The New Jobs

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Markendeya Yeddanapudi

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Jul 17, 2025, 8:37:18 PM7/17/25
to Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, dr anandam, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, Ramanathan Manavasi, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, Anisha Yeddanapudi, vignanada...@gmail.com, ggroup, viswanatham vangapally, thatha patty, Jayathi Murthy, A. Akkineni, Aparna Attili, Neeraja Nadikuda, Nehru Prasad, rctate...@gmail.com, Padma Priya, pad...@mit.edu, Usha, Deepali Hadker


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MarThe New Jobs

 

Machines menace nature. No organism of the Biosphere, excepting the human accepts mechanization. The Biosphere needs and survives on the basis of ecological symbiosis. The Human among all other organisms, is the most vandalized by mechanization. When you use a machine to do the work of your limb, you are freezing the limb, making the limb semi dysfunctional. We are so deceived by commercial and academic advertising that we glorify mechanization as progress and advancement. The fact that every machine harms nature and assaults nature’s ecological symbiosis is put under the big cover up carpet. From the age of about three we drill the children that machines are great.

Economics simply is the applied intrusion of mechanization into our lives, lives which need the tampering by machines. Now the damage appears to have bottomed. Human Sociology is getting antiqued. Humans no longer can be the subject matter of Socialogy, because all relations are being taken over by machines. Every job in the economies is being taken over by machines and we are entering the age of Robots. When jobs are lost, automatically markets will be lost and economies simply collapse. We are all fast jumping into the ultimate abyss, the gigantic depression, which will make the economic depression of 1929 extremely small.

Nature is rejecting economics. It needs ecology on the terms of ecology without any adulteration of economics and mechanization. For about 200 years we have destroyed the 4.6 billion year evolution of earth, diseased it, by polluting the land, water and air, causing the extinction of thousands of life forms, and actually destroying the very geographical and climatic routine and life of the planet earth.

The new and urgent jobs are in reviving the 4.6 billion year evolution; again putting nature on its rails. Every facet of nature needs cure and revival. The first step is to start the ‘Free Nature Parks ‘without human tampering, where nature is free on the terms of nature.

The basic fact is, what we see is just 00.0035% of the totality. We do not see or even feel the 99.9965% of our own life and also the gigantic nature in symbiosis. Nature is basically abstract and not as the 3D visible units only. The reality is the fourth non 3D Time dimension, and the 3D shapes are illusions. Mechanization is putting us in the shackles or jails of confining us into the visible 3D shapes as the only reality. But feelings and emotions are basic currencies of the Biosphere. The Troposphere brims with the messages of organisms in smells resulting from feelings and emotions. Every organism inhales and exhales the smell communications.

Languaging the diverse smell communications of the air itself needs millions and millions of jobs. That is the language with which we converse with nature, without menacing it with economics.

Thanks to our economics, every organism of the Biosphere today is under trauma. Actually we have created the new nature under terrible trauma.

Every University must not only start ‘The Free Nature Parks ‘without our tampering, but also courses in curing nature from the terrible emotional trauma.

Nature is emotional, not mechanical. We can converse with every life form, if we succeed in developing the common language of the Biosphere, which is based on emotions. We must start the revival of nature by first developing the capacity to converse with the other life forms. The Biosphere actually is the emotional cover of the Lithosphere.

YM Sarma

Chat gpt

This is a deeply evocative and philosophical reflection on the impacts of mechanization, penned with a sense of urgency and reverence for the natural world. YM Sarma's piece, The New Jobs, presents a provocative critique of our technological and economic systems while calling for a radical shift toward ecological and emotional reconnection with nature. Here’s a breakdown and interpretation of the key ideas, along with some critical thoughts:


