Categories
Australia

Scientists discover cause of catastrophic mangrove destruction in Gulf of Carpentaria

In the summer of 2015-16, one of the most catastrophic mangrove diebacks ever recorded globally occurred in the Gulf of Carpentaria.

Some 40 million mangroves died across more than 2,000 kilometers of coastline, releasing nearly 1 million tonnes of carbon — equivalent to 1,000 jumbo jets flying back from Sydney to Paris.

After six years of searching for answers, scientists have formally identified what is causing the mass destruction. They hope the discovery will help predict and possibly prevent future events.

Valuable mangroves ‘died of thirst’

Map showing areas affected by severe mangrove dieback in late 2015.
Areas affected by severe mangrove dieback in late 2015 (grey shaded) along the gulf. Aerial surveys (red lines) were undertaken in 2016.(Supplied: NC Duke)

Mangrove ecologist and senior research scientist at James Cook University (JCU) Norman Duke was behind the discovery.

Dr Duke found that unusually low sea levels caused by severe El Niño events meant mangrove trees “essentially died of thirst”.

“The key factor responsible for this catastrophe appears to have been the sudden 40-centimetre drop in sea level that lasted for about six months, coinciding with no rainfall, killing vast areas of mangroves,” he said.

Author assisting with data analysis and JCU researcher Adam Canning said the study’s evidence for sea-level drop being the cause was found in the discovery of an earlier mass dieback in 1982, observed in satellite imagery.

Mass die-off of mangroves off Karumba on Queensland's Gulf Country coast
Hundreds of kilometers of mangroves along the coast of Karumba have turned a ghostly white.(Supplied: James Cook University)

“The 1982 dieback also coincided with an unusually extreme drop in sea level during another very severe El Niño event. We know from satellite data that the mangroves took at least 15 years to recover from that dieback,” Dr Canning said.

“Now they are caught in a vicious collapse and recovery cycle because of repeated pressure from climate change — the question remains when or if they will recover.”

Economic impact

Mangroves are valuable coastal ecosystems providing buffer shorelines against rising sea levels, protection against erosion, abundant carbon sinks, shelter for animals, nursery habitats, and food for marine life.

The destruction of mangroves can lead to a loss of fisheries, increased flooding, increased coastal damage from cyclones, and increased salinity of coastal soils and water supplies.

Mangroves stripped of foliage along a small tidal channel near the Robinson River.
Mangroves stripped of foliage along a small tidal channel near the Robinson River.(Supplied: Dr Norman Duke)

In the gulf, the mangrove dieback threatens a $30 million fishing industry, Dr Duke said.

“The fishing industry relies on these mangroves, including for redleg banana prawns, mudcrabs and fin fish,” he said.

“When the El Niño of 2015-16 struck, redleg banana prawn fishers reported their lowest-ever catches.”

Dr Duke said it was unlikely the gulf’s mangroves would recover due to the growing intensity of El Nino events.

“Our research reveals the presence of a previously unrecognized ‘collapse-recovery cycle’ of mangroves along gulf shorelines,” he said.

Composite image of NT mangrove dieback
Images of different sections of foreshore taken months apart show the extent of mangrove dieback in the NT.(Supplied: NC Duke)
Before and after mangrove death
Before and after the loss of a section of mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria.(Supplied: Dr Norman Duke)

“The threat of future El Niño-driven sea level drops appears imminent, as evidence points to a link between climate change and severe El Niño and La Niña events.

“Indeed, El Niño and La Niña have become more deadly over the last 50 years, and the long-term damage they inflict is expected to escalate.

“Under these circumstances, the potential for the mangroves to recover is understandably low.

Protecting future ecosystems

Dr Duke said closer monitoring was key to preventing future mass diebacks. He said regular aerial surveys were a place to start.

“Tropical mangroves need much greater protection, and more effective maintenance with regular health checks from dedicated national shoreline monitoring,” he said.

Mangrove dieback in the Northern Territory
Mangroves have died along a 2,000km stretch of coastline in the Gulf of Carpentaria.(Supplied: NC Duke)

“Our aerial surveys of more than 10,000 kilometers of north Australian coastlines have made a start.

