Tag Archives: birds

Frame Climate Change as a Food Issue, Experts Say

As IPCC report warns of climate impact on food security, researchers are looking at whether talking about food could break political deadlock on global warming. Reframing climate change as a food issue as the world’s leading scientists did this week could provide an opportunity to mobilise people, experts say. Academics and campaigners were already looking at food as a way to better connect with public on climate change when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its finding on declining crop yields. The report warned: “All aspects of food security are potentially affected by climate change.” It said negative impacts on yields would become more likely in the 2030s. The definitive report arrives at a time when researchers are actively looking at whether talking about climate change through the prism of food would help break through US political deadlock. Food offers an immediate and personal connection, Rachel Kyte, the World Bank vice-president for climate change, said in an interview before the IPCC report’s release. To keep reading, click here. Taken from:  Frame Climate Change as a Food Issue, Experts Say ; ;Related ArticlesTo Fight Climate Change, the Entire World Will Have to Eat Less MeatDot Earth Blog: U.N. Climate Report Authors Answer 11 Basic QuestionsIf This Terrifying Report Doesn’t Wake You Up to the Realities of What We’re Doing to This Planet, What Will? ;

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Frame Climate Change as a Food Issue, Experts Say

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Currents: Rooms: Redoing a Nest for Bird-Watchers

An 18th-century farmhouse at the Norman Bird Sanctuary in Rhode Island has been refurbished for retreats. Original source:  Currents: Rooms: Redoing a Nest for Bird-Watchers ; ;Related ArticlesUtility Cited for Violating Pollution Law in North CarolinaDot Earth Blog: Timber Thieves Threaten California’s Redwood GiantsFinding New Worlds in City’s Old Snow Piles ;

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Currents: Rooms: Redoing a Nest for Bird-Watchers

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Dear Donald Trump: Winter Does Not Disprove Global Warming

green4us

Weather isn’t climate, people. A Bostonian trudges by Government Center as Winter Storm Hercules’s snows begin. Nicolaus Czarnecki/METRO US/ZUMA An intense blizzard, appropriately named Hercules, is about to blanket the Northeast. Antarctic ice locked in a Russian ship containing a team of scientists—en route, no less, to do climate research. Record low temperatures have been seen in parts of the US, and in Winnipeg, temperatures on December 31 were as cold as temperatures on…Mars. So as is their seasonal wont, here come the climate skeptics. Exhibit A: This very expensive GLOBAL WARMING bullshit has got to stop. Our planet is freezing, record low temps,and our GW scientists are stuck in ice — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 2, 2014 And Trump isn’t the only one. A similar reaction came from Congressman John Fleming, a Louisiana Republican: “Global warming” isn’t so warm these days. http://t.co/gOqr2RiuNJ — John Fleming (@RepFleming) January 2, 2014 And RedState.com’s Erick Erickson also piled on, blending global warming dismissal with religion: The difference between people who believe in the 2nd coming of Jesus and those who believe in global warming is that Jesus will return. — Erick Erickson (@EWErickson) January 2, 2014 Meanwhile, the front page of the Drudge Report listed a variety of cold weather news items under the heading, “Global Warming Intensifies…” Drudge Report/Climate Desk Rush Limbaugh also weighed in, noting that the Green Bay Packers may face San Francisco in subzero temperatures at home this weekend: LIMBAUGH: I would love to see Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, and Hillary sitting outside on the 50 yard line of Green Bay the whole game, and then afterwards do a presentation for us all on global warming. Sit there the whole game outside. And last but not least, Fox Business‘s Stuart Varney used the Antarctic ice story to claim that “we’re looking at global cooling, forget this global warming.” All of this is all wrong in ways that have all been explained before. So just a few brief observations: Statements about climate trends must be based on, er, trends. Not individual events or occurrences. Weather is not climate, and anecdotes are not statistics. Global warming is actually expected to increase “heavy precipitation in winter storms,” and for the northern hemisphere, there is evidence that these storms are already more frequent and intense, according to the draft US National Climate Assessment. Antarctica is a very cold place. But global warming is affecting it as predicted: Antarctica is losing ice overall, according to the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. However, sea ice is a different matter than land-based or glacial ice. Antarctic sea ice is increasing, and moreover, the reason for this may be climate change! (For more, read here.) Finally, just one last thing. When it’s winter on Earth, it’s also summer on Earth…somewhere else. Thus, allow us to counter anecdotal evidence about cold weather with more anecdotal evidence: It’s blazing hot in Australia, with temperatures, in some regions, set to possibly soar above 120 degrees Fahrenheit in the coming days.