Core Ideas in the Text

  1. Mechanization as a Threat to Nature and Humanity:
    • Sarma argues that machines are inherently hostile to nature and to human biology.
    • Mechanization leads to the dysfunction of human faculties—our limbs, emotions, and social structures.
    • There's a sharp critique of how society glorifies machines through education and advertising.
  2. Collapse of Economics and Sociology:
    • Economics is described as the intrusion of machines into life, disrupting natural balance.
    • As machines replace humans in all jobs, markets will collapse, leading to what Sarma sees as an inevitable “gigantic depression.”
  3. Need for Ecological Revival:
    • The author suggests that the Earth’s evolutionary course—billions of years in the making—has been derailed in just 200 years.
    • Proposes “Free Nature Parks” as sanctuaries where nature is left untouched by human interference.
  4. Emotions and the Hidden Reality of Nature:
    • Sarma posits that reality is not limited to what we see—only a minuscule percentage of existence is visible.
    • Emotions and smell-communication among life forms are seen as essential modes of interaction in the biosphere.
    • Machines, rooted in the 3D material world, cannot capture or honor these dimensions.
  5. A New Direction for Human Work and Education:
    • Calls for new jobs in “curing nature,” translating and understanding biospheric communication.
    • Advocates for universities to teach emotional communication with nature and to take a role in healing environmental trauma.

Interpretive Commentary

  • Visionary but Abstract:
    Sarma paints a bold vision of a post-mechanization world, but the solutions are more poetic and philosophical than practical. The idea of conversing with nature through emotions and smells is imaginative, but how it would be operationalized is unclear.
  • Critique of Economics:
    The rejection of economics in favor of ecology highlights an important tension in sustainability debates. Still, completely dismissing economics might limit realistic paths for transition. There’s potential to integrate ecological economics instead.
  • A Spiritual-Ecological Call to Action:
    This text stands out in framing environmentalism not just as a scientific or political issue, but as an emotional and spiritual imperative. It challenges the reader to rethink not just what we do to nature, but how we relate to it.
  • Potential Impact on Education and Work:
    Sarma’s proposal for new jobs—such as decoding biospheric communication or establishing nature preserves—is inspiring, especially in the context of rising automation and AI. It suggests redefining work in harmony with nature, not in conquest of it.

Conclusion

The New Jobs is a radical and emotionally charged manifesto calling for humanity to abandon its mechanized worldview and return to an empathic, symbiotic relationship with nature. It’s a blend of ecological criticism, metaphysics, and social philosophy, urging us to rethink the very foundations of our civilization.

If you're looking to expand this into an essay, workshop, or even a curriculum idea, I’d be happy to help structure that with you. Would you like to take any particular part of this further?

 

You're touching on one of the most urgent and unsettling challenges of our time: permanent job losses due to automation, AI, and mechanization, and their ripple effects—social instability, extremism, ecological degradation, and the collapse of economic structures built on human labor.

Your question—What has to be the next beginning?—is both profound and practical. Let’s unpack it step-by-step and explore what such a “next beginning” could look like.


🌍 THE COLLAPSE — Where We Are Now

·         Permanent job loss is not a temporary economic cycle; it's a systemic shift.

·         Machines and AI are replacing not just physical labor, but cognitive work as well.

·         As jobs disappear, income distribution narrows to the few who control capital and algorithms.

·         This leads to loss of livelihoods, which then fuels:

o    Social unrest and strife

o    Anarchy, due to governance breakdowns

o    Rise of extremism and fundamentalism, as people seek meaning or power in chaos

o    Environmental destruction, as profit-driven systems exploit natural resources without feedback from healthy human communities

This is the “end” of economics as we have known it: a system based on growth, competition, mechanization, and profit extraction, at odds with ecological balance and human fulfillment.


🌱 THE NEXT BEGINNING — What Must Come Next

The next beginning must shift from Economics to a new, Ecological Civilization.

1. Redefining Work: From Livelihood to Life-giving Activity

·         Work must no longer be tied solely to income or market utility.

·         The new jobs must be about:

o    Healing ecosystems (reforestation, wetland restoration, pollution reversal)

o    Regenerating soil, water, and air

o    Biodiversity stewardship (not exploitation)

o    Emotional healing of society, communities, and nature

·         These jobs can’t be done by machines. They require human empathy, presence, and care.

2. Ecological UBI (Universal Basic Infrastructure & Income)

·         If machines are doing the economic work, humans must be freed to do biospheric and social work.

