Connect with us

Published

on

With the climate crisis leading to more frequent and severe droughts, many wildlife species in the lower 48 United States will suffer from year-long droughts almost five times as frequently in the coming decades as they did historically, according to a new study.

Droughts lasting three years could become nearly seven times as frequent, a press release from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service said.

Lack of moisture affects how animals compete with each other for resources, contributes to habitat loss and leads to heat stress and dehydration.

“The degree of increased drought exposure for each species in our analysis strongly depends on future greenhouse gas concentrations,” said lead author of the study Dr. Merijn van den Bosch, a postdoctoral researcher at Colorado State University, in the press release. “But even under a lower-concentration scenario, virtually all vertebrates face increased year-long and multi-year droughts in the second half of this century. The implications will depend on the species and the length of the drought.”

The research team found that, from 2050 to 2080, year-long droughts would be nearly five times as frequent as they had been from 1950 to 2005.

Observed change (%) in annual (12-month) and prolonged (36-month) droughts between 1952–1983 and 1991–2021, across Level 3 Ecoregions in the contiguous U.S. Communications Earth & Environment (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-024-01880-z

“Drought, abnormal soil moisture deficits due to low precipitation and excess evapotranspiration, is a major environmental stressor with multifaceted effects on wildlife communities and habitat, including the modification of microbial soil composition, forest die-offs, the proliferation of invasive species, and the destabilization of species interactions through changes in competition and trophic dynamics. Extreme drought, defined as the 1% most severe drought conditions that occurred between 1950 and 2000, is expected to annually affect 30% more land area by the end of the 21st century,” the authors of the study wrote.

One example of an animal having to adapt to a changing climatic landscape is the giant kangaroo rat, an endangered species native to California’s dry habitats. Though giant kangaroo rats have adapted to the occasional short drought, populations can plummet following multi-year droughts. This compounds existing threats, including the loss of almost all their historic habitat.

A giant kangaroo rat, rescued and safely released by a permit holder during a PG&E pipeline excavation project. Increased drought adds to conservation concerns for this endangered species. Ryan Donnelly

The study demonstrated that, in much of the giant kangaroo rat’s remaining range, longer droughts could soon occur much more often.

“That does not bode well for this already-endangered species,” Van den Bosch said.

The populations of many game species not currently at risk will also face droughts lasting one and three years in their ranges more frequently. This includes ungulates like elk, as well as waterfowl, including certain duck species. The shift could have implications for game and wildlife management.

“Drought affects wildlife directly, through physiological impacts that affect survival and fecundity, but also indirectly through the alteration of habitat, resources, and interspecific interactions. Additionally, drought effects on wildlife populations depend on drought duration and intensity. Minimizing biodiversity loss induced by climate change requires not only mitigating climatic change itself but also large-scale assessments of species’ vulnerability to climate change effects such as extreme weather events, to prioritize conservation actions,” the authors wrote in the study.

In order to gain information about places where habitat restoration or adaptive water management could benefit the greatest number of wildlife species, the researchers set out to identify areas that had high levels of biodiversity and were predicted to have large increases in drought.

To predict future scenarios, the team used modeling techniques to come up with six projections of moisture conditions and temperature. They then compared the frequency of predicted and observed drought exposure with range maps of 339 mammals, 349 birds, 253 reptile species and 280 amphibians to create regional summaries.

Average predicted change (%) in annual droughts under (a) RCP 4.5 and (b) RCP 8.5 and prolonged droughts under (c) RCP 4.5 and (d) RCP 8.5 between 1951–2005 and 2050–2080, along with area-weighted terrestrial vertebrate species richness, for the contiguous U.S. Numbers below the x-axis color legend indicate four breaks of percent change in drought between the historical period and average future scenario, species richness is categorized into four equal quantiles along the y-axis legend.

The researchers discovered that, after adjusting for land area, the highest number of overall individual species and the greatest number of species threatened by drought, as well as the highest projected change in drought exposure, were all in the southwestern U.S.

A female elk drinks water from a spring at West Thumb Geyser Basin in Yellowstone National Park.
Anastassiya Bornstein / iStock / Getty Images Plus

“Some of the areas expected to see the greatest increase in drought, such as the southwestern U.S., are already quite dry,” said senior author Dr. Zack Steel, a Rocky Mountain Research Station research ecologist, in the press release. “Many species living in these regions are adapted to periodic droughts, but the concern is that if they are already near the limit of what they can tolerate, the large increase in drought we’re expecting can have grave consequences for these ecosystems and the wildlife that depend on them.”

