Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Experts fear ‘quiet springs’ as songbirds can’t keep up with climate change

The Washington Post
A rose-breasted grosbeak, one of the species-at-risk due to global warming. PinP photo.
In 1962, Rachel Carson warned that pesticides, particularly DDT, would lead to springs without birdsong, as she wrote in her book “Silent Spring.” Carson's forecast kick-started an environmental movement and was instrumental in the Environmental Protection Agency's decision to ban the pesticides 10 years later, so her descriptions of deathly quiet did not come to pass. Story here.

No comments:

Ottawa's Devotion to a Popular Weedkiller Remains Steadfast. Is it True Love or Corporate Seduction?

CIRCA 2016 For those familiar with the mounting body of peer-reviewed evidence showing that the herbicide Roundup is probably harmful to ani...