Feed aggregator
Sperm whales live in culturally distinct clans, research finds
Study of sounds and feeding habits shows animals organise into female-based groups of up to 20,000
Sperm whales live in clans with distinctive cultures, much like those of humans, a study has found.
Using underwater microphones and drone surveys, Hal Whitehead, a sperm whale scientist at Dalhousie University, in Halifax, Canada, examined the sounds the animals made and their feeding habits and found they organised themselves into groups of up to around 20,000.
Continue reading...Massachusetts allocates $50 mln in forest conservation funds
US agtech firm Indigo Ag names ex-Tyson Foods boss as new CEO
US science advocacy warns of overreliance on gas power plants
A heatwave in Antarctica totally blew the minds of scientists. They set out to decipher it – and here are the results
War in Gaza generates more emissions in two months than 20 countries in a year -study
Argentina, conservation NGO launch software to record and promote reforestation
Conservation NGO managing 22 African parks turns to REDD carbon projects to boost finances
Report calls on policymakers to support European market for CO2 transport by ship
UK government gives new year boost to sustainable farming scheme to onboard more farmers
Kenya plans to channel at least 15% of carbon credit revenues for climate goals
Senior Program Manager, Markets, Wildlife Conservation Society – New York/Washington DC/Remote (EST) Considered
UK nature start-up to launch own biodiversity credit standard
Norway set to approve deep-sea mining despite environmental concerns
Scientists say mining could have devastating impact on marine life, but Norway claims it will help green transition
Norway is expected to become the first country in the world to open up its seabed for deep-sea mining with a highly contentious parliamentary vote on Tuesday.
The decision comes despite warnings from scientists who say it could have a devastating impact on marine life, and opposition from the EU and the UK who have called for a temporary ban on deep-sea mining because of environmental concerns.
Continue reading...2023 hottest year on record, CO2-spewing wildfires a major contributor -report
Euro Markets: Midday Update
2023 confirmed as world's hottest year on record
2023 confirmed as world's hottest year on record
2023 smashes record for world’s hottest year by huge margin
Rapid reduction in fossil fuel burning urgently needed to preserve liveable conditions, say scientists, as climate damage deepens
2023 “smashed” the record for the hottest year by a huge margin, providing “dramatic testimony” of how much warmer and more dangerous today’s climate is from the cooler one in which human civilisation developed.
The planet was 1.48C hotter in 2023 compared with the period before the mass burning of fossil fuels ignited the climate crisis. The figure is very close to the 1.5C temperature target set by countries in Paris in 2015, although the global temperature would need to be consistently above 1.5C for the target to be considered broken.
Continue reading...