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Bamboo worlds: the beauty of Chinese aquaculture – in pictures
In Coastal Geometries, architect and photographer Tugo Cheng conjures minimalist compositions from the fishing nets and bamboo poles on the coast of Fujian. It is a world that’s vanishing, since this vital culture is threatened by rapid development
Continue reading...Wildflower planting on farms boosts birds, from skylarks to starlings
New research shows wildlife-friendly farming can quickly help bird populations bounce back, but large-scale rollout will be needed to reverse long-term declines
Planting wildflowers and protecting nests on farms enables birds, from skylarks to starlings, to bounce back rapidly from long-term declines, new research shows.
Intensive agriculture has led to overall farmland bird numbers in the UK plunging by more than 50% since 1970 and the fall has not stopped yet, with the latest figures showing a 9% drop from 2010 to 2015.
Continue reading...Clean Energy Finance Corporation Statutory Review: Public Consultation
Country diary: an old railway sleeper has become a dreaming post
Wenlock Edge, Shropshire The weathered waymark, like a fragment of a wooden henge, is an archive of local history
At the top of steps into the railway cutting stands a wooden post. It is old and weathered and, when sunlight through trees catches it, a beautiful greenfinch blush of moss and algae.
Continue reading...Weather: What to expect in 2018
Whale people
Why we shouldn't be too quick to blame migratory animals for global disease
Industry calls for rethink on recycling as China's waste import ban takes effect
AI early diagnosis could save heart and cancer patients
Pret a Manger doubles discount for bringing reusable coffee cups
Chain will now knock 50p off prices in bid to help change customers’ habits, with the UK discarding an estimated 2.5bn coffee cups every year
Customers who bring reusable cups to Pret a Manger will be given a 50p discount on hot drinks after the company introduced the measure and said it was hoping to change people’s habits and reduce waste.
The sandwich chain has been offering 25p discounts to customers using reusable cups since 2017, alongside Costa and Starbucks. CEO Clive Schlee said he hoped that doubling the discount would make a difference, following other initiatives to reduce waste such as not using plastic cup stoppers in inner city Pret shops.
Continue reading...Rubbish already building up at UK recycling plants due to China import ban
Plastic that would have been imported to China will cause chaos for councils as it mounts up, warn industry experts
A ban on imports of millions of tonnes of plastic waste by the Chinese government is already causing a build up of rubbish at recycling plants around the UK and will bring chaos for councils in the weeks ahead, according to industry experts.
Simon Ellin, chief executive of the UK Recycling Association, said his members had already seen some lower grade plastics piling up at their yards and warned urgent action was needed.
Continue reading...Solving a problem like waste recycling
Trump plan to shrink ocean monuments threatens vital ecosystems, experts warn
Ryan Zinke has recommended three major marine monuments be reduced to allow greater commercial fishing, prompting anguish from environmental groups
The Trump administration’s plan to shrink four land-based national monuments has provoked howls of anguish from environmental groups, Native American tribes and some businesses, such as the outdoors company Patagonia.
Related: In America and beyond, the spirit behind public lands is at risk | Hansjörg Wyss
Continue reading...2017 was the hottest year on record without an El Niño, thanks to global warming | Dana Nuccitelli
Climate scientists predicted the rapid rise in global surface temperatures that we’re now seeing
2017 was the second-hottest year on record according to Nasa data, and was the hottest year without the short-term warming influence of an El Niño event:
Continue reading...The gene editing tech that uses 'molecular scissors'
Mussel power: Bid to save rare shellfish in Wales
Country diary: a visual rhyme of craftsmanship and nature
Grassington, Upper Wharfedale The stark geometry of the bone-white boundary walls complements the outcrops and escarpments around Grass Wood
The weakest of the year’s sunlight falls on the barn-studded latticework of dry stone walls just outside Grassington. I stop to admire the skill they must have required: the Great Scar Limestone that underlies much of Upper Wharfedale comes from the fields in big, irregular chunks, too dense for a chipping hammer, and the resulting walls are completed puzzles that testify to the creativity of the builder.
Continue reading...Dozens of snake eggs found in Australian school sandpit
Wildlife rescuers retrieve 43 eggs thought to be from of one of the world’s most poisonous snakes, the eastern brown
Students at a school on the New South Wales mid-north coast have learned a valuable lesson: sandpits make great snake nests.
Wildlife rescuers were shocked when a call to remove about a dozen eggs from a sandpit at a school near the coastal town of Laurieton, 350km north of Sydney, became rather more dramatic.
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