Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Save the Wilderness. A music video by Eric Bogle and Larry Powell


With special thanks to Eric Bogle, for granting me permission to use his song for this video!

Thanks, Eric! You are the greatest! Larry.

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Rising sea levels pose threat to homes of 300m people – study


The Guardian
Photo by Christian Ferrer
Figure based on new analysis of coastlines is more than three times previous estimate. Story here.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Glacial rivers absorb carbon faster than rainforests, scientists find


The Guardian
Ellesmere Island, northern Canada. Satellite photo by NASA.
‘Total surprise’ discovery overturns conventional understanding of rivers. Story here.

Thursday, October 24, 2019

The Real Case for Saving Species: We Don’t Need Them, But They Need Us

YaleEnvironment360

Conservationists argue that humans need to save species in order to save ourselves. The truth is we could survive without wild species — but they can’t survive without us, and the moral argument for protecting them and the beauty they bring to the world is overwhelming. Story here.
Red-winged blackbird. A PinP photo.


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Trump’s Justice Dept. Sues California to Stop Climate Initiative From Extending to the Province of Quebec.


The New York Times
The Trump administration took another legal shot at California on Wednesday, suing to block part of the state’s greenhouse gas reduction program and limit its ability to take international leadership in curbing planet warming emissions. Story here.

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Understanding extinction — humanity has destroyed half the life on Earth

CBC Radio
A PinP photo.
There's less life overall, and much of it is domesticated plants and animals instead of wildlife.  More here.

Much of the Earth is still wild, but threatened by fragmentation


PHYS ORG 
Seismic lines dissect northern Alberta, Canada.
Photo by Roland Roesler
Half of the Earth's land surface not covered with ice remains relatively wild—but many of these "low human-impact" areas are broken into small, isolated pieces, threatening their future. Story here.

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