samedi 31 mars 2007

No Time to Lose, Extinction is Forever: All political parties urged to put aside politics and ensure Bill passes by summer


TORONTO, March 30 /CNW/ - Ontario's revised Endangered Species Act
proceeded to second reading yesterday. Bill 184 is the result of extensive
public and industry consultations carried out by the Ontario Ministry of
Natural Resources (MNR). With opposition parties now calling for even more
delay, Ontario's leading environmental groups today are underlining the
necessity for quick action.
"It's obvious that some special interests want to slow or stop this Bill.
This is a win-win piece of legislation for the people of Ontario and its
wildlife. If this Bill isn't passed in this legislative session, it will
likely become extinct, just like many of our treasured species of plants and
animals," says Aaron Freeman, Policy Director for Environmental Defence.
The proposed package of new legislation and programs, which includes a
new $18 million stewardship fund to assist landowners in protecting wildlife
habitat, is intended to provide effective protection for Ontario's
approximately 200 endangered species and their habitats. Action is urgently
needed, say the groups, because for those plants and animals for which trends
are known, over 75% are either already gone from Ontario or are on their way
to disappearing.
"We have no time to lose," explains Wendy Francis, Director of
Conservation and Science for Ontario Nature. "There are about 200 endangered
plants and animals in Ontario, which is nearly 40% of all of the endangered
species across Canada. In other words, we have the dubious distinction of
having the most work to do to protect and recover endangered species. Let's
get on with it!"
"Politicians come and go, but extinction is forever," adds Janet Sumner,
Executive Director of CPAWS-Wildlands League. "Every day that we delay,
species like the Woodland Caribou lose more and more of the forests upon which
they depend for survival. If certain politicians and interest groups succeed
in delaying effective legislation, the public will hold them accountable for
exacerbating Ontario's endangered species crisis."
The groups point out that the calls for more consultation lack substance.
Pre-bill consultation began in May 2006 with a detailed discussion paper
distributed to all interested stakeholders. This was followed by a two-month
public consultation period required by Ontario's Environmental Bill of Rights.
Then a nine-member government-appointed panel of scientists and legal experts
was struck to identify the best options for a revised Endangered Species Act.
It produced a report, which was released to the public for comment in November
2006
(http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/mnr/speciesatrisk/ESA_Advisory_Panel_Report.pdf).

Libellés :

vendredi 30 mars 2007

Has Russia declared war on birds?

By Tatyana Sinitsyna

RIA Novosti

(MCT)

MOSCOW - Many migratory birds are already heading for their summer homes in Russia. By the eternal laws of nature, birds are flying in large numbers to their nesting-places for the sake of raising a new generation.

Today, however, few people romanticize the spring return of birds because they have been discredited by the rise of avian flu.

Though ornithologists say the "guilt" of birds has not been proven, fears of a new "plague" seem to be overriding common sense. People are ready to declare a real war on wild birds.

As spring arrives, there are more and more calls from various levels of Russian society to exterminate migratory birds. Alexei Zimenko, the director of the Wild Nature Center, describes such a method of preventing avian flu as "shameful, absurd and unacceptable." First, it would pose a serious threat to endangered species. Second, according to Zimenko, the massive shooting of birds would only encourage an epidemic because killed and wounded birds spread the infection. Third, such measures are very expensive: for example, the work of scare-away teams in the Novosibirsk Region alone costs 300 million rubles a year.

Flocks of birds fly mostly at night, and during the day they stop at their customary migratory places, often near water. It is here that they should be targeted, according to the recommendations. In the instructions it sent to all regional committees, the Russian Agency for Health and Consumer Rights underlines: "Take measures to prevent the nesting of migratory birds near reservoirs and at places of possible contact with poultry." The local authorities will decide which methods to use.

The same is recommended in a letter from the Russian Veterinary Supervision Agency to local authorities: "In population centers situated near the shores of reservoirs where migratory birds have nesting-places, organize measures to scare away birds to a distance of 3 to 10 kilometers from the population centers." The letter contains an important piece of advice: "use all acoustic and other methods." The latter is a clear reference to firearms.

"Besides the fact that the shooting of birds is inhumane and anti-environmental, it is also pointless. Birds are very mobile, and there are so many of them that you cannot exterminate them even if you give every Russian a gun," says Yevgeny Kuznetsov, a leading expert at the Center for the Protection of Wild Animals' Health.

He believes that any attempt to scare away, not to mention shoot, wild birds will only force them to search for new places to feed, rest and nest, meaning they will fly to unusual places.

The problem of avian flu is so serious that it has become the focus of attention not only of scientists and experts but political parties as well. The ruling United Russia party has held a conference on the matter. "Avian flu has existed for millions of years. At present, no type of animal flu is dangerous for humans," Professor Yevgeny Voronin, the rector of the Skryabin Moscow Veterinary and Biotechnology Academy, told the conference. "I can drink a medicine bottle of the H5N1 virus and nothing will happen to me. Students at our academy study virology and work with the live avian flu virus. I have never heard that anyone has suffered."

The tone of another speaker, Academician Dmitry Lvov, the director of the Ivanovsky Virology Research Institute, was different. He believes the possibility of a pandemic on all continents is real. According to Lvov, the potential of the H5N1 virus is greater than that of the Spanish influenza that claimed the lives of 50 million people at the beginning of the 20th century. "For the deadly virus to spread from human to human, only two biochemical changes are needed. If this happens, it will be a disaster," he warned.

The scientist added that it was impossible to counter the process of evolution in ecosystems. "It is impossible to prevent a pandemic or an epizootic (an epidemic affecting animals) because it is a disaster like a hurricane or an earthquake. But it is possible and necessary to reduce the possible effects of such disasters through forecasting and prevention," he stressed. Among the obligatory steps to be taken against avian flu, he named the vaccination of household poultry, reliable protection measures to isolate poultry farms, the vaccination of poultry farm personnel, and wide-ranging disinfection measures.

---

ABOUT THE WRITER

Tatyana Sinitsyna is a commentator for the Russian News and Information Agency Novosti; Web site: http://en.rian.ru/. The Washington Bureau of RIA Novosti can be reached by phone at (202) 328-3238, fax (202) 328-0137, or e-mail: novosti@comcast.net.

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and may not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

---

© 2007, RIA Novosti

Libellés :

jeudi 29 mars 2007

More protection for endangered animals will make Ontario a leader: advocates


Canadian Press

Published: Friday, March 23, 2007

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TORONTO (CP) - Ontario will lead Canada in saving endangered animals if provincial legislation to protect species at risk introduced Tuesday becomes law, environmental groups say.

The proposed legislation expands the number of protected animals in Ontario and allows scientists to determine which new species should be added each year. If it becomes law, the province will spend $18 million over four years to increase protection for the habitat of threatened animals and to engage the support of private landowners - many of whom find themselves responsible for protecting endangered animals.

"If this law is passed in its current form, it will be the best endangered species law in the country," said Rick Smith, executive director of Environmental Defence.

"And there is an urgency to getting it passed - 75 per cent of species in Ontario are declining right across the board. We're losing those incredible animals and plants that make this an interesting place to live."

A lot has changed since the Endangered Species Act was introduced 36 years ago, said Natural Resources Minister David Ramsay.

"Climate change, population growth and urbanization have taken a toll on our natural environment," Ramsay said.

