Cultural services relate to the non-material world, as they benefit the benefit recreational, aesthetic, cognitive and spiritual activities, which are not easily quantifiable in monetary terms.[citation needed]

Marine environments have been used by many as an inspiration for their works of art, music, architecture, traditions... Water environments are spiritually important as a lot of people view them as a means for rejuvenation and change of perspective. Many also consider the water as being a part of their personality, especially if they have lived near it since they were kids: they associate it to fond memories and past experiences. Living near water bodies for a long time results in a certain set of water activities that become a ritual in the lives of people and of the culture in the region.[citation needed]

Sea sports are very popular among coastal populations: surfing, snorkeling, whale watching, kayaking, recreational fishing...a lot of tourists also travel to resorts close to the sea or rivers or lakes to be able to experience these activities, and relax near the water.[citation needed]

A lot can be learned from marine processes, environments and organisms that could be implemented into our daily actions and into the scientific domain. Although much is still yet to still be known about the ocean world: "by the extraordinary intricacy and complexity of the marine environment and how it is influenced by large spatial scales, time lags, and cumulative effects".[58]

Supporting services are the services that allow for the other ecosystem services to be present. They have indirect impacts on humans that last over a long period of time. Several services can be considered as being both supporting services and regulating/cultural/provisioning services.[citation needed]

Nutrient cycling is the movement of nutrients through an ecosystem by biotic and abiotic processes.[62] The ocean is a vast storage pool for these nutrients, such as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus. The nutrients are absorbed by the basic organisms of the marine food web and are thus transferred from one organism to the other and from one ecosystem to the other. Nutrients are recycled through the life cycle of organisms as they die and decompose, releasing the nutrients into the neighboring environment. "The service of nutrient cycling eventually impacts all other ecosystem services as all living things require a constant supply of nutrients to survive".[58]

Biologically mediated habitats are defined as being the habitats that living marine structures offer to other organisms.[63] These need not to be designed for the sole purpose of serving as a habitat, but happen to become living quarters whilst growing naturally. For example, coral reefs and mangrove forests are home to numerous species of fish, seaweed and shellfish... The importance of these habitats is that they allow for interactions between different species, aiding the provisioning of marine goods and services. They are also very important for the growth at the early life stages of marine species (breeding and bursary spaces), as they serve as a food source and as a shelter from predators.[citation needed]

Primary production refers to the production of organic matter, i.e., chemically bound energy, through processes such as photosynthesis and chemosynthesis. The organic matter produced by primary producers forms the basis of all food webs. Further, it generates oxygen (O2), a molecule necessary to sustain animals and humans.[64][65][66][67]

Ecosystem services degradation can pose a number of risks to corporate performance as well as provide business opportunities through ecosystem restoration and enhancement. Risks and opportunities include:

Many companies are not fully aware of the extent of their dependence and impact on ecosystems and the possible ramifications. Likewise, environmental management systems and environmental due diligence tools are more suited to handle "traditional" issues of pollution and natural resource consumption. Most focus on environmental impacts, not dependence. Several newly developed tools and methodologies can help the private sector value and assess ecosystem services. These include Our Ecosystem,[68] the Corporate Ecosystem Services Review (ESR),[69] Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services (ARIES),[70] the Natural Value Initiative (NVI)[71] and InVEST (Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services & Tradeoffs) [72]

Ecosystem services decisions require making complex choices at the intersection of ecology, technology, society and the economy. The process of making ecosystem services decisions must consider the interaction of many types of information, honor all stakeholder viewpoints, including regulatory agencies, proposal proponents, decision makers, residents, NGOs, and measure the impacts on all four parts of the intersection. These decisions are usually spatial, always multi-objective, and based on uncertain data, models, and estimates. Often it is the combination of the best science combined with the stakeholder values, estimates and opinions that drive the process.[73]

