Sunday, March 18, 2018

Youtube daily report Mar 18 2018

[♪ INTRO]

Humans have done a lot to pollute the world we live in,

contaminating soils and water with everything from oil to radioactive waste.

Luckily, some parts of nature have evolved to survive this pollution,

and might even be able to help us clean up these contaminants.

Using living organisms to get rid of toxic waste is called bioremediation.

It's safe and cost-efficient, and we're discovering new ways to do it all the time.

Bacteria are often the go-to bioremediators, but certain plants and animals can pitch in too.

Here are 7 organisms with the potential to make our world a cleaner place.

Fungi are so useful for bioremediation that there's a special word just for them: mycoremediation.

Fungi grow quickly and are great decomposers, using networks of

threadlike structures called mycelia to burrow into organic material like

decomposing trees and inorganic material like rocks.

Mycelia are actually the main body of a fungus;

mushrooms are just a temporary reproductive structure.

As they dig through the soil, mycelia ooze a variety of chemicals

known as extracellular metabolites.

These are enzymes and other compounds that break down molecules, including potentially toxic ones,

into pieces that fungus can digest and absorb.

Researchers who study fungi have found over 120 different enzymes

being produced by different species.

And in the 1990s, a mycologist named Paul Stamets helped develop a strain of oyster mushroom

with enzymes called peroxidases, which can break down hydrocarbon molecules

in oil-contaminated soil.

This is a big deal because oil contaminants can take a really long time to decompose,

and have all sorts of toxic effects on the ecosystem in the meantime.

Oyster mushrooms and other fungi have been deployed as an experiment to

clean up the aftermath of oil extraction in the Amazon rainforest,

and in an oil-contaminated creek in New York City.

That's something to think about the next time you're picking mushrooms off your pizza!

It turns out that cheerful sunflower plants can be great at sucking up radioactive contaminants.

After a nuclear disaster, radioactive isotopes typically stick around in soil and water,

continuing to emit harmful ionizing radiation for decades.

But some of these radioactive molecules are physically and chemically similar

to some nutrients that plants need, like potassium and calcium.

So as some plants grow, their roots can absorb the radioactive isotopes

right alongside these nutrients.

Sunflowers work especially well for this, because they can grow pretty fast

and can thrive in a lot of different climates.

What's more, they accumulate these isotopes in their shoots and stems,

making it fairly easy to dispose of contaminated plant matter.

After the meltdown at Chernobyl in 1986, a company working on the cleanup

built rafts of sunflowers with roots dangling into contaminated ponds.

The sunflower plants sucked up cesium-137 and strontium-90.

And removing those contaminants with this method cost only two to six dollars

for every thousand gallons of water, which is pretty cheap!

The method was less effective for soil, because some radioactive isotopes

can nestle tightly into tiny cavities in clay, where they're harder to extract.

But sunflowers work well enough that they've also been used to try and clean up

groundwater at a uranium-processing plant in Ohio,

contaminated springs at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory

in Tennessee, and even around Fukushima.

Bivalves are mollusks with two-piece hinged shells.

This is the group that includes clams, oysters, and mussels.

They're constantly filtering the water around them,

because they're after tiny, free-floating organisms like plankton.

But in the process, they also suck up chemicals like weed killers, pharmaceuticals, and flame retardants,

as well as removing gunky sediment and algae that can mess up ecosystems.

This can be rough on the bivalves' immune system, but in many cases they survive.

This has led to a lot of interest in restoring natural oyster

populations in places like Chesapeake Bay.

And some scientists are even experimenting with bivalves in other places in need of clean-up.

For a 2014 study, researchers looked at two bivalves:

a mussel species from California and an invasive variety of Asian clam.

They put these species into tanks and flowed wastewater

spiked with 7 chemical contaminants through them.

After 72 hours, the bivalves had sucked up and processed 80 percent of one contaminant,

triclocarban, and smaller amounts of the others.

Triclocarban is an antibacterial chemical that's often used in hand soaps.

If it's in the water supply, it'll kill some bacteria.

But any microbes in the water that happen to mutate and survive

will reproduce and be more resistant to triclocarban,

or possibly other antibacterial compounds they come across.

Which isn't good for us if they cause disease.

Plus, triclocarban can also have effects on hormones in living things.