“We’ve recorded environmental conditions and drivers of shoreline change for north-western Australia, eastern Cape York Peninsula, Torres Strait Islands and, of course, the Gulf of Carpentaria.

“As the climate continues to change, it’s vital to keep a close eye on our changing shoreline wetlands and to ensure we’re better prepared next time another El Niño disaster strikes.”

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Categories
US

Sandy Hook parents under protection after Austin encounters

Categories
Business

Appen woes worsen as EBITDA, revenue tank

“This has especially impacted our global division, particularly those customers with a high exposure to digital advertising. While only 26 per cent of our first half global revenue supports digital advertising, we are seeing a flow on effect to non ad-related projects and some of our core programs, as our customers reduce their overall spend,” he said.

“As stated in February, costs in this half are higher primarily due to transformation costs, and investment in product and technology resulting in higher employee expenses, recruitment, and IT costs. Together with lower-than-expected revenue, this has impacted earnings and margins.”

sliding value

The disappointing earnings come after an 86 per cent slide in the company’s share price since August 2020, when it was trading at more than $40. On Monday, it closed at $5.71.

Appen founder Julie Vonwiller and former chairman Chris Vonwiller remain the company’s largest shareholders with a 7.5 per cent stake of the business.

Appen earnings typically skew to the second half of the calendar year. The business still expects more revenue to flow through in the second half as seasonal projects are delivered and existing work ramps up, but, the business conceded that there had been no improvement last month.

Given the tenuous position of the business, Appen is now reviewing its investment strategy to find a way to increase productivity and improve margins.

“The fundamentals of our business remain strong and our operational performance and the quality of our service we provide customers continue to improve, evidenced by higher NPS. We are increasing our range of products and through our product investments remain well positioned to serve our customers,” Mr Brayan said.

Although Appen has invested in automating more of its processes, at its core, it is still a data annotation company that uses a crowd of 1 million people to label data that feeds the artificial intelligence algorithm of tech companies.

It has been attempting to diversify its customer base and has made a push into China, which was a bright spot in its results in the middle. China revenue was up 141 per cent to $US18 million.

In May, Appen was briefly a takeover target of Canadian rival Telus, which owns its competitor Lionbridge. But, within hours of the non-binding, unsolicited bid being announced to the ASX, the company announced that Telus had backed out of the negotiations with no explanation.

Following the failed deal, investors asked if it was time for Mr Brayan to step down, but at the time he still had the support of the board, which is led by chairman Richard Freudenstein.

Categories
Technology

Battlefield 2042 Update Is Going To Give Everyone Beards

Beleaguered multiplayer shooter Battlefield 2042which has not exactly been the success EA would have been hoping for, will take another step towards being an actual video game this week with the release of its next update.

While the game has been justifiably lambasted by fans (and non-fans) alike, I’ve always had a soft spot for it, partly because the stuff I like in a Battlefield game has been there since launch, but also because this game — developed partly during the worst months of the pandemic — was clearly nowhere near being done when publishers EA rushed it out the door.

Developers DICE have thus basically had to spend the months since launch…finishing the game, adding things like scoreboards and extra UI that under less hellish circumstances would just have made up part of the regular development process and been with Battlefield 2042 at launch.

The game’s Season One update made a lot of players happy because it simply dragged the game so much closer to what they would have expected in October 2021, and the 1.2 update — out tomorrow, August 2 — inches even closer.

It introduces some fixes for the game’s weakest map (Kaleidoscope), finally gives players a lifetime statistics page (letting you track stuff like your K:D ratio, games played, etc) and perhaps most noitceable, makes the first of a number of planned “Style and Tone” changes for the game’s Specialists.

Battlefield 2042’s Specialists, characters similar to those you’d pick in other shooters like, say, apex legendsare a first for the series, and have been pretty poorly received, not only for the changes they’ve made to the game’s structure (replacing traditional classes like Medic), but for the way their cocky swagger and corny one-liners were at odds with the game’s grim, climate apocalypse setting.