One analytical study modeled the stakeholders as agents to support water resource management decisions in the Middle Rio Grande basin of New Mexico. This study focused on modeling the stakeholder inputs across a spatial decision, but ignored uncertainty.[74] Another study used Monte Carlo methods to exercise econometric models of landowner decisions in a study of the effects of land-use change. Here the stakeholder inputs were modeled as random effects to reflect the uncertainty.[75] A third study used a Bayesian decision support system to both model the uncertainty in the scientific information Bayes Nets and to assist collecting and fusing the input from stakeholders. This study was about siting wave energy devices off the Oregon Coast, but presents a general method for managing uncertain spatial science and stakeholder information in a decision making environment.[76] Remote sensing data and analyses can be used to assess the health and extent of land cover classes that provide ecosystem services, which aids in planning, management, monitoring of stakeholders' actions, and communication between stakeholders.[77]

In Baltic countries scientists, nature conservationists and local authorities are implementing integrated planning approach for grassland ecosystems. They are developing Integrated Planning Tool that will be based on GIS (geographic information system) technology and put online that will help for planners to choose the best grassland management solution for concrete grassland. It will look holistically at the processes in the countryside and help to find best grassland management solutions by taking into account both natural and socioeconomic factors of the particular site.

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Ecosystem services - Wikipedia

Amazon River Ecosystem and Biodiversity | Discover Peru

The Amazon River is the greatest river of South America and its biodiversity the richest of any river in the world. Its waters are populated by 2,500 different species of fish, scientists believe that there are many more that have not been identified yet. Mammals, amphibians and water snakes also call the Amazon River home. The river has been a source of protein for the local population for thousands of years and a source of fresh water.

The Amazon River and its tributaries have depleted and eroded the land removing almost all its nutrients and leaving an extremely poor soil. How does the Amazon rainforest exist? It exists because of nutrient recycling. As plants die insects and microbes decompose them releasing nutrients that support new plants. Near water sources as plants absorb the energy from the sun vegetation becomes dense but trees do not grow very tall. Many animals that live in the Amazon River depend on the recycling of nutrients as they feed from plants and algae. This system of recycling has sustained life in the Amazon rainforest for millions of years.

Animal life support each other in the Amazon River by serving as food to other animals above the food chain. Their bodies carry nutrients that eventually serve as fertilizer, feeding the forest and the fauna of the Amazon River ecosystem.

Some species of animals are exclusively found in theAmazon River and many of them are in danger of extinction. For the last 20 years the governments of Peru and Brazil along with conservation organizations, local businesses and indigenous people have been working together to protect endangered species for the enjoyment of the world and future generations.

The following animals are unique to the Amazon river and its tributaries:

One of the most endangered species in the Amazon River is the pink dolphin or bufeo thought to be extinct more than twenty years ago. They are very rarely seen and are found only in the Amazonian rivers around Iquitos. Their pink color is due to blood capillaries near its skin and unlike other dolphins they have a hump instead of a fin and a long bottle nose snout instead of a short one. A distinctive characteristic of the pink dolphin is that they can turn their neck 180 degrees due to an unfused vertebra in its neck.

The average pink dolphin is 8.25ft to 9.75ft long (2.5 to 3 meters) and weights 200lbs (90 kilos). Males are usually larger and heavier. Their diet consists of fresh water fish, crustaceans and turtles. The pink dolphin is a solitary creature unlike their more social relative, the tucuxi.

Pink dolphin or bufeo

The giant river otter is considerably larger and heavier than other river otters at over six feet long and an average of 210 pounds. This species of river otters is very social and communicative, they are rarely found alone and communicate through high pitched screeches. They live in groups of five to ten and eat mostly fish.

The giant river otter is a highly endangered animal in the Amazon River, only 2,000 to 5,000 remain in protected areas in the Amazon basin. Its population once extended from Venezuela to Argentina but because of fur hunting and habitat destruction its numbers have dramatically decreased. These mammals can be seen at the Manu National Park and at the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve.

Amazon giant river otter

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One of the most recognizable Amazon River fish is the piranha. These are small fish with very sharp teeth which local indigenous people use as cutting tools. These small fish are an important part of the Amazon Rivers ecosystem as they eat weak or dead fish and dead animals that would otherwise pollute the waters of the Amazon River. The number of piranha species is estimated to be between 30 and 60. Only five of them pose danger to humans; the red bellied piranha or Pygocentrus nattereri, white piranha or Serrasalmus rhombeus, Serrasalmus Piraya, silver piranha or Serrasalmus Ternetzi and Serrasalmus Hollandi.