The same group of scientists then tested their bivalves in a polluted lake in San Francisco

known to have high concentrations of E. coli bacteria.

And some strains of E. coli can make people sick.

They fed water from the lake through tanks of bivalves and took some samples of the

water going in and the water coming out.

And turns out the mussels efficiently filtered the bacteria out of the lakewater,

digesting it with no apparent bad effects.

Lead-contaminated water has been in the news a lot in recent years,

partially because of the ongoing crisis in Flint, Michigan.

Lead builds up in our teeth and bones, spreading to other parts of our body from there

and interfering with the brain, liver, and kidneys.

Which… becomes a big problem.

We've been developing filtration devices that remove lead from water,

but a recent study shows that a species of moss may be able to help.

Japanese researchers found a possible lead decontamination option in bonfire moss,

known to grow well in sites contaminated with heavy metals,

which are just metallic elements that tend to be pretty dense and toxic.

The scientists exposed the moss to solutions with

varying concentrations of 15 different metals.

About a day later, analysis with a mass-spectrometer

showed that the cells of the moss samples that were exposed to lead

had absorbed enough to make it around 74% of their dry weight.

Most of that lead was in the cell walls of the moss,

and the scientists couldn't determine the exact mechanism.

But a different analysis showed that these cell walls contained an unusually large amount

of a compound called polygalacturonic acid.

So they think it might be involved in binding lead atoms somehow.

Applying this to real-world cleanup is still in the future,

but the researchers definitely think it has promise.

Especially because the lead uptake worked across different conditions.

Who knows, maybe someday lush carpets of moss will be a part of our water treatment systems.

There's a humble-looking plant species with white flowers called alpine pennycress.

It's a member of the cabbage family, and it has an unexpected superpower.

When it grows in soil contaminated with heavy metals,

it concentrates a bunch of them in its leaves.

Like, more than 100 times the heavy metal concentrations that a typical plant can handle.

That's why it's considered a hyperaccumulator.

There are actually hundreds of hyperaccumulator species in the world,

but alpine pennycress is pretty unique.

It's one of only three species known to take in cadmium,

and the only one that can do both cadmium and zinc.

Like with lead, chronic exposure to these heavy metals

can have a variety of health impacts on humans.

Cadmium can cause severe liver and kidney problems, and too much zinc can cause vomiting,

fatigue, or mess with your immune system.

Part of the secret behind this plant's ability lies in specialized transport proteins,

although other molecular pieces are probably involved.

In most plants, transport proteins regulate the accumulation of heavy metals in cells,

letting the plant take in low levels but

rejecting them once the concentration reaches a certain point.

But alpine pennycress seems to lack this kind of regulation;

it just keeps sucking up more heavy metals with seemingly no adverse effects.

Unfortunately, pennycress plants are too small to have a big remediation impact on their own,

but researchers have been looking into how to

harness the molecular mechanisms at work.

In 2011, for example, Chinese researchers managed to express the gene for a key alpine

pennycress enzyme in tobacco, which significantly increased its ability to accumulate cadmium.

Now, that tobacco plant with an alpine pennycress gene wasn't the

first tobacco plant engineered for bioremediation.

In 1999, researchers in the UK inserted a gene from a bacteria species into tobacco.

The gene coded for a protein called PETN reductase,

which is capable of digesting two nitrogen-based compounds.

One's called pentaerythritol tetranitrate, or PETN,

and the other is glycerol trinitrate, or GTN.

Both of these chemicals are powerful explosives, and sometimes military and industrial activity

leaves trace amounts of them behind in soil.

Which is not good.

When the scientists tested out their creation,

they found that the plain tobacco plants they used as controls

could barely grow at all in soils containing even just a little bit of GTN.

The engineered plants, on the other hand, not only sprouted and grew at a normal rate,

they also absorbed and broke down the explosive compounds.

Since then, scientists have turned their attention to another nitrogen-based explosive that you've

probably heard of: 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, or TNT.

For a 2007 study, tobacco plants engineered with both the PETN reductase gene and a second

bacterial gene for breaking down nitrogen compounds were grown in soil spiked with TNT.

Not only did the plants lower the concentration of TNT in the polluted soil, but in doing

so, they also seemed to help out nearby microbes.

Both the biomass and metabolic activity of bacteria

growing around the roots of tobacco plants increased.

