Q&A: What is a science major that studies fish?
Question by Derek: What is a science major that studies fish?
I live in San Diego and I want to take a major in collage that studies fish and their behaivor but i’am not sure if it is marine science or fisheries biology?
Best answer:
Answer by Lmfao Roflcopter
its referred to as cheesology
It’s all a very irrational way of naming studies
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Q&A: Why is climate change science chief against marine nature reserve?
Question by Meadow F: Why is climate change science chief against marine nature reserve?
From The Times (London):
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“A company belonging to the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser is opposing plans to create the world’s biggest marine reserve. His company holds a government contract to manage fishing in the area, which would be banned if the reserve were created.
The Marine Resources Assessment Group (MRAG) Ltd was established by Professor Beddington, a renowned expert on marine fisheries, in 1986.
In 1991 a 200-mile exclusion zone was declared around the Chagos Islands and MRAG won the contract to manage the fishing. The following year Professor Beddington became special adviser to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office on the fisheries around Chagos. Although the management contract must be put out for tender every five years, MRAG has always won it. Neither MRAG nor the Foreign Office will confirm its value, but MacAlister Elliott, a company that tendered for the work in 2005, put in a bid of £1.4 million for three years.
Willie Mackenzie, an ocean campaigner for Greenpeace, said: “Scientists tell us that marine reserves are crucial to protect marine life. Unfortunately it seems that a company owned by the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser didn’t get the memo.”
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What’s really strange is that coral reefs are supposed to be especially at risk from climate change, so why is the UK government’s climate science tsar and chief scientific advisor opposing the establishment of the world’s largest marine reserve? Is it because he owns a company that does very nicely from government licences to fish there for endangered tuna and other fish?
And what does this say about ethical conflicts in those who advise governments on science whilst having business interests in the same area?
Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/environment/article6997414.ece
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Best answer:
Answer by Peter J
Could be, or it could be that if what they predict comes to pass, the coral reefs will thrive, inspite of their predictions they’ll die.
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Would you hire me? Your thoughts, please.?
Question by Victory27: Would you hire me? Your thoughts, please.?
I’m considering a new business (ad)venture, and I’m wondering what kind of market potential there is for it.
First, a little background:
I’m fluent in both Spanish and English, love to travel, I’m a great planner, love to learn as well as share what I know, and I hold two bachelor’s degrees. My degrees are in Fisheries & Wildlife Science and International Studies. I have lived and studied in both Mexico and Ecuador.
My idea for a business is still forming in my mind, so I would love any suggestions you might have. Basically, I want to work as a sort of travel agent/tour guide/interpreter.
I would plan and book trips for clients and could be booked to go along as tour guide &/or interpreter. I think I would specialize in eco-tourism throughout latin America, the Caribbean, and other Spanish speaking areas. Of course historical, cultural, musical, artistic, archeological, whatever the client wants aspects could be included. Clients could choose from different levels of involvement on my part; from, say, just booking and giving some pointers and sending them on their way to planning, booking, accompaniment, translating, tour-guiding, etc…
Do you think this could be a successful venture for me?
Do you have any ideas, opinions, suggestions about my idea?
What should my first step be?
Thanks in advance!
Best answer:
Answer by Mike C
I think this is a valid buisness idea, but your background doesn’t seem to include any stints as a travel agent.
What I’d suggest as a first step to shore up the travel industry knowledge is to spend a season working for a tour company as a guide. You can learn the business from the inside, and use that knowledge to figure how to launch and market your own firm.
While your doing the guide work, you can begin to formulate how to differentiate your business from others because while it’s a good idea, it’s certainly not unique in and of itself.
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What do you think of this business idea? Would you hire me?
Question by Victory27: What do you think of this business idea? Would you hire me?
I’m considering a new business (ad)venture, and I’m wondering what kind of market potential there is for it.
