Don’t count on trees to stop global warming, scientists say

Countries around the world have turned to natural carbon sinks such as forests and wetlands to help them achieve their climate targets. The thinking is that these landscapes naturally soak up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and so can cancel out ongoing emissions from fossil fuels.
But that kind of approach is a mistake, say some of the world’s leading scientists in a new study. And it could jeopardize the Paris Agreement’s vulnerable climate goals.
Because carbon dioxide lingers in the atmosphere for decades, forests and other natural carbon sinks are still absorbing emissions released by humans years ago. And that carbon doesn’t stay in the ground forever, either. It becomes part of the Earth’s natural carbon cycle, eventually escaping back into the atmosphere when the trees die before eventually being reabsorbed again by some other natural landscape.

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It’s all part of a giant natural equilibrium. But the system only stays in balance as long as emissions from human sources wind down to zero. If humans depend on natural carbon sinks to balance out ongoing future emissions, the world will just keep on warming.GET FULL ACCESS

“Climate change” can turn off some farmers. So these scientists are using another two-word phrase

Nathan Brown always keeps a shovel in the bed of his truck. That’s a sure sign a farmer is serious about soil health, he said.“In the spring and the summertime, I’m always digging,” Brown said as he shoveled some dirt from his 1,200 acre farm in Hillsboro into his gloved hands on a warm November afternoon.Brown inspected the dirt from his farm in southwest Ohio closely, searching for hints that his soil will be resilient against extreme weather events.“You see all this little white hair looking stuff on there?” he said. “That’s your fungi and stuff on the root structure. There’s a worm.”These are all signs of good soil health, which he believes is a result of the way he farms. He doesn’t till his land before planting seeds, which improves soil structure. And he plants so-called cover crops like rye and barley on top of his cash crops to protect his soil from eroding.

Kendall Crawford

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Ohio Newsroom Nathan Brown always keeps a shovel with him on his farm in southwest Ohio.

Last week, environmentalists and farmers alike attended workshops, farm tours, art exhibits and rallies – all aimed at highlighting how producers can implement regenerative ag practices, like the ones that Brown uses, to protect the foundation of their farm: their soil.The state’s inaugural Soil Health Week, organized by the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association (OEFFA), emphasized the common ground between climate activists and small family farm operations.Avoiding polarizationBrown plants cover crops and no-till practices because they means better yields and a longer lifespan for his farm.But they also have broader benefits for the environment: they can help prevent nutrients from flowing into our waterways and allow soil to capture more carbon. Both of which, environmentalists say, are important wins in the fight against climate change.For many producers, though, climate change is still a “touchy subject”, according to Ohio State University researcher Robyn Wilson.Wilson surveyed Midwest farmers on their perceptions of climate change. Overwhelmingly, they acknowledged that weather patterns are changing, but they were less likely to see it as caused by humans – something that the vast majority of scientists agree on.
When farmers do use climate-smart practices, Wilson said, for the most part, it’s not out of concern of changing weather patterns.“Their motivation is not really climate change,” Wilson said. “From our data, it didn’t seem like they were framing traditional conservation practices as climate resilience strategies.”Yet farmers have long been invested in keeping Ohio lands productive. That’s why Milo Petruzziello, director of policy with the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association, focuses on a different two-word phrase with less political weight: soil health.“This is a common language that we can talk about how they can both benefit their farm business and benefit their broader community,” Petruziello said.Money talksInstead of hammering on the wider environmental impact of regenerative ag practices, Petruziello first talks with farmers about profitability.He connects producers to federally funded programs that compensate them for planting cover crops. He answers questions about how no-till practices could impact their bottom line. It’s all about showing farmers the small steps they can take to protect soil health, he said.“Not being told what they shouldn’t do or pitting different farming systems against each other,” Petruziello said. “But what can we all do to be better on our own farms?”

Kendall Crawford

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Ohio Newsroom Some of the fields on Nathan Brown’s farm in Hillsboro are green from covercropping.

