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Shell shock: why crayfish replicants are taking over
Marbled crayfish have developed the ability to self-clone – and now a million-strong crustacean army exists in waters stretching from Europe to Japan
Name: Marbled crayfish. Marmorkrebs in German.
Age: Potentially infinite.
Continue reading...Mutant, all-female crayfish spreading rapidly through Europe can clone itself
Genome study finds the invasive clonal freshwater crayfish is descended from a single female and reproduces without males
A voracious pest that mutated in a German aquarium and is marching around the world without the need for sexual reproduction may sound like science fiction, but a genetic study has revealed that a rapidly spreading all-female army of crayfish is descended from a single female and reproduces without any males.
The clonal freshwater crayfish is regarded as an invasive species which threatens endemic wild species, but its success may help scientists better understand how cancer spreads.
Continue reading...Borneo orangutan found riddled with gunshots in latest attack
Indonesian authorities say male orangutan was found with 130 airgun pellets and machete wounds in the second known killing this year
The body of a Borneo orangutan has been found riddled with some 130 airgun pellets, Indonesian authorities have said, the second known killing this year.
The male orangutan, which also showed signs of machete wounds, was found by villagers in Borneo’s East Kutai district this week, police said, adding that an autopsy had been carried out.
Continue reading...Cheddar Man: DNA shows early Briton had dark skin
Organic food and drink sales rise to record levels in the UK
In a sixth year of consecutive growth, organic sales rose by 6% to a record £2.2bn, driven largely by independent outlets and home deliveries
Sales of organic food and drink in the UK rose by 6% last year to a record £2.2bn, fuelled by strong growth through independent outlets and home delivery which outpaced sales in rival supermarkets.
Almost 30% of all organic sales now take place online or on the high street, according to a new report from Soil Association, the trade body which licenses organic products and promotes organic farming.
Continue reading...The plastic bottle scheme that could help clean the oceans
Hedgehog numbers plummet by half in UK countryside since 2000
Longterm decline is blamed on loss of hedgerows and insect prey but urban hedgehogs may offer a glimmer of hope, says a new report
The number of hedgehogs living in the British countryside has plummeted by more than half since 2000, according to a new report.
The popular but prickly character topped a vote in 2013 to nominate a national species for Britain, but it has suffered as hedgerows are lost and the invertebrates it feasts on diminish. However, the survey offers a glimmer of hope as losses in towns and cities appear to have slowed and the numbers patrolling nighttime gardens may be increasing.
Continue reading...Instagram feed shows everyday extinction - in pictures
Photographer Sean Gallagher has set up a new Instagram feed called Everyday Extinction. Featuring work from 25 wildlife photographers, photojournalists and scientists, the project aims to highlight species extinction and celebrate biodiversity
- Warning: this gallery contains some graphic images
NSW court to hear 'landmark' challenge to coalmine over climate change impact
Case brought by group from Hunter Valley town, which it says has been devastated by Peabody Energy’s Wilpinjong mine
In what is described as a landmark case, a New South Wales court will be asked to overturn a decision to extend the life of a coalmine on the grounds the state government failed to properly consider the impact on the climate.
The case is brought by a community group from the tiny Hunter Valley village of Wollar, which it says has been devastated by the development and gradual expansion of the Wilpinjong coalmine over the past decade.
Continue reading...How to use critical thinking to spot false climate claims
Redflow to install Thai-made battery stacks on ZBM2 tank sets in Brisbane to supply existing customer orders
Energy efficiency market report: A “spectacular” start to 2018
Tasmania Libs propose solar + battery microgrid ahead of election
Cape Town is almost out of water. Could Australian cities suffer same fate?
AGL pays $60,000 penalty for failing to inform customers of contract end
Elon Musk sends Tesla Roadster into orbit, and changes space travel
Windlab’s new 100MW wind farm approved for Queensland’s north
South Australia unveils another big battery, this time with solar
What Cape Town can learn from Australia’s millennium drought
As Day Zero looms and the South African city gets set to run out of water, experts say lessons learned during Melbourne’s brush with a similar fate may help avert a global crisis
In December 2017, Seona Candy drove through the vineyards of the Franschhoek Valley near Cape Town towards the banks of the Sonderend river. In the late 1970s, the waterway was dammed to create the biggest reservoir in South Africa’s Western Cape. Behind the thick walls of the Theewaterskloof dam lay the capacity to hold 480 million cubic metres of water, nearly half of Cape Town’s water supply.
“When I got there, it was mostly dust,” Candy says.
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