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Cornish coastline plan offers new haven for rare seabirds
Little terns and black-throated divers are among the seabirds that have been given greater protection after a stretch of coastline in Cornwall was awarded special status to safeguard its wildlife. The newly designated marine special protected area (SPA), which stretches for 24 miles between Falmouth Bay and St Austell Bay, is home to more than 150,000 rare seabirds.
Great northern divers and Eurasian spoonbills are also visitors along with sandwich terns and common terns. All are amber-listed by conservation groups because they have suffered significant losses of numbers and range in the recent past.
Continue reading...Vaquita porpoise facing extinction after £3m rescue plan abandoned
A last-ditch attempt to save the world’s most endangered marine mammal, the vaquita, by taking them into human care has been abandoned. The chances that this rare species of porpoise will become extinct are now extremely high, researchers have warned.
They had hoped to catch a few of the planet’s last 30 vaquitas – which are only found in one small area of the Gulf of California – and protect them in a sanctuary where they could breed safely. But last month, the $4m (£3m) rescue plan by an international team of more than 60 scientists and divers ran into trouble after only a few days, when the first vaquita they caught had to be released when it began to display dangerous signs of stress.
Continue reading...Fire ant threat: Mismanagement of Australia’s eradication effort
Chief vet defends support of larger hen cages
Country diary: quieter times for Badgeropolis
Dolbenmaen, Gwynedd This sett was, I think, first occupied in the early 1950s, its entrances concealed among dense rhododendron thickets
This sett I’ve known for 50 years. I think it was first occupied in the early 1950s. Huge now, 200 metres long and 60 wide, with innumerable entrances concealed among dense rhododendron thickets, I called it Badgeropolis, and spent much time watching from the hillside above as the badgers made their moonlit excursions. These were an enchantment: the silvery bounce of their beautiful coats; the rough-and-tumble of cubs’ play; their curiosity and habituation to my still, nightly presence; the astonishing inflected vocabulary of squeal, purr, yelp and mew; their tenderness at mating; the affection between boar and sow, parents and cubs.
Continue reading...Student essay winner explores potential solution to persistent plastic
Community owned energy retailer takes on big three
The other Dodo: Extinct bird that used its wings as clubs
A Big Country 2 December 2017
Gravity signals rapidly show true size of giant quakes
Electric cars already cheaper to own and run than petrol or diesel – study
Exclusive: Pure electric cars cost less over four years than petrol or diesel cars in the UK, US and Japan, researchers say, but China is set to lead the market
Electric cars are already cheaper to own and run than petrol or diesel cars in the UK, US and Japan, new research shows.
The lower cost is a key factor driving the rapid rise in electric car sales now underway, say the researchers. At the moment the cost is partly because of government support, but electric cars are expected to become the cheapest option without subsidies in a few years.
Continue reading...Wildlife on your doorstep: share your December photos
As we enter the final month of the year we’d like to see your photos of the wildlife you’ve discovered where you live
What sort of wildlife will we all discover on our doorsteps this month? We’d like to see your photos of the December wildlife near you, whether you’re a novice spotter or have been out and about searching for wildlife for years.
Share your photos and videos with us and we’ll feature our favourites on the Guardian site. We also regularly print readers’ best images in the Guardian newspaper and will let you know if your image should feature.
Top US firms including Walmart and Ford ignore Trump on climate change
- Big businesses appear at Miami summit to show progress on sustainability
- ‘We’ve been working on this for a long time, prior to this administration’
Since taking office, Donald Trump has pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement, rolled back numerous protections against environmental pollution and espoused coal as the fuel of the future, all in the name of job creation and ending what he sees as the “theft of American prosperity”.
Related: 'Buried in marshes': sea-level rise could destroy historic sites on US east coast
Continue reading...Pesticides, throwaway fashion and the lobster with a Pepsi 'tattoo' – green news roundup
The week’s top environment news stories and green events. If you are not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox
Continue reading...The week in wildlife – in pictures
Lion cubs at play, the world’s oldest known giant tortoise and a mountain hare are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world
Continue reading...Bike lanes don't clog up our roads, they keep London moving
Protected cycle lanes are one of the best ways to reduce congestion in London, carrying up to five times as many people per hour as a main road, a new report shows
Congestion isn’t exactly the most fashionable political topic of our times, but it is a problem that threatens London’s status as a well-functioning, competitive global city. Businesses need to be able to make and receive reliable deliveries, Londoners need to be able to get to work on time, and tourists – almost 20 million of them a year in London – need to get around quickly and easily too.
As politicians wake up to the need to do more to increase Britain’s productivity, being smarter in how we set up our transport infrastructure is essential. Our streets will get more congested if we do nothing as London continues to grow – currently at the rate of an additional London borough every three years. If no further action is taken, GLA figures show that by 2041, three days would be lost per person every year due to congestion.
Continue reading...New Sentinel satellite tracks dirty air
'Zero tolerance' plan eyed for plastic pollution
Capturing ecology 2017 photo competition - winners in pictures
The British Ecological Society has announced the winners of its annual photography competition, Capturing Ecology. Taken by international ecologists and students, the winning images will be exhibited at the society’s joint annual meeting in Ghent in December
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