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Live Q&A: What can we do to help elephants?
Volunteer? Raise money? Be a citizen scientist? Join us Monday 13 Feb at 1 - 2.30pm GMT to talk about what we can all do to help elephants.
In the face of falling elephant populations around the world, it’s easy to feel a little hopeless. But in fact there are a number of things you can do to help - from volunteering to becoming a citizen scientist yourself, to supporting some of the extraordinary organisations out there.
We’re putting together a database of actions to launch next Monday (Feb 13). To mark the launch, we’ll be hosting an online discussion with elephant experts, discussing what everyone can do, and assessing areas where genuine progress is being made.
Terrific Scientific: BBC Breakfast's fizzy bottle rocket flop
Satisfying the thirsty
Repeal without replace: a dangerous GOP strategy on Obamacare and climate | Dana Nuccitelli
House Republicans are explicitly saying that protecting public and environmental health isn’t worth a few jobs or a small cost.
House Republicans have introduced a bill to rewrite the Clean Air Act. The bill, which has 114 co-sponsors (all Republicans), would revise the Clean Air Act such that:
The term ‘air pollutant’ does not include carbon dioxide, water vapor, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, or sulfur hexafluoride.
Continue reading...Villagers in Bolivia refuse to be left high and dry by drought – in pictures
Despite January rains heavy enough to cause flooding in some areas, the effects of severe drought continue to be felt keenly in many areas of Bolivia, affecting about 125,000 families. A resourceful village in Mizque province has come up with ways to eke out what little water is available
All photographs by Andrew Philip/Tearfund
Continue reading...Restoring Lake Pedder
Hedgehogs now a rare garden sight as British populations continue to decline
More than half of people surveyed had never seen a hedgehog, once common in UK gardens
The plight of the hedgehog in Britain appears to be worsening, with a new survey revealing a further decline in garden sightings.
The spiky creature was once a common sight, with the population estimated at 30 million in the 1950s. But that has plummeted to fewer than one million today, with a third of this loss thought to have taken place in the past decade.
Continue reading...Waxwings and spruce are Kinder trespassers
Kinder Scout, Peak District Walking along the western escarpment, it feels like the land has been brushed by Arctic exoticism
Driving out of Sheffield, I pass half a dozen men hurrying up and down Manchester Road, pointing long lenses into the glacier-blue sky, like paparazzi, and pull over to see what the fuss is about.
The cause is a flock of exquisite, starling-sized birds, their silky-smooth, dusky-pale plumage flushed with cloudberry amber, their heads topped with a punky crest, and their eyes dark with a warlike black mask. They are ransacking the ornamental rowans lining the road, much to the annoyance of a mistle thrush, which sallies angrily from its berry-laden perch to rebuff the raiders.
Continue reading...