Blogging the End of the World™
Destructive species hitching ride on cargo ships make Seaway a bigger threat By Dan Egan of the Journal SentinelOct. 3, 2010 For thousands of years, the Great Lakes were protected by Niagara Falls on the east and a subcontinental divide on the west, but those barriers to our grandest freshwater system were obliterated over the […]
ScienceDaily (Sep. 27, 2010) — Scientists are reporting significant changes in the distribution of coastal fish species in southeast Australia which they say are partly due to climate change. CSIRO’s Climate Adaptation and Wealth from Oceans Flagships have identified 43 species, representing about 30 per cent of the inshore fish families occurring in the region, […]
Pools of standing water in southern Sindh province potentially home to disease-carrying mosquitoes that breed and hatch By Declan Walsh in Islamabad, www.guardian.co.uk, Sunday 3 October 2010 22.00 BST More than two million cases of malaria are expected in Pakistan in the coming months in the wake of the country’s devastating floods, aid workers have […]
Caption by Adam Voiland and Mike CarlowiczOctober 1, 2010 An unparalleled heat wave in eastern Europe, coupled with intense droughts and fires in Russia, put Earth’s temperatures in the headlines this summer. Likewise, an exceptionally warm July in the eastern United States strained power grids, forced nursing home evacuations, and slowed transit systems. But from […]
By Michael McCarthyMonday, 4 October 2010 Forty British wild bird species need special protection to help them survive, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) says today. They range from the once-familiar house sparrows of Central London to the enigmatic and mournful-sounding black-throated divers of the lochs of the Scottish Flow Country, and […]
Contact: Matthias Obst, University of Gothenburg 4-Oct-2010 Having survived for more than 400 million years, the horseshoe crab is now under threat – primarily due to overharvest and habitat destruction. However, climatic changes may also play a role. Researchers from the University of Gothenburg reveal how sensitive horseshoe crab populations are to natural climate change […]
About 8 million remain homeless following Pakistan’s worst flooding in living memory By AARON FAVILA, The Associated Pressupdated 10/4/2010 5:01:22 AM ET SUKKUR, Pakistan — The call to prayer echoes through the tent village at dawn. Muhammad Mosa wakes up and checks on Tikry and Baghee, his buffalo and goat. They are prized possessions, one […]
BBC1 October 2010 Last updated at 09:06 ET A six-month ban on eel catching has begun as scientists try to find out why their numbers are plummeting. The number of eels in Britain’s rivers have fallen dramatically and nobody knows why. Eel catcher Peter Carter, whose family have worked in the trade for 500 years, […]
By Richard Gray, Science CorrespondentPublished: 9:15AM BST 03 Oct 2010 Frog populations are on the verge of dying out in some parts of Britain due to a disease which causes them to bleed to death. Common frogs, which are the most widespread species of frog in Britain, have suffered declines of around 80 per cent […]
By Laura Zuckerman; editing by Steve Gorman and Greg McCuneSat Oct 2, 2010 6:29pm EDT SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) – Across the northern Rocky Mountains, bighorn sheep are dying by the hundreds from pneumonia and alarmed wildlife officials are hunting and killing the majestic animals to halt the spread of the disease. Since winter, nine disease […]