Piranhas help keep rivers clean

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The Amazonian manatee is the largest mammal living in the Amazon River at over 1,000 pounds (454 kilos) and 9 feet (3 meters) long. They are found in the northern Amazon River Basin and its tributaries and are locally known as seacows. Their skin is thick, wrinkled and grey in color. The manatee is an herbivore so it depends heavily on vegetation near the rivers, over the years soil erosion from deforestation has been affecting its food supply making it scarcer. During the wet season the manatee can eat up to 110 pounds a day to build up reserves for the dry months.

For centuries the Amazonian manatee has been hunted by local Indians who consumed their meat and used their oil and fat. Demand for the animal expanded making it commercially profitable. Another factor affecting its population is accidentally getting caught in commercial fishing nets. They are classified as vulnerable in the endangered species list.

Amazonian manatee or seacow

The tucuxi is locally known as bufeo gris or bufeo negro. Tucuxi, pronounced too-koo-shee is one of the two species of river dolphin that live in the Amazon River and its tributaries, the other one is the pink dolphin. The tucuxi looks like a bottlenose dolphin with dark gray to light gray coloration but much smaller in size. On average a tucuxi grows between three to five feet long and their weight range is between 95 to 120 pounds. Their diet consists mainly of fish.

Tucuxi, one of the two species of river dolphins in the Amazon River.

The giant Amazon River turtle is also known as Charapa turtle, Arrau turtle, Tartaruga-da-amaznia, or Ara. An adult turtle can grow to more than 3.3 feet (1 meter) in length and they often weight up to 200 pounds, female turtles have a larger shell and are heavier than male turtles. This species of turtles do not leave the water, only females do to lay their eggs on the sandy beaches and immediately return to the water. Once the eggs hatch the hatchlings get the attention of predators, mostly birds, it is believed that only five percent make it to the river. Because of their low survival rate this species has been included in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as a conservation dependent species.

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Only five percent of hatchlings will make it to the river.

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Giant Amazon River turtles from the Baltimore National Aquarium.

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The arapaima is locally known as pirarucu or paiche and it is the largest freshwater scaled fish known to humans. It lives exclusively in the Amazon River and its tributaries and can reach a length of over nine feet long (almost 3 meters long) and weight over 440 lbs (200 kg). This species is a favorite among fishermen and have become a victim of overfishing. Because they come to the surface every five to fifteen minutes to breathe in air, they are easy to catch. Fishermen usually use harpoons and nets. Its meat is part of the culinary culture of the Amazon and is sought after for its taste. The arapaima is considered to be a living fossil that has not evolved for more than 20 million years and had no predators other than men.

According the BBC, errors in its classification has pushed the species closer to extinction. The latest taxonomic review was done over 160 years ago. Today they know that there are at least four species of arapaima. While some populations are increasing others are being overfished and driven to extinction.

Arapaima in captivity at the Vancouver Aquarium.

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The electric eel is an electric fish capable of generating electric shocks of up to 600 volts, five times the voltage generated by a U.S. household wall socket. This species live in the muddy waters of the Amazon River and its tributaries and it has a limited vision, therefore heavily relying on its electric field for hunting and self defense. Their bodies contain electrocytes, cells capable of storing power, and when threatened they will discharge electricity making them a feared predator.

The electric eel, despite its appearance, is not truly an eel (Anguilliformes) but a neotropical knifefish. It has a long, cylindrical, serpentine shaped body that grows to an average of 6 to 8 feet (1.8 to 2.5meters) long and weights 44 lbs (20 kilos). The electric eel can live up to 15 years and their diet consists mainly on fish, and in a smaller scale amphibians and birds.

The electric eel is not truly an eel but a neotropical knifefish.

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Dwarf caimans are small crocodile reptiles and are distinguishable by the shape of their head. Their skulls are small and short and their upper jaws overlap the lower. The average length of a dwarf caiman is 5 feet (1.5 meters) long. Its body is covered in hard scales protecting them from predators. Their diet consists of fish and crustaceans. This species is not considered endangered.