And since microbes are essential for soil health, that's good news too.

Wax moth caterpillars are probably most familiar to two kinds of people: anglers and beekeepers.

They're bred and sold as premium fishing bait.

And in the wild, they eat beeswax and are a major beekeeping pest.

But a scientist and amateur beekeeper discovered by accident

that they'll also chow down on something else: plastic.

She removed some wax moth caterpillars from one of her hives and put them into a plastic bag.

And later, she was surprised to find that they'd eaten their way out.

Then she did a follow-up study in a lab, which was published in 2017.

And experiments showed that in just half a day, a hundred worms could eat

almost a tenth of a gram of polyethylene.

Scientists also smashed up caterpillars and spread the goo on plastic surfaces.

And that goo ate holes in polyethylene, too.

This test confirmed that an enzyme in the caterpillar was truly breaking down the plastic,

they weren't just chewing it up into smaller bits.

This is a big deal because polyethylene is used in a lot of packaging.

Some estimates say about 40% of the plastic products today are made of this stuff,

and it doesn't easily break down on its own.

We don't know yet exactly what enzymes are involved in the caterpillars' plastic-eating prowess,

but presumably it's the same ones they use for digesting wax.

So, the next step will be identifying those enzymes and figuring out how to

put them to work breaking down plastic waste.

Some have raised concerns that breeding lots of these

wax-eating caterpillars could put bees at further risk, but maybe their

plastic-destroying genes could be stuck into bacteria or something else.

So if science looks hard enough, there's probably a plant, animal, mushroom,

or microbe out there that can help us deal with pretty much any kind of toxic waste.

Adaptations can be pretty incredible.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about pollution and how it's being cleaned up,

check out our video about some of the most toxic areas in the United States, called superfund sites.

[♪ OUTRO]

For more infomation >> 7 Organisms That Can Clean Toxic Waste - Duration: 11:51.

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Watch "No One" New Release

For more infomation >> Watch "No One" New Release

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NOVO CORTE + CONSELHO CABELO DESCOLORIDO / NOUVELLE COUPE + CONSEILS • @wenddel - Duration: 8:24.

For more infomation >> NOVO CORTE + CONSELHO CABELO DESCOLORIDO / NOUVELLE COUPE + CONSEILS • @wenddel - Duration: 8:24.

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Organizer for Bracelets Step by step - Duration: 9:07.

Hello friends, welcome to your channel Arte in Your Hands, for today we are going to teach you

to make this arm, It is usually used in costume jewelery, in

the jewelries, to exhibit their bracelets and sell them, but we

we can also make them part to have them in our home and thus have the bracelets

ordered, I hope you join me in all the

step by step so that they learn to do it together with me, Welcome!

and these are

the materials that we are going to use for perform arm bracelets

then a sheet of the color that you want in foam or rubber eva more or less an eighth

scissors, a skewer stick, pencil, a piece of wood mdf or the sea

easier to get 14 cm x 8 centimeters

are you normally the carpenters or cabinetmakers, often throw away the remnants

then you can recycle or reuse and have it cut off from this measure or

larger or smaller depending on the size of the arm

this is a stick a frame that has an average of 9 centimeters in length and

width of 2 centimeters, can also use the round ones, they are also

perfect for these projects but I I had this ...

this is one of the tubes

internal that comes in aluminum foil, the kitchen paper, the more resistant

be better because you will have more life

also glue for wood, paints

acrylics in the colors that suit them most like, in this case I'm going to use yellow,

fuchsia or strong pink and turquoise blue. brushes, a hammer, I will use

also spearhead, silicone hot with the gun, a piece of

cardboard also that we are not using to give firmness to the project and

these are some tips without head for wood, of a measure of 3/4 of an inch

then with these materials we started

We started the project doing the following we are going to take the table

which is going to be the base and we look for the center, as she has a measure of 14

x 8 cm, then we place the center and then we take the frame, we apply

glue for wood

Let it dry for a while, let it be well located

and then so that the piece remains firm

we take lace of these for wood that have no 3/4 "head and

with the help of the hammer then we would nail this part into the base ...