Dice’s first move to fix this was to simply shut them up, so that the characters no longer shouted catchphrases during the end-of-game roundups, but the next step here will be to make them all look a bit more appropriate for the setting. This means making them all just generally look more tired, dirty and haggard, and in the case of the male Specialists, giving them beards. And if they already had a beard, giving them more beard, and some extra wrinkles to boot. Here’s a look at the changes:

The two guys on the left used to be clean-shaven, now they have got beards.  The guy on the right, Pyotr, already had a beard, but now it's beardier.  (Image: DICE)The two guys on the left used to be clean-shaven, now they have got beards. The guy on the right, Pyotr, already had a beard, but now it’s beardier. (Image: DICE)

I like it, everyone does indeed look a bit more appropriate for the setting. I will say though, as someone who mains Mackay — for gameplay reasons, not aesthetic — I was hoping for a bit more of an improvement considering his original look (Guy Who Stans Elon Musk Under Tesla Car Reviews On YouTube) has now been turned into Guy Who Thinks Wrestling Is Too Woke Now.

The update will also introduce some other smaller nerfs and changes to gameplay, and you can read all about it here.

Categories
Sports

Judges under fire after Aussie ‘robbed’

Kyle Bruce, Christopher Murray and Nicolas Vachon, pictured here with their medals after the men's 81kg final at the Commonwealth Games.

Kyle Bruce, Christopher Murray and Nicolas Vachon pose with their medals after the men’s 81kg final at the Commonwealth Games. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

Australian fans and commentators were left absolutely fuming on Monday night at the Commonwealth Games when weightlifting Kyle Bruce was denied gold by a controversial judges decision.

Bruce was sensationally denied the gold medal after judges wiped out what would have been the winning lift, handing the top prize to hometown hope Chris Murray of England.

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Bruce was celebrating with his team after his final lift of 183kg in the clean and jerk section had been given the green light, only for the English team to lodge an appeal.

The lift, which would have been a new Commonwealth Games record, was then ruled out due to a ‘hand press’ – where the lifter’s elbow is deemed to have not locked properly.

The Aussie team immediately challenged the call, which led to another review by the same judging panel, but it was thrown out less than a minute later.

Bruce was forced to settle for the silver medal, with the 23-year-old reduced to tears while speaking to the media.

“A little bit in the recovery (during the lift) I was a bit shaky but I felt like my elbows were fully locked, it was just heavy weight,” Bruce said.

“I’m 80kg and I’m throwing 183kg over my head, its going to shake around, yeah?

“I haven’t seen the footage yet so I’m not 100 per cent sure, I can’t really say anything right now.

“But, that’s the decision, that’s how sport goes, unfortunately it just wasn’t my day in that regard.”

Kyle Bruce, pictured here performing his clean and jerk during the men's 81kg final at the Commonwealth Games.

Kyle Bruce performs his clean and jerk during the men’s 81kg final at the Commonwealth Games. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

Bruce, who wears his father’s compression shirt after his dad’s death in 2015, was incredibly classy in defeat.

“Sometimes it’s just how the sport goes and congratulations to Chris on winning it. He was the good lifter on the day and I just got a bit unlucky there,” he said.

“My only focus and goal coming into these Games was winning that gold medal for Australia and coming away with that silver.

“Not going to lie, is quite disappointing. I set my standards very high but that’s just how sport goes sometimes and I’ll be ready for 2026 and I’ll come back and have some redemption I think.

“My dad actually passed away in 2015 and I just wear his shirt because… so he’s always there with me.

“Just so he’s always there for me. This one’s for him.”

Kyle Bruce, pictured here during the medal ceremony with Christopher Murray and Nicolas Vachon.

Kyle Bruce (L) looks on during the medal ceremony with Christopher Murray and Nicolas Vachon. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

Aussies up in arms over Commonwealth Games ‘disgrace’

Bruce admitted there is no further avenue for appeal following the initial challenge, and vowed to come back hungrier at the 2024 Olympics in Paris and 2026 Commonwealth Games in regional Victoria.

