Sunday, November 29, 2009

A Jane Goodall Thanksgiving


By Michael Winship
Consortium News
November 25, 2009

Editor’s Note: In a U.S. political environment where leaders make hay by rejecting the scientific evidence of evolution and denying the threat of global warming, there is something encouraging about scientists who devote their lives to observation and analysis.

In this Thanksgiving guest essay, Michael Winship gives thanks for anthropologist Jane Goodall and her landmark study of chimpanzees:

Click on Title above for essay

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Deep in the Forest, Bambi Remains The Cold War's Last Prisoner


By CECILIE ROHWEDDER
The Wall Street Journal
November 4, 2009

Deer Still Shun Iron Curtain Border, 20 Years After the Guards and Barbed Wire Vanished

Click on Title above for complete article

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Music Written For Monkeys Strikes A Chord


By Richard Harris
National Public Radio
September 2, 2009

Music has great power to alter our emotions — making us happy or sad, agitated or calm. Psychologists have tried in vain to figure out why that happens. Now, a composer says he's has a clue. And he got it by writing music not for humans, but for monkeys.

David Teie plays cello with the National Symphony Orchestra and even on occasion with the heavy metal band Metallica. He's also a composer.

Teie has been developing a theory to explain why music plays on human emotions. His theory is that music relates to the most primitive sounds we make and respond to, like laughter, heartbeats, or a mother's cooing...

Click on Title above to continue

Friday, August 14, 2009

Save Cloud And His Herd From Capture


IDA Action Center

American wild horses are in serious danger. The BLM has scheduled another mustang round up to begin September 1 in the Pryor Mountains of Montana. Please send an e-mail to President Obama, Vice President Biden, and your two U.S. Senators...

Click on Title above to continue

Friday, August 7, 2009

Steering the Right Course


by Heidi Ridgley
Summer 2009
Defenders of Wildlife

Help is on the way for right whales in crowded East Coast shipping lanes...

Click on Title above to continue

The sound of a Sitka spruce


by Diane Daniel
July 2008 issue
Ode Magazine

Audio ecologist Gordon Hempton says Rialto Beach in Washington state is the world’s most musical beach. So Diane Daniel, who writes about his life’s work preserving “One Square Inch of Silence” tried to cipher the symphony by poking her head into the hollowed-out driftwood logs there. What did she hear?

Click on Title above to continue

Sunday, August 2, 2009

The War on India's Tigers


National Geographic
July 2009

Squeezed for space and targeted by poachers, India's tigers have reached a tipping point. But in the world's most celebrated tiger sanctuary, an unlikely hero has emerged. Why is he despised by wildlife officials?

Sunday, June 21, 2009

All-Around Non-Toxic Flea Control


Care2
Healthy & Green Living


Let’s face it. Fleas are the WORST, but applying pesticides to our pampered pooches doesn’t make us howl with excitement either. In an attempt to find non-toxic flea control remedies, Care2 staff stumbled upon this amazing technique that kills fleas fast without toxic chemicals. While citrus peel extract (d-limonene) works well for dogs, cats can’t tolerate it, so this is an especially great choice...

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Omak Suicide Race - The Riders Volunteer - The Horses Do Not


In Defense of Animals

The Omak Suicide Race is the most disgusting part of the Omak Stampede, a rodeo held in a small town in eastern Washington since 1935. The race regularly and routinely kills horses. Just since 1984, there have been at least 20 documented horse deaths. Next Scheduled Cruelty: August 6 - 9, 2009.

After a galloping start, horses plunge over an almost vertical drop of about 225 feet. The horses do not realize where the ground is until it is rushing beneath them. They cannot see horses ahead of them. This is documented cruelty. See more photos here, write a few letters, make a few phone calls!

Click on Title above to act!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Peruvian Police Accused of Massacring Indigenous Protesters in Amazon Jungle


DemocracyNow!
June 9, 2009

Dozens of people are estimated to have been killed in clashes between police and indigenous activists protesting oil and mining projects in the northern Peruvian Amazonian province of Bagua. Peruvian authorities have declared a military curfew, and troops are patrolling towns in the Amazon jungle. Authorities say up to twenty-two policemen have been killed, and two remain missing. The indigenous community says at least forty people, including three children, were killed by the police this weekend...

