BG 3-10-24

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will have to make when
the time change happens,
Awad says. Also be sure
you’re regularly getting
enough sleep. If you’re
sleeping eight hours per
night, one night of one
hour less of sleep is going
to be a lot less problematic
than if you’re regularly
sleeping six hours of sleep
and miss an hour.
If you’re not on
the healthiest sleep
schedule currently, use the
time change as a reminder
to reevaluate how much
sleep you’re getting and
work on solidifying good
sleep habits.
“Treat sleep with
the same dedication as
other habits, like brushing
your teeth or going to the
gym,” Awad says. “It’s
important.”
To establish a healthy
sleep routine, try to go
to bed and get up at the

same time every day, use
your bed only for sleep and
sex, limit caffeine starting
in the late afternoon, and
avoid bright light exposure
in the evening (switch off
electronic devices at least
30 minutes before bed), per
recommendations from the
AASM.

2. Shift your sleep
gradually the days before
DST

As DST approaches,
start rolling your sleep back
by about 15 minutes and
moving your wakeup time
15 minutes earlier each
morning.
“That can help your
body gradually adjust,
instead of being hit with
that one-hour time change,”
Awad says.
3. Push up your dinner
gradually

“Another major driver
of our circadian rhythm is
food,” Awad says.


Eating too close to
bedtime can make it tough
to fall asleep, because
your body is too focused
on digestion to think about
winding down for the night.
In general, it’s a good
idea to stop eating three to
four hours before bedtime,
Awad says. To prevent any
disruption in that schedule,
begin shifting your final
meal (usually dinner) to
an earlier time about one
week before DST starts.
Awad suggests shifting in
15-minute increments until
you’ve hit one hour.

4. Switch all your
clocks the night before
DST starts

Before going to bed the
night before DST, be sure to
move all your clocks ahead.
Doing so may make the time
change feel less confusing.
Then, you’ll be ready to live
according to the new time as
soon as you wake up.
5. Start your day
with sunlight

While some delay
in your circadian rhythm
after DST is inevitable,
you can use natural
sunlight to get your body
clock as closely in tune
with the sun clock as
possible.
“Getting light early in
the morning is key,” Awad
says.
Try to get 15 minutes
of sunlight first thing in
the morning. If you live in
a warmer climate, you can
get your sunlight outside.
But even sitting next to
the window while you
drink your morning coffee
will do the trick, Awad
says. Later, avoid wake-
promoting blue light from
cell phones, laptops and
other electronic devices
too close to bedtime.


Daylight Saving Time continued...


John Ball Zoo’s
conservation team is
monitoring a group of
migratory fish species to
help understand breeding


and spawning of the fish to
support their conservation.
Suckers — like the
longnose sucker and white
sucker, among others —

migrate from Lake Michigan
in the late winter and early
spring into rivers and
streams, including the Grand
River, where they spawn.

As one of its community
science projects, John Ball
Zoo is working with a team
of trained volunteers to
gather information about the

fish’s patterns. This project
is part of the Zoo’s greater
efforts focused on improving
the Grand River ecosystem.
“Suckers are incredibly
important for the health of
the rivers they spawn in,
releasing huge amounts of
nutrients that are important
to other fish, plants and
aquatic insects,” said Travis
Kurtz, community science
coordinator at John Ball Zoo.
“We are excited to get the
community involved in this
project, and the data gathered
will help us understand and
preserve the river.”
The John Ball Zoo and
volunteer teams monitor a
spawning site daily, aiming
to count as many suckers
as they can see, as well as
tracking other data points
like stream temperature and
depth.
This program is in
partnership with several
other organizations,
including Grand Valley
State University, the Grand
Rapids Public Museum
and the Lower Grand River

Organization of Watersheds.
Data gathered by the
Zoo and its volunteers is
sent to Shedd Aquarium
in Chicago, where Dr.
Karen Murchie, director
of freshwater research, has
been collecting data on the
other side of Lake Michigan
to understand breeding and
spawning behavior.
The Zoo is hoping
to expand the monitoring
project to additional sites
in future years, and Kurtz
encouraged those looking
to get involved in this or
other community science
projects to reach out to him
at [email protected].
“This is an opportunity
for folks who aren’t
professional scientists
to make a difference for
important species locally,”
Kurtz said. “It’s such an
important facet of the
Zoo’s conservation work to
offer opportunities for the
community members to be
part of positive changes in
our local environment.”

John Ball Zoo monitoring migratory


Grand River fish for conservation

Free download pdf