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Welcome to Your Daily Dot where Dot will share tips, advice, and stories on how we can make our world better. |
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All Dear Dot illustrations by Elissa Turnbull. |
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Dear Reader,
For all the information we have at our fingertips โ all the graphs, the charts, the analyses โ we can thank scientists who have gathered and collated and discerned. They get inadequate thanks for the work they do. Theyโre criticized when their predictions turn out to be off (even if they trend accurately, there is a massive disinformation campaign that pounces on every tiny inaccuracy), and theyโre often ignored even by those of us who respect their work, because โฆ who wants to read bad news?
They continue to do the work because they know itโs important, and that companies, governments, nonprofits, and academic institutions canโt (wonโt!) make wise and crucial choices without reliable data.
Which is why, today, Dotโs Climate Champs are those who continue to show up, monitor dwindling populations, catalog melting glaciers, witness the last of a species. Thereโs a cost to the work they do, and itโs paid in sleepless nights, in frustration, in stress, and in despair.
Biographic magazine gives us a deep dive into the long tail of scientific research documenting the impact of avian flu on a gannet colony. When researchers arrived in 2022, โeverything seemed normal.โ Then, in early June, the first gannet on Bass Rock tested positive for HPAI. The article quotes one of the scientists as saying that โTwo weeks later, it was absolutely devastating. It was just so quiet. I donโt think a seabird colony is ever quiet. But at Bass Rock, it was just eerie.โ
By monthโs end, there were more than 5,000 dead birds, some of them birds that the researchers knew well. โTheyโd literally sat there and died whilst incubating eggs,โ one researcher says. โIt was just heartbreaking to see what [the virus] did to them.โ
The population is slowly recovering. The researchers are too. But this work is not without cost to them, and so, today they are Dotโs Climate Champs for continuing to bring us valuable information to help us better understand and tend to our world.
Admiringly,
Dot
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