The Amazonian dwarf caiman is also known as Cuviers dwarf caiman.

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The green anaconda lives in the shallow waters of the Amazon. It is one of the largest species of snakes and the heaviest known to men. The anaconda can grow up to 30 feet (9 meters) long. Its color, green and brown, serves as camouflage in order to catch its prey. Anacondas are non-venomous constrictor snakes; they wrap around its victim and squeeze them to death. They eat small mammals, fish and rodents.

The green anaconda, a mighty constrictor.

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More than three quarters of the Peruvian territory lies east of the Andes. The jungle or Selva has two parts, the high and the low Selva.

Mining and oil extraction are very controversial economic activities as they bring wealth and economic development but pollute the environment.

In terms of volume, the Amazon is the largest river in the world, it contains one fifth of the earths fresh water.

Between 1890 and 1920 the economy of the region suffer a boom due to the demand for its rubber.

Economic development is taking its toll among native Indians, many of them have fled deep inside the jungle, some have died of starvation and others have adapted to modern live.

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Tags: Amazon basin, Amazon jungle, amazon rainforest, Amazon River, amazon river animals, amazonia, animals of Peru, animals of the amazon river, biodiversity, ecosystem, endangered animals, fauna, flora, indigenous people, Peru, pirahna

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Amazon River Ecosystem and Biodiversity | Discover Peru

Homepage – Dell EMC Cloud Ecosystem Hub

Cloud innovations

Want to integrate best-in-class technologies, industry-leading services and single-call support, whilst delivering IT-as-a-Service? With Enterprise Hybrid Cloud a comprehensive, one-of-a-kind engineered solution you can.

Perhaps youre looking for the quickest and easiest path to cloud-native application delivery and management? In that case, Native Hybrid Cloud is the system for you; a fully turnkey Pivotal Cloud Foundry developer platform.

Make your applications run faster, and more efficiently and economically, with Virtustreams enterprise-grade cloud software and services, built for complex IT enterprises.

If you want to plan out a hybrid-cloud strategy, evaluate workload deployment and design, and implement appropriate and effective cloud-delivery models, then turn to Dell EMCs Global Services.

Dont forget that IT organisations, as a whole, need to continue to learn if theyre to grow and compete with the competition. Dell EMCs Educational Services, such as curriculum-based training tracks and certifications, take an open approach to technology concepts and principles that apply to all vendor environments helping to further your knowledge, improve your skills and enable big-data analytics.

Imagine Dells innovative systems and in-depth service combined with EMCs invaluable expertise, and powered by Intels innovative technology. Partner with us, and thats exactly what you can expect.

Dell EMC has formed to further expand Dells portfolio of cloud options, delivering more choice and flexibility than ever before. And it works in collaboration with Intel to deliver market-leading solutions that triumph in the areas most important to your company, and your customers.

Whats in a processor? The truth is, more than we realise. The processor at the heart of your customers cloud servers affect everything, from their applications performance to the cost of running their organisation.

Intels processors have been specifically designed and are continually optimised for use in the cloud. Learn more here, or read on to discover the benefits Intel Cloud Technology can bring.

Did you know that security concerns are keeping 52 per cent of enterprises from moving to the cloud?1 Now is your chance to differentiate yourself based on cloud integrity and Intel can help.

With multi-faceted security tools, Intel puts your customers in control of their cloud. This includes Intel Cloud Integrity Technology: software that encrypts workloads, and enhances the security features of Intel Xeon processors to ensure that cloud applications run on trusted servers and unaltered virtual machines.

It also includes Intel QuickAssist Technology which provides both security and compression acceleration capabilities for optimum performance, ultimate efficiency and unrivalled security and Intel Clear Containers, which offers enhanced protection around the popular container model for application deployment.

Make virtualisation practical for your customers and give them the opportunity to do more with their existing resources. How? With Intel Virtualization Technology (Intel VT) .

Intel VT can empower businesses to eliminate performance overheads and improve security by reducing the size, cost and complexity of virtualisation software.