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Dear Donald Trump: Winter Does Not Disprove Global Warming

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Dear Donald Trump: Winter Does Not Disprove Global Warming

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A Struggle to Balance Wind Energy With Wildlife

Tensions between the Obama administration and the wind energy industry and environmental organizations rose after a new rule was announced allowing wind farms 30-year permits to kill eagles. View original: A Struggle to Balance Wind Energy With Wildlife Related Articles Outsider Challenges Papers on Growth of Dinosaurs Energy Secretary Calls Oil Export Ban Dated Energy Secretary Voices Concern Over Dated Oil Export Restrictions

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A Struggle to Balance Wind Energy With Wildlife

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How Many Birds Do Wind Turbines Really Kill?

Image: James Butler

One of the most commonly repeated criticisms of wind power is that it kills birds. The giant spinning turbines are basically bird death traps—and often they cut through prime flying space, making the carnage even worse. At least that’s the story. But how many birds really do die?

If you look around for statistics about bird deaths from wind turbines get you wildly different numbers. Some say just 10,000 birds a year meet their end at the hands (blades) of the wind industry. Others ramp that number up to 600,000. Now, a new study tried to actually use science to estimate.

Of course, they didn’t go to each turbine and count how many little feathered bodies they found at the base. Instead, they combed the literature for all the studies they could find on bird deaths, and tried to combine them into an estimate. This meant searching for fun things like “’bird AND wind turbine’ with ‘collision,’ ‘mortality,’fatality,’ ‘carcass,’ and ‘post-construction.’” And then—even more cheerful—searching all those terms again, but “with ‘bird’ replaced by ‘avian’ and ‘wildlife’; and ‘turbine’ replaced by ‘farm,’ ‘facility’ and ‘energy.’”

In the end, using 58 mortality estimates that met their criteria, they came up with an estimate. According to the current literature somewhere between 140,000 and 328,000 birds die each year from collisions with wind turbines. That’s not all, explains the blog Natural Reactions:

In addition, it appears that there is a greater risk of fatal collisions with taller turbines. This is a real problem, as larger wind turbines may provide more efficient energy generation. Consequently, it is expected that new wind farms will contain even bigger turbines, which will result in even more bird deaths. Future developments therefore will have to give very careful consideration to potential wildlife impacts when planning the type of turbine to install.

The estimate, and conclusions, don’t let wind turbines off the hook. And with recent rulings to try and protect certain species from the spinning blades, the scrutiny will probably continue when it comes to bird deaths due to wind power. But at least now there’s a scientifically derived number for those deaths.

More from Smithsonian.com:

Do Wind Turbines Need a Rethink?
Scientists Save Bats and Birds from Wind Turbine Slaughter

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How Many Birds Do Wind Turbines Really Kill?

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World Briefing | Australia: Where Eagles Dare (the Eagle’s Cut)

A sea eagle snatched a video camera that was recording crocodiles in northwest Australia and captured footage of its 70-mile journey across the country’s remote landscape. Originally from: World Briefing | Australia: Where Eagles Dare (the Eagle’s Cut) ; ;Related ArticlesHow Do Meteorologists Fit into the 97% Global Warming Consensus?Urban Schools Aim for Environmental RevolutionOff the Shelf: ‘Climate Casino’: An Overview of Global Warming ;

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World Briefing | Australia: Where Eagles Dare (the Eagle’s Cut)

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Should Bird-Lovers Feel Guilty About Wind Power?

