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Ariane rocket suffers rare launch anomaly
Edible bandages for bears' burnt paws
Scientists, community groups question accuracy of Territory fracking inquiry
Sustainable shopping: how to stay green when buying white goods
11 billion pieces of plastic bring disease threat to coral reefs
Modern humans left Africa much earlier
Billions of pieces of plastic on coral reefs send disease soaring, research reveals
A major new study estimates 11bn pieces of plastic contaminate vital reefs and result in infections: ‘It’s like getting gangrene,’ scientists warn
Billions of pieces of plastic pollution are snagged on coral reefs, sending disease rates soaring, new research has revealed. The discovery compounds the damage being done to a vital habitat that already faces an existential threat from the warming caused by climate change.
Scientists examined 125,000 corals across the Asia-Pacific region, home to half the world’s reefs, and found 89% of those fouled by plastic were suffering disease. On plastic-free reefs, only 4% of the corals were diseased.
Continue reading...Air pollution will damage UK health for ‘many years', court told
Government is being sued for third time to act quickly on illegal levels of toxic air
Air pollution will continue to take a heavy toll on people’s health for many years to come unless the UK government is forced once again to improve its action plan, the high court has been told.
Ministers have already had two previous plans declared illegal but environmental lawyers ClientEarth argue that even the latest plan fails to cut widespread illegal levels of pollution in the “shortest possible time”, as required by EU law.
Continue reading...Naked veggies and a ringing rebuke | Brief letters
It is true that we no longer lend out the Ben Nicholsons and Alfred Wallises that Harland Walshaw was lucky enough to choose from as a student (Letters, 24 January), but we do still invite students in to Kettle’s Yard to choose a work of art, which for a small deposit and a modest fee they can hang on their walls for the year. And there are some beautiful works to choose from. We do love to hear the stories from those who enjoyed Jim Ede’s generosity when he was still living here.
Andrew Nairne
Director, Kettle’s Yard
• As I hunted through Sainsbury’s recently for unpackaged vegetables (MPs urge supermarkets to banish plastic waste, 20 January), my route to the nice, clean carrots and leeks – two of the very few naked veggies on display – was blocked by shoppers carefully decanting them into plastic bags.
Vicky Woodcraft
Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire
Boris Johnson: Mummy is distant ancestor
Are you a mosquito magnet? Swatting really can deter them, study shows
Researchers have discovered why mosquitoes prefer some people over others – and how a swat teaches them to avoid you
Researchers have found a solution for those plagued by mosquitoes: thrash about, and the insects will learn to give you a wide berth.
While it has long been known that mosquitoes favour some individuals over others – and can shift those preferences when availability is scarce – it was not clear what was behind the switch.
Continue reading...Most UK bat species 'recovering or stable'
Communities offered £1m a year to host nuclear waste dump
New search for communities willing to host underground site for thousands of years
Local communities around England, Wales and Northern Ireland will be offered £1m a year to volunteer to host an underground nuclear waste disposal facility for thousands of years, as part of a rebooted government programme.
The financial incentive is one way the government hopes to encourage communities to host the £12bn facility, after previous efforts failed in 2013 when Cumbria county council rejected the project.
Continue reading...Boris Johnson 'is descendant' of mummified Basel woman
Planet rumbles
Why beetles are the most important organisms on the planet | Richard Jones
From the minuscule to the mighty, tree-dwellers to pond-swimmers, millions of beetle species reveal a wealth of information about the world we live in
New network of water refill points aims to reduce England's plastic waste
Free refill points and fountains will be set up in shops, cafes and high streets in every English town and city, under plans announced by the water industry
Consumers will be encouraged to refill their water bottles free of charge in tens of thousands of shops, cafes, businesses and water fountains in England under plans announced by the water industry.
The national scheme aims to fight the growing scourge of waste created by single-use plastic by preventing the use of tens of millions of plastic bottles every year, as well as increasing the availability of quality drinking water.
Continue reading...Country diary: a mighty poplar brought down by old age and the revenge of the wind
Sandy, Bedfordshire: At the tree’s base, an autopsy of its last seconds was written in splits, snaps, rips and a broken heart
When the last storm whipped through our valley it brought down the tallest tree on the river. An old Lombardy poplar, a spire without a church, it belonged to an age when planting poplars was popular. They were the leylandii of their day, for they shot up as fast as rockets and looked like them too. They were often grown in rows as windbreaks, though nobody much thought about old age and the wind’s revenge.
For a day or so after, my eyes clawed at the air, looking for the absent shape of a tower that had been a crow’s nest for a magpie, a labyrinth for tits, a cricked neck. I saw only a wooded ridge, some houses, and sky – so much sky that it snuffed out the memory. For a day or so only, passersby stopped to inspect the toppled giant, as they might view the corpse of a beached whale.
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