here as you can see, key the lace

As it has no head then it remains sign the lower part of what the arm is

Now what I'm going to do is

this is another aluminum foil tube base

then I have another one that I cut to 20 centimeters, so that it remains a size

right, the hole that I have here is the measure of laying the foundation, take the

measure mark and cut with the scalpel spear point, remove the piece that does not

served and the court and this is the one that is going to stay, it's going to tie us together with the base

Now what I'm going to do is I'm going to start decorating and painting with the

acrylic paintings that I teach to the Start

then I will decorate it in one color turquoise blue and then make some flowers

with this yellow and with this fuchsia ...

it has completely dried the base of the arm

for the bracelets then what are we going to do is decorate, with the yellow tone

with the end of a brush I will start making a few points so

random

so for the whole base you can decorate it with more you like ..

but for example this yellow is very nice and highlights on this turquoise blue

I already made the points in yellow now what what I'm going to do is in this fuchsia tone

I'm going to make other points around the so that they can form flowers

term the entire base and then this is how the

basis of the project, we wait for it to dry and meanwhile we begin to work the arm

now then to the body of what would be

the arm where we're going to put the bracelets we will cover with a piece

in foam or rubber eva, this has a measurement of 20 centimeters and the contour

of 12.3 centimeters, I'm going to cut a piece that you have already pointed out

previously with the skewer stick so as not to damage or stain and what we are going

to do is cut

considering the Measure the circle of the cardboard tube

We are going to take out 2 pieces in foami (rubber eva) and 2 pieces in the recycled cardboard, in this

that we were using what we're going to do is we're going to paste the pieces of

paperboard

we locate the cardboard tube that is left well from end to end in the piece of

foami (rubber eva) let's start to hit but

before hitting, before doing it let's take this cut

let's use the scissors or the scalpel any of the 2 and we're going

to cut a little

we remove so that it is well that space and the same thing we do with the

other side

when you have already cut exactly tailored

then I start to stick with silicone hot

I have already stuck it then now what I'm going to do is put the piece of cardboard

and foami in the extremes

here at the end if you want Cover imperfections can decorate

with a bit of rat tail cord, the piece was ready

now we are going to join or hit the base that we decorate

what we are going to do

is that we apply glue and we're going to enter then through the hole, we make a

little bit of pressure, so that it comes in and so then since that would give the

piece, the arm for the bracelets ....

and so then the project is already

finished as you can see this is a idea in which we can have ordered

the bracelets or also when we have business is a way of showing them and

do that in an orderly manner our Clients see what we have for them

then I hope you like it put in practice

remember that we read your comments and suggestions, a hug for all of you

our subscribers and subscribers that They see us all over the world and we see each other in

an upcoming video here on your channel Arte en Tus Manos

For more infomation >> Organizer for Bracelets Step by step - Duration: 9:07.

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J'avais l'habitude de jeter la peau de la pastèque jusqu'à ce que mon mari me dise quelque.. - Duration: 5:38.

For more infomation >> J'avais l'habitude de jeter la peau de la pastèque jusqu'à ce que mon mari me dise quelque.. - Duration: 5:38.

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My Honest Review of Synergy Spanish 2018! - Duration: 2:39.

Hey Youtube what's up its James Sierra in this video I'm gonna give you My Honest Review about Synergy Spanish.

Synergy Spanish is a Spanish product app ,which was developed by Mr.

Marcus Santamaria, Marc Santamaria basically is an English Professor that was working in Mexico

teaching English to people who want to learn the English language.

While Marcus was working in Mexico he encountered difficulties being able to communicate effectively in Spanish

To talk to people and also to get by so Marcus has developed an urge to learn Spanish, to be able to communicate effectively.

So during hard years of hard work and dedication

He was able to level

down his fluency in Spanish and

today he's very fluent in Spanish so he created this program,

which has been able to help many many people to learn Spanish conversation and also to comprehend effectively Spanish

and as Marcus says

138 words and 88,000 phrases could be used to be able to communicate effectively in Spanish

This product is really good because it provides the newbie the opportunity to be able to

grasp the Spanish information such as words and phrases and put them into sentences and also being able to comprehend the information

which, is in the Spanish language and use the different types of memory techniques,

dialects, dialogues and also being able to

communicate in any type of different situation while you're traveling to Spanish-speaking destination or working people who speak Spanish or

being able to understand a conversation. I

highly recommend the program because it's gonna provide you a great foundation to be able to

comprehend Spanish effectively not only that being able to talk to people and

basically being able to describe how you feel in any type of situation,

being able to talk to family and friends and most of all being able to have the independence to

express how certain things are around you so if you're very interested in a program that's gonna help you to learn Spanish conversation

and also to be able to comprehend

vocabulary then I highly recommend Synergy Spanish because you're gonna be on your path to

fluency of Spanish but it's gonna take you hard work and dedication and daily practice and using the program.