He hopes OEFFA’s soil health week helped more farmers consider that question. Especially since many of the conservation practices are still a rarity. Only around 8% of Ohio farmers plant cover crops, according to data from the Soil Health Institute. Randall Reeder, president of Ohio No-Till Council, estimates farmers practicing continuous no-till is also in the single digits.“We’ve been tilling and plowing for 150 years or more,” Reeder said. “So, it’s a reluctance to change.”Saving soilBrown was hesitant to bring regenerative ag practices to his farm in southwest Ohio at first. Now, he’s been using them for more than a decade.“We all know and realize that as farmers, we depend on the top six inches of topsoil,” Brown said. “And we have always wanted that to be the best that it can be to pass on to the next generation. Cause there’s not one farmer that I know that doesn’t want to pass their farming operation onto the next.”Like Petruziello, he sees soil as a legacy.

“Climate change” can turn off some farmers. So these scientists are using another two-word phrase

Nathan Brown always keeps a shovel in the bed of his truck. That’s a sure sign a farmer is serious about soil health, he said.“In the spring and the summertime, I’m always digging,” Brown said as he shoveled some dirt from his 1,200 acre farm in Hillsboro into his gloved hands on a warm November afternoon.Brown inspected the dirt from his farm in southwest Ohio closely, searching for hints that his soil will be resilient against extreme weather events.“You see all this little white hair looking stuff on there?” he said. “That’s your fungi and stuff on the root structure. There’s a worm.”These are all signs of good soil health, which he believes is a result of the way he farms. He doesn’t till his land before planting seeds, which improves soil structure. And he plants so-called cover crops like rye and barley on top of his cash crops to protect his soil from eroding.

Kendall Crawford

/

Ohio Newsroom Nathan Brown always keeps a shovel with him on his farm in southwest Ohio.

Last week, environmentalists and farmers alike attended workshops, farm tours, art exhibits and rallies – all aimed at highlighting how producers can implement regenerative ag practices, like the ones that Brown uses, to protect the foundation of their farm: their soil.The state’s inaugural Soil Health Week, organized by the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association (OEFFA), emphasized the common ground between climate activists and small family farm operations.Avoiding polarizationBrown plants cover crops and no-till practices because they means better yields and a longer lifespan for his farm.But they also have broader benefits for the environment: they can help prevent nutrients from flowing into our waterways and allow soil to capture more carbon. Both of which, environmentalists say, are important wins in the fight against climate change.For many producers, though, climate change is still a “touchy subject”, according to Ohio State University researcher Robyn Wilson.Wilson surveyed Midwest farmers on their perceptions of climate change. Overwhelmingly, they acknowledged that weather patterns are changing, but they were less likely to see it as caused by humans – something that the vast majority of scientists agree on.
When farmers do use climate-smart practices, Wilson said, for the most part, it’s not out of concern of changing weather patterns.“Their motivation is not really climate change,” Wilson said. “From our data, it didn’t seem like they were framing traditional conservation practices as climate resilience strategies.”Yet farmers have long been invested in keeping Ohio lands productive. That’s why Milo Petruzziello, director of policy with the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association, focuses on a different two-word phrase with less political weight: soil health.“This is a common language that we can talk about how they can both benefit their farm business and benefit their broader community,” Petruziello said.Money talksInstead of hammering on the wider environmental impact of regenerative ag practices, Petruziello first talks with farmers about profitability.He connects producers to federally funded programs that compensate them for planting cover crops. He answers questions about how no-till practices could impact their bottom line. It’s all about showing farmers the small steps they can take to protect soil health, he said.“Not being told what they shouldn’t do or pitting different farming systems against each other,” Petruziello said. “But what can we all do to be better on our own farms?”

Kendall Crawford

/

Ohio Newsroom Some of the fields on Nathan Brown’s farm in Hillsboro are green from covercropping.