"This government is setting a gold standard for species protection and recovery that we believe will be an example for other jurisdictions right around the world."

Ontario is home to 175 different species like the peregrine falcon and woodland caribou that are now considered at risk, said Ramsay, who added that under the new legislation, up to six new species could be added to the list each year.

While some farmers are concerned the legislation will cost them a chunk of their annual income in lost crops if they encounter an endangered animal or plant, environmental groups were thrilled with the bill and want it passed as soon as possible.

The legislation covers all the bases, Smith said. It has a plan to replenish dwindling species and helps protect the environment they depend upon to survive, he said.

"That just makes sense - it doesn't do any good to protect individual creatures if you completely obliterate everything that surrounds them," he added.

Robert Wright, counsel with the Sierra Legal Defence Fund, called the legislation "a terrific step forward."

"This would be a big improvement and the faster it gets in, the better we'll be, he said.

But Paul Mistele, vice-president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, is worried about the impact the legislation might have for his members. Without some kind of adequate compensation, Mistele said farmers might be less inclined to voluntarily co-operate with endangered species protection.

"We're going to be taking a hard look at that," he said.

Ron Maher, provincial manager with Ducks Unlimited, said recognizing the role of private landowners is a good start. But he said the $18 million budgeted for the new law may not be enough to ensure co-operation.

Libellés :

mardi 27 mars 2007

Animals feel pain, just like humans!

Published: March 25, 2007 10:37 pm print this story email this story comment on this story

Adoption counselor: Animals feel pain, just like humans

By Amelia A. Pridemore
Register-Herald Reporter


Five dogs and two cats went to loving homes at the Raleigh County Humane Society Saturday, and Jim Kenney, adoption counselor, was celebrating seven victories.


However, his heart was heavy as he thought about animals in Raleigh County that recently suffered violent deaths.

Thursday afternoon, Raleigh County sheriff’s deputies searched for the person responsible for shooting at a man in his yard and killing his dog in Bolt. Slightly more than an hour later, Beckley police were investigating the shooting and mutilation of a cat in the process of giving birth, killing both the mother cat and her kittens. Juveniles are suspected in the latter case at Lewis-Ritchie Apartments.

“It’s really shocking that there are juveniles that would be so callous and do that to a living creature,” Kenney said. “If that was an adult that shot the dog, other juveniles would believe it is OK to treat animals that way. That sends a horrible message to kids in this area.

“To think someone would be able to shoot a cat while it was giving birth — unbelievable.”

However, Kenney said that given his experience at the animal shelter, such acts do not surprise him. He estimates that on a weekly basis — at least — the animal shelter receives dogs and cats that have been starved and are near death. Some of these animals, even after receiving proper care, die. People will often move away and leave animals in their homes or tied up in the yard to die.

He said Raleigh County has a large problem with people abusing horses — starving them. If the owners are having trouble caring for the horses, he said, the horses can be sold at farmers market auctions and go to owners who will properly care for them. He encouraged anyone needing further information to call him at the animal shelter.

“Initially, you feel anger, but then it turns to sorrow for the animals,” he said. “They’re the ones who suffer.

“There’s a saying that really gets to me. It was written by the woman who wrote ‘Black Beauty,’ Anna Sewell. She wrote, ‘We may call them dumb animals, and so they are, for they cannot tell us how they feel. But they do not suffer less because they have no words.’

“Those people do not think animals have feelings, but they feel pain like we do. Sometimes, if they mistreat animals, they will also mistreat a person.”

Some of the situations do have happy endings, Kenney said. Some of the abused animals that arrive at the shelter manage to survive and find loving homes.

“We recently had some hounds in here, and the people moved away and left them tied up in the yard,” he said. “Two of them didn’t make it, but this one larger hound made it. A breed rescue took it, and they plan to find it a good home.

“That dog will think it died and went to dog heaven.”

Kenney said people will often come to the shelter for a new dog or cat after one dear to them has died. From some of their reactions, he imagined the owners of these animals killed must be grieving — and will do so for some time.

“It’s like a loss of a family member to most people,” he said. “They will grieve like they’ve lost a member of the family. For some people, it takes them years to get over the loss of an animal.”



apridemore@register-herald.com

Libellés :

samedi 24 mars 2007

Planet Earth




LET ME TELL YOU about patience and perseverance in the pursuit of great television.

The camera crews of The Discovery Channel's "Planet Earth" waited 45 days in the New Guinea forests for the opportunity to film the bizarre mating dance of the Blue Bird of Paradise.

That's awesome dedication.

Here is an even better example: Cinematographer Doug Allan spent three years trudging up and down the Himalayas in the hope of photographing the rarely seen snow leopard.

In the first episode of the 11-part "Planet Earth" series premiering at 8 p.m., Sunday you'll hear Allan say, as he waits all bundled up against the cold, "Of course this is boring. Boring as hell."

But the boredom dissolves into excitement when there at last, within camera range, is the magnificent ghost cat with fur that's a blend of white and gray.

The picture of the snow leopard alone is worth what you paid for cable this month.

"Planet Earth" is one stunning series of high-definition images after another, including pictures of a cat they call the rarest on Earth - the amur leopard of far east Russia. Experts who study the big cats say the population of the amur leopard has dwindled to fewer than 40.

David Attenborough, who was the series narrator when it premiered on the BBC in 2006, told an online source, "The series is a celebration of our planet, not a lament about the state of it. In some areas there is no doubt that we are doing damage to our world, but at the same time we should be aware of a vast amount of uncharted and untouched wilderness."
ON TV
"Planet Earth" premieres Sunday at 8 p.m. on
The Discovery Channel.

Television as far back as the early 1960s discovered that critters doing what comes naturally captivate viewers. "Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom" with Marlin Perkins and Jim Fowler debuted on NBC in 1963. It continued on the network and later in syndication until the late 1980s.

"Nature" on PBS has had a marvelous 25-year run. The Learning Channel and The Discovery Channel on cable provide platforms for animal exploration seen by millions. The Animal Channel premiered 11 years ago, but until "Planet Earth" came along, television's coverage of animals in motion rarely reached the level of art.

"You're in for a treat," said Sigourney Weaver when "Planet Earth" was introduced to the press in Silver Spring, Md. "The camera work is so extraordinary."

She replaces Attenborough as the narrator for the U.S. run of "Planet Earth," in which the viewer enters the world of the beast in more than 200 locations with 70 camera crews to record this and much more: the mass migration of a million caribou in the Arctic... mere mortals challenging nature on some of the tallest mountains on the planet... the spectacular sandstorms of the Sahara... predators such as wolves, lions and even eagles preying on the wildebeest of east Africa... a pride of African lions hunting elephants at night.

Run out right now and buy a high-def TV to watch this series.

Of focusing on brutality in the bush, Executive Producer Alastair Fothergill said, "We had to tread a fine line between showing nature as it really is while not offending the sensibilities of the viewers. I think it's an enormous mistake to try and sanitize nature."

It's high drama when Fothergill's camera crews in a helicopter equipped with a 360-degree lens track wild dogs running like the wind to bring down impala in Botswana.

If that's too intense for you, revel in previously unseen footage of grizzly bear cubs in the Rockies leaving their den for the first time. You'll love it.

# Reach Larry Bonko at (757) 446-2486 or larry.bonko@pilotonline.com.

Libellés :

jeudi 22 mars 2007

Destroying the rivers...

