Feed aggregator
Cockchafer flies in with chainsaw hum
Watership Down, Hampshire Disturbingly large and menacing in flight, the billy witch is a beetle of otherworldly workmanship
The day has been hot and heavy and full of the drones of insects sounding up at their own unique frequencies. In the cool of the evening my muscle memory is still swaying, an artefact from the repeated left and right arc of cutting hay on the meadow bank. All day as I worked I’d watched the bees hum and fumble at the flower heads as I cut down through the cornflowers, ox-eye daisies and yarrow at the field’s edge; a meadow’s measure of summer music.
At my desk in front of the wide open window I can hear what sounds like the distant hum of a chainsaw, its pitch changing as it cuts through the wood. With alarming suddenness, the sound is upon me, in the room and loud around my ears as a cockchafer flies past my head and settles on the books by a lamp.
Continue reading...Darwin Airport switches on 4MW solar array
AGL invests in world’s largest battery storage virtual power plant
France gets a step closer to solar roads
Tesla: Gigafactory is “on schedule” to support 2017 Model 3 roll-out
State of the Climate 2015: global warming and El Niño sent records tumbling
Tesla and SolarCity: Do they fit together?
Saving ARENA could be only upside of scary new Senate
Linking Adani coalmine to social uplift in India ridiculous, says conservationist
Activist Debi Goenka says Indian coal market, which has swung dramatically against the viability of imported coal for power, will seal Carmichael mine’s fate
Continued attempts by Australian politicians to link Adani’s Carmichael coalmine to the social uplift of the poor in India are “completely ridiculous”, a veteran Indian conservationist says.
Debi Goenka, the Mumbai activist who challenged Adani’s environmental licence for its mine in the Queensland land court in 2014, said Australian government figures continued to rely on arguments about imported coal lifting Indians out of poverty, which were “all bunkum”.
Continue reading...Suncorp – It’s time to act on climate change
Badgers may not spread TB to cattle through direct contact
Flight of the bumblebee: survey finds individual personalities
Queen Mary University of London tracked four bumblebees for whole life, and found disparities in how they found food
A study has revealed that bumblebees have distinct personalities.
Some bees play it safe by returning to the same flowers again and again while others search for new sources of nectar, scientists found.
Continue reading...Artificial leaf turns CO2 emissions Into fuel
The financial case for net zero energy districts
Tree-saving campaign focuses eyes on the white-letter hairstreak
Patrick Barkham on how a colony of rare butterflies living in a healthy elm has become a key element for citizens resisting Sheffield council tree felling
We tend to picture butterflies feeding on flowers, but five British species spend most of their lives in the tops of trees. These insects are often overlooked during their unobtrusive lives. But the white-letter hairstreak finds itself in the spotlight this month as local people fight to save a fine mature elm in Sheffield.
Related: Rare UK butterfly under threat as elms disappear
Continue reading...Rocks tell story of China's great flood
Men may have evolved better 'making up' skills
Your pictures of the newly enlarged Yorkshire Dales and Lake District
After boundaries were re-drawn on 1 August, we asked you to share your best pictures of the Yorkshire Dales and Lake District national parks – including the newly incorporated areas now on many walkers’ bucket lists
- See more images and add yours using the blue GuardianWitness button below
Hidden Degas portrait revealed
Electric vehicle charge points to outnumber petrol stations by 2020, say Nissan
Analysis by the car manufacturer marks end of the decade as a potential tipping point for the mass take up of electric vehicles, reports Business Green
Public electric vehicle (EV) charge points will outnumber petrol stations in the UK by the end of the decade, marking a potential tipping point in the adoption of zero emission vehicles.
That is the conclusion of a new analysis by auto giant and EV manufacturer Nissan, which argues that based on current trends EV charge points will overtake traditional petrol stations by August 2020.
Continue reading...