He hopes OEFFA’s soil health week helped more farmers consider that question. Especially since many of the conservation practices are still a rarity. Only around 8% of Ohio farmers plant cover crops, according to data from the Soil Health Institute. Randall Reeder, president of Ohio No-Till Council, estimates farmers practicing continuous no-till is also in the single digits.“We’ve been tilling and plowing for 150 years or more,” Reeder said. “So, it’s a reluctance to change.”Saving soilBrown was hesitant to bring regenerative ag practices to his farm in southwest Ohio at first. Now, he’s been using them for more than a decade.“We all know and realize that as farmers, we depend on the top six inches of topsoil,” Brown said. “And we have always wanted that to be the best that it can be to pass on to the next generation. Cause there’s not one farmer that I know that doesn’t want to pass their farming operation onto the next.”Like Petruziello, he sees soil as a legacy.

How a silly science prize changed my career

Eleanor Maguire wasn’t too thrilled when she was first offered an Ig Nobel Prize. The neuroscientist at University College London was being honoured for her study showing that London taxi drivers have larger hippocampi in their brains than do people in other professions1. But she worried that accepting the prize would be a disaster for her career. So, she quietly turned it down.Three years later, the prize’s founder, Marc Abrahams, contacted Maguire again with the same offer. This time, she knew more about the satirical award that bills itself as honouring achievements that “make people laugh, then think”. She decided to accept. On the way to the ceremony, her taxi driver was so delighted to learn about his enlarged hippocampus that he refused to accept a fee from her.Maguire credits the prize with bringing more attention to her work. “It was useful for my career because people wanted to talk about it,” she says, adding that “it was on the front pages of newspapers when it came out and struck a chord with people.”How to win a Nobel prize: what kind of scientist scoops medals?As one measure of the Ig Nobel’s impact, Maguire says that she was once introduced as “the most famous member” of a panel that happened to also include three Nobel laureates. “There were only questions about taxi drivers, and not anything to the Nobel laureates there.”Other researchers have similar stories about winning the famous — some would say ‘infamous’ — awards. Abrahams created them in 1991, after years of collecting examples of weird research that he included in the Journal of Irreproducible Results, which he was editor of at the time. “I kept meeting people who’d unknowingly done very funny things that almost no one knew about.”The response from the scientific community was mixed at the start, but Abrahams says that the Ig Nobels are not out to harm anyone’s career. And last year, the prize received more than 9,000 nominations, a sign of how much it has grown, he says.Beyond the fun, several researchers who have won an ‘Ig’ say that it has improved their careers by helping them to reach wider audiences, and it has prompted some scientists to spend more time engaging with the public about their work. Here are their stories.The duck guyFor Kees Moeliker, an Ig Nobel had a profound influence on his work — and his life. In 1995, the ornithologist was looking out of the glass wall of his office at the Natural History Museum Rotterdam in the Netherlands, when he heard the sound of a duck flying into it. He went outside and saw a live duck mounting the dead one that had just hit the window. It was the first documented case of homosexual necrophilia in ducks, says Moeliker, who reported his findings six years later2. He expected that only a handful of people would read the paper, but then he received a phone call in 2003 offering him an Ig Nobel Prize.“After I won the prize, my paper got a huge readership, and people keep sending me stuff that you don’t read about in the mainstream journals,” he says. “I have a huge compilation of cases of remarkable animal behaviour.”Kees Moeliker won an Ig Nobel prize for his work on homosexual necrophilia in ducks.Credit: Anne Claire de BreijThe duck paper and the Ig Nobel marked a turning point for Moeliker. He became known as ‘the duck guy’ and published a book of the same name: De eendenman (2009; in Dutch). In 2013, he gave a TED Talk titled ‘How a dead duck changed my life’.Since the Ig Nobel, Moeliker has dedicated a large part of his life to science communication alongside his research. Now the director of the museum in Rotterdam, he has also kept up his connection with the Ig Nobels. He is part of the team that decides who wins, and he often informs scientists in Europe who have been selected.One of his favourite winners was a pair of researchers who had dressed up as polar bears to study how reindeer in the Arctic would react. “When I called them, they just started screaming with happiness. This happens all the time.”Friday-night experimentsThe only person with both a Nobel and Ig Nobel Prize is Andre Geim, a physicist at the University of Manchester, UK. He shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010 for the discovery of graphene, but the Ig Nobel came a decade earlier for a very different kind of work: using a magnet to levitate a frog. One Friday night at Radboud University in the Netherlands, Geim poured water into a powerful 16-tesla magnet and found that it levitated. The floating drop shocked his