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Draft policy statement: advanced environmental offsets under the EPBC Act

Department of the Environment - Fri, 2015-07-31 14:36
The Department of the Environment is releasing the policy statement as a working draft for public comment from 17 August 2015 to 12 October 2015.
Categories: Around The Web

Cecil the lion mural painted outside dental practice in Minnesota – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-07-30 17:45
Artist Mark Balma discusses why he is painting a huge mural of Cecil the lion outside Walter Palmer's dental practice in Minnesota. Palmer received widespread condemnation for hunting and killing the lion in Zimbabwe. Hundreds of protesters gathered outside Palmer's office on Wednesday demanding the dentist be extradited to face charges in Zimbabwe. Palmer has said he believed the hunt was legal and didn't know about the lion's status

Watch the full interview with artist Mark Balma Continue reading...
Categories: Around The Web

Warning - potential scam involving the purchase of puppies

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2015-07-30 15:44
The Department of the Environment is urging people to be aware of a scam involving the purchase of puppies.
Categories: Around The Web

Threat abatement plan for predation by feral cats

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2015-07-30 14:09
This threat abatement plan establishes a national framework to guide and coordinate Australia's response to the impacts of feral cats on biodiversity.
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Activists hang from bridge in Portland to block Shell's Arctic vessel

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-07-30 06:31

Greenpeace climbers in Oregon city say they plan to spend days hanging from the bridge but Shell maintains the Fennica will be off after ‘final preparations’

A group of environmental activists rappelled off a bridge in Portland, Oregon, shortly before 3am PT, in a bid to block a key vessel in Shell’s Arctic drilling fleet leaving the city’s port.

Related: The new cold war: drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic

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Categories: Around The Web

Cecil the lion's killer joins long list of big game hunters skewered on social media

The Guardian - Thu, 2015-07-30 04:55

From the King of Spain to America’s most famous hockey mom, proud displays of animal trophies haven’t always been met with congratulations online

In the jungle, the mighty jungle, poor Cecil the lion no longer sleeps tonight. After news broke that the beloved big cat was killed by a dentist from Minnesota, the hunter, Walter Palmer, quickly became “the most hated man in America who never advertised Jell-O pudding on television”, according to Jimmy Kimmel.

Palmer is reportedly receiving death threats and a deluge of horrible Yelp reviews, and it probably goes without saying that his patients are likely hunting themselves – for a new dentist. But Palmer is by no means the first big game trophy hunter to get skewered online for their exploits.

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Categories: Around The Web

Jimmy Kimmel has emotional response to death of Cecil the lion - video

The Guardian - Wed, 2015-07-29 23:29
US talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel gives an emotional response to the death of Cecil the lion, a cherished creature at Zimbabwe's Hwange national park. The host of Jimmy Kimmel Live! says he was saddened to hear the lion was killed by an American hunter earlier this month. Kimmel becomes visibly upset while speaking about the incident, and later prompts viewers to donate to a wildlife research unit

Watch a longer version of this clip
Watch archive footage of Cecil the lion Continue reading...
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Richard Branson urges against shark hunting following Mick Fanning attack

The Guardian - Wed, 2015-07-29 21:02

Virgin founder calls for sharks to be protected, not killed in retribution, following top surfer’s amazing escape from an attack in South Africa

Sir Richard Branson has called for sharks to be protected rather than hunted down and killed in the wake of an attack on one of the world’s leading surfers.

The billionaire entrepreneur called for restraint following Mick Fanning’s encounter with a shark on the coast of South Africa, in which he fought it off by punching the predator on the back.

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Categories: Around The Web

Killer of Cecil the lion was dentist from Minnesota, claim Zimbabwe officials

The Guardian - Wed, 2015-07-29 02:00

Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force alleges trophy hunter shot one of Africa’s most famous lions near Hwange national park

Conservationists in Zimbabwe have accused an American man of being the alleged killer of Cecil, one of Africa’s most famous lions and the star attraction at the Hwange national park.

On Tuesday, the Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force said the man thought to have paid $50,000 (£32,000) for the chance to kill Cecil was not a Spaniard as originally believed, but US citizen Walter Palmer, from a small town near Minneapolis. The man left the lion skinned and headless on the outskirts of the park, the ZCTF’s Johnny Rodrigues said in a statement.

