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Wildlife officials urge people to stop painting endangered turtle shells
‘If you want to paint something, paint a rock,’ Florida officials implore after shells of a threatened tortoise species were found daubed with paint
Wildlife officials in Florida have urged people to not illustrate the shells of a threatened tortoise species after several animals were found daubed with paint.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) has released photos of gopher tortoises that were painted red and a shade of turquoise. The FWC said the “illegally painted” tortoises were at risk from paint fumes and from toxins that could be absorbed into the bloodstream via the shell.
Continue reading...Life thriving on UK's biggest underwater mountains
Britain's tallest mountain is underwater
Why the EU is right to oppose a global ivory ban | Colman O’Criodain
Controversial proposals ahead of this year’s global wildlife trade summit threaten to fuel a divisive debate and divert attention away from the real measures needed to tackle the illegal ivory trade
Anyone paying even cursory attention to wildlife stories in recent years would have heard all about Africa’s elephant poaching crisis. And with good reason. An estimated 30,000 animals are being killed for their ivory every year, a shockingly high figure that threatens the survival of central Africa’s forest elephants as well as some elephant populations in east Africa.
They also would have read about the international community’s response to the poaching crisis, with governments around the globe promising action and conservation organisations scaling up efforts to tackle elephant poaching and the illegal ivory trade.
Continue reading...Action needed to 'future-proof' pollinators
Beware the walruses
Scientists develop dissolving battery
'Stay away' from beached oil rig
BMC Ecology Image competition 2016 - the winners in pictures
A Kalahari desert sunrise and a wren’s nest under a bike seat are among the winning images in the scientific journal’s annual competition, which showcases biodiversity, natural beauty and biological interactions photographed by ecologists
Continue reading...South Australia would face higher electricity bill without wind energy
Smart cities: does this mean more transport disruptions?
Direct Action on climate means moving your money
The first slim flocks of starlings gather by a muddy river
Waltham Brooks, West Sussex Now breeding has finished, the numbers of starlings gathering together are building up again, and will rise into the thousands in the coming months
The river Arun has slowed almost to a stop, the bare strip of dried earth along the bank betraying the low water level. Large bunches of dark green weed are exposed. Along the grassy footpath, there are a still a few thistles in bloom, glowing purple in the evening sunshine, but many other thistle heads have now exploded, trailing their down of sticky, spindly white seeds. It’s warm and close, but the breeze is slowly bringing a band of black cloud from the west.
Continue reading...Renewables offer “unrivalled opportunity” to grow rural jobs, economies
Comparing “energy poverty” in Germany with other countries
JinkoSolar powers the Miami Science Barge
Why Malcolm Roberts' demand for 'empirical evidence' on climate change is misleading
Scientist and Nobel prize-winner Peter Doherty says new One Nation senator ‘has no understanding of how science works’
Across Australia, climate science denialists are beside themselves with glee at the voting into office of one of their own.
Late last week, the Australian Electoral Commission confirmed that Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party had snagged Queensland’s final 12th Senate spot. Her candidate, Malcolm Roberts, is now a senator.
Continue reading...One drug is 'new hope' for three killer infections
Australian research produces DNA test to help save rare largetooth sawfish
Scientists in Queensland develop an environmental DNA test to help make habitats easier to identify
Australian scientists have developed a cutting-edge test that could give the endangered largetooth sawfish a better chance of survival.
Researchers working from James Cook University in Queensland, have found a way to reliably test large bodies of water for the DNA of the prehistoric-looking fish and help make habitats easier to identify.
Continue reading...DME: the answer to Australia's unquenchable appetite for diesel?
Australia is one of the world’s largest diesel consumers per capita but a cleaner option called dimethyl ether could change all that
As one of the world’s largest consumers of diesel per capita, Australia could soon benefit from the onshore production of a cleaner-burning alternative.
Dimethyl ether (DME) is a colourless gas used as an aerosol propellant for things such as hairspray, but engine manufacturers and other companies have been exploring its potential as an alternative transport fuel.
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