First, a little background:
I’m fluent in both Spanish and English, love to travel, I’m a great planner, love to learn as well as share what I know, and I hold two bachelor’s degrees. My degrees are in Fisheries & Wildlife Science and International Studies. I have lived and studied in both Mexico and Ecuador.
My idea for a business is still forming in my mind, so I would love any suggestions you might have. Basically, I want to work as a sort of travel agent/tour guide/interpreter.
I would plan and book trips for clients and could be booked to go along as tour guide &/or interpreter. I think I would specialize in eco-tourism throughout latin America, the Caribbean, and other Spanish speaking areas. Of course historical, cultural, musical, artistic, archaeological, whatever the client wants aspects could be included. Clients could choose from different levels of involvement on my part; from, say, just booking and giving some pointers and sending them on their way to planning, booking, accompaniment, translating, tour-guiding, etc…
Do you think this could be a successful venture for me?
Do you have any ideas, opinions, suggestions about my idea?
What should my first step be?
Thanks in advance!
Best answer:
Answer by Costa Rica ’03
To answer all your questions in one swoop: Check out Costa Rica.
Everything you mentioned is EXACTLY what is very applicable to that country.
The only drawback might be the competition, but if you are as good as you sound, you’ll make out like a bandit!
Yes, I would hire you.
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I did masters n Fisheries Biology,my question is that is there any schlorship of Japan for higher studies?
Question by zeeshan m: I did masters n Fisheries Biology,my question is that is there any schlorship of Japan for higher studies?
Best answer:
Answer by Looking for the truth…
I cannot be sure about scholarships, but I used to teach English in the department of fisheries at Kagoshima University. I can put you in touch with the professor in charge of Foreign Student Affairs. He is a very nice man and speaks English very well. Let me know if you are game.
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Q&A: Would you be shocked if media was wrong about global warming? Two articles below state to different thoughts..?
Question by Soundzzz Slappy: Would you be shocked if media was wrong about global warming? Two articles below state to different thoughts..?
ARTICLE: http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20090609/sc_mcclatchy/3249010
Scientists: Global warming has already changed oceans
WASHINGTON — In Washington state , oysters in some areas haven’t reproduced for four years, and preliminary evidence suggests that the increasing acidity of the ocean could be the cause. In the Gulf of Mexico , falling oxygen levels in the water have forced shrimp to migrate elsewhere.
Though two marine-derived drugs, one for treating cancer and the other for pain control, are on the market and 25 others are under development, the fungus growing on seaweed, bacteria in deep sea mud and sea fans that could produce life-saving medicines are under assault from changing the ocean conditions.
Researchers, scientists and Jacques Cousteau’s granddaughter painted a bleak picture Tuesday of the future of oceans and the “blue economy” of the nation’s coastal states.
The hearing before the oceans subcommittee of the Senate Commerce Committee was expected to focus on how the degradation of the oceans was affecting marine businesses and coastal communities. Instead, much of the testimony focused on how the waters that cover 70 percent of the planet are already changing because of global warming.
Ocean acidification or diseases that thrive in acidified, oxygen-depleted seawater could be responsible for oysters not reproducing in Washington state , said Brad Warren , who oversees the ocean health and acidification program of the Sustainable Fisheries Partnership in Seattle . A federal study found that two-thirds of larval blue crabs died when exposed to acidity levels like those currently measured off the West Coast , he said.
Federal studies also found acidity levels in the North Pacific and off Alaska are unusually high compared to other ocean regions. The high acidity is already taking a toll of such tiny species as pteropods, which are an important food for salmon and other fish.
As greenhouse gas emissions increase, billions of tons of carbon dioxide from smokestacks and vehicle tailpipes are absorbed by the oceans. The result is carbonic acid, which dilutes the “rich soup” of calcium carbonate in the seawater that many species, especially on the low end of the food chain, thrive in, Warren said.
“If we lose it, it is gone forever,” Warren said of the oceans’ delicate chemical balance.
