Published on November 2nd, 2009

Officials from elephant range states are meeting in Delhi this week in hopes of finding a solution to the growing number of elephant killings in India.
Loss of habitat leading to an increase of conflicts between elephants and humans, combined with the invasion of poachers into government-protected zones, are resulting in an unacceptable increase in elephant deaths in India.
To address this issue, officials from India’s elephant range states are gathering in Delhi this week.
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activism,
assam,
China,
chinese,
Conservation,
Delhi,
elephant,
elephant range states,
endangered species,
habitat loss,
human overpopulation,
India,
ivory,
kunkis,
mahouts,
poachers,
poaching,
retaliatory elephant killing,
Uladguri
Published on November 1st, 2009

Diatoms are one of the most common types of phytoplankton.
Climate change isn’t just warming the atmosphere, it’s also warming the ocean’s surface and deeper levels of the water column. This is known as the pelagic ocean (the “pelagic zone” is any part of the water column other than that at the sea floor) and it just so happens to harbor the most productive ecosystem on planet Earth. The pelagic ocean is responsible for an estimated half of the world’s primary production (i.e., the basic food or nutrient making needed to sustain other life), and sustains most of the world’s natural fisheries.
The pelagic zone also plays a very complex but important role in the global carbon cycle. Inorganic carbon (mostly in the form of CO2) can be “drawn down” from the atmosphere by two main processes: the respiration of photo-synthetic algae and plankton (which produce oxygen and serve as a food source as well), and, secondly, the sedimentation of carbon (in the form of sinking, dead marine matter) onto the sea floor. Most algae and phytoplankton have chlorophyll and live in the upper most layer of the water column where there is sufficient sunlight penetration (this is called the euphotic zone; from the surface down to 200 meters is the epipelagic zone). Although carbon is also removed via “outgassing” (the exporting of carbon and carbon-based molecules into the atmosphere via ocean-air circulation), these two processes keep carbon out of the atmosphere. And of the two, bottom accumulation (via sinking) is the predominant means by which carbon is removed from the water column.
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acidification,
algae,
algal blooms,
biogenic carbon flow,
carbon cycle,
carbonic acid,
caron pump,
Climate Change,
cyanboacteria,
diatoms,
dinoflagellates,
drawn down,
ecosystem,
epipelagic zone,
euphotic zone,
indoor mesocosm model,
inorganic carbon,
nitrogen cycle,
ocean temperatures,
organi carbon,
outgassing,
pelagic,
pelagic zone,
photosynthesis,
phytoplankton,
positive feedback,
primary producers,
production,
sedimentation,
sinking,
trophic levels,
warming,
water column
Published on October 30th, 2009
The Nordic countries are the northernmost cultural community within the Europe.
Comprising five countries and seven territories, only one is totally outside the Arctic Circle and three quarters of the rest lie within.
It’s a land which is bleak and beautiful, fragile and harsh, and utterly magnificent.
This is why the recently published “Threats to Biodiversity in Nordic Countries”(1) is so relevant for environmentalists around the world.
Biodiversity is vital to all life. The lessons uncovered in the unique Nordic countries need to be applied on a global scale. Read the rest of this entry »
Published on October 29th, 2009

Today the Center for Biological Diversity announced that the winner of its third annual Rubber Dodo Award is Michael Winer, portfolio manager for Third Avenue Management, LLC (”TAREX”).
The Center for Biological Diversity awards the Rubber Dodo each year to the person who has contributed the most to driving endangered species extinct. Winer was selected this year for his leadership role in Third Avenue Management, LLC (”TAREX”), a giant real-estate investment firm responsible for unsustainable sprawl in California and Florida - and the driving force behind the proposed destruction of Tejon Ranch with a luxury development known as Tejon Mountain Village.
Last year’s recipient was former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin.
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activism,
adam keats,
Arnold Schwarzenegger,
california condor,
center for biological diversity,
Conservation,
endangered species,
environment,
extinction,
Michael Winer,
Rubber Dodo Award,
Sarah Palin,
TAREX,
tejon mountain village,
tejon ranch company,
Third Avenue Management LLC,
trc,
unsustainable
Published on October 28th, 2009