His total in Birmingham of 323kg, two kilograms less than Murray’s winning amount, was well short of his personal best of 331kg set last year.

Channel 7 host Mel McLaughlin described the scenes with Bruce as “heartbreaking”, while Aussie netball legend Catherine Cox said: “Sport is horrible. It is also good in the same package.”

Fans and pundits were left fuming over the result on social media, with some describing it as a ‘joke’ and a ‘disgrace’.

Later on Monday, Sarah Cochrane won a second weightlifting silver medal for Australia in the 64kg class.

And eight weeks after dislocating her knee in training, and then suffering gastro a few days before her competition, Kiana Elliott finished fourth in the 71kg.

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Categories
Australia

Teacher massive shortages prompt federal government to consider pay rises for some and paying others to retrain

Dire teacher shortages have pushed the federal government to consider radical reforms to get more people to take up the profession or stay longer.

Under a plan to be tabled at an emergency meeting of federal, state and territory education ministers next week, senior teachers could get a pay rise, while professionals who want to retrain to be teachers could be paid to learn on the job.

But a pay rise would not be for everyone. So-called “master teacher” or senior teaching positions would be awarded a 40 per cent wage boost.

With more children at school than ever before but fewer people lining up to become teachers, Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said it was time for a shake up.

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Categories
US

Donald Trump Appears Two Endorse Two Candidates by Picking Just ‘Eric’ in Missouri GOP Senate Race

On Monday evening, former President Donald Trump issued an endorsement in the hotly contested Republican Missouri Senate race.

Except Trump didn’t just pick one candidate. Instead, he appeared to choose two candidates, both of whom, Eric Greitens and Eric Schmitt, have the same first name.

“I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their own minds, much as they did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Full Endorsement!” Trump said in a statement.

Following the former president’s announcement, Greitens told The Daily Beast through a spokesperson that he was “honored to receive President Trump’s endorsement,” despite the unclear endorsement.

“From the very beginning of the race, I have been the true MAGA Warrior fighting against the RINO establishment backing Mr. Schmitt,” he added, citing a message Trump sent out Sunday night on Truth Social slamming Schmitt.

Schmitt then also claimed the Trump endorsement as his own, saying in a statement: “It is truly an honor to have President Trump’s endorsement.”

Not to be outdone, Greitens then tweeted that he’d spoken to Trump and thanked him for the endorsement.

Schmitt also said the ex-president had called him and he had thanked him for his vote of confidence in the race.

The last-minute Trump statement comes just before Election Day and follows The Daily Beast’s reporting that Trumpworld remains very much divided on the race.

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Categories
Business

2024 MG Cyberster electric convertible emerges

MG is set to embrace its classic roots with a two-seat convertible sports car.

Tipped to go on sale in time for the brand’s 100th anniversary in 2024, the machine is likely to be a battery-powered alternative to affordable sports cars such as the Mazda MX-5.

The brand flirted with a sports car comeback with the MG Cyberster concept of 2021.

MG designer Carl Gotham said at the time that “the Cyberster is a bold statement that looks strongly into MG’s future, touching on our heritage but more importantly building on our cutting edge technology and advanced design”.

“Sports cars are the lifeblood of the MG DNA and Cyberster is a hugely exciting concept for us.”

The radical styling exercise promised 800 kilometers of electric range and a sub-three-second dash to 100km/h.

A subsequent production model won’t match the Hot Wheels flair of the Cyberster.

Patent drawings show the real-world version will be a two-seater with a folding fabric roof.

A teaser video published by MG this week suggests it will be an attractive-looking machine, and one of the first convertibles of the modern electric era.

MG Australia executive Danny Lenartic said in 2021 that the roadster was “firmly in our plans” for a local debut.

Technical details for the model are scarce, though it makes sense for the compact machine to send drive to the rear wheels through a powerful electric motor.

Established sports car brands such as Porsche, Lotus and Alpine have also announced plans to build compact, battery-powered machines aimed at enthusiasts.