So if you have any questions please feel free to shoot out

to me an email at support@jamesierra.com . I look forward to assisting you with any question you may have.

Thank you have a good one!

For more infomation >> My Honest Review of Synergy Spanish 2018! - Duration: 2:39.

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《歌手》播出前一天霍尊临时换歌!李泉和她均被淘汰,霍尊泪奔 - Duration: 3:19.

For more infomation >> 《歌手》播出前一天霍尊临时换歌!李泉和她均被淘汰,霍尊泪奔 - Duration: 3:19.

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그렇게 웃지마, 설레 - 박보검 미소에 '심쿵'해 정색한 이효리 - Duration: 2:34.

For more infomation >> 그렇게 웃지마, 설레 - 박보검 미소에 '심쿵'해 정색한 이효리 - Duration: 2:34.

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Ref:rain Aimer(エメ) フル 歌詞付き (画面下欄の右から4番目の字幕ボタンを押すと歌詞が表示されます) - Duration: 4:54.

For more infomation >> Ref:rain Aimer(エメ) フル 歌詞付き (画面下欄の右から4番目の字幕ボタンを押すと歌詞が表示されます) - Duration: 4:54.

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ice cream lol-エルオーエル-  フル 歌詞付き (画面下欄の右から4番目の字幕ボタンを押すと歌詞が表示されます) - Duration: 4:54.

For more infomation >> ice cream lol-エルオーエル-  フル 歌詞付き (画面下欄の右から4番目の字幕ボタンを押すと歌詞が表示されます) - Duration: 4:54.

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[INDO SUB] FULL NCT LIFE K-Food Challenge Ep.1 - Duration: 38:31.

For more infomation >> [INDO SUB] FULL NCT LIFE K-Food Challenge Ep.1 - Duration: 38:31.

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Nova novela das seis estreia terça com romance, humor e aventura - Duration: 8:52.

For more infomation >> Nova novela das seis estreia terça com romance, humor e aventura - Duration: 8:52.

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C'è posta per te, Paolo accusa Ferdinando: "Sei un bugiardo" - Duration: 3:59.

For more infomation >> C'è posta per te, Paolo accusa Ferdinando: "Sei un bugiardo" - Duration: 3:59.

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This is What Happens to Your Body if you Eat Flax Seed Every Day - Health and Fitness || Life Care - Duration: 2:23.

Flax seeds are an integral part of many healthy eating regimens, and it's no wonder because

they promote your overall health, and protect your body from a long list of conditions.

Have you ever wondered, what will happen to your body if you start consuming flax seeds

every day?

The seed provides oil rich in omega-3, digestible proteins, and lignans.

In addition to being one of the richest sources of α-linolenic acid oil and lignans, flax

seed is an essential source of high quality protein and soluble fiber and has considerable

potential as a source of phenolic compounds.

It's no wonder that it has been dubbed a superfood and you should start consuming it

immediately.

This is what happens if you start consuming flax seeds every day.

It's rich in omega 3 fatty acids, which have an amazing effect on your overall health.

Flaxseed can lower your bad cholesterol levels by 50%.

It can lower your triglycerides as well, by 25% to 60%.

In addition to lowering your cholesterol and triglycerides, flaxseeds prevents the onset

of diabetes by regulating your blood sugar levels.

Three tablespoons of flaxseed oil contain as much omega 6 and omega 9 fatty acids as

half a kilogram of fish.

Flaxseed is rich in fibers, so it's effective against constipation and helps digestion.

The lignans in flaxseed have preventative properties against cancer, cardiovascular

diseases and osteoporosis.

They also reduce inflammation and ease the effects of arthritis and lupus.

It can also stimulate weight loss, because it prolongs the feeling of satiety.

This is not a comprehensive list of all the benefits of flaxseed consummation, but just

a short list of the most important ones.

If you aren't consuming it, start right now and promote your overall health and well-being.

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