2020-04-01 Smithsonian Magazine

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YOU’VE GOT QUESTIONS. WE’VE GOT EXPERTS


108 SMITHSONIAN | April 2020 Illustration by Traci Daberko


F


OR THUNDERSTORMS and resul-
tant lightning to occur, there must
be rising currents of warm, moist
air. Deep in the Arctic and Antarctic,
there is only cold, dry air, which does
not rise, and thus cannot form thunder clouds, says
Douglas Herman, senior geographer at the Nation-
al Museum of the American Indian. But as climate
change brings moister, warmer air to the area, light-
ning is increasing and causing fi res in the boreal for-
ests where that used to be rare.


Q: My barber sends hair clippings to orga-
nizations that use them to soak up oil spills.
Does that work? What other tricks are used?
Claire Bugos | Evanston, Illinois


THE MOST COMMON methods for cleaning up oil
spills are dispersing, in situ burning or skimming.


Chemical dispersants break up the oil slick into
droplets, which mix into the water column or are
broken down by microbes. That option, used in
the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of
Mexico, can be harmful to marine life, says Andrea
M. Quattrini, research zoologist and curator of an-
thozoa at the National Museum of Natural History.
For the other approaches, a boom fi rst concentrates
the spill in one area. The oil is either set on fi re, or
is removed from the surface using a device called a
skimmer. There are diff erent designs and methods,
including using suction or gravity to move the oil in
storage tanks. Hair clippings can be used to make the
containment booms , but are not widely deployed.

Q: How does a coff ee brand earn the label
“bird-friendly”?
Anonymous

COFFEE PLANTS can be grown either in the under-
story of tree canopies, a practice that helps sustain
migratory bird habitat, or in direct sunlight, which
drives deforestation and leads to less diverse habi-
tats. To conserve habitats for overwintering migra-
tory bird populations, Smithsonian’s Bird Friendly
certifi cation eff ort, started in the late ’90s, supports
farmers who opt for shade-grown coff ee, says Scott
Sillett, who heads the Smithsonian Migratory Bird
Center. At the moment, 45 farms are participating in
the program, primarily in Central and South Amer-
ica. To be certifi ed, a plantation must include for-
est land that has not been cut for at least ten years,
support ten native tree species, provide 40 percent
shade coverage and also be USDA-certifi ed organic.

Q: Will cli mate change have any eff ect on all
the “space junk”—like outdated satellites or
spent rocket stages—currently in orbit?
Don Maddox | Pasadena, California

WHEN SCIENTISTS discuss the greenhouse eff ect,
they’re usually talking about changes in the tropo-
sphere, the lowest part of Earth’s atmosphere. The
thermosphere, where most of these man-made or-
biting objects are located, is also experiencing an
increase in carbon dioxide. But at that level, because
the atmosphere is much less dense, carbon dioxide
behaves diff erently, says Martin Collins, curator of
the civilian applications satellites collection at the
National Air and Space Museum. Instead of trap-
ping heat, the CO 2 releases heat into space and chills
this upper layer of atmosphere. As a consequence,
the thermosphere contracts, resulting in less atmo-
spheric drag or friction on such objects.

Q: I’ve heard lightning rarely strikes in


the Arctic. Why is that?


Carter Matthew | Boston

Text by Anna Diamond

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