The study, “Climate change scenarios forecast increased drought exposure for terrestrial vertebrates in the contiguous United States,” was published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

A flock of flamingos near a small stream. Serhii Bezrukyi / iStock / Getty Images Plus

The post Increasing Drought Frequency Brings Threats to U.S. Wildlife, Research Finds appeared first on EcoWatch.

https://www.ecowatch.com/drought-frequency-wildlife-impact-us.html

Continue Reading

Green Living

Guest Idea: How to Avoid Altitude Sickness on the Everest Base Camp Trek

Published

on

Altitude sickness isn’t just an Everest problem. It’s a risk for any hiker venturing into high country above 3,000 meters (9,842 feet), from the Rockies and Andes to the Himalayas. Mountaineers and high-altitude climbers have understood this for decades: success at altitude isn’t about strength alone, but about pacing, acclimatization, and knowing when to stop.

Those same lessons apply directly to trekkers heading for Everest Base Camp (EBC). You can train for months, buy the best gear, and still get humbled by one thing on the trek to Everest Base Camp: altitude. One day you feel strong and excited. The next morning you wake up in Namche Bazaar (3,440 meters / 11,286 feet) with a pounding headache, no appetite, and legs that suddenly feel heavy. That’s altitude sickness, and it’s the reason many trekkers turn back before they ever reach Base Camp.

The good news? Altitude sickness is often preventable. Not with “super fitness,” but with smart pacing, proper acclimatization, good daily habits, and the right decisions at the right time.

This guide breaks everything down in a clear, practical way: what altitude sickness is, why it happens on the Everest Base Camp route, how to acclimatize properly, what symptoms to watch for, and what to do if you feel unwell. Follow these principles, and you’ll give yourself the best chance of reaching Everest Base Camp safely, and actually enjoying the journey.

What Is Altitude Sickness and Why Is It a Concern on the Everest Base Camp Trek?

Altitude sickness, also known as Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS), occurs when your body doesn’t have enough time to adapt to lower oxygen levels at high elevation. According to the Himalayan Rescue Association, symptoms can range from mild discomfort to life-threatening conditions if ignored.

It usually starts mild, but it can escalate quickly.

The three types you should know

  • AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness): AMS, the most common form, begins with dizziness and difficulty sleeping; the key is recognizing AMS early so it doesn’t progress.
  • HAPE (High Altitude Pulmonary Edema): This condition happens when fluid builds up in the lungs, making breathing difficult even at rest. Additional oxygen and medication are needed.
  • HACE (High Altitude Cerebral Edema): An urgent medical emergency requiring immediate evacuation, HACE involves swelling of the brain that causes confusion and loss of coordination.

Why Altitude Sickness Is Common on the EBC Route

Everest Base Camp sits at 5,364 meters (17,598 feet). At this altitude, oxygen availability is roughly 50% of sea-level concentrations, according to data summarized by the CDC’s High-Altitude Travel Guidelines.

You can’t “power through” that change. Your body needs time.

The EBC trek adds extra stressors:

  • Long walking days
  • Cold temperatures
  • Dehydration (very common at altitude)
  • Poor sleep in teahouses at higher villages

These same challenges become even more pronounced for trekkers who combine the trek to Everest Base Camp with climbing Island Peak Nepal, where altitude exposure is higher and recovery margins are tighter.

Altitude sickness has nothing to do with strength. Even very fit trekkers can develop AMS if they ascend too quickly.

When Altitude Sickness Usually Starts on the Trek

Symptoms often appear above 2,500 meters (8,200 feet). On the EBC trek, this can happen quickly, especially after reaching Namche Bazaar.

Higher-risk points along the journey include:

  • Namche Bazaar (3,440 meters / 11,286 feet)
  • Dingboche (4,410 meters / 14,468 feet)
  • Lobuche (4,940 meters / 16,207 feet)
  • Gorak Shep (5,164 meters / 16,942 feet)

From around 3,000 meters (9,842 feet) onward, doing a short body check every evening becomes essential.

