Monday, APRIL 8, 2024

Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives through its Focus Areas

January is Vocational Service Month

This month Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives by helping to improve the lives of mothers and their childrenExplore the possibilities with us at our meeting Wednesday at noon at Wick Park or virtually via Zoom. 

http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com

The  Zoom ID is: 3567145262

This Week's Meeting

Samatha Turner and Jack Kravitz will discuss the bigger, better Bike Belmont event at 1 p.m. Sunday at the B&O Station. The Community Ride, a 10-mile round trip, will roll at a comfortable pace of 9-11 miles per hour. The Challenge Ride, a 22-mile round trip, will proceed at a moderate pace. Lunch will be served afterward. Come learn more about the event and its connection to the Building A Better Belmont Initiative.

Also, RCY is helping college-bound high school seniors to prepare for dorm life. Wednesday is the deadline to contribute laundry supplies, towels and linens, or gift cards to Target or Walmart. Gerri Jenkins will accept all offerings and deliver them to the city schools. Call her at 330-519-8302 if you have questions.

See you Wednesday at the Wick Park Pavilion.

Rotary Last Week

Dr. Colleen McLean of Youngstown State University and other scientists follow the planetary boundaries framework. Using current-day scientific information, framework authors have proposed limits for the impact of human activities on the environment to avoid irreversible changes. Unfortunately, in 2023, 6 of the 9 boundaries were crossed.

Human activities contribute to an accumulation of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and planet warming. Reforestation is a counteraction. Thus, YSU Legacy Forest is reforesting the Mahoning Valley, she said.

Dr. Lauren Schroeder started the all-volunteer program to plant a tree for every freshman at YSU. The students help to plant in different areas, compile nutrient profiles, and test soil. Planting is occurring at Mill Creek Metroparks Collier Preserve in Boardman. 

Rotarians can help to install more plants this fall, provide post-planting maintenance, and raise money for the organization, McLean noted.

In other news, RCY’s Safe Haven Baby Box campaign has received $8,000 in funding commitments toward a goal of $17,000. A Baby Box usually is installed in a church, fire station or hospital to enable a woman to surrender her child legally, safely and anonymously. A silent alarm lets emergency services know when a baby has been placed inside. See President Deanna if you have any fundraising leads.

Elsa Higby is growing native perennial plants. Call or email her if you are interested in acquiring some for your yard.

GET YOUR ROTARYCLIPSE MERCH

Total solar eclipses don’t last, and neither will the Rotaryclipse merchandise sale. See Aimee Fifarek about our very limited inventory of keepsakes.

SAVE THE DATE

Fireside Chat, for new and current members, 5:30-7:30 May 28, Home of Scott Schulick, 2304 Fifth Ave., 44504; check email for invitation and to register.

Rotary After Hours, 5:30 p.m. June 5, Bistro 1907 downtown.

Annual District 6650 Conference, 8:30-4 June 15, Kent State University Stark Campus Conference Center (kick off social 5:30-7:30 p.m. June 14 at Royal Docks Brewing in Oakwood Square). Register at tinyurl.com/Rotary6650Conference

RCY President’s Party, 6 p.m. June 27, Doubletree Hotel; invitations to be mailed.

“In Our Nature” District 6650 fundraiser, August 11, Mill Creek MetroParks D.D. Davis Center, Youngstown.

 

The Solid Connection Between Biodiversity and Climate Change

 

By Azzedine Downes

 

The International Fund for Animal Wildlife has long been a leader in recognizing the inherent link between biodiversity and climate change, the existential threat both issues pose to life on our planet, and the critical need to address both these threats together.

 

The results of a comprehensive workshop report released by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), confirmed that nature and climate are inextricably linked. According to the peer-reviewed report, authored by 50 of the world’s leading biodiversity and climate experts, unprecedented changes in climate and biodiversity, driven by human activities, have merged and increasingly threaten nature, human lives, livelihoods, and overall well-being around the world. Biodiversity loss and climate change are both driven by human activities and mutually reinforce each other. Though this concept is widely accepted in the scientific community, it is a point often underappreciated among policy decision makers.