colleagues because it seemed to violate ideas about magnetism.Success with water led to a series of other experiments with levitating objects — and eventually with a small frog that survived its wild ride unharmed.You must be joking: funny paper titles might lead to more citationsWhen Geim was offered the award, he was an early-career researcher and wary of accepting it on his own. So he reached out to Michael Berry, a theoretical physicist at the University of Bristol, UK, and Geim’s co-author on a paper describing the levitating frog3. As a tenured academic, Berry provided the cover of being associated with a highly respected scientist.Geim talks often about his frog experiment and the value of the curiosity-led science that led to his Ig Nobel Prize. It was on another Friday night, several years after the levitation experiments, that Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, who is now at the National University of Singapore, stuck a piece of tape to graphite, leading to their discovery of graphene4 — and their shared Nobel prize.Geim and Maguire aren’t the only Ig Nobel winners who had qualms about accepting the prize. And Abrahams has built in allowances for that. He and his colleagues contact potential recipients confidentially months before the prize-giving ceremony and offer them the chance to accept or reject the award. Abrahams also arranges for them to be handed out by Nobel prize-winners at the annual ceremony. “To have these credible people be a part of it makes it much harder for anyone to jump to the conclusion that we are out to do damage,” he says.Not everyone has been so pleased to receive the award. Eric Topol, a cardiologist at Scripps Research in La Jolla, California, was part of a group of nearly 1,000 people who won the 1993 Ig Nobel Literature prize for “publishing a medical research paper which has one hundred times as many authors as pages”. He says that the study should not have been made light of; at the time, it was the largest heart-attack study in history, with more than 40,000 participants5, he adds.Topol says that he thinks the name Ig Nobel “is out of alignment with the more recent ones. They’re more for humour’s sake.”Abrahams agrees, saying, “In retrospect, I kind of wish we’d chosen a different name.”Running on waterIn the past two decades, most of the awards have gone to lighter research — sometimes quite literally. So it was for a 2013 prize for Alberto Minetti at the University of Milan in Italy.Minetti studies the biomechanics of locomotion and has long had an interest in the forces involved in running. When he learnt that spacecraft orbiting the Moon had detected evidence of water in 2008, he wondered whether a person could run on water on the Moon, which has a gravitational force only about 16% as strong as that of Earth.Using mathematical models from the basilisk lizard (Basiliscus basiliscus) and the western grebe (Aechmophorus occidentalis), two vertebrates that can run on the surface of water, Minetti calculated that it was theoretically possible. Then, he and his colleagues tested their calculations by attaching a person to a harness to simulate weaker gravity. With the aid of small fins on his feet, a participant was able to stay afloat while running in place in a wading pool, the researchers reported6 in 2012.The following year, Minetti received a phone call from Abrahams, who offered him an Ig Nobel. At the time, he wasn’t sure of the prize’s standing or what it would do to his reputation, so he conducted a survey among his colleagues. “Most of the people I spoke to were very positive about it,” says Minetti.Marc Abrahams holds up the 2016 Ig Nobel award during ceremonies at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.Credit: Michael Dwyer/AP/AlamyFun and humour are still at the heart of the Ig Nobels. The 2024 physiology prize was won by a team for “discovering that many mammals are capable of breathing through their anus”. The lead author of the study7, Ryo Okabe at Tokyo Medical and Dental University, has been treating patients as a clinician for more than 15 years, while also carrying out research projects. The research behind the Ig Nobel was a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The researchers wanted to see whether they could develop an alternative breathing method in the event of respiratory failure.He was honoured to win the prize and thinks that the award will be a driving force to conduct future research. “I learnt that [the other laureates] are all engaged in their respective research with humour and passion.”Scientists reveal weirdest things they’ve done in the name of scienceThe Ig Nobel has come a long way since it was launched more than three decades ago. What started as a prize that scientists were wary of has been embraced by many.Minna Lyons, who won the prize in 2014 along with her colleagues, still cherishes her Ig Nobel. “It has been one of the best surprises in my academic career, by far.” She won for “amassing evidence that people who habitually stay up late are, on average, more self-admiring, more manipulative, and more psychopathic than people who wake up early in the morning”.Lyons, who is a psychologist at Liverpool John Moores University, UK, says that the prize is excellent for public engagement because it makes science popular, and for this reason, the Ig Nobel is one of the most respected academic awards in her field, she says.“It actually inspires people and I’m hoping it will also inspire younger generations to go into science.”