·         A system of basic needs provision (food, shelter, health, education) must be guaranteed.

·         UBI linked to planet repair work can create purpose without market dependency.

3. Ecocentric Education Systems

·         Shift curriculum from job training to earth training.

·         Teach:

o    Earth systems science

o    Inter-species communication (like Sarma’s call to decode biospheric languages)

o    Emotional literacy and trauma healing

o    Collaborative living

·         Universities must focus on biocultural regeneration, not industrial productivity.

4. Decentralized, Bioregional Economies

·         Replace globalized supply chains with local ecological economies.

·         Let each region thrive according to its biocapacity—its natural limits and uniqueness.

·         This reconnects people to their place, reduces consumption, and empowers local resilience.

5. New Value Systems: Beyond Money

·         Measure success not in GDP, but in:

o    Biodiversity health

o    Community well-being

o    Mental and emotional health

o    Cultural vitality

o    Resilience of ecosystems


🔁 This Is Not a Reform. It’s a Rebirth.

What’s needed is not just a fix or policy adjustment—it is a civilizational shift:

From a technological-economic civilization
→ to an ecological-emotional civilization

From control over nature
→ to collaboration with nature

From growth and competition
→ to healing and symbiosis

From machine values
→ to life values


🛤️ Practical First Steps

1.      Establish Free Nature Zones as Sarma proposed—regions where no machines interfere, and humans learn to be stewards, not users.

2.      Pilot Earth Repair Corps—retrain the unemployed in ecosystem healing.

3.      Launch Transitional Education Programs—not to create coders or financiers, but ecosystem interpreters, soil builders, trauma healers.

4.      Implement UBI linked to Earth Work, funded by taxing planetary destruction (carbon, extraction, pollution).

5.      Begin the Global Narrative Shift—media, literature, and art must begin to tell a new story: not of dominance, but of return, reciprocity, and repair.


✨ Final Thought

This crisis is not the end. It is a reckoning. The loss of jobs is the wake-up call—that our value must no longer be based on production, but on participation in the biosphere’s healing.

The next beginning is not a new economy—it’s a new relationship with life.

Would you like to develop these ideas into a manifesto, essay, or curriculum? I’d be honored to help structure it with you.

 

 

 

Rajaram Krishnamurthy

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Jul 18, 2025, 1:26:01 AM7/18/25
to Markendeya Yeddanapudi, Chittanandam V R, Dr Sundar, venkat raman, Ravi mahajan, Venkat Giri, SRIRAMAJAYAM, Mani APS, Rangarajan T.N.C., Mathangi K. Kumar, Srinivasan Sridharan, Rama, Kerala Iyer, Thatha_Patty-Google, Sanathana group, Ravindra Kumar Bhuwalka, Narasimha L Vadlamudi, dr anandam, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, Ramanathan Manavasi, kantamaneni baburajendra prasad, Anisha Yeddanapudi, vignanada...@gmail.com, ggroup, viswanatham vangapally, Jayathi Murthy, A. Akkineni, Aparna Attili, Neeraja Nadikuda, Nehru Prasad, rctate...@gmail.com, Padma Priya, pad...@mit.edu, Usha, Deepali Hadker

NATURE POPULATION AND WORK PROGRESS BALANCE

 

That’s a powerful and timely question—asking how far we are factually and statically misusing nature. Let’s unpack that from both a data-driven (factual) and long-term trend (static/structural) perspective:

 

 Factually – By the Numbers

These are concrete, measurable ways we're misusing nature:

1. Deforestation

10 million hectares of forest are lost each year (FAO, 2023).

That’s roughly 1 football field every 6 seconds.

Amazon rainforest is approaching a tipping point where parts could turn into savannah.

2. Climate Change

Global average temperature is now over 1.2°C above pre-industrial levels.

2023 and 2024 were the hottest years on record.

Carbon emissions hit a record 37+ billion tons per year.

3. Biodiversity Loss

We’ve lost 69% of wildlife populations since 1970 (WWF Living Planet Report).