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Protect Yellowstone's Newborn Buffalo


Right now, newborn wild bison -- better known as buffalo -- are grazing under their mothers' watchful eyes on the lush Horse Butte peninsula near Yellowstone National Park in Montana.

But on May 15, this pastoral scene could turn ugly if the government begins hazing the buffalo back into the park with helicopters, horses and ATVs, as they did last year at this time.

If this operation proceeds, some buffalo could die, including young calves and pregnant cows.

Please speak out immediately to stop the government's annual hazing operation.

This wildlife tragedy replays almost every year on Horse Butte -- a birthing ground for the buffalo.

First, a helicopter invades the stillness, circling low to scare wild buffalo out of the woods, so that government agents on ATVs and horses can chase them back to Yellowstone.

With no time to rest or nurse during this relentless chase, some calves collapse and even die of exhaustion before ever reaching their grazing grounds deep within the park.

The saddest part? This senseless tragedy is unnecessary. The justification for hazing and killing buffalo is that they could spread the disease brucellosis to domestic cattle. That is why buffalo are generally not welcome outside Yellowstone Park in Montana -- and why thousands have been slaughtered or hazed back into the park in recent years.

But the fact is, there has never been a documented case of brucellosis transmission from buffalo to cattle in the wild.

More to the point, there are no cattle at all on Horse Butte, so there is absolutely no reason to haze and endanger Yellowstone's wild buffalo.

So please, help us give newborn buffalo a better chance at survival this spring.

Tell the Secretary of Agriculture to intervene right away and prevent the hazing of wild buffalo in the weeks ahead.

As living links to the great herds that once thundered across America's plains, Yellowstone's buffalo are a national treasure. Please join me in urging our government to protect them -- instead of subjecting them to needless suffering.

Natural Resources Defense Council

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Vote to prohibit the import/trade of seal products


Care2 Petition Site

After the Russian government announced an end to the hunting of seal pups under a year old (18th March 2009), Canada released, that they will allow for the slaughter of 280,000 (or even more) harp seal pups this year putting further strain on seal populations, what is a great provocation of all ethical oriented people in the entire world.
Now it is the time to change the values and morals of those who are involved in this bloody business...please click on Post Title to take action!

Monday, April 13, 2009

The New Age of Extinction


By BRYAN WALSH / MADAGASCAR
Planet on the Brink
Time Magazine

As the globe warms, more than the climate is endangered. Species are vanishing at a scary rate. We're the cause--but we're also the solution...

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Join the National Outcry to Save Wolves


Add your voice now to our campaign. Tell Interior Secretary Salazar to reverse his decision to kick wolves off the endangered species list.

This is absolutely the wrong time to rip away federal protections from these struggling wolves. Over the past year, the wolf population in Yellowstone National Park has declined by 27 percent, with more than 70 percent of wolf pups succumbing to disease.

One pack alone lost all 24 of its pups!

If the federal protections are lifted on May 4 as planned, newborn wolf pups and their nursing mothers traveling outside national parks will be in the line of fire.

That's why NRDC and our partners are filing suit in federal court to block this disastrous policy. But we must do more: we must raise a nationwide outcry that the Obama Administration cannot ignore.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Honoring César Chávez--and His Call to Stop Eating Animals



This week activist César Chávez's birthday was celebrated in California and across the country. Animal Rights blogger Stephanie Ernst laments that, in all of the hoopla surrounding the event, there wasn't a word about his opposition to exploitation of animals on all fronts, including research, sport, food, and entertainment.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Syncrude Duck Deaths Triple


Although noise-producing duck deterrent systems are supposed to be in place at these waste ponds a snowstorm had delayed their deployment in this instance. As all other bodies of water in the area were still frozen, the ducks were left no other place to land than the toxic pond.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Natural Flea and Tick Control for Dogs and Cats



The Daily Green
Monday, March 23, 2009

Keep your pets happy and healthy with nontoxic and less toxic alternatives to conventional insect treatments...