Listen Technologies appoints new regional sales manager

Listen Technologies Corporation, a provider of advanced wireless listening solutions for 26 years, has promoted Shawnee Bond to regional sales manager. Bond will manage Listen Technologies’ team of manufacturer representative firms in the Western United States.
She will also work directly with Listen Technologies dealers, integrators, consultants, and end users throughout the region. Bond will report to Listen Technologies senior sales director Mikey Shaffer.
Bond joined Listen Technologies in 2017 and has worked in customer service and sales roles at the company. Most recently, she was an account sales representative for the Western United States where she fostered strong relationships and a keen understanding of the market and related industries. Bond has earned the trust and respect of colleagues, channel partners, and customers with her clear communication skills, supportive and collaborative manner, and extensive knowledge of Listen Technologies’ solutions.
Shaffer said: “Throughout her tenure at Listen Technologies, Shawnee has proved to be a champion in her stellar support of our channel and our manufacturer’s reps and has been a tremendous driver of our mutual growth. It is truly my pleasure to see Shawnee step into the role of Western regional sales manager and I look forward to the team’s continued success in the West under her leadership.”
Bond will lead the Western US team selling Listen Technologies’ full suite of listening solutions, including ListenWIFI, ListenTALK, ListenRF, and ListenIR. She will also represent Ampetronic and sell its induction loop systems in the Western United States as part of Listen Technologies’ partnership with Ampetronic and the companies’ creation of a single, market-leading source for innovative audio solutions.
Bond said: ”I am excited to strengthen the relationships I have with customers, manufacturer’s reps, and consultants in this new role. I believe in the purpose of Listen Technologies and am grateful for the opportunity to further our shared goals and help meet the needs of venues and end users with new and innovative technologies and solutions.”
Bond is an artist who enjoys painting and working with different mediums. She reports that her creativity helps her look at things in different ways: “Sometimes a fresh perspective is all you need to find the best way to move forward, whether in work or on a painting.”

Taylor Jenkins Reid is Back with a New Book and More Book News!

Emily has a PhD in English from the University of Southern Mississippi, MS, and she has an MFA in Creative Writing from GCSU in Milledgeville, GA, home of Flannery O’Connor. She spends her free time reading, watching horror movies and musicals, cuddling cats, Instagramming pictures of cats, and blogging/podcasting about books with the ladies over at #BookSquadGoals (www.booksquadgoals.com). She can be reached at [email protected].
View All posts by Emily Martin

Book lovers, it’s time to gather ’round to share the hottest book gossip and revel in all of the exciting book news. Sure, the world might be on fire, and the rest of the news cycle might be dire, but at least we have a few nuggets of book news to carry us through the rest of this chaotic month. So take a break from your doom-scrolling and comfort yourself with a little bit of book cheer.

Here’s the cover of Mia Sosa’s upcoming romance novel When Javi Dumped Mari. What’s more, Cosmopolitan is letting readers have a look at the first chapter. So check that out, and get ready to pick this book up on June 24th, 2025.Here’s another fun book to check out in 2025! Ally Carter’s The Blonde Who Came in from the Cold will be out on August 5th. Check out an excerpt over at People right now.Taylor Jenkins Reid is back with a new novel! According to the publisher Ballantine, a Penguin Random House imprint, Atmosphere tells “a passionate and soaring story about the transformative power of love, this time among the stars.” It’s out on June 3rd.

