Saturday, June 3, 2017

Climate Change Is Killing New England’s Moose. Can Hunters Save Them?

inside
climate
news
Ticks that flourish as temperatures rise are decimating the once-thriving population. Some experts think reducing moose numbers is the best way to save them. Story here.

A moose in Riding Mountain National Park, Canada. PinP photo.

A 10-year old's vision for healing the planet | Genesis Butler | TEDxCSULB

THE CLOCK IS TICKING ON SITE C

SIERRA
CLUB BC
The results of the BC election are finally in, and the message is clear: Almost sixty per cent of voters called for a review or cancellation of the Site C dam. Their concerns must be honoured by the incumbent government. Details here.

Toxic Cocktail of Man-Made Chemicals Found in Great Barrier Reef Turtles

EcoWatch
Green Sea Turtles in Australia's Great Barrier Reef are some of the world's most majestic creatures. They have a lifespan of up to 50 years, but after recent results from blood tests on the marine animals, their health might be in jeopardy. Story here. 

Photo by Nize @ English Wikipedi

Not So Funny: The Arctic is Leaking Laughing Gas

EcoWatch
Nitrous oxide, the main ingredient in laughing gas, is 300 times more potent as a greenhouse gas, than carbon dioxide. And scientists believe it could be leaking from ancient reservoirs beneathArctic permafrost. Details here.

Melting permafrost in Canada's Arctic. Photo: Charles Tarnocai/Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Friday, June 2, 2017

Biodiversity moves beyond counting species

nature
Ecologists are increasingly looking at how richness of traits — rather than number of species — helps set the health of ecosystems. Details here.

How scientists reacted to the US leaving the Paris climate agreement

nature

What the United States' departure from the historic pact means for efforts to fight global warming. Details here.

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Health Leaders Must Focus on the Threats From Factory Farms (Opinion)

The New York Times.

This week, the World Health Organization — which works globally to improve human health — will meet in Geneva to select a new director general. We have a mission for that leader: take on factory farms, a major threat to health and the environment. Story here.

Monday, May 29, 2017

Stand up for Greenpeace, our great forests and free speech

SumOfUs
Greenpeace and Stand.Earth (formerly Forest Ethics) are getting sued for $300 million by Canada’s largest logging company to make them shut up. Details here.

Coral bleaching on Great Barrier Reef worse than expected, surveys show

The Guardian
Surveys taken throughout 2016 show escalating impact from north to south, with 70% of shallow water corals dead north of Port Douglas. Story here.
Blue Starfish in the Great Barrier Reef 2004. Photo by Richard Ling

Sunday, May 28, 2017

As world faces unprecedented famine threat, G7 should pay up and push for peace

OXFAM
Deadly famine is already affecting 100,000 people in parts of South Sudan and threatens to extend to Yemen, Somalia and northeast Nigeria. Widespread famine across all four countries is not yet inevitable, but G7 leaders need to act now with a massive injection of aid, backed with a forceful diplomatic push to bring an end to the long-standing conflicts that are driving this hunger crisis. Details here.

Africa is no stranger to famine. Except now, the crisis is even worse and more widespread than it was in 2011. 
That's when this image, depicting famine refugees in the Horn of Africa, was taken. Andy Hall/Oxfam


A Rescue Center for Small Wild Animals Looks to Place a Blind Moose Calf

July 19, 2025 By  Ian Austen On Friday at Holly’s Haven, a wildlife rescue and rehabilitation center in a rural section of Ottawa, there was...