Still want to do more with your customers resources? Introducing Intel Resource Director Technology (Intel RDT) . Delivering the future of workload consolidation density, today, it allows you to intelligently monitor and control the allocation of key shared system resources to ensure quality of service and provide invaluable insight.

If your customers are looking for a smart way to optimise and manage their power, cooling and compute resources in the data centre, look no further than Intel Node Manager. This firmware feature provides key information and controls that can drive down your customers costs and boost the efficiency of their servers.

To learn more about Intel Cloud Technology, click here.

1 Bitglass Report: Security Concerns Limit Cloud Adoption, Talkin Cloud, March 2014. Published at http://talkincloud.com/cloud-computing-research/050114/bitglass-report-security-concerns-limit-cloud-adoption

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Comets to play Crunch in preseason game in Rome – Times Telegram – The Times Telegram

Ben Birnell

The Utica Comets are set to return to a familiar place in the Mohawk Valley for a preseason game.

Their opponent also is well-known to hockey fans in Central New York.

The Comets announced Thursday the team will host the rival Syracuse Crunch at 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 30, at Kennedy Arena in Rome to begin out a home-and-home exhibition series.

Tickets are $10 and will go on sale at 2 p.m. Friday, Sept. 8, at the Kennedy Arena box office.A special Season Ticket member presale will begin at 10 a.m.All proceeds will go to Kennedy Arena.

The preseason game is being played in Rome because of the construction project at Utica Memorial Auditorium. The contest will mark the third time since the Comets began play in 2013 that the team will have a preseason game at the Rome rink. The Comets played preseason contests in Rome in 2013 and 2014.

I like Kennedy Arena, Comets president Rob Esche said. "Im happy we were able to work ... with the city of Rome and the AHL to highlight such a great hockey community, and to kick off what is to be a very special fifth anniversary season.

This will be the third consecutive preseason that the Comets have taken on Syracuse, which is Tampa Bay Lightnings top affiliate. Last season, a home-and-home series between teams included a game at the Aud. In 2015, the teams traveled to France for training camp and preseason.

The teams will close out the preseason series at 5 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 1, at War Memorial arena in Syracuse. Including the regular season, the North Division foes will meet a total of 14 times in 2017-18. This season, the series has some added intrigue as new Comets coach Trent Cull and associate coach Gary Agnew previously were coaches at different times with Syracuse.

The Comets open the regular season the first full weekend of October. Utica travels to North Division rival Toronto for a two-game set on Saturday, Oct. 7, and Sunday, Oct. 8. Both games are set for 3 p.m. starts. It is the first of seven consecutive road games for the Comets to start the season.

Cometssign goaltender

The Utica Comets signed goaltender Michael Garteigto a one-year American Hockey League contract,general manager Ryan Johnson announced Thursday.

Garteig appeared in eight games with the Comets last season. He went 0-4-1 with a .897 save percentage and a 3.01 goals against average in net for Utica.

The 25-year-old British Columbia native and former Quinnipiac University skater posted an 11-6-2 record for the Alaska Aces last season in the ECHL.Standing at6-foot-1, 183-pound, Garteig dressed in 22 games for Alaska, recording a .906 save percentage and a 3.11 goals against average.

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Comets to play Crunch in preseason game in Rome - Times Telegram - The Times Telegram

Comet Facts – Interesting Facts about Comets – Space Facts

Comet ISON stardustobservatory.org/images.php?page=details&id=363

A comet is a very small solar system body made mostly of ices mixed with smaller amounts of dust and rock. Most comets are no larger than a few kilometres across. The main body of the comet is called the nucleus, and it can contain water, methane, nitrogen and other ices.

When a comet is heated by the Sun, its ices begin to sublimate (similar to the way dry ice fizzes when you leave it in sunlight). The mixture of ice crystals and dust blows away from the comet nucleus in the solar wind, creating a pair of tails. The dust tail is what we normally see when we view comets from Earth.

A plasma tail also forms when molecules of gas are excited by interaction with the solar wind. The plasma tail is not normally seen with the naked eye, but can be imaged. Comets normally orbit the Sun, and have their origins in the Oort Cloud and Kuiper Belt regions of the outer solar system.

