Supervivencia del más apto. Este principio básico de la evolución explica por qué el pájaro dodo ya no existe y por qué los seres humanos tienen pulgares oponibles.

La adaptación es clave para la supervivencia, no importa cuántos dedos tienes. La capacidad de adaptarse a cualquier condición que la Madre Tierra pone en nuestro camino determina si conducen a la extinción o a una nueva generación.

El cambio climático acelerado por la actividad humana es un desastre esperando ocurrir. Ya hemos visto las supertormentas y la sequía que puede crear. A pesar de que podemos trabajar para frenar el cambio climático, no hay manera de detenerlo por completo. Esta realidad significa que la adaptación volverá a ser la estrategia más importante para la supervivencia.

Una cosa es segura: la Tierra seguirá existiendo, ya que tiene millones de años. La pregunta es, ¿Quiénes la habitarán después?

A continuación, se presentan cinco especies conocidas por su resistencia y capacidad de sobrevivir en condiciones adversas. Ellos son los más propensos a sobrevivir a un desastre el cambio climático. Decepción: los seres humanos no están en la lista.

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A new design for solar cells that uses inexpensive, commonly available materials could rival and even outperform conventional cells made of silicon.

Writing in the Oct. 21 edition of Science, researchers from Stanford and Oxford describe using tin and other abundant elements to create novel forms of perovskite – a photovoltaic crystalline material that’s thinner, more flexible and easier to manufacture than silicon crystals.

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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside’s Bourns College of Engineering have developed an inexpensive, energy-efficient way to create silicon-based anodes for lithium-ion batteries from the fossilized remains of single-celled algae called diatoms. The research could lead to the development of ultra-high capacity lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles and portable electronics.

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The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) in partnership with the Coalition for Climate and Clean Air (CCAC) and the Government of Norway has launched a global awareness campaign on the dangers of air pollution – especially ‘invisible killers’ such as black carbon, ground-level ozone and methane – for the health of individuals and the planet.

Titled BreatheLife: Clean air. A healthy future, the campaign aims to mobilize cities and their inhabitants on issues of health and protecting the planet from the effects of air pollution. Moreover, By WHO and CCAC joining forces, ‘BreatheLife’ brings together expertise and partners that can tackle both the climate and health impacts of air pollution.

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Hydrogen (H2) is an extremely simple molecule and yet a valuable raw material which as a result of the development of sophisticated catalysts is becoming more and more important. In industry and commerce, applications range from food and fertilizer manufacture to crude oil cracking to utilization as an energy source in fuel cells. A challenge lies in splitting the strong H-H bond under mild conditions. Chemists at Goethe University have now developed a new catalyst for the activation of hydrogen by introducing boron atoms into a common organic molecule. The process, which was described in theAngewandte Chemie journal, requires only an electron source in addition and should therefore be usable on a broad scale in future.

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