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    November 2022

    Feature Story

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    Nov 9, 2022
    • Conservation
    • Ecology
    • Graduate Students

    Permanent daylight saving time would reduce deer-vehicle collisions, study shows

    Deer along a highway
    Oregon Department of Transportation
    Deer along a road near Sutherlin, Oregon.

    In much of the United States, there is a twice-yearly shift in timekeeping between standard time and daylight saving time, or DST, which delays both sunrise and sunset to make mornings darker and evenings brighter. Recently, scientists, policy experts, lawmakers and citizens have debated abandoning the twice-a-year switch and adopting either year-round standard time or DST.

    A team of researchers at the University of Washington — led by postdoctoral researcher Calum Cunningham and Laura Prugh, an associate professor of quantitative wildlife sciences — have found that one of those options would sharply reduce a hazard common to much of the country: deer-vehicle collisions. In a paper published Nov. 2 in Current Biology, they report that adopting permanent DST in the United States would reduce deer-vehicle collisions and likely prevent an estimated 36,550 deer deaths, 33 human deaths, 2,054 human injuries and $1.19 billion in costs each year. Deer-vehicle collisions would decrease under permanent DST because skies would be brighter later into the evening.

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    Nov 4, 2022
    • Awards and Honors

    Two College of the Environment faculty recognized by American Geophysical Union

    Ginger Arwbrust
    Ginger Arwbrust

    University of Washington School of Oceanography Professor Ginger Armbrust and Department of Atmospheric Sciences Professor Dennis Hartmann will be honored at the 2022 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting in December.

    Armbrust has been named a 2022 AGU Fellow in recognition of her outstanding contributions to ocean sciences and for embodying AGU’s values by fostering equity, integrity, diversity and open science; by mentoring; through public engagement; and in her communications. Fewer than 1% of AGU members are selected to receive this honor each year.

    Dennis Hartmann
    Dennis Hartmann

    Hartmann has been selected to receive the Roger Revelle Medal, which is given annually to one honoree in recognition of outstanding contributions in atmospheric sciences. The medal is named in honor of Roger Revelle, an oceanographer who made substantial contributions to the awareness of global climate change.

    Read more at UW News »

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    Nov 9, 2022
    • Ecology
    • Freshwater
    • Graduate Students

    Fish, Forests and Fungi

    Salmon RiverMushrooms have a long-standing history as a culturally and nutritionally significant food source, yet we still have much to learn about our fungal friends. Enter the wondrous world of mushrooms: some toxic, some colorful; some cap-tipped, some mimicking a wave in the ocean. Regardless of how much research has been done on fungi, we have only scratched the surface, with only four percent of fungi species characterized.

    School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences graduate student Anne Polyakov spent a summer with the UW Alaska Salmon Program studying ecosystems along three salmon streams, hoping to use the data collected to track how nutrients flow into all parts of the system — into the soil, plants and the role that fungi play in this intricate process.

    Mushrooms made from salmon

    Dead salmon potentially play a large role in nutrient cycling, dissolving and flowing through every component of the ecosystem surrounding salmon streams in a vast, multi-directional web. 

    Fungi are one of the primary decomposers of salmon carcasses, taking up the nutrients through their hyphae (the long, thin white strands that make up the main bulk of the fungi) and either consuming them for their own metabolic needs or passing some along to plant partners that need them for growth or maintenance. These nutrients are then used to produce structures such as leaves or mushrooms, which can be further cycled through the ecosystem when they’re eaten by animals.

    “Fungi are typically left out of the equation when scientists track and model salmon nutrient flow through the salmon stream forests,” said Polyakov. “But these fungi are very important, as they connect the soil below to the plants above, and also form networks that allow for possible redistribution of nutrients to other plants and fungi.”

    Tracing the salmon signature

    But how do researchers follow these nutrients from the streams to the leaves of nearby trees? It turns out that salmon have a special chemical signature in their tissues that can be used to trace nitrogen that originates in their bodies. This signature arises due to the fact that salmon spend much of their adult life in the ocean, where the nitrogen signature looks very different from nitrogen that originates in terrestrial systems. Salmon “pick up” this signal during their time at sea, making their nutrients stand out when they return to freshwater streams and, eventually, make their way onto land. 

