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'A first in my 60 years': readers spot early signs of spring
Readers around the UK have been getting in touch after noticing blooming and blossoming ahead of time
Spring has come early in the form of blooming flowers and butterflies, according to readers around the UK who responded to our callout.
Related: Spring flowers in autumn, birdsong in winter: what a freak year for nature
Continue reading...Country diary: panic ripples through the birds as a raptor approaches
Pulborough Brooks, West Sussex: This is no idle flyover – the peregrine falcon is focused, intent, trying to single out possible targets
Continue reading...AGL seeking big wind project proposals to help replace Liddell
Former Queensland Coalition MP pushing coal propaganda
New antibiotic family discovered in dirt
NSW land-clearing prosecutions down 80% in three years
Government says it has no information on extent of clearing under new, less-restrictive laws
Prosecutions in New South Wales for illegal land clearing have dropped by 80% in the past three years, according to data released under freedom of information laws.
The information, obtained by the NSW Labor opposition, shows the Berejiklian government claims not to have any information about how much clearing has occurred under new laws that came into force in August 2017 aimed at making land clearing easier.
Continue reading...Energy divide: Frontier attacks AEMO, wants it abolished
JA Solar supplies mono PERC modules for 250MW solar project in Israel
CEFC backed green loan scheme hopes to boost EV uptake
Tesla charged with diesel generator still cleaner than conventional car
Trump budget US cash for International Space Station
Antarctic iceberg expedition set to reveal hidden realm
Network Rail to install drinking fountains in majority of its train stations this year
Company pledges to introduce free drinking water facilities in many of nation’s busiest stations
Network Rail has pledged to install water fountains in the majority of its 17 managed UK stations by the end of the year.
Related: Bottled water is a nonsense. Just ban it and fill our towns with drinking fountains | Sonia Sodha
Continue reading...Wombats, sharks, possums, frogs: Australia's animals at risk of extinction
Hundreds of Australian animals are endangered, and while they could be saved, government intervention is urgently needed
• ‘A national disgrace’: Australia’s extinction crisis is unfolding in plain sight
'A national disgrace': Australia's extinction crisis is unfolding in plain sight
More than 1,800 plant and animal species and ecological communities are at risk of extinction right now
• Interactive: Wombats, sharks, possums, frogs: Australia’s animals at risk of extinction
Global warming wiped out the Bramble Cay melomys – the first mammalian extinction in the world to be caused by climate change – but a straightforward plan that could have rescued the little rodent was thwarted by red tape and political indifference.
“It could have been saved. That’s the most important part,” says John Woinarski, a professor of conservation biology who was on the threatened species scientific committee that approved a 2008 national recovery plan for the species, endemic to a tiny island in the Torres Strait.
Continue reading...New crayfish that doesn't need males to mate becomes all-powerful
The EPA debunked Administrator Pruitt’s latest climate misinformation | Dana Nuccitelli
Until Pruitt deleted the EPA climate webpages.
Last week, a Las Vegas news station interviewed Trump’s EPA administrator Scott Pruitt. The interviewer brought up the topic of climate change, and virtually everything Pruitt said in response was wrong, and was often refuted on his own agency’s website, until he started deleting it.
Continue reading...UK team set for giant Antarctic iceberg expedition
Queen Elizabeth II declares war on plastic
Microplastics pollute most remote and uncharted areas of the ocean
First data ever gathered from extremely remote area of the South Indian Ocean has a surprisingly high volume of plastic particles, say scientists
Microplastics have been found in some of the most remote and uncharted regions of the oceans raising more concerns over the global scale of plastic pollution.
Samples taken from the middle of the South Indian Ocean – at latitude 45.5 degrees south – show microplastic particles detected at relatively high volumes. Sören Gutekunst, from the Geomar Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, who analysed the samples, said the data showed 42 particles per cubic metre, which was surprising given the remoteness of the area.
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