A climber evacuated in the Himalayas. Source: Adobe Stock Photos

How to Prepare for Altitude Before the Everest Base Camp Trek

A smoother trek starts before you even land in Nepal. Preparation won’t guarantee you avoid AMS, but it helps your body cope better with stress and fatigue.

Get Your Body Trek-Ready

Aim for 8–12 weeks of training, including:

  • Uphill hiking (stairs, hills, treadmill incline)
  • Long walks for endurance
  • Leg and core strength training
  • Practice hikes with a backpack

Fitness won’t prevent altitude sickness, but it reduces overexertion, which does lower risk. This becomes especially important if your itinerary includes Island Peak climbing after Everest Base Camp, where accumulated fatigue can increase susceptibility to AMS.

Medical Check-Up

Before you travel to high-altitude destinations, speak to a medical professional if you have:

  • Asthma or lung conditions
  • Heart issues
  • Previous history of altitude sickness
  • Concerns about taking Diamox

Also ensure your travel insurance covers high-altitude trekking and helicopter evacuation, particularly if you plan additional objectives like peak climbing.

The Best Acclimatization Techniques for the EBC Trek

If there’s one rule that saves trekkers every season, it’s this:

Go slow—especially above 3,000 meters (9,842 feet). A safe itinerary includes at least two key acclimatization days:

Namche Bazaar (3,440m / 11,286 ft)
Stay two nights. Do a day hike to Everest View Hotel or Khumjung, then sleep back in Namche.

Dingboche (4,410m / 14,468 ft)
Stay two nights. Hike to Nagarjun Hill or the Chhukung ridge area, then descend to sleep.

These aren’t “rest days”, they’re altitude training days. Skipping them is one of the most common mistakes trekkers make, especially those planning to continue on to Island Peak after the EBC trek.

Hike to a higher point during the day, then return to a lower elevation to sleep. Keep acclimatization hikes steady and controlled, not exhausting missions.

Medications for Altitude Sickness: What Actually Helps

Diamox is commonly used to help with acclimatization by improving breathing at altitude. Medical guidance from sources such as the Mayo Clinic and CDC recommends it only under professional advice.

A typical preventative dose:

  • 125 mg twice daily, starting 1–2 days before ascent or early in the trek
    (always follow medical advice)

Diamox can help, but it never replaces proper acclimatization or descent if symptoms worsen.

Natural remedies, such as garlic soup, ginger tea, and warm fluids, can improve comfort and hydration. However, they do not replace slow ascent, acclimatization days, or descent, especially at higher elevations encountered during Everest Base Camp trekking and Island Peak climbing.

Symptoms of Altitude Sickness: What to Watch For

Early Warning Signs (AMS)

  • Persistent headache
  • Nausea or loss of appetite
  • Unusual fatigue
  • Dizziness
  • Poor sleep

If symptoms are mild, do not ascend further until they improve.

Dangerous Symptoms (Medical Emergency)

According to the International Society for Mountain Medicine:

  • Breathlessness at rest
  • Confusion or unusual behavior
  • Poor coordination
  • Persistent cough or chest tightness

These require immediate descent and medical attention.

What to Do If You Get Altitude Sickness on the Trail

If symptoms are mild:

  • Rest at the same altitude for 24 hours
  • Hydrate and eat light, high-carb meals
  • Reassess the next morning

If symptoms persist or worsen:

  • Descend at least 300–500 meters (1,000–1,640 feet)

No summit, no Base Camp photo, and no peak climb is worth risking your life.

Medical Support on the EBC Trail

The Himalayan Rescue Association clinic in Pheriche, seasonal service, is the most-known medical support point. Some lodges have oxygen or emergency resources, but availability varies, another reason proper insurance is essential.

Daily Habits That Make a Huge Difference

Hydration & Food

  • Drink 3–4 liters of fluids daily
  • Eat high-carb meals (rice, pasta, potatoes, lentils)
  • Snack regularly, appetite often drops at altitude

Dehydration makes AMS worse quickly.

Pace: Slow Beats Strong

Walk with:

  • Steady breathing
  • Short breaks
  • No rushing or racing others

A slow trekker reaches Base Camp more often than a fast trekker who crashes in Dingboche.

Avoid These at Altitude

  • Alcohol
  • Smoking
  • Sleeping pills or sedatives

They reduce oxygen efficiency and worsen sleep quality.