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Should Bird-Lovers Feel Guilty About Wind Power?

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Observatory: Cuckoo Finches Come Up With a New Con

Scientists have discovered that the birds have another way of duping other species into raising their young: laying multiple eggs in the foreign nest. See the original article here:  Observatory: Cuckoo Finches Come Up With a New Con ; ;Related ArticlesA Disease Cuts Corn YieldsBP Trial in 2nd Phase, to Set Amount of Oil SpilledU.N. Climate Panel Endorses Ceiling on Global Emissions ;

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Observatory: Cuckoo Finches Come Up With a New Con

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The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.

Texas ranchers are crucial to the protection of the declining lesser prairie chicken, but they must set aside their deep suspicion of government efforts. Source:  The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs. ; ;Related ArticlesNational Briefing | New England: Massachusetts: Fishery Group Limits Herring CatchMatter: In Fragmented Forests, Rapid Mammal ExtinctionsAfter the Floods, a Deluge of Worry about Oil ;

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The Texas Tribune: It’s Not the Rare Birds They Mind So Much. It’s the Watchdogs.

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Mink will be trapped to right the wrongs of Exxon Valdez

Mink will be trapped to right the wrongs of Exxon Valdez

Jerry Kirkhart

Pigeon guillemots, a kind of puffin.

Nearly a quarter of a century after the Exxon Valdez crashed and spewed 11 million gallons of crude into Prince William Sound, one species of seabird still has not recovered from the disaster. To help it recover, the federal government is proposing to get rid of lots of American minks. Allow us to explain.

Thousands of pigeon guillemots were killed by the Valdez disaster — some coated with oil, others poisoned by it for a decade afterward. The guillemots are the only marine bird still listed as “not recovering” from the accident; the local population is less than half what it was before the spill.

The birds used to flourish on the Naked Island group in the middle of the sound, but fewer than 100 remain there now. To boost that number back up to the pre-spill level of 1,000, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to trap most of the islands’ American minks — aquatic ferret-like creatures that feast on the birds’ chicks and eggs. If trapping doesn’t work, shooting the minks is the backup plan.

Leo-Avalon

American mink.

The minks are native to the region, but nobody knows for sure whether they are native to the islands in question. What scientists do know is that the islands’ mink populations skyrocketed in the immediate aftermath of the 1989 spill. “[T]he increase in mink caused pigeon guillemots and other bird species (whose nests are susceptible to mink predation) to decline significantly,” the FWS wrote in a draft environmental assessment detailing its proposal.

From the Alaska Dispatch:

Figuring out how many mink to remove is “the hard part,” [FWS seabird coordinator David] Irons said, as the exact number inhabiting the cluster of islands is unknown, although their numbers are estimated to range roughly from 200-300.

By removing the mink, several other species of birds that nest on the islands would benefit as well, Iron said. Parakeet auklets, tufted puffins and horned puffins have also been on the decline in the past decades, but those birds are not on the [Exxon Valdez oil spill] Trustee Council’s list of affected animals.

“Right now Naked Island is a desert of birds — it used to be a hot spot,” Irons said, adding that the Prince William Sound used to be home to 700 parakeet auklets, whereas now only around 40 remain.

It’s hard to imagine how an oil spill would cause a mink population to explode. But Irons points out that that’s not the main concern — what’s important to the Exxon Valdez oil spill Trustee Council is that the birds “were affected by the oil spill” and it is therefore the council’s responsibility to do what it can to help them out, drawing on $900 million in civil penalties paid by Exxon.

This map shows the Naked Island group. The Exxon Valdez ran aground bear Bligh Island.

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Mink will be trapped to right the wrongs of Exxon Valdez

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