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Butterfly decline is no surprise to bee-liners | Letters
I read about the butterfly decline noticed by people all around the country, described by Patrick Barkham (Record low UK butterfly count is ‘a shock and mystery’, 10 October). I don’t find it so much of a mystery, having spent the summer planning for and walking from the Royal Botanical Gardens in Edinburgh on what we called a Bee Line.
This initiative was triggered by a visit in September 2014 to our former farm on the edge of Salisbury Plain. When we moved there in the late 1940s, there were permanent pastures, hedges and ancient drove roads lined with wayfarers’ trees and carpeted with wildflowers – orchids, harebells, trefoils – and abuzz with bees, butterflies, dragonflies and pollinators of all kinds. Now, 60 years on, it is a silent landscape; no cows, chickens, sheep, or even farm workers, just contractors, and of course no birds, butterflies, bees or flying insects. Between 30 August and 6 September we followed our Bee Line, walking some 80km from Edinburgh to our home along small roads, footpaths, cycle tracks, disused railway lines, through open moorland. We saw few butterflies, moths or bees and even noted a lack of midges.
Continue reading...Fossil sheds light on evolution of birdsong
Xavi Bou's photographs reveal flight paths of birds – in pictures
The Spanish photographer Xavi Bou digitally combines sequential pictures of birds to create a single image, or chronophotograph, that reveals the shapes of their flight paths against Catalonian skies. His work shows the variety and beauty to be found in the daily activities of the local birds, including spiralling storks, swooping starlings and giddy swifts
Continue reading...Can an upcycling expert transform my junk?
Max McMurdo has made a career out of turning household tat into chic new forms. But can his creations match his talk? We put him to the test
Max McMurdo stands on the doorstep surrounded by toolboxes, neat as a pin. A professional upcycler, he has offered to convert my worst bits of household junk into brilliant new forms. It’s hardly surprising that he is smiling: upcycling is a form of recreational optimism. The whole pursuit is underpinned by the belief that no tat is too tatty. All junk can be saved.
McMurdo, 38, defines upcycling as “adding emotional or financial value [to waste objects] through the addition of design”. The idea has been around since at least the 1990s, and while the principle of adding value to waste makes sense, I have always disliked most of the interiors styles it has generated. Too often, upcycling bolts an adjective – such as “shabby” or “industrial” – to the word “chic” in the hope of rendering rubbish desirable. But maybe Max will change my mind.
Continue reading...Virus stole poison genes from black widow spider
Yasuni Man trailer: an Amazonian tribe threatened by oil drilling - video
Biologist Ryan Killackey filmed for seven years in order to create an account of a remote forest community under pressure from US and Chinese oil companies. The result was Yasuni Man, which focuses on the Yasuni biosphere reserve in Ecuador. The ITT Initiative, which would have protected the Ishpingo, Tambococha and Tiputini regions, was killed off by President Rafael Correa in 2013. This month, the first oil from the Yasuni fields is due to be pumped up by a Chinese company and piped to customers in California
Continue reading...Investors warn car industry over climate change
Car manufacturers told they must address climate change by switching to low-emission models − or face a sell-off of their shares, reports Climate News Network
Major investors have warned the automotive industry it needs to accelerate its readiness for a low-carbon world if it is to retain their support and prosper.
Vehicle makers must put climate change specialists on their boards, engage better with policy-makers, and invest more heavily in low-emission cars, says a network of 250 global investors with assets of more than $24tn (£20tn).
Continue reading...Shark attack at Ballina: beaches closed after surfer bitten
Sixth attack in 21 months persuades the premier, Mike Baird, to lobby federal government to install shark nets on north coast beaches
All beaches in Ballina on the New South Wales north coast are closed after a man was bitten by a shark while surfing, the sixth attack in 21 months in the area.
The attack has caused a backdown from the premier, Mike Baird, who has resisted the idea of shark nets on north coast beaches has now announced he will lobby for them to be installed.
Continue reading...National Geographic photographer uses images to call for conservation
Blood and bandages: a healer in the hedgerow
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire Even though the woundwort has lost its place in the pharmacy, bees visit these late flowers for the nectar tucked inside them
Woundwort grows from a hedge as if to mark some hurt, not to heal so much as to witness it. Hedge woundwort, Stachys sylvatica, belongs to the betony, horehounds and catmint of the waysides. It has small tight whorls of “blood and bandages” flowers – purply red clasps with white markings – nettle-like leaves and a hairy stem that when rubbed has a stink bad enough to do you good.
Continue reading...Energy efficiency ‘single largest’ climate lever – why aren’t we pulling it?
Victorian energy efficiency market: a recovery of sorts?
Gas role in SA price spikes underlines clear case for battery storage
Coalition will be out of job if it keeps head in sand on renewables
Queensland lays out three “cost neutral” paths to 50% renewables
So, you want to buy battery storage?
Space heating and cooling our homes – time for a rethink?
Solar shading, and what to do about it
Largest solar array installed at an Australian winery passes half-way mark
生态保护者谴责津巴布韦出口活大象的计划
尽管津巴布韦国家公园管理方予以否认,但专家相信该国正计划将数十只大象运往中国。(翻译:金艳/chinadialogue)
有人担心,津巴布韦正准备再次将数十只幼年大象送往中国野生动物园。
今年8月,津巴布韦国家公园及野生动植物管理局(ZimParks)开始从万基国家公园捕捉大象,并将它们关在乌特士比野生动物圈养设施内。
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