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Bridgerton actess Bessie Carter is narrating Marie Benedict’s new novel The Queens of Crime. The novel will be out in print and on audiobook in February 2025 from St. Martin’s Press. Check out the cover of the new queer romance from Gabriella Gamez, Kiss Me, Maybe. The author told Entertainment Weekly, “I was actually very particular about what I wanted this cover to look like, which is funny because I was not this way at all with my first book. There’s a scene in Kiss Me, Maybe where Krystal is placing a flower crown on Angela’s head during Fiesta, and as I was actively writing it I knew I wanted the cover to convey that scene in some way.” Kiss Me, Maybe is out from Forever on May 6th, 2025.

Be sure to come back and check out more book news every week. In the meantime, take care of yourself. Read a good book. We’ll see you very, very soon.
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Reading List Roundup: The First “Best of 2024” Book Lists

Katie’s parents never told her “no” when she asked for a book, which was the start of most of her problems. She has an MLIS from the University of Illinois and works full time as a Circulation & Reference Manager in Illinois. She has a deep-rooted love of all things disturbing, twisted, and terrifying and takes enormous pleasure in creeping out her coworkers. When she’s not at work, she’s at home watching the Cubs with her cats and her cardigan collection. Other hobbies include scrapbooking, introducing more readers to the Church of Tana French, and convincing her husband that she can, in fact, fit more books onto her shelves.

Twitter: @kt_librarylady
View All posts by Katie McLain Horner

I have your collection development resources this week: November new releases, the first of the Best of 2024 lists, and some themed book lists to help generate display ideas.

November New Releases
Here are November’s most buzzworthy books, as chosen by Amazon, CBC, Epic Reads, L.A. Times, LitHub (SFF, poetry), New York Times, and Town & Country. And then, of course, we have key November titles selected by Book Rioters, so make sure to check out our general picks, along with romance, mystery/thrillers, horror, SFF, historical fiction, nonfiction, queer titles, children’s books, and comics/graphic novels.

The Best Books of 2024

Publishers Weekly is always one of the first to come out with their Best Of the Year list, and I always find it to be an…interesting selection. There are the titles that you just assume are going to show up on every list (this year, it’s James and Intermezzo), but there are also a lot of titles that I’m unfamiliar with. My favorite end-of-the-year lists tend to tap into popular appeal more than the Publishers Weekly list does, but to each their own. Maybe this list really speaks to you and your patrons’ reading interests! And then there are also a couple of (non-Publishers Weekly) lists for the best horror of 2024 and the best romantasy of 2024.

Display Ideas & Resources
Native American Heritage Month

Cozy, Escapist Reads (Gee, I wonder why?)

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Books For Foodies

Which of these books would you be most likely to pull from a library display?
If you’re reading this newsletter online and want library-relevant dispatches in your inbox, sign up for Check Your Shelf here.

Tourism ministry mediates Sakona Travel dispute

Victims and relevant stakeholders meet at the tourism ministry to seek solutions on November 18. Tourism ministry

The Ministry of Tourism is working to mediate a resolution for over 80 families who lost tens of thousands of dollars due to invalid flight tickets sold by Sakona Travel (Cambodia) Co Ltd for overseas travel packages.
The latest mediation session was held on November 18, led by tourism minister Huot Hak, with participation from lawyers representing Sakona Travel and representatives of 82 affected families.
On November 13, the ministry announced the cancellation of the company’s operating licence due to its failure to fulfil contractual obligations to clients and violations of laws and regulations governing the tourism sector.
Several victims shared their experiences on social media, revealing that they had purchased travel packages for international vacations but discovered their flight tickets were invalid on the scheduled departure dates.
According to a Facebook post by victim Sokhim Chhum, the agency collected a total of $238,712 from 72 families, comprising 344 individuals. Another account, posted by Pich Amily, described similar losses, with victims spending substantial amounts on travel packages and airline tickets without receiving refunds after their trips were cancelled.
The ministry stated that it would follow out-of-court dispute resolution mechanisms using a win-win approach. A tripartite working group has been established, including representatives from the ministry, Sakona and the affected citizens.
The ministry added that it would prepare a draft settlement agreement to be reviewed and amended based on feedback from the parties involved before reaching a final resolution.