Construction destroying world rivers: WWF

GENEVA

The Yangtze River gets more than half of China’s industrial waste and sewage. Europe’s Danube has lost most of its surrounding wetlands. And the Rio Grande has become so shallow that salt water is seeping in, bringing ocean fish that threaten freshwater species.

Pollution, global warming and rampant development could destroy some of the world’s most iconic rivers in the coming decades, threatening to wipe out thousands of fish species and cause severe water shortages, the World Wide Fund for Nature said in a report release this week.

Only 21 of the planet’s 177 longest rivers run freely from source to sea, with dams and other construction destroying the habitats for migratory fish and other species by altering the water’s natural ebb and flow, the WWF said.

About a fifth of the world’s 10,000 freshwater fish and plant species are either extinct or endangered, the report said, calling on governments to radically step up efforts to preserve rivers, lakes and wetlands.

“Unabated development is jeopardizing nature’s ability to meet our growing demands,” said Jamie Pittock, who heads WWF’s freshwater program.

The report focused on some of the world’s most important rivers: the Nile, the Danube, the Rio Grande, South America’s La Plata, Australia’s Murray-Darling and Asia’s Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, and Ganges rivers.

The Danube, home to more than half of Europe’s fish species, has lost 80 per cent of its surrounding wetlands and flood plains because of dams, the report said.

Construction to ease shipping channels, dredging, pumping water or straightening banks, also threaten animals and plants in the river, which runs from Germany to the Black Sea, WWF said. Less than seven per cent of its basin is protected.

In China, pollution in the main stem of the Yangtze River has increased by more than 70 per cent over the last 50 years. Almost half of the country’s industrial waste and sewage is discharged in the river, the report said.

Garbage heaps, pig waste and discharge from factories, hospitals and mines, possibly including radioactive waste, lie at the bottom of the reservoir at the Three Gorges Dam, the world’s largest hydroelectric project, the WWF said.

In the Rio Grande, low water levels have allowed salt water to enter and ocean species to crowd out freshwater fish. Excessive extraction, primarily for agriculture, is threatening the river, which flows along the U.S.-Mexican border.

At the same time, rising populations along both sides of the river need more and more water, increasing pressure on the 69 fish species found only in the Rio Grande, the WWF said.

Global warming is threatening fish populations in Africa, where even small temperature changes can dramatically alter water levels and fish productivity, the report said. The Nile, the world’s longest river, is expected to reach a critically low level by 2025, threatening a source of drinking water for thousands of years.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Libellés :

mercredi 21 mars 2007

Job-Job-Job

rew wanted to save whales

The Japanese whaling fleet has set out to kill 945 whales this year. Greenpeace is setting out as well to stop them. But not just with a ship: we're launching an online community of virtual crew to defend the whales.

Closing Date: 31 May 2007


JOB DESCRIPTION:
Become a Greenpeace campaigner by signing on to http://whales.greenpeace.org in order to create a truly global campaign to defend the whales.

BACKGROUND: Greenpeace actions against whaling fleets brought about a moratorium on commercial whaling over twenty years ago. However, in recent years, against the wishes of more than 70% of Japanese people and in the face of international condemnation, the Fisheries Agency of Japan has spent millions of dollars of Japanese taxpayers money pursuing a campaign to reintroduce commercial whaling and the hunting of endangered species.

LOCATION: Anywhere in the world where you can log on to: http://whales.greenpeace.org and take action.

QUALIFICATIONS: Possess great ideas, is willing to campaign relentlessly to defend the whales and ensure the Southern Ocean becomes a true sanctuary for all whales. Has a positive and constructive approach, racist jerks need not apply.

REWARDS: Become part of the biggest crew to sail to the Southern Ocean, just by surfing the Internet. Have your idea used by the Greenpeace crew to defend the whales in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.

Contact information

Libellés :

Danube is sick

Top News


Drought threatens Danube ecosystem, WWF says

Environmental organization World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) included Danube in it's „World’s Top 10 Rivers at Risk“ study. According to the data, infrastructure works, embanking, excessive fishing, weather changes and pollution are the main causes that threaten to irreversibly affect 10 of the world's most important rivers.

Danube is the only river in Europe mentioned in the WWF report, along with La Plata and Rio Grande / Rio Bravo (America), Nile - Victoria Lake (Africa), Murray-Darling (Australia), Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, Ganges and Indus (Asia).

Danube is Europe's second largest river, with 2,780 kilometers spread along ten countries. According to the report, 80% of Danube's wet zones were lost in the past 200 years because of human interventions - embanking, canals, draining and navigation improvement works.

New infrastructure works are still planned in the Trans-European Network for Transport - TEN-T, designed to eliminate rapids and improve navigation. Changes may affect 500 kilometers on the Danube, including one of the sturgeons' last place to lay eggs.

Romanian track of the Danube is considered as the last part where the river runs free, being included by WWF in the most important 200 natural areas in the world.

Libellés :

dimanche 18 mars 2007

Catdiesel

Power your car with dead cats It is ok, they have nine lives
By Nick Farrell: jeudi 15 septembre 2005, 07:57

A GERMAN boffin has come up with the technology that will power your car on fuel derived from run over cats.
Christian Koch, 55, has angered animal rights people with his alternative fuel which is made from a secret recipe of garbage, mashed-up moggies, and other ingredients.
He said that his normal diesel-powered car has clocked 170,000 kilometres (106,000 miles) on pussy power without any major catastrophe.
His company "Alphakat GmbH", says his patented "KDV 500" machine can produce "bio-diesel" fuel at about 23 euro cents (30 cents) a litre.
It takes 20 dead cats added to the mix to produce enough fuel to fill up a 50-litre (11 gallon) tank. The engine really purrs apparently.

Libellés :

vendredi 16 mars 2007

Catwoman

‘Cat lady’ suspected of killing 650 animals
Friday, March 16, 2007
Kevin Mayhood
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH


Investigators are afraid that a woman who confessed to killing 650 cats and dogs is telling the truth.
Two animal rescuers have told authorities that they gave Maureen McLaughlin about 150 animals during the past five years.
"The numbers no longer sound so ridiculous," said Assistant City Prosecutor Bill Hedrick. "When we searched her apartment, there were almost no vet records and no adoption papers."
And no McLaughlin.
The 56-year-old disappeared before investigators returned to her North Side apartment with a search warrant on Wednesday.
Hedrick described the apartment as "meticulous," with no signs of pets, though neighbors referred to McLaughlin as "the cat lady."
She had called Columbus police over the weekend telling of her crimes.
When investigators from the Franklin County Animal Shelter and Capital Area Humane Society went to McLaughlin’s apartment, she told investigators that she had killed 650 animals and showed them how: She would put an animal in a crate, then drown it in a large trash can filled with water, Hedrick said.
McLaughlin also showed investigators 16 envelopes that had names and descriptions of animals written on them as well as the dates of their deaths, Hedrick said.
The envelopes contained fur or hair.
On Sunday, Cpl. Joe Rock of the Franklin County Department of Animal Care and Control met McLaughlin and videotaped her confessing to killing the animals.
She then led him to the most recent grave, which was in some woods near her home. He said the remains of a shorthaired gray and white cat were inside. McLaughlin was charged with one count of animal cruelty.
Sam Massie, a private security guard and animal rescuer, said he hates to think McLaughlin lied to him all these years.
They met in 2001, and he began bringing dogs and cats to her because she said she was affiliated with an organization that did not euthanize animals, he said.
He estimated he and his wife brought McLaughlin 100 animals.
"It’s heartbreaking," Massie said. "When we heard, it made us sick to our stomachs."
The Humane Society, the County Animal Shelter, the Columbus Dog Connection and the Columbus Cat Welfare Association, where McLaughlin volunteered about a decade ago, said they have not taken in any animals from McLaughlin during the past five years.
Hedrick said that building a case might prove difficult. The statute of limitations prevents his office from prosecuting animal-cruelty cases more than 2 years old.
McLaughlin, who got around by bicycle, told investigators she dropped the bodies in parks and different forested areas around the county.
When investigators returned to her apartment at 4331-B Malin Dr. E. with a search warrant Wednesday, the envelopes, crate and trash can were gone.
McLaughlin had left a note saying what she wanted to be buried with.
A warrant for her arrest was issued wedesday