In the Gulf of Mexico , Alexandra Cousteau said, the runoff down the Mississippi River from farms in the Midwest has created a dead zone the size of New Jersey where few species can survive. Wetlands in Louisiana are disappearing at the rate of 33 football fields a day as hurricanes grow in strength and frequency because of climate change, she said.
“We must start to realize that there can be no standalone policies, especially as they relate to our water resources,” Cousteau said. “Energy, transportation, climate change, infrastructure, agriculture, urban development: this is where our ocean policy must begin. It is all interconnected.”
Others testified that the economic toll eventually could be enormous for fishing and other ocean-related industries and for the nation’s coastal communities. Taken together, the ocean and coastal economies, including the Great Lakes , provide more than 50 million jobs and make up nearly 60 percent of the nation’s economy.
“Significant environmental changes, such as sea level and sea temperature rise, oxygen depletion and ocean acidification, will dramatically change the landscape, restructuring an array of natural and physical assets as well as cultural and economic,” said Judith Kidlow of the National Ocean Economics Program. “Over the next 30 years, the nation will see the most significant changes in the ocean and coastal economies since the arrival of industrialization and urbanization.”
The subcommittee’s chairman, Sen. Maria Cantwell , D- Wash. , suggested a doubling of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration budget, which is now about $ 4 billion , and giving the agency additional responsibilities.
Cantwell, however, said the key has to be passing comprehensive climate change legislation to reduce carbon emissions.
“Protecting our oceans is an environmental and economic imperative,” Cantwell said
VERSUS
ARTICLE :
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/globalwarming/4029837/Global-warming-Reasons-why-it-might-not-actually-exist.html
Global warming: Reasons why it might not actually exist
2008 was the year man-made global warming was disproved, according to the Telegraph’s Christopher Booker. Sceptics have long argued that there are other explanations for climate change other than man-made CO2 and here we look at some of the arguments put forward by those who believe that global warming is all a hoax.
Some icebergs are melting -but not necessarily because of mankind’s actions
Temperatures are falling, not rising
As Christopher Booker says in his review of 2008, temperatures have been dropping in a wholly unpredicted way ove
Best answer:
Answer by jay j
I still wouldn’t take the risk. I mean, global worming makes sense. To answer your question, yes i would be surprised.
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How do you pick a major when you have two diverse passions?
Question by Ferret: How do you pick a major when you have two diverse passions?
I’m a second semester freshman and I’m really starting to question my choice of major. I’m currently majoring in Wildlife and Fisheries, and I’m doing so because I’ve always loved animals and nature in general. In high school I took an AP Environmental Science course and enjoyed it (and made a 5 on the test). I enjoy attending “talks” given by scientists describing their work and findings in my areas of interest and I made an A in introductory Biology and Ecology. On the other hand ever since 4th grade I’ve loved acting. All throughout high school I was involved in theatre and took part in around 13 productions ranging from full size musicals to children’s shows. I love acting and seriously considered majoring in it once, but decided against it because I didn’t want to get stuck doing a “liberal arts major type of job” (i.e. Business and/or anything involving an office), teaching (although it wouldn’t be terrible), or starving. Additionally I have no desire to live in California or New York (but there could be worse things). So here’s the deal. I haven’t been in a production since high school and I miss it. Additionally I’m finding several subtle (and not so subtle) things about science that I dislike (I’m not enthralled in any of my classes and I fear there may be a number of courses that I have to take that will be that way), I’m not a big math person, and I’m not big on manual labor or living outdoors for extended periods of time. I know that I haven’t been doing science for very long, but I’m beginning to fear that I’m interested in the subjects that science deals with, and not science itself…although of course I’m not sure. Any advice for what I should do?
Best answer:
Answer by Nicole
honestly, do both. if you are passionate about both things then work towards both degrees and then see what one you can find a job with.
personally i love science and history so i am majoring in pharmacy with minors in history and spanish.
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