Saturday, April 20, 2019
Thursday, April 18, 2019
Corn-farming fouls the air to fatal effect
Nature - Agriculture
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Harvesting corn in Canada. A PinP photo. |
The dominant US crop plant has a voracious appetite for fertilizer, which leads to air pollution and health problems. More here.
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Climate change made the Arctic greener. Now parts of it are turning brown.
ScienceNews
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A green Arctic meadow - Baffin Island, CA. Photo by Mike Beauregard. |
Warming trends bring more insects, extreme weather and wildfires that wipe out plants. More here.
Monday, April 15, 2019
Yukon temperatures are the highest in 13,600 years
CLIMATE&CAPITALISM
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Photo by Diego Delso. Warming of over 2 degrees Celsius is above the global average and well above the average of the rest of the Arctic region.More here. |
Sunday, April 14, 2019
The Trump Administration Has Thrown Out Protections for Migratory Birds
truthout
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A great egret. One of the many birds that migrate between Canada and the U.S. A PinP photo. |
Under Republican and Democratic presidents from Nixon through Obama, killing migratory birds, even inadvertently, was a crime, with fines for violations ranging from $250 to $100 million. The power to prosecute created a deterrent that protected birds and enabled government to hold companies to account for environmental disasters. But in part due to President Donald Trump’s interior secretary nominee…more here.
Saturday, April 13, 2019
Rising global shipping traffic could lead to surge in invasive species
Science Daily
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Ship traffic in the Suez Canal - 1957. Photo by Buonasera |
Maritime trade is likely to far outweigh climate change as the driver of bio-invasions over the next 30 years, study finds.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Even Canada's beloved grey jay is not immune from the ravages of manmade climate change.
Decades of Canadian research, just released, finds "strong evidence" that increasing "freeze-thaw" cycles are destroying food the birds store away in the fall. This, in turn is damaging their ability to reproduce and likely playing a role in a severe population decline in at least one region. by Larry Powell |
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The grey jay, AKA as Canada jay or "Whiskey-Jack." Photo by Steve Phillips, via Canadian Geographic magazine. |
It's been
known for some time that our changing climate is leading to reductions, even
entire removal of many species from certain areas (a process called
"extirpation"). This new research by the University of Guelph,
sheds more light on just how that happens.
Using 40
years of breeding data, scientists studied grey jays (scientific name perisoreus canadensis) at the southern edge
of their range in Algonquin Park, Ontario. (The birds can be found in all Canadian provinces and territories.)
Like many
species, they hide or "cache" significant amounts of food away
which they'll need later on when it is more scarce - mainly the breeding
season late in the following winter. In past years, when winters were
more consistently cold, this would allow them to retrieve it,
intact. But with "freeze-thaw" cycles becoming more frequent,
that food is either rotting or greatly degrading in nutrient value. As a
result, the jays are having fewer young and those young are less healthy than
before. The spokesperson for the study, Alex Sutton (above), tells PinP, "The population in Algonquin has declined by over 50% since the 1980s. So we do believe that climate change is currently affecting this population. While work is ongoing about the actual cause of the decline, it is likely that changes to reproductive performance do contribute to the decline."
The
birds eat a variety of things, some which you might expect, like
insects, berries and mushrooms, and some you might not - like nestling birds
they catch themselves and game meat that has been shot or trapped by humans. (It's the meat, berries and fungi which are most vulnerable to spoilage.) The birds often hide it away in tree forks, behind flakes of bark or in conifer
needles. It is this instinctive practise that seems to be coming back
to haunt them now.
To quote the
study, "Our results suggest that freeze-thaw events have a significant
detrimental impact on the quality and/or quantity of cached food available to
Canada jays. Future increases in such events, caused by climate change, could
pose a serious threat to Canada jays and other food-caching species that
store perishable foods for long periods of time." ![]()
The research
findings have just been published in the proceedings of The Royal Society in
the UK.
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Larry Powell Powell is a veteran, award-winning journalist based in Shoal Lake, Manitoba, Canada. He specialize in stories about agriculture...