Those brands have recently formed outstanding sports cars such as the Porsche Boxster, Lotus Exige and Alpine A110.

While the MG brand is associated with affordable British sports cars, the reborn marque’s Chinese ownership has focused on affordable SUVs and hatchbacks such as the MG3.

But the brand looks likely to broaden its reach in the near future, branching into territory that is both new – and very old – to MG.

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Categories
Technology

Surprisingly, Xenoblade Chronicles 3 Won Me Over In The First Few Hours

I’ve been looking forward to Monolith Soft’s next game since the last one ended in 2017, though not without my fair share of reservations. Xenoblade Chronicles 2 was a meandering JRPG with a hodgepodge of systems and extremely uneven storytelling. As much as I love the series, I was worried Xenoblade Chronicles 3 would be the same. So far, it’s not. It’s a first-party Nintendo Switch blockbuster that can hang with the rest of the library.

Five hours in, it feels like the most lush and balanced game in the series. The environments are sprawling but filled. Combat has plenty of layers to experiment with but none of them seem overly obtuse or overbearing. Your party’s roster is stocked with classic archetypes that stop short of cliché. And the music, responsible for sustaining momentum through long, grindy sections of a game like this, is as excellent as ever.

Screenshots: NintendoScreenshots: Nintendo

Given discussions about Xenoblade 3‘s gargantuan runtime and how it’s still tutorializing 10 hours in, my number one concern was pacing. The game wastes hardly any time getting going, however. You play as Noah, a member of the nation of Keves, who along with his comrades of him are locked in an existential struggle against the rival nation of Agnus. Both sides are indented to “flame clocks” inside giant mech bases called Ferronis that hoover up life energy from those failed in battle. People are born as children and only live 10 years, or less if they don’t take enough lives to feed the clock. It’s sort of like battle royale by way of Philip K. Dick.

Things start off with a big battle before quickly pivoting to otherworldly intrigue. Noah and his crew run into rival fighters from the opposing nation while on a reconnaissance mission only for both sides to be thrown into chaos after a mysterious old man tells them they’re all pawns in a larger plot. The next thing you know, cyborgs are fighting, characters are fusing together, and a party six characters deep is delivered into your hands to fight your way to the bottom of Xenoblade 3‘s secrets.

Screenshot: Nintendo / KotakuScreenshot: Nintendo / Kotaku

This all happens within the first couple hours. I spent most of my time before and after battling across fields, rivers, and mountain passes. Despite its heady premise and talkative ensemble, the heart of Xenoblade 3‘s gameplay remains classic JRPG grinding. Much of it can be accomplished on auto-pilot. Tougher battles against non-bosses are called out with special fonts over enemies’ heads denoting their extra power, better rewards, or both. And unlike in Xenoblade 2, the landscapes are once again generously peppered with collectible resources you can pick up merely by walking over them. No more stopping every five seconds to press a button prompt to discover extra pieces of crafting wood or cooking mushrooms.

Combat-wise, I’m still unlocking some of the core features, but customizing special attacks (called “Arts”) in battle and changing character classes open up pretty early. It’s easy to see how these interlocking systems, which include a certain level of mixing and matching of active and passive abilities, can lead to lots of satisfying tinkering in-between marquee boss fights. And while I was originally worried that having six party members on screen at once would make battles needlessly chaotic, being able to swap between them at will adds a level of welcome micromanagement to Xenoblade 3 that I’ve sorely missed in previous games (the user interface remains a nightmare).

Screenshots: NintendoScreenshots: Nintendo

My only real qualm is that the heavy tutorializing is sometimes overly explanatory and unskippable. Do I need the game to walk me through equipping a new piece of armor step-by-step? No. Similarly, I don’t need the characters chatting about various game systems to make them feel vaguely a part of the sci-fi world building. People are joining bodies and becoming cyborgs. Magical costume changes and young adults weidling giant swords is the least of my worries.

