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First high-energy proton beam machine 'great for UK'

BBC - Sun, 2017-05-21 03:23
A key component of the UK's first high-energy proton beam machine is delivered to its new home in Newport.
Categories: Around The Web

Norway to boost protection of Arctic seed vault from climate change

BBC - Sun, 2017-05-21 01:20
Measures are announced after water enters a frozen facility guarding the world's key crop seeds.
Categories: Around The Web

Urban beasts: how wild animals have moved into cities

The Guardian - Sat, 2017-05-20 18:30
Rome has a problem with wild boar; wolves mingle with surburban Germans; mountain lions frequent LA. All around the world, city life seems increasingly conducive to wildlife

In Aesop’s fable, the town mouse turns his nose up at his country cousin’s simple fare, preferring the haute cuisine to be scavenged in the city. It appears that the wild boar of Italy have taken note, and are venturing ever more boldly into Rome.

But they are not alone: all around the world, city life seems to be increasingly conducive to wildlife. Urban nature is no longer unglamorous feral pigeons or urban foxes. Wolves have taken up residence in parts of suburban Germany as densely populated as Cambridge or Newcastle. The highest density of peregrine falcons anywhere in the world is New York; the second highest is London, and these spectacular birds of prey now breed in almost every major British city. And all kinds of wild deer are rampaging through London, while also taking up residence everywhere from Nara in Japan to the Twin Cities of the US.

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Categories: Around The Web

Sap is rising on the shimmering heath

The Guardian - Sat, 2017-05-20 14:30

Mockbeggar, New Forest Tiny, parched, sorrels streak the ground with red but there is feverish activity in the ditch

From Moyles Court, a fine 17th-century house that is now a private school, we set off up the slope with paddocks on either side. Leaving the Avon Valley Path, we cut the corner of Newlands Plantation, and climb steadily uphill along the woodland edge. Rhododendron ponticum infests part of the margin, with the blooms of young plants announcing their colonisation of the adjacent open ground.

Related: For a beetle at risk, what better place to be?

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Hunstanton Sea Life Sanctuary's first Humboltd penguin chick in decade

BBC - Sat, 2017-05-20 10:23
A Humboldt penguin chick has hatched at a sea life sanctuary for the first time in more than a decade.
Categories: Around The Web

The little Aussie shopping bag replacing plastic in the war on waste

ABC Environment - Sat, 2017-05-20 09:19
Boomerang Bags is an Australian solution to plastic pollution that's gone global.
Categories: Around The Web

The Arnavon Islands: turtle breeding ground becomes first national park for Solomon Islands

ABC Environment - Sat, 2017-05-20 08:35
The Arnavon Islands are the largest rookery for the critically endangered hawksbill turtle in the South Pacific.
Categories: Around The Web

A Big Country

ABC Environment - Sat, 2017-05-20 06:20
Natimuk pre-schoolers go bush for outdoor kinder; Miriwoong man David Newry goes searching for native bananas; an Irish lass swaps Belfast for an outback pub; and we go to an alpaca handling school.
Categories: Around The Web

'Doomsday' seed vault, new plants and a plague of plastic – green news roundup

The Guardian - Sat, 2017-05-20 02:39

The week’s top environment news stories and green events. If you are not already receiving this roundup, sign up here to get the briefing delivered to your inbox

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Categories: Around The Web

Arctic stronghold of world’s seeds flooded after permafrost melts

The Guardian - Sat, 2017-05-20 01:39

No seeds were lost but the ability of the rock vault to provide failsafe protection against all disasters is now threatened by climate change

It was designed as an impregnable deep-freeze to protect the world’s most precious seeds from any global disaster and ensure humanity’s food supply forever. But the Global Seed Vault, buried in a mountain deep inside the Arctic circle, has been breached after global warming produced extraordinary temperatures over the winter, sending meltwater gushing into the entrance tunnel.

The vault is on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen and contains almost a million packets of seeds, each a variety of an important food crop. When it was opened in 2008, the deep permafrost through which the vault was sunk was expected to provide “failsafe” protection against “the challenge of natural or man-made disasters”.

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Live Q&A: What impact is human development having on the world’s elephant populations?