    Although the nutrient tracing from salmon to soil and vegetation has been studied, little to nothing is known about the role of fungi in this process. This is where Polyakov’s research comes in. Alaskan mushrooms are super under characterized, so by collecting 250 mushrooms, in addition to soil and leaf samples, she hopes to sequence these mushrooms to add to the fungal species database, filling in the gaps of which fungal groups are located in these regions of Alaska, and incorporating fungi in the salmon nutrient tracing process alongside soils and plants.

    It’s very likely that these salmon nutrients are vital to the ecosystems that surround their home streams. But as some salmon populations decline, it’s unclear how those ecosystems will manage. “There are a ton of places where salmon aren’t coming back or the salmon runs are dwindling,” Polyakov said. “A big question in the field is, what’s going to happen to the fungal systems that have adapted to receiving salmon nutrients for millenia if salmon numbers continue to decline?” Polyakov hopes that this research might one day help us better answer that question. 

    Another concern surrounding diminishing salmon runs is the possibility that the fungi that have evolved to feed off salmon carcasses may diminish entirely. Because so few fungal species have been discovered so far, we may not even know what these species are, or their role in the ecosystem, before they disappear completely.

    Although there have been extensive studies on how salmon-derived nutrients affect vegetation and soils, the effects of these nutrients on fungi are mostly unknown. This is important because fungi are what connect the plants to the soil and are thus an essential, and often overlooked, component of this system. When we examine how fungi interact with salmon-derived nutrients, we can better understand and model the presence and ecological significance of salmon nutrient inputs to terrestrial systems by considering and integrating all components of this system — soil, plants, and fungi, in this interconnected web.

    https://environment.uw.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Untitled-design.mp4

    Story by Joy Chu

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    Nov 3, 2022
    • College of the Environment

    Watch the 2022 Doug Walker Lecture, Climate Crisis: Finding Hope in Action and Community

    Faced with countless environmental crises, it can be difficult to see a path to a better world — but change doesn’t happen in a vacuum. We can find hope in the relationships we build, the communities we forge, and the power we share when we act together.

    On October 18, 2022, the College community came together at Town Hall for a live discussion featuring environmental advocate and educator Jamie Stroble ’10, and moderated by Maya Tolstoy, Maggie Walker Dean of the UW College of the Environment. Video of the event is now available on the College YouTube channel.

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    Nov 16, 2022
    • Marine Science

    Study reveals how ancient fish colonized the deep sea

    Photo of a glowing lanternfish
    Steven Haddock/Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
    A lanternfish, which is a deep-water fish that gets its name from its ability to produce light.

    The deep sea contains more than 90% of the water in our oceans, but only about a third of all fish species. Scientists have long thought the explanation for this was intuitive — shallow ocean waters are warm and full of resources, making them a prime location for new species to evolve and thrive. But a new University of Washington study led by Elizabeth Miller reports that throughout Earth’s ancient history, there were several periods of time when many fish actually favored the cold, dark, barren waters of the deep sea.

    “It’s easy to look at shallow habitats like coral reefs, which are very diverse and exciting, and assume that they’ve always been that way,” said Miller, who completed the study as a postdoctoral researcher in the UW School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences and is now a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Oklahoma. “These results really challenge that assumption, and help us understand how fish species have adapted to major changes to the climate.”

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    Events

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    December 1, 2022

    Sparking Climate Connections: UW Virtual Talks on Climate Change | Virtual Showcase

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    December 2, 2022

    ATM S 520 Atmospheric Sciences Colloquium: Professor Marshall Shepherd, University of Georgia

    Calendar Icon Check out our calendar for more events

    News From Around the College

    • Life on Mars May Have Been Its Own Worst Enemy, Scientific American
    • Living with fire: Community learns how to set fires in order to prevent them, University of Washington
    • How Sobriety and Mental Health Issues Shaped Acid Tongue’s New Album, KEXP
    • Scientist Sharpens Weather Forecasts with AI, NVIDIA

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