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Kenya bans export of snakes to zoos and pet shops
Trafficking of endangered snakes as pets or for their skins is having a negative impact on breeding patterns and size of species
Kenya has banned the export of various snake species, including the African rock python, to zoos and pet shops around the world after reports of animal abuse and snakes being sold on the black market for their meat and skins.
The trafficking of the endangered snakes by cartels is also having a negative impact on the environment, said authorities.
Restoring native plants 'boosts pollination'
Scientists find 'oldest human ancestor'
Gin lovers relax as declining juniper saved in national seed project
Juniper threatened by fungus-like disease is first species to be fully collected in Kew’s Royal Botanic Gardens tree seed project
The future of gin is safe, according to horticultural experts who have collected juniper seeds from across the country to help conserve the declining tree species.
Juniper berries, which take two years to mature slowly on the plant, help give gin its distinctive flavour, but the native UK species is in decline.
Continue reading...Beauty and destruction: the Amazon rainforest – in pictures
The Amazon rainforest is the world’s largest, but in the last 40 years at least 20% of it has been destroyed. The Amazon basin covers nine countries in South America, with 60% of it in Brazil, and for a decade local photographer Rodrigo Baleia has documented the beauty and destruction of the region from above
Continue reading...First images of unique Brazilian coral reef at mouth of Amazon
The discovery of the 600 mile-long reef in 2016 stunned scientists but oil companies are planning to drill in the area
The first images have been released of a unique coral reef that stunned scientists when discovered in 2016 at the mouth of the Amazon.
The 600 mile-long reef is expected to reveal new species as scientists explore it further, but oil companies are planning to drill in the area. The photographs were captured from a submarine launched to a depth of 220 metres from the Greenpeace ship Esperanza. Campaigners say drilling must be prevented to protect the reef.
Continue reading...Here’s how we know Trump’s cabinet picks are wrong on human-caused global warming | Dana Nuccitelli
The research is clear – humans are responsible for all the global warming since 1950
The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report – which summarizes the latest and greatest climate science research – was quite clear that humans are responsible for global warming:
It is extremely likely [95 percent confidence] more than half of the observed increase in global average surface temperature from 1951 to 2010 was caused by the anthropogenic increase in greenhouse gas concentrations and other anthropogenic forcings together … The best estimate of the human-induced contribution to warming is similar to the observed warming over this period … The contribution from natural forcings is likely to be in the range of −0.1°C to 0.1°C, and from internal variability is likely to be in the range of −0.1°C to 0.1°C.
Continue reading...Family of Briton killed by elephant poachers launch £1m ivory appeal
Roger Gower’s brother says he wants something good to come from tragedy after pilot was shot dead in Tanzania
The family of a British pilot who was shot dead by elephant poachers in Tanzania have said they want to “make some good come from tragedy” as they spearhead an appeal to raise £1m to help tackle the African ivory trade.
Roger Gower, 37, was tracking criminals who had killed three elephants near the Serengeti national park when a poacher opened fire with an AK-47 rifle on 29 January last year.
Continue reading...An island of wild and ancient woodland in an urban sprawl
Thorpe Wood, Peterborough This wood was here long before the city grew up around it. If it were lost its space would be instantly absorbed
Here’s a strange little peace in a tightened noose of noise. If you stumbled on it by footbridge, housing estate passage or nondescript pull-in, it would be a surprising find: an ancient worked wood caught in an outer eddy of the city. Thorpe Wood was here long before Peterborough grew up around it, before the city began to squeeze, before what little was left was mercifully protected.
The morning’s snowfall has gone. In spring there might be bluebells here, wild garlic, wood anemone, the “pock” of woodpecker, smells, shade. But in January life has descended to waist height and is thick with hardy, sharp things. At eye-level, winter’s transparency makes the wood a weave of disorderly trunks. The rafters are empty and naked, and it’s here the trees spread, contrast, throw flamboyant shapes against the sky.
Continue reading...Shark-inspired drug may help treat fibrosis, researchers say
Victoria steps up climate ambition. Turnbull takes two steps back
Know your NEM: Spot prices soar, demand stays soft
Graph of the Day: How EVs are driving the next oil crisis
Autonomous vehicle developer opens Adelaide base
When the heat is on, we need plans to keep cities cool
Tony Abbott rebuffed after attacking Turnbull government on renewable energy target
RET was settled 18 months ago under former prime minister’s leadership, says Simon Birmingham
The Liberal frontbencher Simon Birmingham has dismissed Tony Abbott’s latest criticism of the Coalition’s renewable energy target, reminding Abbott that the target was settled under his leadership just 18 months ago.
Abbott warned at a Young Liberals conference at the weekend that power was getting more expensive and less reliable because the Turnbull government was making it “harder and harder” to use coal and gas through the renewable energy target.
Continue reading...Emissions task shifting to industry as carbon can kicked further down the road
UK 'need not fear electricity blackouts' says ex-National Grid boss
Crocs and cattle don't mix, and catching barra in the Kimberley
50 years ago: The sound of the fox honk
Originally published in the Guardian on 4 February 1967
MACHYNLLETH: Foxes, unlike most creatures, are noisiest in midwinter. Here they usually begin calling about a week before Christmas and go on till early February. Their normal cry is often described as a bark. But foxes are not dogs and their call sounds to me more like a honking, a strangely vibrant, rather eerie owk-owk-owk-owk. This is repeated about every half-minute for several minutes at a time, it is a far-travelling call; so when you hear it the fox may be much farther off than you suppose. But foxes will cry close to houses. One night a fox called for ten minutes just outside our garden, a loud, wild, exciting sound.
We mostly hear our foxes in the early part of the evening. But they must call on and off all night, for if I wake I occasionally hear one. On morning this week there was a fox in full voice in broad daylight but that does not happen very often. So the mating season passes. And soon, come wind, come weather, the young foxes will be born safe and warm in their burrows. But not safe for long, many of them, when the spade and terrier brigade arrives. Still, not all will be discovered, for though thousands will be killed plenty will survive to send their lovely cries through the nights of next midwinter. So let us rejoice. For the fox is, as Hudson once said, “good to meet in any green place.”
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