The Guardian - Sat, 2017-05-20 01:37

The conflict between humans and elephants for space and resources is driving the rapid decline of elephant populations. Join us on Wednesday 24 May from 1-2.30pm BST to discuss how elephants and humans can live together

This week an elderly man was killed by a wild elephant in central India as he picked tendu leaves in the Surajpur forest. A few days earlier, a father and his son were injured after two elephants wandered into their house in Tamil Nadu. As human populations grow and communities live in closer proximity to elephants, one of the world’s most unique and beautiful animals can become the most dangerous.

But human development is also contributing to the severe decline in elephant populations. Across Asia and Africa, elephants’ natural habitats are being destroyed by rapid urbanisation and industrial and agricultural expansion.

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The week in wildlife – in pictures

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-05-19 23:00

Tasmanian devils, a Saimaa ringed seal and a white wolf are among this week’s pick of images from the natural world

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Categories: Around The Web

Greece battles locust plague on Agios Efstratios island

BBC - Fri, 2017-05-19 21:33
Locals say sheep on Agios Efstratios are starving as so much plant life is being devoured by swarms.
Categories: Around The Web

UN looks to protect birds from green energy threats

BBC - Fri, 2017-05-19 20:25
Shutting down wind farms when birds pass over is one of the methods being tested to save migrating species.
Categories: Around The Web

Study: inspiring action on climate change is more complex than you might think | John Abraham

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-05-19 20:00

People have to grasp how climate change impacts them, and we need to value environmentally sound behavior

We know humans are causing climate change. That is a fact that has been known for well over 100 years. We also know that there will be significant social and economic costs from the effects. In fact, the effects are already appearing in the form of more extreme weather, rising sea levels, ocean acidification, and so on.

So why haven’t humans done much about the problem? Answering that question may be more challenging than the basic science of a changing climate. Fortunately, a new review just out in Science helps us with this question. Lead author, Dr. Elise Amel, a colleague of mine, completed the review with colleagues Drs. Christie Manning, Britain Scott, and Susan Koger. Rather than focusing solely on the problems with communicating the science of climate change, this work takes a wider view on the hurdles that get in the way of meaningful action.

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China claims breakthrough in mining 'flammable ice'

BBC - Fri, 2017-05-19 19:27
The vast reserves of methane hydrates under the bottom of the sea could be key to future energy needs.
Categories: Around The Web

2017 Whitley Gold Award winner: 'Fish loved me but people didn't'

BBC - Fri, 2017-05-19 19:03
Zafer Kizilkaya's conservation work saved a whole Turkish community and despite resistance his fish model is being widely adopted. He has just been awarded the 2017 Whitley Gold Award.
Categories: Around The Web

Woodside says it was behind oil spill that regulator kept secret

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-05-19 17:01

The company reported a leak from a well off the coast of Western Australia to Nopsema last year, and says there was no lasting impact on the environment

Woodside Petroleum has confirmed it was behind an oil spill off the coast of Western Australia that was kept secret by the regulator for more than a year.

The company said on Friday that it reported a leak from a well in the Cossack field on the North West Shelf to the National Offshore Petroleum Safety and Environmental Management Authority (Nopsema) in April 2016.

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Great white shark study could be used to drop protected status, Greens warn

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-05-19 16:18

Government may justify delisting the threatened species or order a cull despite its treaty obligations, senator says

A scientific study of great white shark numbers could be used by the government to justify delisting the species as threatened or ordering a cull despite international treaty obligations, the Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson has warned.

Whish-Wilson, who is chairing a committee inquiring into shark mitigation and deterrence, has accused the Liberals of politicising recent deaths in Western Australia, including that of 17-year old Laeticia Brouwer through their calls to end protection of great whites.

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Immersive plunge for bored young dipper

The Guardian - Fri, 2017-05-19 14:30

Milldale, Derbyshire The adult whirred downstream. The juvenile, sat still for a bit, gaped, grew restless, then launched itself into the stream

The grassy east bank of the river Dove below the packhorse bridge at Milldale, in the Peak District, is popular with picnickers and we had to drift downstream to find a little space. Once prone, bagel in hand, I half dozed, half watched insects forming clouds over the river, catching sunlight like chaff.

But then I snapped awake as I realised I was being watched. A rich brown eye glistened as it fixed on mine from no more than three metres away – a juvenile dipper clamped to a broken branch jammed in the rocks, deep in shadow, breaking the flow of water.

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Categories: Around The Web

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