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Fatal confusion
Could culling brumbies help save our national parks?
CP Daily: Monday May 21, 2018
Senior Operations Officer, Climate Policy, IFC (World Bank) – Washington DC
Michigan utilities, environmental campaigners agree to RPS compromise
Peru agrees to ‘nest’ Althelia’s REDD projects into its Paris efforts
NSW's no-cull brumby bill will consign feral horses to an even crueller fate
Human race just 0.01% of all life but has destroyed over 80% of wild mammals – study
Groundbreaking assessment of all life on Earth reveals humanity’s surprisingly tiny part in it as well as our disproportionate impact
Humankind is revealed as simultaneously insignificant and utterly dominant in the grand scheme of life on Earth by a groundbreaking new assessment of all life on the planet.
The world’s 7.6 billion people represent just 0.01% of all living things, according to the study. Yet since the dawn of civilisation, humanity has caused the loss of 83% of all wild mammals and half of plants, while livestock kept by humans abounds.
Continue reading...An insect you may not want to be kind to | Brief letters
Oh no: an article about how we can be kind to insects (G2, 21 May). Does this go for clothes moths too? They have just eaten through my only ever cashmere sweater. When he sees them, my husband says: “It’s no use killing them – I should torture them and ask where they are coming from.” The Indian tapestry, I suspect. What do they eat in the wild? Is our house “the wild” for them? Do I have to be kind to them?
Margaret Squires
St Andrews, Fife
• If Noah Charney wishes to include the recently sold Salvator Mundi, attributed to Leonardo, in his forthcoming book (Raiders of the lost art, G2, 21 May), he should first look at the many representations of the same subject by Bernardino Luini, in all of which the same error in the depiction of the sphere is made. Luini was a painter from Leonardo’s circle and worked in a similar idiom.
Deirdre Toomey
London