Libellés :

jeudi 15 mars 2007

Peta kills animals

PETA kills animals



By Michelle Malkin · January 25, 2007 04:04 PM
The Center for Consumer Freedom is blogging the PETA animal cruelty trial in North Carolina over at PetaKillsAnimals.com. Check back often for updates. And have this chart handy the next time your vegan college kids or favorite Hollywood starlet starts proselytizing for PETA:

Libellés :

mercredi 14 mars 2007

Magic honey from New-Zealand arrives in North America

Natural Skin Care from New Zealand Arrives in North America



Wonders Down Under LLC is now the exclusive North American distributor for Parrs Products Ltd.
Temecula, CA (PRWeb) March 14, 2007 -- Wonders Down Under LLC is now the exclusive North American distributor for Parrs Products Ltd, the manufacturer of one of New Zealand’s oldest and most popular lines of skin care products.


Helvetica, sans-serif; TEXT-DECORATION: none" href="http://www.newzealandbeauty.com/" alt="Link to website">We have already established a distributor supply chain to serve the European marketplace and are now very excited to have a North American distribution channel. There are so many Americans who have never even heard of Manuka Honey and the wonderful things it can do for your skin so we are very pleased to now be able to address that Parrs is based in Auckland, New Zealand, and has been a family owned and operated business for over 50 years. All of their skin creams, lotions, soaps, shampoos and other items utilize native ingredients unique to New Zealand. The most popular range is Manuka Honey. These products contain active Manuka Honey – an amazing honey that has natural anti-bacterial and healing properties. Bees produce this honey from the native Manuka bush (Leptosperum Scoparium), which grows wild throughout the countryside of New Zealand. Manuka Honey has been used by the native New Zealand Maori people as both a food and a medicine for hundreds of years.Now serving the retail and wholesale US and Canadian marketplace, Wonders Down Under is based in Southern California and stocks the complete range of Parrs skin care products.In addition to Manuka Honey, the Parrs skin care product lines include, Lanolin, Paua (abalone, a vita marine), Thermal Mud (a spa-quality mud line), Rotorua Spa, and Tea Tree Oil. "We have already established a distributor supply chain to serve the European marketplace and are now very excited to have a North American distribution channel. There are so many Americans who have never even heard of Manuka Honey and the wonderful things it can do for your skin so we are very pleased to now be able to address that," says Nick Ewart, Managing Director of New Zealand Beauty Limited, the company that exports Parrs skincare products around the world.Wonders Down Under already does a brisk business to retail customers via the www.newzealandbeauty.com web site, but its long-term goal is to establish the products in stores throughout the US and Canada so customers can purchase product locally.Comparable in size and shape to Great Britain, Colorado or Japan, New Zealand has a population of only 4 million, making it one of the world’s least crowded countries. It is a haven for those seeking peace, rejuvenation and relaxation, as well as a playground for thrill-seekers and adventurers. Visit 100% Pure New Zealand (www.newzealand.com) to learn more about the land that gives us the wonderful Parrs skin care products."Literally tens of thousands of Americans have been travelling to New Zealand over the past several years and many have brought home Parrs skin care products," says Chris Stiles the Managing Director of Wonders Down Under in North America. "But they have no easy way to order more, which many have wanted to do. We are now able to serve these existing Parrs customers and also introduce a much wider American and Canadian audience to the these unique and beneficial products.""Take lanolin, for example. It’s derived from the wool of sheep which is very close chemically to the natural lubricant sebum in human skin, so it has wonderful moisturizing, healing and anti-aging qualities when it comes to dry and chapped skin. And New Zealand lanolin is widely regarded as the best in the world so it’s no wonder these products are so popular." In North America:Chris Stiles, Managing DirectorWonders Down Under LLC951-966-6326http://www.newzealandbeauty.com31805 Hwy 79 South, #167Temecula, CA 92592

Libellés :

mardi 13 mars 2007

Polar poster bear


Polar bears, the poster animals of climate changeThe combination of polar bears and melting ice is heady mix-so much so that the animal's plight as become a rallying cry in the fight against climate change

Not so long ago polar bears were a symbol of cold, but these days they are a symbol of warmth. In the past few weeks it has become difficult to open a newspaper or web page without seeing photographs of the beautiful yellowy-white animals leaping, or lying on sea ice in the Arctic, the newly helpless emblem of climate change. The traditional threats to the polar bear — hunting, toxic waste, offshore drilling — have been overshadowed by a new one: the ice around them is melting, and we are to blame.
This new threat is not new, of course — about as new as deforestation. But two things have put the polar bears on top of the vanishing ice, where they pose unwittingly as the latest poster animals in a distinguished and photogenic parade of endangered pandas, gorillas, dolphins and whales. At the end of December, the US Secretary of the Interior revealed the US Fish and Wildlife Service was considering adding the polar bear to its list of threatened species. A three-month consultation process began in January, and the world's Arctic specialists have been making appointments to deliver their expertise. This is a more significant addition to the at-risk list than a rare gazelle or panther: it is an admission, after years of denial, of the existence of global warming. The Bush administration could no longer disavow the effects of climate change if one of its departments had acknowledged such visible and dramatic effects. The polar bear had done what environmentalists could not, and opened a window on a global crisis. Three lawsuits against the White House — from Greenpeace, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Natural Resources Defense Council — were settled at a stroke.

