Alaskan crabbing season cancelled due to extreme population decline

Alaskan crabbing season cancelled due to extreme population decline

October to January is generally the optimal season for fishing and harvesting all crab species for food, a Southern Living Magazine article stated. This is when most individual crabs are at their largest and when populations are at their peak. A major crabbing industry is centralized in the Bering Sea in Alaska. Its snow crab harvest in particular brings in approximately 132 million dollars each year, according to a Time article. This October, however, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game determined that the number of crabs in the Bering Sea this season was too low to open the fishery.

New bivalent COVID booster recieves less attention than previous vaccines

New bivalent COVID booster recieves less attention than previous vaccines

As we approach nearly three years of social distancing, mask mandates and Zoom meetings, Americans appear more than ready to leave COVID-19 in the past, an MSN article reported. But the article’s documentation of the low numbers of those receiving the new booster and the concerns these statistics could pose for another surge suggest that the danger of COVID-19 may not be gone from the United States.

New website provides sexual and reproductive health resources

New website provides sexual and reproductive health resources

From its inception, Our Bodies Ourselves has been a resource for women and gender expansive individuals to gain information regarding their physical health. Originally created in the late 1960s due to a lack of knowledge on cisgender women’s bodies, it’s now more relevant than ever in the fight for control over reproductive and sexual choices.

World Wide Fund for Nature report discovers wildlife population decline

World Wide Fund for Nature report discovers wildlife population decline

On Oct. 12, 2022, a press release from the World Wide Fund for Nature announced the findings of the 14th edition of their biennial Living Planet Report, revealing a 69 percent average wildlife population decline alongside other cutting-edge wildlife and ecosystem health data.

Nobel Prize winners unlock new discoveries in quantum mechanics

Nobel Prize winners unlock new discoveries in quantum mechanics

On Oct. 4, the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Alain Aspect from Université Paris-Saclay and École Polytechnique, research physicist John F. Clauser of J.F. Clauser & Associates and Anton Zeilinger from the University of Vienna for their work in the field of quantum information science.

Women found to be underrepresented in scientific article citations

Women found to be underrepresented in scientific article citations

A study published on Oct. 6, 2022, in Nature Physics demonstrated a pattern of under-representation of scientific works authored by women in physics articles citations. The study revealed that the bias towards citing research authored by men primarily occurs among male writers and researchers, as well as when the citing author has less familiarity with the subject they are writing about.

More people need to start talking about long COVID

More people need to start talking about long COVID

President Joe Biden’s “60 Minutes” interview remarks on Sept. 18, 2022, during which he declared that “the pandemic is over,” serve as a painful confirmation that the institutions meant to protect us — namely the government — have neglected the American public in the face of a more subliminal, yet similarly-grave ailment: long COVID. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stated that Long COVID is a term used to refer to a variety of conditions that develop after a COVID-19 infection.

James Webb Space Telescope photographs universe

James Webb Space Telescope photographs universe

Since the James Webb Space Telescope was launched on Dec. 25, 2021, it has allowed the curiosity of the human mind to travel through space. The JWST has now been in space for almost nine months and has not disappointed with its remarkable discoveries. According to NASA’s webpage about the telescope’s first images, scientists over the past few months have been able to acquire “full-color, … seemingly three-dimensional” pictures using the JWST. The clarity of its images is a result of the telescope’s multiple sensors and four-foot long mirror which allow it to observe galaxies that were formed 13.5 billion years ago.