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Japanese whaling fleet to set sail for Antarctic
Fleet to leave on Tuesday to carry out ‘lethal research’ despite UN court ruling that the hunts are a cover for commercial whaling and have no scientific merit
Japan’s whaling fleet will set sail for the Antarctic on Tuesday despite international pressure to end its annual hunts, as Australia said it was considering sending a vessel to track the fleet in waters which Canberra considers a whale sanctuary.
Related: Japan under fire over decision to resume whaling
Continue reading...The Australian Cornish Mining Sites - Burra and the Copper Triangle proposed National Heritage Listing
Independent review of the water trigger legislation – public consultation
Groundwater Purchase Tender in Queensland Upper Condamine Alluvium now open
Scientists unable to explain starling mass drownings
Behaviour could be one cause of the unusual drownings of the birds in large groups in England and Wales
Starlings have been consistently drowning in large groups in a phenomenon yet to be fully explained by scientists, according to new research led by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).
In 12 separate incidents recorded between 1993 and 2013 in England and Wales, starlings were found drowned in groups of two to 80. In 10 cases, at least 10 starlings were found drowned at a time, the research published in the journal Scientific Reports on Wednesday shows.
Continue reading...Australia's abatement task: tracking to 2020
Warkworth Sands Woodland of the Sydney Basin Bioregion ecological community
Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder Update
Environmental water provides golden opportunity for Lachlan fish
Warning – spam email and attachment sent to wildlife trade ‘SmartForm’ users
Our evil planet kills countless humans every year – why bother to save it? | Colin Quinn
Earth has these ‘natural occurrences’ that devastate homes and villages. But are they really natural occurrences? Sounds more like outbursts of a maniac
If this planet exploded tomorrow I wouldn’t shed a tear.
Environmentalists say evil mankind is destroying a beautiful God-given place. Really? Mudslides, earthquakes and twisters kill millions (thousands) of people every year. Innocent planet? I judge by deeds not words. Yes, pollutants kill. But so do rockslides. If you talk to the average resident of a natural disaster location, they will be glad to tell you the planet has done as much evil as the average multinational in terms of lives taken in their local community.
Continue reading...Richey Fishing Company - Australian Salmon - Application 2015
Emoji lords to release 67 new symbols
Ecological Communities of National Environmental Significance data now available
Draft varied threat abatement plan for competition and land degradation by rabbits
Four species added to the list of threatened species under the EPBC Act
Reef Trust Tender - Burdekin - Expressions of interest
Sale of Commonwealth environmental water from the Goulburn catchment benefits Victorian irrigators and the environment
Campaigners try to halt Japan whale hunt in last-ditch legal fight
Australian environmental group asks court in Sydney to find Japanese whalers in contempt of a 2008 ruling banning fleet from the Southern Ocean
Environmental campaigners are launching a last-ditch legal attempt to prevent Japan from slaughtering whales in the Antarctic this winter, after Tokyo indicated it would ignore a ban on its “scientific” expeditions.
The Australian branch of Humane Society International (HSI) will on Wednesday ask the federal court in Sydney to find Kyodo Senpaku, the Japanese company that organises the hunts, in contempt of a 2008 ruling that banned the whaling fleet from hunting in an area of the Southern Ocean that Australia recognises as a whale sanctuary.
Continue reading...Palau protects marine wealth to pay for its future
The banning of fishing in a newly created Pacific marine sanctuary will help stocks recover and attract high-end tourist dollars as a replacement source of income
The recent decision by the Pacific island nation of Palau to end fishing in a California-sized swath of tuna-rich ocean comes at a time of record overfishing and will help the populations of bigeye and yellowfin to recover, scientists say.
Officials hope that the new reserve will boost sustainable tourism revenues as well as fish populations, as ordinary divers and even snorkelers will be able to experience the difference that protection measures can make.
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