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has awarded 6 grants totaling $800,000 to determine the cause and stop the spread of deadly white-nose syndrome that has killed over a million bats in the Northeast.
Six grants have been awarded through the USFWS Preventing Extinction program for research to determine the cause, find a cure, and stop the spread of deadly white-nose syndrome in bats. Since its discovery in 2006, white-nose syndrome (WNS) has killed more than a million bats of six species in nine states - and biologists warn this is most devastating wildlife health crisis to face North America in the last 100 years.
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bat,
Bat Conservation International,
caves,
cold-loving fungus,
Conservation,
endangered species,
environment,
grant recipients,
hibernacula,
hibernating bats,
Preventing Extinction program,
U.S. Fish Wildlife Service,
United States,
usfws,
white-nose syndrome,
WNS
Published on October 27th, 2009
The devastation Man’s appetite for seafood is wreaking on the ocean environment has been thrown into sharp relief by a “red fish list” published by Greenpeace.
These are the fish which are most in peril from destructive, illegal or simple over fishing. It lists 19 fish, two shellfish and one crustacean.
Cod we all know about and hopefully everybody avoids. However the list also includes other common white fish, including hoki and pollock.
Then there are other common seafood: salmon, quahog, swordfish, red snapper, halibut and most types of tuna.
The list goes on and on and is truly astounding: you can read it all at the Greenpeace Red Fish List page.
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Climate Change,
cod,
fish,
greenpeace,
haki,
halibut,
pollock,
quahog,
red snapper,
supermarkets,
swordfish,
tuna
Published on October 23rd, 2009

Now that the polar bear is about to receive over 128 million acres of critical habitat designation, the state of Alaska is taking legal action to challenge the decision.
Following the announcement that threatened polar bears are set to receive over 128 million acres of critical habitat designation, Alaska Governor Sean Parnell and Attorney General Dan Sullivan responded by taking legal action against federal protection of polar bears.
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alaska,
Alaska Governor,
center for biological diversity,
Climate Change,
critical habitat designation,
Dan Sullivan,
endangered species,
endangered species act,
environment,
exploratory oil drilling,
global warming,
greenpeace,
lawsuit,
Natural Resources Defense Council,
oil development,
polar bear,
Sean Parnell
Published on October 19th, 2009

Japan’s annual whaling expedition off the port city of Kushiro has resulted in the killing of 59 minke whales - just one whale short of the 60 allowed by international guidelines.
Under the cover of its so-called research program, Japan has slaughtered 59 minke whales - almost the maximum of 60 authorized by the International Whaling Commission (IWC).
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commercial whaling,
Conservation,
International Whaling Commission,
IWC,
Japan,
Kushiro,
minke whale,
research,
Tokyo,
whale meat consumption,
whale slaughter
Published on October 19th, 2009

The spotted seal, a sea ice-dependent Arctic species, has been denied Endangered Species Act protection by the Obama Administration.
Disappointment: The Center for Biological Diversity has announced that the Obama administration denied Endangered Species Act protection for the spotted seal, a species whose habitat is rapidly melting away due to global warming.
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arctic,
Arctic seal,
Bush,
Climate Change,
Conservation,
endangered species act,
global warming,
NOAA,
Obama,
obama administration,
Phoca largha,
sea ice,
spotted seal,
summer sea ice
Published on October 15th, 2009
I am thrilled to report that the Dole Food Company has finally dropped their ridiculous lawsuit against the filmmakers of the powerful documentary Bananas!*. It appears that the courts have ruled that the fatuous defamation lawsuit of the criminally inclined Dole was proven to be nearly as lacking as the multi-national corporation’s integrity.

Just a few minutes ago I received this rather nonchalant tweet from one of the movie’s Swedish creators, Fredrik Gertten: DOLE dismissing the BANANAS!* law suit it seems.
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Bananas!*,
company,
criminal,
defamation,
documentary,
Dole,
evil,
exploit,
Federation,
Film,
food,
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free speech,
fruit,
international,
Journalists,
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Max,
movie,
pesticide,
poison,
Riksdag,
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tweet,
twitter,
victory,
worker