There are many misconceptions about comets, which are simply pieces of solar system ices travelling in orbit around the Sun. Here are some fascinating and true facts about comets.

Comets come in several categories. The most common are periodic and non-periodic.

In the past, comets were named for their discoverers, such as Comet Halley for Sir Edmond Halley. In modern times, comet names are governed by rules set forth by the International Astronomical Union (IAU). A comet is given an official designation, and can also be identified by the last names of up to three independent discoverers.

Heres how it works. Once a comet has been confirmed, the following naming rules are followed. First, if the comet is a periodic comet, then it is indicated with a P/ followed by the year of its discovery, a letter indicating the half-month in which it was discovered, followed by a number indicating its order of discovery. So, for example, the second periodic comet found in the first half of January, 2015 would be called P/2015 A2.

A non-periodic comet would be indicated with a C/ followed by the year of its discovery, a letter indicating the half-month in which it was discovered, followed by a number indicating its order of discovery.

If a comet is independently discovered by three people named Smith, Jones, and Petersen, it could also be called Comet Smith-Jones-Petersen, in addition to its formal designation. Today, many comets are found through automated instrument searches, and so the formal designations are more commonly used.

Well-known comets include the non-periodic comets Hale-Bopp (C/1995 O1), Hyakutake (C/1996 B2), McNaught (C2006 P1), and Lovejoy (C/2011 W3). These flared brightly in our skies and then faded into obscurity.

In addition, Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (D/1993 F2) was spotted after it had broken up after a close call with Jupiter. (The D in its proper designation means it has disappeared or is determined to no longer exist). More than a year later, the pieces of the comet crashed into Jupiter.

The periodic Comet Halley (1P/Halley) is the most famous in history. It returns to the inner solar system once every 76 years. Other well-known periodic comets include 2P/Encke, which appears ever 3.3 years and 9P/Tempel (Tempel 2), which was visited by the Deep Impact and Stardust probes, and makes perihelion around the Sun every 5.5 years.

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Comet Facts - Interesting Facts about Comets - Space Facts

Comets win opener – Waupaca County News

August 24, 2017

Medford's Sam Hallgren (left) collides with Waupaca's Jack Snider during the second half of a nonconference boys' soccer game at Waupaca High School. Greg Seubert Photo

By Greg Seubert

Waupacas boys soccer team opened its season with a win.

Jack Sniders goal broke a 1-1 tie and the Comets went on to hand Medford a 2-1 nonconference loss Aug. 22 in the season opener for both teams.

Damian Johnson gave Waupaca a 1-0 lead in the 34th minute off of an assist from Keenin Polebitski and Matt Marquette.

Medford tied the game in the 68th minute on a goal from Alex Veal, but Snider found the net for the game-winning goal two minutes later.

Passing was excellent today, coach Cory Nagel said. Great looks and finding the open man. Medford played an excellent offsides trap, which frustrated our forwards most of the game. Dawson Patzke, a freshman, played the entire game in his first-ever high school soccer game. It wont show up on the stat sheet, but he was our rock today.

Bailey Colden had 10 saves in goal.

Waupaca will play its first game at Comet Field at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 31, as the Comets host Wrightstown in the North Eastern Conference opener.

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Comets win opener - Waupaca County News

Comets spikers down Dan River High School 3-1 in opening game – YourGV.com

The Halifax County High School varsity volleyball team got its season off to a good start Tuesday night with a 3-1 win over Dan River High School at Dan River High School in Ringgold.

Dan River High School topped the Comets 25-19 in the opening game, but the Comets bounced back to win three games in a row by scores of 25-13, 25-16 and 25-18 to win the best-of-five-game match.

Overall it was a great first game and a good win, said Comets Head Coach Tiffaney Bratton.

We saw that we needed to work on some things to compete in our district and beyond. The girls had a great time on the court and came home with a win.

The Comets struggled with service errors at times in the opening game, opening the door for Dan River High School to pull off the win.

We missed key serves in the first game that cost us that one, Bratton explained.

We controlled the ball well in the first game. but we made some small mistakes that cost at critical moments. We also let some balls drop without making a play on them.

The Comets bounced back with a better effort in the second game, improving their ability to place their shots.