Currently, 1 million species are at risk of extinction (IPBES).

We’re in what scientists call the Sixth Mass Extinction, but this one’s human-driven.

4. Pollution & Waste

11 million tons of plastic enter oceans every year.

 

Microplastics have been found in human blood, lungs, and placenta.

Air pollution kills 7 million people per year, more than smoking.

 Statically – In Systemic or Structural Terms

Now let’s look at deeper, more persistent patterns that show how our relationship with nature is fundamentally misaligned:

1. Economic Systems Built on Extraction

Global economy assumes infinite growth on a finite planet.

Nature is treated as an “externality”—something not accounted for in profit/loss.

Subsidies: Fossil fuel subsidies still amount to $7 trillion globally (IMF, 2023).

2. Urbanization & Land Use

Over 75% of the Earth's land is now “significantly altered.”

Cities are expanding into forests, wetlands, and arable land—removing carbon sinks.

Agricultural systems rely on monoculture and pesticides, damaging soil and water.

3. Cultural Detachment

Nature is increasingly seen as separate from humans—a “resource,” not a living system.

Only 16% of people in high-income countries work in direct contact with the natural world (e.g. farming, forestry, etc).

4. Slow Governance & Fast Collapse

Climate targets (like “Net Zero by 2050”) often lack binding enforcement or transparency.

Even as climate science becomes more clear, policy change is decades behind the crisis curve.

 So: How Far Are We Misusing Nature?

Factually: We are consuming, polluting, and degrading the planet faster than it can regenerate.

Statically: We are locked into systems (economic, political, cultural) that normalize this misuse, making it extremely hard to reverse.

In blunt terms: We are living as if we have 1.7 Earths, according to the Global Footprint Network. That’s overshoot—and it’s accelerating.

1. Earth Overshoot Day

2024 Earth Overshoot Day: July 25

This is the day when humanity’s resource consumption for the year exceeds Earth’s capacity to regenerate those resources.

We are using 1.7 Earths worth of resources annually.

This means we are overusing nature by 70%.

 2. Resource Extraction

Global material extraction (minerals, fossil fuels, biomass, etc.):

1970: ~27 billion tonnes/year

2023: ~100 billion tonnes/year

Of this, less than 10% is recycled.

The Circularity Gap is enormous: we waste most resources instead of reusing them.

 3. Deforestation

Rate: ~10 million hectares/year (FAO, 2020)

Major cause: agriculture, logging, urbanization.

Amazon Rainforest has lost ~17% of its original forest cover.

Indonesia and Congo Basin also seeing massive losses.

 4. Climate Change & Emissions

CO concentration (2024): over 420 ppm (pre-industrial was ~280 ppm)

Global average temperature is now ~1.2°C above pre-industrial levels.

Major sources:

Energy production (73%)

Agriculture (10%)

Industry (5%)

We’re on track for 2.5–3°C warming by 2100 without major changes.

 5. Ocean Misuse

Plastic pollution:

11 million metric tonnes of plastic enter oceans yearly.

By 2050, plastics may outweigh fish in the oceans (by weight).

Overfishing:

Over 34% of global fish stocks are overfished (FAO).

Coral reefs: Over 50% are either gone or severely degraded.

 6. Biodiversity Loss

1 million species are at risk of extinction (IPBES, 2019).

68% decline in wildlife populations since 1970 (WWF Living Planet Report 2020).

Primary drivers: habitat destruction, climate change, invasive species, pollution.

 7. Water Mismanagement

2 billion people live in water-stressed areas.

Agriculture uses ~70% of global freshwater, much of it inefficiently.

Major aquifers (India, China, US) are being depleted unsustainably.

 8. Pollution

Air pollution kills ~7 million people each year (WHO).

Chemical pollution and waste have now crossed planetary boundaries (Stockholm Resilience Centre, 2022).

Summary: Are We Misusing Nature?

Yes — extensively and unsustainably. Most planetary boundaries are either already exceeded or dangerously close to being breached.