Polar bears, which are dropping in numbers and weight in the Arctic, are in deep trouble because of global warming. PHOTO: AGENCIESThen, at the beginning of last month, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) delivered its damning verdict on rising temperatures and disappearing sea ice, and polar bears had even more reason to feel loved. Six hundred scientists attempted to dismiss all lingering cynicism about global warming, and to pin the blame on its human perpetrators. The reality is now stark and quantifiable, they stated, and in some areas the devastation is irreversible: we are already too late, for example, to avert the effects of the recent rises in sea levels. This news is particularly bad for polar bears, for the earlier melting of spring ice and the later formation of autumn ice has an immediate impact on their ability to feed. In some areas there is evidence that sea ice breaks up three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago.
Which seems to be good news for polar bear photographers. There is no such thing as an ugly polar bear, and even the less handsome ones appear to have learnt to conceal their claws as they leap the ice floes. Like panting labradors, they always appear to be smiling (no such fillip for the equally threatened but unglamorous walrus).
One photograph in particular has captured the imagination. In a neat piece of marketing, the Canadian Ice Service made available a stunning image to coincide with the IPCC report. Two bears, probably a mother and her cub, are pictured on a spectacular ice block off northern Alaska that might have been modeled by Henry Moore. They appear to be howling against injustice. The drama is clear: this is truly the tip of an iceberg, the bears are desperately stranded as the water swells around them. The first thought among viewers is surely one of pity and concern, but this is to misjudge the situation: polar bears are reasonable swimmers, and certainly climbed upon such sculptures centuries before we climbed into our 4x4s.
"Initially I thought the picture was a Photoshop fake," Ian Stirling, senior research scientist with the Canadian Wildlife Service, e-mails from his home in Edmonton. "But I have since checked and it is authentic. There is no doubt the photo is used because of its dramatic effect, and it is true it does not represent the kind of sea ice bears normally live on and depend upon for hunting seals."
The photograph was taken in 2004. Naysaying bloggers have used the fact the picture has been romanticized to discredit the claim of bears at risk, and in some cases the very existence of global warming. Several sites link to the original text that accompanied the photograph when it was first used three years ago, in an online journal of the Beaufort Gyre Exploration Project, in which the ice block is described as "extraordinary." The bears were seen during a late-summer arctic drilling mission that found the ice much thicker than expected.
Elsewhere, images of the polar bear are used to further other ends. The World Wildlife Fund features four of them, sketched in Biro, in its latest magazine campaign to "Change the world with a pen," an attempt to encourage corporate responsibility: "Climate change is no longer a debate," the advertisement says, "it's a business challenge."
"The fate of the polar bear has been on our minds for several years," says Stefan Norris, head of conservation for the WWF International Arctic Programme. "The polar bear is at the very top of the food chain, and is easy to sell, and is an iconic species — but they are just an indication of what's happening to the entire Arctic ecosystem."
Easy to sell, but hard to save. Despite their uncertain fate, you wouldn't mind having their PR account. They look sweet, embraceable even. Those who have run from them on land, or witnessed a savage, ripping kill on an ice floe will have a different perspective, but the bears do not yet seem to be aware they are a business challenge, or even that another TV crew is at this very moment packing for a trip to Churchill, Manitoba, for a closer glimpse of the imperiled bears, and an examination of their myths. No, polar bears are not left-handed. They do not kill seals with blocks of ice, although they do occasionally pound the ice in frustration when a seal gets away. And they do not cover their black noses for camouflage when stalking their next meal.
The polar bear has traditionally been an adaptable creature. But, though it may receive a little sustenance from birds' eggs and from scavenging in rubbish bins, it cannot survive without large supplies of seal meat and blubber, and for its kill it must be on or near sea ice. And the problem is broader still. Polar bears may be feeding on fewer seals not just because of melting sea ice; the seals may be declining because they aren't finding enough fish, and the fish aren't finding sufficient krill, and the krill aren't finding the algae.
"Every time we look at this, the urgency becomes greater," Norris says. "The scientific thinking in 2004 was that there was a significant chance that at the end of the 21st century there would be no sea ice at all at the North Pole during the summer. But at the end of last year the US Geological Service came out with a report that this is likely to happen by the middle of this century, in the lifetime of our kids."
How did we get here? There is no agreed date that we can pinpoint as the beginning of our concern for Ursus maritimus. A more civilized approach to their fate began, perhaps, in 1985, when the polar bears disappeared from London Zoo at the temporary closure of the Mappin Terraces. Animal husbandry matured: Regents Park was no longer considered the ideal habitat for the King of the Arctic. The last polar bear in Britain is a female called Mercedes at Edinburgh Zoo, who looks distinctly forlorn on her Web site photo.
But we could just as reasonably choose 1993, the year Coca-Cola adopted the animal to spearhead its new global marketing campaign. The Cola Bear reinforced the notion that Coke was best served ice-cold, and it was a drink that spread the love: the bears, who made deep and reassuring guttural noises and never had seal blood on their fur, were represented in family groups playing with penguins and admiring the Aurora Borealis. There was no cuter or more deceptively cuddly anthropomorphism on the tundra — the little ones even wore red scarves — and merchandise followed; keyrings, soft toys, pencil toppers, now quite big on eBay. The only downside for the polar bears was they didn't own their image rights.
That was also the year when Ian Stirling and Andrew Derocher, both of the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Polar Bear Specialist Group (IUCN PBSG), wrote their first scientific paper on what they perceived as a deterioration in the condition of polar bears in western Hudson Bay, Canada; they also noted unfamiliar patterns in the break-up of ice. Another paper appeared six years later with stronger evidence, and since then similar patterns have been reported in five of the 19 polar bear sub-populations in the Arctic. More young cubs are found dead each year; adults have lost weight, from an average of 250kg in 1980 to 230kg in 2004; there have been instances of cannibalism; and in western Hudson Bay the polar bear population decreased from 1,200 in the mid-nineties to less than 1,000 in 2004.
There are thought to be between 20,000 and 25,000 polar bears in the world, and all but one member of the PBSG believe global warming poses a critical threat to their long-term survival. The exception, quoted by contrarian writers, is Mitchell Taylor from the Government of Nunavut, who remains skeptical about the climate modeling projections and their impact. "I'm not sure I understand his logic," Stirling says. "However, at the last meeting of the IUCN PBSG in Seattle in June 2005 the group [including Taylor] unanimously agreed to classify the polar bear as vulnerable."
But as numbers decline, polar tourism flourishes. Companies promise a trip like no other, with buggy tours lasting two days and one evening, "long enough," one brochure states, "for nature enthusiasts to keep their excitement, but not too long to the point of monotony." The same brochure also advertises the "Ultimate Churchill," which offers an optional helicopter journey to the female bears' denning area "where we can have the chance to crawl inside an unoccupied polar bear den."
The path to preservation has been a slippery one. There have been laws prohibiting excessive hunting since the 1970s, and concern about oil drilling began a decade later, but the case for climate change demanded sterner proof. In 2001, the WWF issued a report called Polar Bears at Risk, but it was speculative. According to Stefan Norris, "We had a little trouble getting the scientists to say, "Yes, there is a one-to-one link here" because there hadn't been long enough statistical studies to link everything together. But we're now seeing direct scientific linkages in Canada, Alaska, Norway and Russia."
Norris says the WWF has come under a lot of pressure to predict when polar bears will become extinct, but no one is prepared to be so precise, or so doom-laden. He is increasingly optimistic that an immediate cut in greenhouse gas emissions "may yet turn the ship around."
Others are less certain. Peter Wadhams, professor of ocean physics at Cambridge, has made frequent observations of Arctic sea ice from submarines, recording more than a 40 percent loss in ice thickness in the past 25 years. He is not surprised at predictions that the Arctic summer ice will disappear much earlier than previously envisaged — "perhaps before 2040." Wadhams says he is about to leave Britain due to inadequate funding for his research, despite its influence on government reports. He is one of those scientists who has no difficulty making a direct link between climate change and the fate of the polar bear. "If the pack ice has retreated far from the coast, the bear will start swimming, thinking there is only a small shore lead, as has usually happened in the past. If the distance to the ice is too great, he may tire and drown. This has been observed in bears denning in north Alaska then trying to get out on to the Beaufort Sea pack ice."
After years of hesitancy, there is now a sense of urgency. Tomorrow night in Washington the US Fish and Wildlife Service held the second of its public hearings Thursday on whether the polar bear should be officially regarded as a threatened species. The third and final meeting took place in Alaska yesterday. But it may be too late to be squabbling over semantics. To some extent the fate of the polar bear is already fixed: unless it is able to adapt to spending far greater periods of the year on land, it may not recover from our devastating impact on its Arctic environment.
But not all polar bears are in the Arctic. This month the Horniman Museum in London has a timely display of 32 photographs of polar bears, and they make sober viewing. They are all stuffed, and their habitat is wooden packing crates and storage units: this is a collection of every taxidermists' polar bear in Britain. A chilly vision of the past and, maybe, the future too. This story has been viewed 8961 times.
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Libellés :

