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Why do endangered right whales keep dying off the coast of Canada?
Researchers are racing for answers after at least 10 deaths of north Atlantic right whales, marking the deadliest year since tracking began
Researchers are scrambling to figure out why one of the world’s most endangered whale species is dying in “unprecedented” numbers, after at least 10 north Atlantic right whales have been found floating lifelessly off the coast of Canada.
The first whale carcass was reported in early June. Within a month, another six reports came in, leaving researchers reeling. This week, after several carcasses washed up on the shores of western Newfoundland, Canadian officials confirmed that the number of whale deaths had risen to at least 10, making 2017 the deadliest year for the marine mammal since researchers began tracking them in the 1980s.
Continue reading...Invitation to comment on draft revised referral guideline for the three Western Australian black cockatoos
Inscrutable all-seeing dragonfly overhead
Hamsterley Forest, Weardale Their visual sensitivity challenges us and their ability to track small fast objects is unparalleled
Much of Hamsterley forest lay in deep shadow and the scent of conifer resin hung in the still air between the spruces. No one had passed this way this morning; there were intact spiders’ webs stretched across the path high above Spurleswood beck.
And there we found a female golden-ringed dragonfly, Cordulegaster boltonii, clinging to rushes, still grounded by the lingering chill of the night. It’s the largest and, with its jet-black and yellow markings, the most startling, dragonfly species in the north Pennines.
Continue reading...World has already used nature’s budget for year, and Australia is worst offender
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Ministers must support farmers to save wildlife from 'damaging uncertainty'
National Trust chief says seamless transition in funding is vital post-Brexit to protect countryside from short-termism
British farmers are returning to intensive measures that deplete wildlife and damage the environment as a vacuum in government policy leaves them facing an uncertain future after the Brexit vote, the director general of the National Trust is warning.
In an outspoken message to ministers, Dame Helen Ghosh says action is needed now to create a seamless transition of subsidies and green incentives for farmers after the UK leaves the EU in order to avoid creating a decade of uncertainty in the countryside.
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