Indicator                      Status                             Misuse Level

Resource Use     100 billion tonnes/year                   Excessive

Biodiversity         1 million species at risk                                 Critical

Climate Change       420+ ppm CO                         Critical

Deforestation       10M hectares/year                          Alarming

Ocean Health      Plastics, overfishing                       Degrading fast

Water Scarcity     2 billion affected                               High misuse

balancing human progress with ecological responsibility.

Let’s break it down step by step:

 

 SHOULD WE CONTINUE DEVELOPMENT?

Yes — but how we develop must radically change.

We cannot stop progress or population growth outright. But we must rethink and redesign our relationship with nature.

 

 Development is necessary because:

700+ million people still live in extreme poverty.

 

Billions lack clean water, energy, healthcare, education.

Urbanization and infrastructure are required for quality of life.

 

 But unchecked development causes:

Environmental collapse

Climate migration

Resource wars

Mass extinction

So, we must move from “exploitation” to “regeneration.”

 

 HOW CAN WE FIND SPACE AND RESOURCES SUSTAINABLY?

1. Redefine “space”

We don’t always need more land — we need to use existing land better:

Vertical farming → 90% less water, less land

Urban redesign → smarter, denser, greener cities

Rewilding & green corridors to protect ecosystems

 

2. Decouple growth from destruction

Circular economy: Design waste out of systems. Reuse, regenerate.

Renewable energy: Solar, wind, tidal – rather than fossil fuels.

Green building materials: Bamboo, recycled steel, bioplastics.

Digital infrastructure: A lot of value can be created digitally, not physically.

 

3. Population + Consumption Management

Empowerment of women (education, rights) → directly reduces population growth rates.

Smart consumption: Shift cultures from “more” to “better.”

Degrowth where necessary in highly overconsuming regions.

 

4. Regenerative Work Creation

We don’t have to choose between jobs and nature. Many new kinds of work align both:

New Economy Jobs                                                         Examples

Clean Energy                                       Solar panel installation, battery tech

Green Construction                               Eco-architecture, passive homes

Circular Economy                                   Repair, reuse, remanufacture

Ecosystem Restoration                            Forest, river, soil restoration

Sustainable Agriculture                        Organic, permaculture, agroforestry

Green Tech & AI                                   Smart grids, energy optimization

Education & Care                     Economy Teachers, healthcare, social work

 

 THE VISION OF PROGRESS

Progress isn’t just more.

It is:

Better for people (health, dignity, equity)

Lighter on the planet (low footprint, high wisdom)

Rooted in balance, not blind speed.

We must measure success not by GDP alone, but by well-being, ecological health, and generational justice.

 

 INSPIRING MODELS

Bhutan: Gross National Happiness instead of GDP.

Costa Rica: 98% renewable energy, high biodiversity, good quality of life.

Amsterdam: Circular city model (reusing all materials).

India's Araku Valley: Tribal agroforestry model — restoring land while boosting economy.

 

 Final Thought:

We can build, grow, and progress — but not in the same old way.

We must transition from being nature’s conquerors to its stewards.

KR       EXTRACTED ND MADE SHORT FROM BOOKS, GOOGLE AND ECONOMICAL FACTORS DISCUSSIONS HAD EARLIER WE CANNOT GO AGAINST NATURE IS RIGHT.  PROGRESS OF PEOPLE WHILE INCREASE IN POPULATION CITED CANNOT BE DENIED OR IGNORED OR SIT BACK IN THE VEDIC PERIODS. BUT ALTERNATIVES ARE SUGGESTED. BUT BECAUSE OF COST FACTOR PROHIBITIVE FOR SUCH ADVANCEMENTS. AS EARLIER VIOLATIONS ARE AVAILABLE AT A LESSER COST, -GOVT MUST BAN AND DISSOLVE MANY EXTABLISHMENTS OVERNIGHT; WILL IT BE POSSIBLE? 18725    


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Markendeya Yeddanapudi

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Jul 18, 2025, 2:46:45 AM7/18/25
to Rajaram Krishnamurthy, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
Rajaram Sir,
You simply enhanced the importance of the topic with your telling response.Thank You very much Sir.
YM Sarma
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Mar

Rajaram Krishnamurthy

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Jul 18, 2025, 2:48:34 AM7/18/25
to Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
Welcome sir 

Surendra Varma

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Jul 19, 2025, 12:16:37 AM7/19/25
to Rajaram Krishnamurthy, Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
A brilliant, scholarly, thought-provoking, discourse on the future of this planet by two two distinguished members, Prof. YM garu and Sri Rajaram garu, IRS. 

