The AutoMOST initiative wins the ITS Award for Autonomous and Connected Vehicles at the 21st ITS Spanish Congress
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Engage with the IDB on access to safe water
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If youâve taken a country drive in central Texas, or if youâre familiar with the landscape of Fort Hood, you have noticed forested slopes of mesas and canyons. Most of those dark evergreen trees are cedars, also known as mountain cedar or Ashe juniper. About half of them are beginning to change color â and not because of a change in season. Soon, local allergy sufferers will wisely stock up on allergy antidotes and try to avoid the great outdoors.
From about December to February cedar trees take advantage of any wind to get pollinated. The males, laden with amber-hued limbs, release copious amounts of microscopic pollen, which from a distance looks like an off white puff of smoke. The females produce purple berries (actually cones) in which they receive pollen. Wind pollination is effective but very inefficient, as most of it gets wasted â leaving a yellow film on our cars, windows, and outdoor furniture. Inevitably some pollen grains also end up in our sinuses,