 

To date, legislative policies have largely tackled biodiversity loss and climate change independently of each other. Neither lives in isolation, and neither will be successfully resolved unless they are both tackled together. Addressing the synergies between mitigating biodiversity loss and climate change while considering their social impacts, offers an optimal opportunity to maximize benefits and meet global development goals, taking a critical step towards stewardship of our shared planet.


As climate change progresses, the distribution, functioning and interactions of organisms, and thus broader ecosystems, are increasingly altered. Put simply, as climate shifts, it causes shifts to where and how animals and plants live and essentially determines if such species can ultimately thrive. Just as changing temperatures produce stress in human communities—through rising seawater levels, increased incidence of storms and wildfires, and irregular seasons for instance—the vagaries of climate change also impose severe stress on animals and plant species. As species move, migrate, and potentially alter their behaviors with resultant shifts in their local populations, that in turn causes shifts in the very fabric of our landscapes and seascapes. Ecosystems depend on the presence of native flora and fauna to produce basic needs including clean air, drinkable water, and nutrient-rich soil and seas. As we lose that biodiversity, ecosystems degrade, even breaking down entirely. It is these situations that make clear the inherent interdependence of both species and their ecosystems.

 

Climate change, however, is not the leading driver of biodiversity loss – it is overexploitation and habitat destruction. Climate change is still a significant contributor, and one that is likely to move up the ranks of significance as it intensifies. And just as climate change contributes to biodiversity loss, so too does the loss of biodiversity contribute to the changing climate. A relentless cycle that escalates as conditions escalate.

 

On one hand, healthy ecosystems can mitigate the damaging effects of climate change; wetlands can help to absorb rainfall and prevent excessive flooding, for instance. But biodiversity that is both rich and thriving, can also protect against climate change itself. Take for example animals such as forest elephants, pangolins, and whales, universally considered to be ‘ecosystem engineers’—with key roles in preserving the health of these ecosystems and facilitating the capture of more carbon. This form of carbon ‘sequestration’ helps keep excess carbon out of the atmosphere where it would otherwise absorb and reflect heat.

 

Given the global impact of climate change and its influence in the efforts involved in the animal welfare and conservation space, IFAW will continue to ensure its programmatic efforts fully reflect the fundamental understanding of the link between both climate change and biodiversity protection.

 

In the US as well as internationally, we work to protect and restore wildlife corridors, allowing wild species to roam more freely in response to changing conditions, accessing food and water, and engaging in natural migratory and reproductive behaviors. Because sometimes the best road to conservation is actually a corridor.

 

In addition to our on-the-ground conservation work across the globe, we also advocate for laws and policies that support our conservation values. These range from strategies aimed at reducing overexploitation from wildlife trade, conserving, and restoring habitats, shrinking carbon emissions, and protecting biodiversity. 

 

We recognize that climate health, as well as the health of animals and ecosystems, is critical to the survival of both people and livelihoods. All countries and cultures need to strive to conserve wildlife and habitats, to combat climate change literally from the ‘ground up’, so that we can all continue to not only survive—but to thrive—both now and well into the future.

 

Our hope is that this report is eye-opening to both people and policy makers, and ideally a catalyst for a real paradigm shift in how we address the dual existential threats of climate change and biodiversity loss.

We are already seeing the intense and ever-escalating impacts of human activities that threaten our natural world. It is time for us to take swift, collective action for a more sustainable future. Understanding is the keystone and action is the key.

Read more...

THIS WEEK IN ROTARY HISTORY

April 14, 1926: James A. Campbell, President of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company, was made an honorary member of Rotary Club of Youngstown.

 
CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION
 
 
Birthdays:
 
Gerri Jenkins 4/10
 
 
 
Anniversaries:
 
Kevin Chiu 4/9
21 years
 
Donald Foley 4/10
28 years
 
Sharon Letson 4/11
12 years
 
Bob Calvert 4/13
13 years

 

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Debora Flora
 
 
 
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Brendan Considine
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Club Information

Welcome to Youngstown Rotary

Service Above Self

Wednesdays at 12:00 PM
Wick Park Pavilion
260 Park Avenue
Youngstown, OH 44504
United States of America
Phone:
(330) 743-8630
Connect through Zoom: http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com/
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