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What are the shrieking lynx actually doing?
Grace mission launches to weigh Earth's water
Grace mission launches to weigh Earth's water
EU Market: EUAs stretch 7-year highs as traders grow edgy
Curious Kids: How does an echidna breathe when digging through solid earth?
Bunya pines are ancient, delicious and possibly deadly
Welcome to Beating Around the Bush, wherein we yell about plants
Trump administration's bid to scrap hunting rules condemned as 'new low'
Proposal would repeal Obama-era rules that ban shooting of bear cubs and other controversial hunting practices in Alaska
The Trump administration is attempting to repeal a rule that bans the shooting of bear cubs, using dogs and bait to hunt bears, and killing caribou from motorboats in Alaska’s federal wildlife refuges.
The proposal would scrap a 2015 regulation by the National Park Service that restricts controversial hunting and trapping practices on around 20 million acres of federal land in Alaska.
Continue reading...12 conservation success stories - in pictures
On international day for biological diversity, the IUCN celebrates successful conservation action with images and stories of 12 species and the efforts underway to improve their status
Continue reading...Is Britain's fox population desperate for Chris Packham's roadkill?
The wildlife presenter has revealed he is storing roadkill in his freezer to feed foxes, as recent reports suggest their numbers are in sharp decline
The next time you’re at Chris Packham’s house, rifling through his kitchen looking for a snack, for God’s sake, don’t look in the freezer. That’s where Packham keeps his “enormous quantity” of roadkill.
What exactly is Packham doing with an enormous quantity of roadkill in his freezer? It’s a fair question. Should a nationally renowned wildlife presenter be running over wildlife in the first place?
Continue reading...Inside the Tesla big battery: How it made money and cut prices
Shell investors revolt over climate change and executive pay
Oil firm grilled over carbon emissions, but defeats motion calling for tougher targets
Shell investors have rebelled over the company’s executive pay, as the Anglo-Dutch oil company came under pressure to take stronger action on climate change.
While chief executive Ben van Beurden’s €8.9m (£7.79m) pay package for 2017 was approved, more than a quarter of shareholders voted against the firm’s remuneration report at its annual general meeting (AGM) on Tuesday.
Continue reading...'Rare' birth of live reindeer twins in Cairngorms
'Rare' birth of live reindeer twins in Cairngorms
Great British Bee Count 2018 - in pictures
As the fifth annual Great British Bee Count gets under way, wildlife and gardening experts are calling on the public to grow weeds to help Britain’s bees. The count, which will provide the first national health check for wild bees and other pollinators, runs until 30 June
Continue reading...EU nations’ CO2 price floor efforts win World Bank praise as global pricing revenues double in 2017
Future of global carbon markets rests on China success -survey
Air pollution plans to tackle wood burners
Carbon markets back from the brink of collapse, says World Bank
Development of major new markets in China and reforms in Europe have provided a crucial boost as countries look at tools to cut carbon and meet their Paris climate targets
Global carbon markets have been revived from the brink of collapse as, after years in the doldrums, recent developments have provided a much-needed boost, according to a new report from the World Bank.
China has made strong progress on its new carbon markets, which when complete will be the biggest in the world, while the EU initiated reforms of its carbon trading system which have already had an effect on prices.
Continue reading...Rangers find 109,217 snares in a single park in Cambodia
Snares – either metal or rope – are indiscriminately killing wildlife across Southeast Asia, from elephants to mouse deer. The problem has become so bad that scientists are referring to protected areas in the region as “empty forests.”
A simple break cable for motorbikes can kill a tiger, a bear, even a young elephant in Southeast Asia. Local hunters use these ubiquitous wires to create snares – indiscriminate forest bombs – that are crippling and killing Southeast Asia’s most charismatic species and many lesser-known animals as well. A fact from a new paper in Biodiversity Conservation highlights the scale of this epidemic: in Cambodia’s Southern Cardamom National Park rangers with the Wildlife Alliance removed 109,217 snares over just six years.
“Some forests in Vietnam don’t have any mammals left larger than squirrels,” Thomas Gray, the lead author of the new paper and the Science Director for Wildlife Alliance, said. “Given how diverse these forests formally were this must be having substantial impacts on ecosystem services and the [forest’s] entire biodiversity.”
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