Feed aggregator
Commonwealth Northern Prawn Fishery
Country diary: Fishbourne Reedbeds, West Sussex: The water vole's grand designs
At the head of the Fishbourne Channel there is a hinterland of reedbeds and briny watercourses. There is no sea wall here, just a gradual merging of elements as land meets sea. Few plants can survive the daily exposure to salt water that occurs when the tide is in, so the reedbeds are dominated by dense stands of common reed that form an impenetrable two-metre high grey-green wall on either side of the boardwalk.
In the spring, the reedbeds reverberated with a cacophony of bird song and the begging calls of hungry chicks. Now they are eerily quiet, just the whisper of the breeze blowing through the reeds and the distant screech of gulls. Many of the breeding birds have migrated but reed buntings are resident all year round and I eventually catch a glimpse of a male's jet-black head, with its white moustache and collar, as it clings to a tasselled flower spike.
Continue reading...Extensions to EPBC Act listing assessment and decision timeframes
Key threatening process listing decision - Damage to marine ecosystems
Recent threatened species listing decisions
2013 - 2014 Finalised Priority Assessment List released
Recent threatened ecological community listings
Strategic assessment prospectus issued
Strategic assessment of Melbourne's urban growth boundary
Free TV and Computer Recycling available nationally
Minimata Convention on Mercury - Australia one of 92 signatory countries
Call for witnesses for damage to protected WWII Japanese midget submarine
'Lost' World War Two shipwreck now protected under Australian law
Japanese 'mother-shipwreck' protected for future generations
Repealing the carbon tax - submissions invited on the exposure drafts of the carbon tax repeal bills
Commonwealth Northern Prawn Fishery
On-Farm Irrigation Efficiency Program - Round four application period now closed
Commonwealth Coral Sea Fishery
Killer whales experience menopause – just like humans
Just like humans, killer whales experience menopause – and the rare evolutionary trait improves their offspring's chances of survival, according to experts.
Killer whales are one of only three species able to continue living long after they have stopped reproducing. This allows mothers to spend the rest of their life looking after their offspring.
Continue reading...