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Global warming experiment turns up the heat in Puerto Rican forest
A pioneering research project is aiming to determine how forests in the Amazon, the Congo and elsewhere in the tropics will reacting to rising temperatures
Mid-morning in the Luquillo experimental forest in north-west Puerto Rico, and the thermometer already reads 26C. Tana Wood, an ecologist employed by the US Forest Service, pulls on a pair of heavy gloves for insulating against electrical shock.
Over two years, her team here has laid out hexagonal plots four metres across, each about the size of a backyard trampoline. Industrial-strength heaters suspended several metres above the ground from metal scaffolding on the perimeter of three plots will heat the soil and undergrowth to 4C above the forest’s ambient temperature.
Continue reading...Finance for deep-rooted prosperity is coming | Joseph Robertson
We’re entering a new age for the Earth’s climate and for the way we conceive of finance
“Macrocritical resilience” may be the most mystifying two-word phrase you need to know. Though you may never have heard these two words before, what they describe affects everything you live and strive for. Wonky as it sounds, it is a common sense idea: what generates value is more valuable than what we count in dollars. And yet, it is only in the last few years that we are truly beginning to understand that macrocritical indicators—elements of human experience that shape the health and viability of the overall economy—really do describe how and where value and capability come into being.
On Christmas Eve, 2013, the small island nation of St. Vincent and the Grenadines experienced the most intense rainfall in its history. 15 percent of gross domestic product was wiped out in just a few hours. In 2004, Hurricane Ivan caused $900 million worth of damage in Grenada—more than twice the nation’s GDP. One of the executive directors of the International Monetary Fund noted that when so much value can be lost so suddenly, “you no longer know what the value of a dollar is.”
Continue reading...Wolves once hunted these Helsfell slopes
Kendal, Lake District A skeleton unearthed by a Victorian archaeologist should give us clues as to when wolves last roamed the Lakeland fells
From my study window I watch jackdaws making their chattering sorties above the rooftops and over Kendal Fell. Across the road a footpath leads up the fell, less well known now as Helsfell, and on through two small areas of woodland. What I can’t see, and hadn’t known until recently, though I walk the area most days, is that deep in the far wood is a cave of significant archaeological importance.
In the 1880s an amateur archaeologist, John Beecham, spent five summers excavating it. He discovered the bones of bear, wild cat, polecat, wild boar and iron age oxen – Bos longifrons, the first domesticated cattle – and the complete skeleton of a wolf. All undated, the collection became dispersed, but the wolf still resides in Kendal Museum, which is having it restored with the help of Arts Council funding].
Continue reading...Historic climate deal reached on potent refrigerant gases
Federal resources minister hoorays Adani coal (and solar) jobs
Tesla and Panasonic to collaborate on PV cell and module production in Buffalo, New York
Australia takes centre stage on global green climate funds
Antarctic marine reserves deal within reach as Russia thaws environmental stance
After five years of failed negotiations, conservations are hopeful Russia is prepared to make a deal to protect the Ross Sea and East Antarctica
An international agreement to protect some of Antarctica’s unique and pristine marine ecosystems could be reached within a fortnight, with scientists and conversationists hopeful of a breakthrough after five years of failed negotiations.
Delegates from 24 nations and the European Union gathered in Hobart on Monday to commence two weeks of talks at the annual meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
Continue reading...Know your NEM: D-day for Australia’s dirtiest power plant
Australian fisherman fends off great white shark with a broom – video
Dan Hoey, an angler from Port Fairy, a coastal town in Victoria, Australia, was out fishing with his brother and a client when he noticed a great white shark circling his boat. Video captured by Hoey’s chartered fishing business, Salty Dog Charters, shows him fending off the shark with a household broom
Continue reading...Who has the best tap water?
Tritium launches a Veefil range of fast chargers for electric vehicles
Discover Australia’s ‘Green House’ on the Airbnb Sustainability Tour
Visions clash at World Energy Congress in Istanbul
Coal CEO calls Tesla a “fraud,” doesn’t mention subsidies for failing coal
CEFC adds Townsville-based Tracy Lines to QLD team
Powering the future: hundreds to bring ideas to Melbourne
Photo of the Day: Biggest wind turbine blades arrive in Australia
Ceremony to mark start of Attenborough polar ship construction
Use of strongest antibiotics rises to record levels on European farms
Medicines classified as ‘critically important in human medicine’ appear to be in frequent use, says European Medicines Agency
Use of some of the strongest antibiotics available to treat life-threatening infections has risen to record levels on European farms, new data shows.
The report reinforces concerns about the overuse of antibiotics on farms, following revelations from the Guardian of the presence of the superbug MRSA in UK-produced meat, in imported meat for sale in UK supermarkets, and on British farms.
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