【18】科技:Study: Planet-Warming Gasses Make Food Less Nutritious
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Study: Planet-Warming Gasses Make Food Less Nutritious
Laborers transplant rice seedlings in a paddy field in Qalyub, in the El-Kalubia governorate, northeast of Cairo, Egypt, June 1, 2016.
Researchers studied the effects of one such gas -- carbon dioxide -- on rice. The researchers grew rice plants in a controlled environment. They set carbon dioxide levels to what scientists are predicting for our planet by the end of the century. They found that the resulting rice crops had lower than normal levels of vitamins, minerals and protein.
The researchers said the effects of planet-warming gasses would be most severe for the poorest citizens in some of the least developed countries. These people generally eat the most rice and have the least complex diets, they noted.
A report on the study was published in the journal Science Advances.
In the experiment, scientists grew 18 kinds of rice in fields in China and Japan. They pumped carbon dioxide gas over the plants in an effort to create the atmosphere of the future.
Rice grown under high carbon dioxide conditions had, on average, 13 to 30 percent lower levels of four B vitamins and 10 percent less protein. The crops also had 8 percent less iron and 5 percent less zinc than rice grown under normal conditions.
However, vitamin E levels increased by about 13 percent on average.
The results are bad news, "especially for the nutrition of the poorer population in less-developed countries," said the University of Tokyo’s Kazuhiko Kobayashi, who helped to write the report.
That includes about 600 million people in Indonesia, Cambodia, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Laos and other nations, mainly in Southeast Asia, the report said.
Other studies have shown that higher temperatures from climate change and weather extremes will reduce food production. But scientists are finding that rising levels of carbon dioxide and other planet-warming gasses threaten food quality.
Earlier studies showed that wheat, maize, rice, field peas and soybeans grown under high carbon dioxide conditions all had lower levels of protein and minerals. Scientists estimated that almost 150 million people might be at risk of having too little protein or zinc in their diet by 2050.
One of the scientists is Sam Myers of Harvard University in the American state of Massachusetts. He said that findings like this are an example of the surprises climate change creates.
"My concern is, there are many more surprises to come," he said.
Myers noted that pollution, loss of some species, destruction of forests, and other human activities are likely to produce unexpected problems. He said that you cannot completely change all the natural systems that living organisms have grown to depend on over millions of years without having effects come back to affect our own health.
The new study suggests a way to lower the nutritional harm of climate change.
One way, Kobayashi said, is to grow different forms of rice that have shown to be more resistant to higher carbon dioxide levels.
I’m Phil Dierking.
Steve Baragona wrote this story for VOANews.com. Phil Dierking adapted his story for Learning English. George Grow was the editor.
Have you seen plants that have been affected by climate change? Write to us in the Comments Section or on our Facebook page.
______________________________________________________________
Words in This Story
journal - n. a magazine that reports on things of special interest to a particular group of people
species - n. a group of related animals or plants that is smaller than a genus
往期回顾:
【17】科技:Pill Combines Biology, Electronics to Recognize Diseases
【16】科技: Study: Humans Know How to Throw Their Weight Around
【15】科技: Smart Farm Equipment to Greatly Reduce Use of Chemicals
【14】科技: Jupiter’s Moon Europa May Be Top Candidate for Life
【13】科技: Electrified Road Can Charge Moving Vehicle
【12】科技:Marijuana Growers Turn to Hemp to Fight Oversupply
【11】科技: Scientists Change Biology with Technology
【10】科技:Scientists: Ozone-Eating Chemical Mysteriously Rising
【9】科技:California to Require Solar Power for New Homes
【8】科技: US Army Doctors 'Grows' Ear on Soldier's Arm
【7】科技Storms, Nature Uncover Bones on New York’s Island of the...
【6】科技: Top 10 New Google Features Announced at I/O 2018
【5】科技: Antibiotic Resistance Spreads Quickly from Animals to...
【4】科技:Scientists Observe Birth of Huge Galaxy Cluster 1 hour ago
【3】科技: Facebook Adds Dating App, Launches Oculus Go
【2】科技New NASA Mars Mission Will Study Deep Under Planet’s Surface
【1】科技: Facebook Adds Dating App, Launches Oculus Go
voa 科学技术:Ancient Finger Bone Found in Saudi Arabia is 90,000 ...
voa 科学技术: Organization Urges Young African Scientists to...
voa 科学技术: New Technology Harvests Energy from River and Tidal..
voa 科学技术: Robots Bring Change to Construction Industry
voa 科学技术: Daylight Turns Thin Plastic Barrier into ...
voa 科学技术: Lawmakers Demand Privacy Protection, Raise ...
voa 科学技术: Researchers: Many Black Holes in Center of Milky ...
VOA文化艺术: Hollywood Thriller ‘Unsane’ Filmed Totally on iPhone
voa 科学技术: US Space Agency Expands Search for Distant Planets ...
voa 科学技术: Robots Not Ready to Take Over
New Facebook Tool Provides Information About News Publishers
NASA's Juno Spacecraft Shows the Makeup of Jupiter
voa 科学技术:Scientists: Early Humans Were Not as Simple as One ...
还没听够看够?关注本公众号(漂泊者乐园微信公众号),定期收听收查看各种精彩内容。跑步入场还不晚哦。
(学习交流微信:littleflute)
特别说明:
A. 如果您想收听全部中级美国英语内容,有两种方法:
(1) 在漂泊者乐园微信公众号回复:zjmgyy 。
(2)点击左下角的 阅读原文 。
B. 本平台(漂泊者乐园微信公众号)会不定期推送各种各样的在线资源,为了不错过收听查看机会,建议广大亲朋好友们关注本公众号(漂泊者乐园微信公众号)。
C. 本平台(漂泊者乐园微信公众号)主要推送以下几类资讯:
(1)各种英语学习资料。
(2)各种音乐学习资料。
(3)各种中国象棋学习资料。
(4)各种计算机学习资料。
(5)各种电子图书。
(6)各种MP3,MP4等音像资源。
D. 本平台(漂泊者乐园微信公众号)诚招合作者。有意者请联系 微信:littleflute。
提示:
1. 回复 president 可收听查看所有《美国总统》文章。
2. 回复 park 可收听查看所有《美国国家公园》文章。
3. 回复 zjmgyy 可收听查看所有《中级美国英语》文章。
4. 回复 bztl 可收听查看所有 《VOA标准听力》。