The team played much smarter in the second game, Bratton pointed out.

They figured out that if they controlled the ball more on our side we could put the ball in spots that Dan River couldnt return it.

The Comets continued to control the ball on both sides of the net in the third and fourth games with several players making big plays at key points, and came away with solid wins in the two games to seal the match win.

I was really pleased to see the overall team effort that the girls gave, Bratton remarked.

We really had some unselfish play out there, and that made the team concept a reality for us.

Several players drew praise from Bratton for their play.

We had some big plays from seniors Mackenzie Lawter and Rose Spainhour, Bratton noted.

Both Mackenzie and Rose led the team both on the front row and on the back row. Leigh-Anne McCormick stepped up and made some great sets and big hits to lead us on the front row.

Leigh-Anne is a great player, Bratton continued.

She is so versatile as a player that she helps the team immensely with power plays and great sets. Outside hitter Savanna Cabaniss had some big hits on the front row and held her own on the back row as well. Katie Cole stepped into several roles on the court to help with the win.

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Comets spikers down Dan River High School 3-1 in opening game - YourGV.com

Comets face final test Thursday – YourGV.com

The Halifax County High School varsity and junior varsity football teams will face their final pre-season test Thursday night with a scrimmage against Colonial Heights High School.

Thursdays action at Tuck Dillard Memorial Stadium starts with a JV scrimmage at 5 p.m. followed by the varsity scrimmage at 6 p.m.

Both Comets teams were successful in their respective opening pre-season tests Friday night, with the varsity squad topping Buckingham County High School 34-14 in the annual Virginia High School League Benefit Game and the JV team outscoring Buckingham County High School four touchdowns to none in its scrimmage.

Thursdays scrimmage against Colonial Heights will be a different kind of test for the Comets varsity squad in terms of preparation, format and the level and style of the competition.

As far as preparation goes, it is quite a bit different because it cuts a day of preparation out in your normal routine, so everything is off kilter, explained Comets Head Coach Grayson Throckmorton.

Youre scrimmaging on a night you are not accustomed. You have to adjust your practice plans and your overall mindset. In the NFL, it doesnt make much difference. In college, it doesnt make much difference. With high school, it makes a lot of difference because the kids cant adjust as well as those seasoned veterans can.

Its just something weve got to do out of necessity, Throckmorton added.

The Comets are expected to see the level of the competition ramp up Thursday night when they face the Richmond-area school.

As far as team size, the number of players and the number of students in the school, Buckingham County and Colonial Heights are about the same, Throckmorton noted.

But, Colonial Heights competes in a much larger district, and they compete against the likes of Thomas Dale, Dinwiddie, Meadowbrook, Matoaca, and the list goes on. When they get into the (post-season) playoffs, they compete at the Division 3 level, but they compete mostly against Division 5 and Division 6 teams during the regular season. So, just with regard to the level of the competition they are used to competing against, Colonial Heights is going to be a better squad.

Colonial Heights, Throckmorton said, will play a different style of offense than his team saw Friday night with Buckingham County High School.

They (Colonial Heights High School) are a true spread team which we havent seen yet, explained Throckmorton.

They are going to be looking to throw the ball out in the perimeter and try to screen on us with wide receiver screens and screens in the backfield. They will be looking to use their passing game as an advantage, which is going to be good for us.

The result, Throckmorton says, is that the Comets defense will be stretched more and better play will be needed in the defensive secondary.

Were not going to be able to play as run heavy as we did Friday night, he pointed out.

Were going to have to play more 50-50 versus the run and the pass, where the other night we were playing 80 percent run and 20 percent pass. Were going to have to be more evenly balanced Thursday night.

Throckmorton and the Comets kept everything very simple in Friday nights contest against Buckingham County High School. The Comets Head Coach says he plans to expand a few things Thursday night.

Offensively, we are going to add a little more offense in, some stuff we have been working on that we didnt use and a couple of things that are brand new, Throckmorton pointed out.

Defensively, were going to add a few stunts in that we didnt use the other night. We didnt use any stunts Friday night and we are going to add some of that in on defense.