lundi 12 mars 2007

Think of the animal's


Dear Editor, HOW wonderful it would be to have someone in Parliament bold enough to speak up on animal welfare issues. Unfortunately, unlike in developed countries, it is impossible to have our Members of Parliament to talk about animal welfare.Perhaps, the MPs here are worried of being ridiculed, with a prevailing narrow-minded perception that animal welfare is not important.Here, humans are always a priority.Very few would fight for the environment and the animals.Often in Malaysia, when one is tired of taking care of an animal, he would abandon it on the streets.Some, who refuse to neuter or spay their pets, give the litters away to others without thinking that these ‘eager’ adopters might abandon them too.When an animal rescuer saves sickly and abused animals, they’re looked upon as ‘dumb’ for saving a life.Some parents couldn’t care less when their children throw stones at strays, or abuse them.They don’t realise that by allowing such behaviour, the children will grow up to be selfish and ignorant.And if the animal retaliates, and the child gets hurt, the animal is blamed, with the child’s parents going to the media to report the trauma the child had gone t h ro u g h .In the end, it is usually the animal that pays the price.Numerous reports of animal abuse have been made, many suggestions have been made, thousands of signatures have been collected through a petition to urge the Government to look into the Animal Act 1953.But still, the penalty charges and deterrent law are pathetic.Instead of introducing harsher penalties, the authorities are happier to pick up a gun and shoot the animals.In developed countries, the Government ensures that its laws on animal welfare are regularly revised and improved to keep up with the complex situation in its society.
In Malaysia, this is not happening.I have had my fair share of being laughed and ridiculed at over efforts to promote animal rights awareness, asking if anyone would care.If this is the type of society that we have today? Are we fit to call ourselves a ‘caring society’? Mahatma Gandhi once said that the moral progress of a nation can be judged by the way its society treats its animals.Compassion isn’t restricted to humans only, it is also to be extended to God’s other creations, the animals and the environment.
ANGELINE S.CHIN,
Author of Silent Cries

Libellés :

dimanche 11 mars 2007

Lesbian sex animals

University of Queensland researchers garnered attention last week with their finding that koalas in captivity frequently engage in lesbian sex. But koalas are hardly the first animals to have been outed by scientists. Researchers have identified more than 300 softball-playing and Streisand-loving vertebrate species. Here, Esquire's Field Guide to Gay Animals.

Bighorn Sheep (Ovis Canadensis)
Black Swan (Cygnus atratus)
Bonobo (Pan paniscus)
Boto Dolphin (Inia geoffrensis)
Eurasian (Oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus)
Flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber)
Japanese Macaque (Macaca fuscata)
Humboldt Penguins (Spheniscus humboldti)
Killer Whale (Orcinus orca)
Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus)

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samedi 10 mars 2007

Sex cues ruin men's decivisiness


Sex cues ruin men's decisiveness

Images of women such as Kelly Brook can be distracting to menCatching sight of a pretty woman really is enough to throw a man's decision-making skills into disarray, a study suggests.
The more testosterone he has, the stronger the effect, according to work by Belgian researchers.
Men about to play a financial game were shown images of sexy women or lingerie.
The Proceedings of the Royal Society B study found they were more likely to accept unfair offers than men not been exposed to the alluring images.
The suggestion is that the sexual cues distract the men's thoughts, preventing them from focusing on their task - particularly among those with high natural testosterone levels.
The University of Leuven researchers gave 176 heterosexual male student volunteers aged 18 to 28 financial games to test their fair play.
They are looking for opportunities to pass on their genes
Dr George Fieldman, Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College
But first, half of the men were shown sexual cues of some kind.
One group of 44 men were given pictures to rate; some were shown landscapes while the rest were shown attractive women.
Another group, of 37 men, were either asked to assess the quality, texture and colour of a bra or a t-shirt.
And a third group of 95 were shown either pictures of elderly women or young models.
Each group was then paired up to play a game where the men had $10, a proposer had to suggest a split, and the other man accepted or rejected the offer.
If the second man accepted the offer, the money was distributed in agreement with the offer. If he rejected it, neither partner got anything.
The game is designed as a lab model of hunting or food sharing situations.
'Vulnerable'
The men's performance in the tests showed those who had been exposed to the "sexual cues" were more likely to accept an unfair offer than those who were not.
The men's testosterone levels were also tested - by comparing the length of the men's index finger compared to their ring finger.
If the ring finger is longer, it indicates a high testosterone level.
The researchers found that men in the study who had the highest levels performed worst in the test, and suggest that is because they are particularly sensitive to sexual images.
Dr Siegfried DeWitte, one of the researchers who worked on the study, said: "We like to think we are all rational beings, but our research suggests ... that people with high testosterone levels are very vulnerable to sexual cues.
"If there are no cues around, they behave normally.
"But if they see sexual images they become impulsive."
He added: "It's a tendency, but these people are not powerless to fight it.
"Hormone levels are one thing, but we can learn to deal with it."
The researchers are conducting similar tests with women. But so far, they have failed to find a visual stimulus which will affect their behaviour."
Dr George Fieldman, principal lecturer in psychology at Buckinghamshire Chilterns University College, told the BBC News website: "The fact men are distracted by sexual cues fits in to evolutionary experience. It's what they are expected to do.
"They are looking for opportunities to pass on their genes."
He said the study confirmed what had been suspected by many.
"If a man is being asked to choose between something being presented by an attractive woman and an ugly man, they might not be as dispassionate as they could be."

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mercredi 7 mars 2007

Sport and wildlive


Snow sports 'stress' to wildlife


Winter sports such as snowboarding, off-piste skiing and trekking are putting Alpine wildlife under stress, scientists have concluded.
Researchers found that in areas of the Alps heavily used for sports, black grouse produced large amounts of a hormone indicating stress.
Writing in the Royal Society's journal Proceedings B, they say these sports represent a new threat to wildlife.
Climatic change is also affecting habitat for these birds.
During the winter, they make burrows, or "igloos", in the snow. They come out twice each day to feed, then make a new igloo in which to hide.
Rising winter temperatures are reducing the availability of these hiding places on lower slopes, while this new study, by scientists based in Switzerland and Austria, suggests the growing popularity of "extreme" winter sports is affecting their chances higher up the slopes.
Under pressure
In a wide variety of animals, production of the hormone corticosterone rises in conditions of stress.
Black grouse are apparently no different.
In the first part of their study, the research team tagged three of the birds for identification. They then put them under stress for several days by repeatedly forcing them out of their snow burrows, mimicking conditions the birds face in areas heavily used for human recreation.