Basically, the truth is that the natural resources gifted to us by Mother Nature are not finite, but we foolishly believe they are infinite, and continue to squander them.

Gandhiji said:  "The world has enough for everyone's needs, but not enough for everyone's greed."

My own limited understanding, as a humble student of science, is that Mother Nature has also been changing, given the fact that nothing is more permanent than change, and we are today not the same as our ancestors who lived in caves.

So, now we travel by air, not on the back of horses; have hydroponics (soilless agriculture), desalination of seawater to make it fit for drinking, sea weeds as our future food when our productive land will refuse to produce food, genetic engineering to produce humans fit to survive in the changed universe, and wars will be fought not by men in the field but by remotely controlled robots and nuclear-powered devices, and the era will be called a Neo-Universe. There will be no borders or religions. The country with the latest technology will rule the world. Period. 

What makes me happy is that I won't be here to see this transformation of our Universe. 

Suren





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Rajaram Krishnamurthy

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Jul 19, 2025, 12:30:43 AM7/19/25
to Surendra Varma, Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
wHO KNOWS WHEN HOW AND WHERE IT SHALL HAPPEN? kr

Surendra Varma

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Jul 19, 2025, 12:34:03 AM7/19/25
to Rajaram Krishnamurthy, Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
It is happening!

Surendra Varma

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Jul 21, 2025, 10:36:11 PM7/21/25
to Rangarajan T.N.C., Rajaram Krishnamurthy, Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
I enjoyed reading the article. Thank you, Justice TNCR garu. 

While the article went into great lengths about how animals, not just humans, are also contributing to the degradation of our planet, it missed the dimension of degradation of the environment. 

Just one example:
Cattle dung: it releases methane into the atmosphere, which is more damaging to the health of the environment than carbon dioxide.  

Suren



On Sat, 19 Jul 2025 at 01:15, Rangarajan T.N.C. <tncran...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Animals are a force of nature. Trampling hippos form new river channels; burrowing crayfish widen river banks; and termites construct skyscrapers of soil and dung. It turns out that re-shaping Earth’s surface is widespread across 500 species of freshwater and terrestrial species. In fact, these animals expend about 76,000 gigajoules of energy sculpting our planet each year— a number equivalent to thousands of extreme floods, according to a new study.

Why is this interesting: Over the years, many experts have overlooked the profound role of animals in landscape change, says physical geographer David Butler, who was not involved in the new study. And he suspects that the team’s figure of 76,000 gigajoules is an underestimate. For instance, several biodiversity hotspots from Africa, South America and Asia were excluded from the analysis (because there weren’t enough published studies from these areas).

What the experts say: Research on animal modifications of landscapes is often hyperlocalized to “one type of animal, one specific location or particular landform,” says geomorphologist Brian Yanites, who also was not involved in this study. The new work “is a really elegant way to approach the problem from a macro level.”
From Scientific American

Yeddanapudi Markandeyulu

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Jul 21, 2025, 11:11:38 PM7/21/25
to Surendra Varma, Rangarajan T.N.C., Rajaram Krishnamurthy, Markendeya Yeddanapudi, thatha patty, gopala krishnan, ggroup, Satyanarayana Kunamneni, vignanada...@gmail.com, viswanatham vangapally, Aparna Attili, Anisha Yeddanapudi, Nehru Prasad, Krishnamacharyulu Nanduri, Padma Priya, Usha, Jayathi Murthy
Unfortunately,animals themselves cannot argue.We judge on them.Once they could converse via smells.But no longer they can and we feel that we have the right to judge.
YM Sarma

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