Should You Hire a Guide to Reduce AMS Risk?

A good guide helps by controlling the pace of your trek and can help with:

  • Monitoring symptoms
  • Managing accommodations
  • Making tough calls to stop when trekkers want to push on

A knowledgable guide becomes especially important if you plan to combine the trek to Everest Base Camp with climbing Island Peak in Nepal, where acclimatization margins are tighter. If you’re unsure about altitude, hiring a guide is one of the smartest safety upgrades you can make.

Learn From Experience

If there’s one thing experienced Himalayan guides agree on, it’s this: your itinerary matters more than your fitness. You can be strong, fast, and well-trained, but if you rush the ascent, altitude sickness can still catch you off guard.

Rest days in Namche Bazaar and Dingboche aren’t optional. They’re essential for a safe Everest Base Camp trek and absolutely critical if you plan to continue on to Island Peak.

Mild AMS is a warning, not something to push through. Severe symptoms are emergencies that require immediate descent. Knowing the difference can prevent serious consequences.

And finally, remember that descending is not failure. It’s smart decision-making. Everest Base Camp, and even Island Peak, are incredible goals, but real success is returning healthy, with clear memories and respect for the mountains that allowed you to experience them.

About the Author

This sponsored article was written by Samita Maharjan of Magical Nepal.

The post Guest Idea: How to Avoid Altitude Sickness on the Everest Base Camp Trek appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/inspire/guest-idea-how-to-avoid-altitude-sickness-on-the-everest-base-camp-trek/

Continue Reading

Green Living

Best of SIYE: Heather Terry’s Regenerative Journey At GOODSam Foods

Published

on

Read a transcript of this episode. Introducing Sustainability In Your Ear transcripts.

The global food system stands at a crossroads. Climate change is reshaping where crops can grow, trade disputes threaten supply chains, and smallholder farmers who produce much of our food often have the least power in the system. Meet Heather Terry, founder and CEO of GoodSAM Foods, and discover how the company is transforming the traditional smallhold farm model by putting people and regenerative agriculture at the heart of a growing food company. GoodSAM Foods sources 90% of its ingredients directly from smallholder farms in Latin America and Africa, eliminating middlemen and reinvesting profits into farming communities. Terry’s approach is both principled and pragmatic: as climate volatility reduces crop yields globally, the companies that have built genuine relationships with farmers will have access to limited harvests. “When I’m a farmer and I suddenly have leverage, who am I going to sell that product to?” Terry asks. “It’s relationships.”

Heather K. Terry, Founder and CEO of GoodSAM Foods, is our guest on Sustainability In Your Ear.

Terry’s journey to raise $9 million in Series A funding over 18 months illustrates the disconnect between traditional investors and regenerative business models. After facing skepticism from conventional CPG investors, she found success with impact investors who understood that sustainable food systems represent the future of the industry. While GoodSAM maintains USDA Organic and Non-GMO Project verification, Terry takes a critical stance on regenerative certification labels, arguing that current systems impose Global North standards on farmers who have practiced regenerative techniques for generations. Instead, GoodSAM focuses on direct relationships and on-ground verification. Her proactive approach protected both the company and its farming partners from sudden economic shocks at a time when the U.S. food system faces mounting pressures from climate impacts and trade policy changes. “Every time you pick something up off the shelf, you are voting,” Terry said. “You’re sending a signal to a company.”

You can learn more about GoodSAM Foods at goodsamfoods.com.

Editor’s Note: This episode originally aired on September 22, 2025.

The post Best of SIYE: Heather Terry’s Regenerative Journey At GOODSam Foods appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-heather-terry-s-regenerative-journey-at-goodsam-foods/

Continue Reading

Green Living

Earth911 Inspiration: Nothing In Vain

Published

on

Aristotle, who saw purpose and design in everything, wrote in several different works that “Nature does nothing in vain.” We reply that regardless of purpose, nature does everything with grace; we are fortunate to witness the miraculous results of 13.4 billion years of experimentation.

Earth911 inspirations. Post them, share your desire to help people think of the planet first, every day. Click the poster to get a larger image.

The post Earth911 Inspiration: Nothing In Vain appeared first on Earth911.

https://earth911.com/inspire/earth911-inspiration-nothing-in-vain/

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 BreakingClimateChange.com