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Categories: Around The Web

Proposal to grant an export permit for a rainbow lorikeet (Trichoglossus haematodus) under exceptional circumstances

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2015-07-28 15:03
The Minister is considering granting a permit to export one (1) Rainbow Lorikeet (Trichoglossus haematodus) as a household pet to Canada. Comments close 4 August 2015.
Categories: Around The Web

Wild beluga congregate in Canada's Hudson Bay – in pictures

The Guardian - Tue, 2015-07-28 01:37

Explore.org, Polar Bears International, Frontiers North Adventures and a group of wildlife experts have launched a wild beluga livestream, broadcasting footage from a boatcam that will follow the whales as they migrate to a small estuary on Hudson Bay. The livestream will run until 21 August, with a guide narrating footage from above and below the water

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Categories: Around The Web

SENG Victoria news - July 2015

Newsletters VIC - Mon, 2015-07-27 22:30
SENG Victoria news - July 2015
Categories: Newsletters VIC

As if Australia didn't have enough spiders – 13 new species found in Queensland

The Guardian - Mon, 2015-07-27 17:35

A team of scientists, teachers and Indigenous rangers find new arachnids during survey of the Cape York peninsula in Queensland’s far north

Thirteen new species of spider have been discovered on Queensland’s Cape York peninsula – adding to the thousands of known species that give Australian wildlife its fearsome reputation.

The new species were found by scientists, teachers and Indigenous rangers during a 10-day journey to the largely unsurveyed area.

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Chairs’ Update 24 July 2015 | Commonwealth Marine Reserves Review

Department of the Environment - Mon, 2015-07-27 16:45
Find out the latest updates on the Commonwealth Marine Reserves Review.
Categories: Around The Web

The mystery of the poisoned seagull: is this the start of the fightback?

The Guardian - Sat, 2015-07-25 18:00

They’ve divebombed pensioners. They’ve eaten tortoises. Now a seagull has been found dead in Bridport. Tragic accident or mob-style warning? Our gumshoe found a tale of starling-swallowers, salmonella – and a second victim

“They sent you all this way to ask about a seagull?” The taxi driver looked at me in the mirror. In his eyes, I saw confusion, maybe a little fear. I smiled wearily. Not now, I thought. Not him, too. No more talk of seagulls. It had been a long couple of days. I was so nearly out of Saigon I could hear the rotor blades thumping above.

By Saigon, of course, I mean Bridport, west Dorset, a seaside market town of charity shops, estate agents and bad local art galleries. By rotor blades, I mean seagulls. For the past 36 hours I had thought about little else. If you gaze at the seagull long enough, I learned, it gazes back at you. You wonder whether it has a demonic quality. A seagull will do strange things to a man.

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Categories: Around The Web

Wild boar numbers on the rise despite cull in the Forest of Dean

The Guardian - Sat, 2015-07-25 01:21

Survey reveals population has nearly doubled to over 1,000 despite significant increase in number of animals culled every year

Wild boar numbers in the Forest of Dean have nearly doubled since 2013 despite an increase in the number culled, according to the Forestry Commission.

Results of an annual thermal imaging survey estimate the population is now more than 1,000 animals.

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Categories: Around The Web

Mick Fanning on shark encounter: 'Thanks for not eating me!'

The Guardian - Tue, 2015-07-21 16:20

Surfer says it may be months before he goes back in the ocean after the terror of escaping a shark while competing in South Africa

Surfer Mick Fanning says it could be months before he gets over the shark attack in South Africa, but says he will return to the water.

A shaken Fanning appeared at a media conference of about 150 journalists in Sydney on Tuesday afternoon to recount fighting off a shark while competing at the J-Bay Open in South Africa.

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Categories: Around The Web

Review of Australia’s Biodiversity Conservation Strategy 2010-2030

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2015-07-21 11:11
Australia is reviewing the first five years of Australia’s Biodiversity Conservation Strategy.
Categories: Around The Web

Chemical pollution from M6 lorry fire thought to be behind mass fish deaths

The Guardian - Mon, 2015-07-20 06:28

Environment Agency found about 150 dead fish in the river Penk and more in the river Sow, near Stafford – identifying the tarmac-melting fire as the likely cause

A lorry fire that shut a motorway for 16 hours after it melted the road is believed to be responsible for killing more than 100 fish in nearby rivers, the Environment Agency has said.

Tests are being carried out by environmental officers, with the agency saying the fire caused chemicals to seep into the watercourses. Around 150 fish were found dead at the river Penk near Stafford, while there were further reports of dead fish at the river Sow.

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Categories: Around The Web

Beware permitting fracking, says farmer who allowed coal methane borehole

The Guardian - Fri, 2015-07-17 22:55

Paul Hickson says when he signed access agreement he had no idea of physical or psychological impact that gas drilling could have on him and his family

A farmer who gave an energy company permission to dig a test borehole for coal bed methane gas out of a sense of national duty has warned other landowners not to allow fracking and other unconventional gas exploration companies on their land.

The potential of gas drilling to pollute water courses and the effect it could have on the value of farmland left Paul Hickson and his family stressed for years and no wealthier, he said.

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Categories: Around The Web

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