Thursday night is also going to offer Throckmorton and his coaching staff another opportunity to evaluate personnel.

We are going to continue to look at personnel, Throckmorton pointed out, and see who can play what positions and who can play what and where in the future to help us. We have a real good idea of who is where now. Where before there were some bigger adjustments the last week and a half, now its a matter of one or two (players) here and there.

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Comets face final test Thursday - YourGV.com

VOLLEY: Comets show grit in 5-set win – Kokomo Tribune

GREENTOWN When it mattered most Tuesday night, Easterns volleyball team was dialed in.

The Comets won the first two games against visiting Kokomo, then errors crept into Easterns game and Kokomos serving got sharper. The VolleyKats won games three and four to even the match and set up a decisive fifth set.

Thats when Eastern responded. The Comets took a 9-8 lead when middle hitter Hailey Holliday floored a Kokomo overpass and the Comets never trailed again, finishing off a 25-19, 26-24, 23-25, 19-25, 15-11 victory over Kokomo.

I think we finally dug deep and decided not to let up, Eastern coach Missy Mavrick said. We have a bad habit of letting up. Once we get ahead we feel comfortable, and we decided to make sure we kept pushing that [fifth] set.

Holliday and Isabel Kelly each floored 13 kills to lead the Comets and Bailey Johnson added seven kills. Each of those net players came up with important finishes in the fifth set. Johnson had three kills including a tip kill on an overpass to end the match and scored on a block. Holliday had three kills and Kelly two.

I thought our hitters played really well at the net, Mavrick said. I thought we saw the floor really well, all the way around, all of our hitters. Weve still got some kinks to work out in the back row, thats really the key to our offense is weve got to be able to pass better than what were passing. Once we fix one thing weve got to keep being aggressive and not let something else fall apart.

Kokomo had done damage in the third and fourth sets with effective service, especially from Alliyah Hochstedler and Kylee Lauderbaugh. As the fifth set played out, the service rotation worked out ideally for the Kats as Hochstedler and Lauderbaugh were Kokomos last two servers. But neither got on a run.

A strong Hochstedler serve almost aced the Comets but the home team recovered and scored on a Johnson block for a 13-10 lead. Then after a Kokomo point, Lauderbaughs serve was fielded cleanly and Kelly smoked a kill for a 14-11 lead. Johnson settled the match on the next point.

We really made sure that on receive on those two girls that we stayed focused and make sure that we pushed to get the ball back, Mavrick said.

To illustrate how much cleaner Easterns play was in the decisive set, look at the errors. In the third set, Kokomo scored points on 14 Eastern attack, serve or technique errors. The Comets gave up eight more points in the fourth game on their own errors. In the fifth set, Eastern gave away just one point via a service error and the Kats had to earn all their other points that set.

On the other side, errors took a toll.

We had a lot of momentum going into the fifth set we had all the momentum, but our inexperience in those situations showed its head with hitting errors and kind of playing safe instead of playing to win, Kokomo coach Jason Watson said.

We had five hitting errors, two serve receive errors and a block error. Thats eight of their 15 points were directly points that we give them.

When the Kats (1-6) served well, they had the advantage, but early when they struggled, serving was the problem.

Early on we struggled serving, Watson said. In the first and second set, our serving cost us in my opinion the match. At one point we missed four out of five serves and you cant beat anybody with that lack of consistency.

Gabby Cooper led the Kat attack with 16 kills, and added seven digs. Chiara Minor had 11 kills and Hochstedler had seven kills and 14 digs. Lauderbaugh finished with 41 assists, 12 digs, four kills from her setter spot and six aces. Molly Fisher added seven digs and Madison Wood six.

I liked our energy and I think we definitely have a lot to build on, Watson said.

Maci Weeks had 25 assists and Grace Kuhlman had 16 for the Comets (3-3). Casey Clark had 31 serve receives and 25 digs. Torie Bratcher served 11 points and 16 serve receives.

I thought Hailey Holliday did a great job, Mavrick said. She played very consistent through the whole night. And Isabel Kelly, shes just been our go-to. Shes been very consistent.

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VOLLEY: Comets show grit in 5-set win - Kokomo Tribune