"Extreme" sports are taking people into more remote parts of the AlpsSigns of stress were evident in the birds' faeces in the form of elevated levels of corticosterone.
The second part of the study involved collecting black grouse faeces left in 32 sites, some close to winter sports centres and others in unused parts of the mountains.
Birds closer to human sites produced higher levels of corticosterone, the stress marker.
Stress can affect animals in a variety of ways, potentially affecting even reproduction, though this study did not look for or find any specific impacts of the elevated stress.
But there may be other factors too. Increased disturbance may mean birds leaving their igloos more frequently, exposing them to cold and predation.
More research would be needed to measure these impacts and to extend the analysis to other species. Looking at other regions used for winter sports would be another approach.
But the research team, led by Raphael Arlettaz from the University of Bern, believes Alpine wildlife might need extra protection as winter sports and winter melting spread.
"Only the creation of suitable protected wintering refuges will enable the Alpine fauna to endure the growing pressure exerted by human activities on these vulnerable mountain ecosystems," the scientists write.

Libellés :

Sport and wildlive


Snow sports 'stress' to wildlife


Winter sports such as snowboarding, off-piste skiing and trekking are putting Alpine wildlife under stress, scientists have concluded.
Researchers found that in areas of the Alps heavily used for sports, black grouse produced large amounts of a hormone indicating stress.
Writing in the Royal Society's journal Proceedings B, they say these sports represent a new threat to wildlife.
Climatic change is also affecting habitat for these birds.
During the winter, they make burrows, or "igloos", in the snow. They come out twice each day to feed, then make a new igloo in which to hide.
Rising winter temperatures are reducing the availability of these hiding places on lower slopes, while this new study, by scientists based in Switzerland and Austria, suggests the growing popularity of "extreme" winter sports is affecting their chances higher up the slopes.
Under pressure
In a wide variety of animals, production of the hormone corticosterone rises in conditions of stress.
Black grouse are apparently no different.
In the first part of their study, the research team tagged three of the birds for identification. They then put them under stress for several days by repeatedly forcing them out of their snow burrows, mimicking conditions the birds face in areas heavily used for human recreation.

"Extreme" sports are taking people into more remote parts of the AlpsSigns of stress were evident in the birds' faeces in the form of elevated levels of corticosterone.
The second part of the study involved collecting black grouse faeces left in 32 sites, some close to winter sports centres and others in unused parts of the mountains.
Birds closer to human sites produced higher levels of corticosterone, the stress marker.
Stress can affect animals in a variety of ways, potentially affecting even reproduction, though this study did not look for or find any specific impacts of the elevated stress.
But there may be other factors too. Increased disturbance may mean birds leaving their igloos more frequently, exposing them to cold and predation.
More research would be needed to measure these impacts and to extend the analysis to other species. Looking at other regions used for winter sports would be another approach.
But the research team, led by Raphael Arlettaz from the University of Bern, believes Alpine wildlife might need extra protection as winter sports and winter melting spread.
"Only the creation of suitable protected wintering refuges will enable the Alpine fauna to endure the growing pressure exerted by human activities on these vulnerable mountain ecosystems," the scientists write.

Libellés :

Sport and wildlive


Snow sports 'stress' to wildlife


Winter sports such as snowboarding, off-piste skiing and trekking are putting Alpine wildlife under stress, scientists have concluded.
Researchers found that in areas of the Alps heavily used for sports, black grouse produced large amounts of a hormone indicating stress.
Writing in the Royal Society's journal Proceedings B, they say these sports represent a new threat to wildlife.
Climatic change is also affecting habitat for these birds.
During the winter, they make burrows, or "igloos", in the snow. They come out twice each day to feed, then make a new igloo in which to hide.
Rising winter temperatures are reducing the availability of these hiding places on lower slopes, while this new study, by scientists based in Switzerland and Austria, suggests the growing popularity of "extreme" winter sports is affecting their chances higher up the slopes.
Under pressure
In a wide variety of animals, production of the hormone corticosterone rises in conditions of stress.
Black grouse are apparently no different.
In the first part of their study, the research team tagged three of the birds for identification. They then put them under stress for several days by repeatedly forcing them out of their snow burrows, mimicking conditions the birds face in areas heavily used for human recreation.

"Extreme" sports are taking people into more remote parts of the AlpsSigns of stress were evident in the birds' faeces in the form of elevated levels of corticosterone.
The second part of the study involved collecting black grouse faeces left in 32 sites, some close to winter sports centres and others in unused parts of the mountains.
Birds closer to human sites produced higher levels of corticosterone, the stress marker.
Stress can affect animals in a variety of ways, potentially affecting even reproduction, though this study did not look for or find any specific impacts of the elevated stress.
But there may be other factors too. Increased disturbance may mean birds leaving their igloos more frequently, exposing them to cold and predation.
More research would be needed to measure these impacts and to extend the analysis to other species. Looking at other regions used for winter sports would be another approach.
But the research team, led by Raphael Arlettaz from the University of Bern, believes Alpine wildlife might need extra protection as winter sports and winter melting spread.
"Only the creation of suitable protected wintering refuges will enable the Alpine fauna to endure the growing pressure exerted by human activities on these vulnerable mountain ecosystems," the scientists write.

Libellés :

lundi 5 mars 2007

Ethical Man's top ten tips for ethical living

Justin ponders what a family can do to reduce their carbon footprint
Justin Rowlatt and his family were told to "go green" for an entire year to see by how much they could cut their carbon footprint.
You can find out how they got on by watching BBC One's Panorama at 2030 GMT on Monday.
In the meantime, here are Justin Rowlatt's top 10 tips for ethical living (in no particular order):
1. GIVE UP YOUR CAR

Justin and his family had to give up their car
Experiment with giving up your car, you may find it easier than you think. Our cars produce 11% of the country's carbon emissions so there are big savings to be made here. We never thought that we would be able to give up the family car permanently but that's what we've done. Of course adjusting to a life without our motor took a bit of time - and a few stressful moments - but shank's pony and public transport have seen us right. Don't be too hard on yourself.

Remember cars cost a lot of money - I reckon we're saving £2,000 a year - so don't worry about treating yourself by jumping in the odd taxi when you can't face the bus. Why not join the local car club so you've got wheels on hand when you really need them and, if you want a weekend away and taking the train isn't practical, just hire a car.
2. INSULATE YOUR HOME

Insulating your home can be expensive
Our homes produce a quarter of the UK's carbon emissions. You should consider insulating your home but, as I discovered, that can be expensive. So why not try draught-proofing your windows and just turn down the thermostat by a degree or two and put on a jumper. If you can afford it you could line your curtains - that'll stop draughts and save almost as much heat as double glazing your windows. Consider buying a rug or carpeting your floors, that also helps keep rooms warm. We did all these things and cut our gas usage by 15%. That has saved us real money - I reckon over £50 in one year.
3. MOVE THE ELECTRICITY METER FROM UNDER THE STAIRS

The electricity meter under the stairs can get ignored
I've bought a little gadget on the internet that has certainly cut our electricity use - proving that gadgets can help save the world. It's a little device that takes the electricity meter out from under the stairs to tell you how much electricity you are using as you are using it. It has found a permanent home on the kitchen worktop and I can now tell which appliances and lights are on around the house just by looking at it.
4. START COMPOSTING