Fortunately, none of this gets too much in the way. I’ve spent the last couple of days really enjoying Xenoblade 3 while I was playing it and continually thinking about it when I wasn’t. That rarely happens for me these days. Especially when it comes to JRPGs. but for now, Xenoblade 3 has managed to combine some of my favorite elements from Monolith’s past games (mechs, cabals, free-flowing combat) with what’s been working so well in others. Namely the group of student fighters praising, questioning, and sniping at each other while trying to overthrow the powers that be and while keeping cringe to a minimum. It worked in person 5, Fire Emblem: Three Housesand, currently, it’s really working for me in Xenoblade 3. I’ve got several dozens more hours to go before I know whether the rest of the game measures up.

Categories
Entertainment

Job applicant responds to rejection letter with a hilarious meme – and ends up scoring an INTERVIEW

‘Y tho’: Job applicant responds to a rejection letter with a hilarious meme – and ends up scoring an INTERVIEW with the company

  • TikTok user @swedishswan shared her story in a now-viral video, saying she had woken up to ‘another rejection letter’ from a job she had applied for
  • She explained that she really wanted the job, and with nothing less to lose, she replied to the email with a meme
  • The meme in question is a painting of Pope Leo X by Fernando Botero that has the phrase ‘y tho’ written underneath his face
  • Much to her surprise, the move ended up reinvigorating the company’s interest in her, and she got a follow-up email asking for an interview

A job applicant who had nothing else to lose responded to a rejection letter with a hilarious meme — and ended up scoring an interview with the company.

TikTok user @swedishswan shared her story in a now-viral video, explaining that she had woken up to ‘another rejection letter’ from a job that she had applied for.

‘I really kind of wanted this job, so I took a lesson from Gen Z, and I sent them back this,’ she said, sharing a picture of the meme she responded with.

The meme in question is a painting of Pope Leo X by Fernando Botero that has the phrase ‘y tho’ written underneath his face.

TikTok user @swedishswan revealed in a now viral-video that she ended up scoring a job interview after replying to a rejection letter with a meme

TikTok user @swedishswan revealed in a now viral-video that she ended up scoring a job interview after replying to a rejection letter with a meme

The meme in question is a painting of Pope Leo X by Fernando Botero that has the phrase 'y tho' written underneath his face

The meme in question is a painting of Pope Leo X by Fernando Botero that has the phrase ‘y tho’ written underneath his face

Much to her surprise, the move ended up reinvigorating the company’s interest in her as a job applicant.

‘They sent me another email saying they do, in fact, now want to interview me,’ she said. ‘I can’t believe that worked.’

The video has been viewed more than five million times and has received thousands of comments from delighted viewers.

‘These are the stories that keep me going in life,’ one person wrote, while another added: ‘As a recruiter, if someone felt that to me, I would ABSOLUTELY want an interview.’

‘Responding to a rejection email was literally how I got my job now,’ someone else commented. ‘I kept thinking: what are they gonna do, NOT hire me MORE?’

'I really kind of wanted this job, so I took a lesson from Gen Z,' she said, adding: 'I can't believe that worked'

'I really kind of wanted this job, so I took a lesson from Gen Z,' she said, adding: 'I can't believe that worked'

‘I really kind of wanted this job, so I took a lesson from Gen Z,’ she said, adding: ‘I can’t believe that worked’

The TikTok user was likely inspired by Samantha Jane's viral video in which she recounted how her job recruiter sister Hannah received the same meme after sending a rejection email

The TikTok user was likely inspired by Samantha Jane’s viral video in which she recounted how her job recruiter sister Hannah received the same meme after sending a rejection email

TikTok user @swedishswan never shared where she got the idea from, but she was likely inspired by another viral video that took the internet by storm earlier this year.

Samantha Jane, who is known as @samantha_jane on the platform, revealed in March that her sister Hannah, a job recruiter, received the same meme in response to a rejection email.

The bold move didn’t work in this case, but plenty of people thought it was amusing, including Samantha.

The TikTok user has since made her account private, but she described the response being ‘the most Gen Z thing’ she has ever seen, according to The Independent.

‘No context, no other text, just the meme. I love it so much,’ she added.

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