Much kitchen waste can be composted
I have taken great delight in my compost bin. It doesn't save much carbon but cuts the amount of waste we send to landfill. The handful of worms I was given by the country's composting king, John Cossham of York, have multiplied and now happily devour all our kitchen waste. We are a family of five but thanks to the efforts of my worms, a year of green living and the compost bin is still less than half full.
5. EAT MORE VEGGIES

Vegetables can be far more interesting than boiled sprouts
Our veggie box has proved a revelation. It is delivered once a week and contains locally produced organic vegetables. We've had vegetables delivered that I have never heard of before so it forces you to try things you'd normally walk straight past in the supermarket. It also means I have developed quite a repertoire of recipes for cabbage and courgettes.
6. EAT LESS MEAT

Livestock accounts for roughly18% of greenhouse gas emissions
Farming animals produces an astonishing 18% of world emissions of greenhouse gases - much of it from the burps, farts and poos of the world's three billion cows and sheep. I tried going vegan for a month. It wasn't easy, you'd be amazed how many products contain animal products in one form or another. I shed two kilos and saw my cholesterol levels fall from a worrying 5.5 to just 3.4. But I love meat and am eating animals again, though not so many.
7. USE WASHABLE NAPPIES

The weather is now too bad to hang out our bamboo nappies on the line for our new baby Elsa.
We now get washable nappies delivered by a local company, Nappy Ever After. I'm still learning some of the more complicated folds.
8. BUY ENERGY-SAVING LIGHT BULBS

An energy-saving bulb has been installed outside 10 Downing Street
I was very sceptical about energy-saving light bulbs when we launched this project at the end of February last year. I thought the light they gave out was cold and couldn't believe that they'd make any significant savings in power use. But the bulbs have got much better and our electricity bill shows the difference they can make. We changed most of our bulbs - we've still got six halogens in the kitchen (down from 12) - and, thanks to my portable meter gadget (see tip 3), we've got much better at turning appliances off stand-by and we've slashed our electricity use by 22%. That's £100 worth.
9. TRY TO FLY LESS

Air travel is one of the fastest growing contributors to carbon emissions
What my year of green living really brought home was just how polluting the culture of cheap flights is. I pretty much bust my family's carbon budget, undoing many of the careful carbon savings we'd made, by jetting off to Jamaica to explore carbon offsetting. My carbon guru was very strict: he said if you've pumped the CO2 into the atmosphere it has to be counted, even if you pay someone else to cut their carbon by the same amount. So my advice is to try to fly less. Instead of jetting off to some European capital why not take a break here in Blighty?
10. TURN OFF THE TAPS

Brits use an average of 150 litres of water a day
As climate change alters weather patterns, water use is increasingly becoming an issue as well as carbon. In The Gambia people use an average of 4.5 litres of water a day. Here in Britain we use an average of 150 litres a day. I've got water butts in the garden and have tried (not always successfully) to remember to do the little things like turning the tap off when I brush my teeth. My composting guru even persuaded me that we could use the toilet less by urinating in our compost bin. I did try this out but since our compost bin is in the front garden it wasn't - how shall I put this - something you'd want to do every day.

Libellés :

samedi 3 mars 2007

The Dakota winter

Dakota County, skiers and zoo animals dig the cold

BY MARICELLA MIRANDA
Pioneer Press



About an inch more of snow piled down on Dakota County cities this morning, adding to the 10-plus inches already on the ground.
All public and private schools closed for the continuing storm, but many businesses in the area remained open for snow-day shoppers, including Burnsville Center and grocery stores.
Snow-loving animals, like the Amur tigers, Mexican wolves, and woodland caribou, frolicked in the blizzard at the Minnesota Zoo in Apple Valley, said zoo spokeswoman Kelly Lessard. Only the meerkats close their outdoor summer exhibit to spend the winter inside.
The zoo wasn't sure if the winter wonderland attracted more people than usual. But at Burnsville's Buck Hill ski slope, 1,000 people had arrived by noon, said Don McCleure, general manager at Buck Hill. On a normal Friday, about 250 people would show up. Twenty extra staff members were called to duty in anticipation of the rush.
With no school, Cheryl Johnson of Lakeville, a ski instructor at Buck Hill, had plenty to do as students lined up for lessons. The mom of four brought her children along to work. "I came to see if there was a need" for me to come to work, Johnson said. She quickly learned there was.
By the end of the day, McCleure expected about 2,000 people would be skiing, tubing or snowboarding at Buck Hill. "This is winter," he said. "It's a little late but it's here."

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vendredi 2 mars 2007

wild animals create problems

- Wild animals create problems in residential areas
by Jill Cornett, Frontier Heritage CommunitiesPublished: Thursday, March 1, 2007 4:35



As the weather warms and creatures awake from winter sleep, Frontier Heritage Communities is gearing up for calls to remove wild animals from residential areas.FHC pest contractor Hal Myers warns that March and April will bring out skunks and raccoons that were inactive during the cold weeks of February. While these animals don't actually hibernate, they do burrow into dens and sleep hard when temperatures are below freezing."Around March, the skunks begin their mating season," Myers said. "And there are lots of skunks on Fort Leavenworth."
Skunks, raccoons and opossums are very clever animals when seeking food. They are omnivorous, eating plants and small animals like frogs and insects. Garbage, pet dishes and vegetable gardens provide fast food for wild mammals, enticing them to approach homes.Most recently, squirrels have been the focus of FHC pest removal efforts. Residents reported finding them in attics, bedrooms and the engine compartments of cars.In the wild, squirrels eat fruits, nuts, seeds, plant bulbs and occasionally bird eggs or hatchlings. Myers believes that new construction around the post is disturbing some animal habitats, driving squirrels deeper into the neighborhoods.
"They're hungry," Myers said, "and right now they'll eat almost anything."In residential areas squirrels are drawn to bird feeders, pet food dishes, spilled food and, strangely, automobile wires. FHC has received several reports of squirrels eating through the wiring of parked cars. Initially, maintenance crews were baffled by this behavior, but found the Web site www.squirrelsatemywiring.com, which described incidents of wire-eating well beyond the borders of Kansas.Originally, Myers believed squirrels were chiefly attracted to Fords because the company uses a soy-based oil to coat engine wires. But bloggers suggest squirrels will consume wiring from many makes of automobiles.
Myers is currently trapping squirrels and relocating them to areas north of the Missouri River."You've got to haul them at least 10 miles from where you trapped them, so they don't come back," he said.It is impossible to eliminate wildlife from residential areas, particularly this close to the Missouri River. Myers said it is fortunate that mice and rats have not been an issue, because their natural habitats include nearby fields, woods and rivers.
While many wild creatures are cute and fun to observe, they are best left alone. This can be a challenge when they are eating out of trash cans and finding their way into homes. FHC recommends the following to keep them at bay:
Do not feed wild animals, including birds and squirrels. Although many people enjoy watching birds flock around a backyard feeder, seeds that fall to the ground attracts squirrels and other small mammals.

Do not leave pet food or dishes outdoors.
Close ground-floor windows at night. Raccoons are known to tear open screens to get to pet food inside.
Do not place garbage outside until the morning of a scheduled trash pickup. (Residents are permitted to place garbage on the curb the night before pickup, but it can attract wild animals.)
Use a repellent to discourage squirrels

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