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Polar Bears At Risk, Climate Deal Needed: Norway


Reuters March 18, 2009

OSLO - An international plan is needed to rescue polar bears and their icy Arctic habitat but its success will hinge on a U.N. deal to fight global warming due to be agreed in December, Norway said on Tuesday.

"Climate change has overtaken hunting as the most significant threat to the polar bear," Norway's Environment and Development Minister Erik Solheim told a meeting of the five states rimming the Arctic where the white bears live.

"We must work to protect the ecosystem the bear is part of," Solheim said. "Global warming must be stopped if we are to succeed."

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Support a National Wolf Recovery Plan



A national wolf recovery plan would help ensure a lasting future for wolves in Greater Yellowstone and the Northern Rockies and provide a needed boost for wolf recovery and management efforts in the Southwest, Northeast and Pacific Northwest.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's existing recovery plans for America's wolves are badly out of date (the most recent plan is over 15-years old), do not reflect the most recent scientific data on wolves, and set recovery goals that are grossly inadequate. We can do better for America's wolves, but we'll need your help.

Please support a forward-looking effort to protect the gray wolf’s important part in America. Fill out the form below to send your personalized comments to Dale Hall, head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

https://secure.defenders.org/site/Advocacy?pagename=homepage&page=UserAction&id=1001&s_einterest=C3C4&JServSessionIdr008=nvn77hunx3.app20a

Friday, February 13, 2009

President Obama and Wild Bison


Since a lone bull came wandering across the hills and gullies of Yellowstone National Park's northern boundary on November 15 and was promptly shot, there hasn't been a single wild buffalo in Montana. Buffalo Field Campaign has been taking advantage of this atypical downtime by working double time in the legal and policy arenas, with our singular focus on providing Yellowstone buffalo unimpeded access to their habitat in Montana.

We need your help.

With a new administration in Washington, positive change for the buffalo has never been more promising. But we must let President Obama know about the wild Yellowstone buffalo, their importance, and what he can do to stop the slaughter.

If you haven't already done so, please take a moment to send a letter to President Barack Obama using BFC's new Take Action Center. And if you've already sent one yourself, please share the letter with your family members, friends, and acquaintances. President Obama has already received nearly 800 letters for the buffalo. It is up to each of us to make sure he hears from thousands more.

We have drafted a sample letter for your convenience, but please be sure to personalize it and ask President Obama to help the buffalo in your own words.


http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/2426/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=26453

Friday, January 16, 2009

Eco-Friendly Smart Growth Takes Root in Dallas


By Anna Clark, January 15, 2009
Greener Buildings

Savvy developers are capitalizing on growing demand in Dallas for eco-friendly urban alternatives.

Can a city known for its conspicuous consumption really be the next green frontier? Several prominent real estate pioneers and a pro-sustainability mayor think so...

Wednesday, January 14, 2009




National Geographic
January 2009

By Brook Larmer
Photograph by Randy Olson


Like many of his Inca ancestors, Juan Apaza is possessed by gold. Descending into an icy tunnel 17,000 feet up in the Peruvian Andes, the 44-year-old miner stuffs a wad of coca leaves into his mouth to brace himself for the inevitable hunger and fatigue. For 30 days each month Apaza toils, without pay, deep inside this mine dug down under a glacier above the world's highest town, La Rinconada. For 30 days he faces the dangers that have killed many of his fellow miners—explosives, toxic gases, tunnel collapses—to extract the gold that the world demands. Apaza does all this, without pay, so that he can make it to today, the 31st day, when he and his fellow miners are given a single shift, four hours or maybe a little more, to haul out and keep as much rock as their weary shoulders can bear. Under the ancient lottery system that still prevails in the high Andes, known as the cachorreo, this is what passes for a paycheck: a sack of rocks that may contain a small fortune in gold or, far more often, very little at all...

Let's Turn The White House Into A 'Passive House'




by Danielle Sacks
January 5, 2009
FastCompany

David White, an architectural energy technical consultant at Transsolar who I met while reporting environmental design stories, is a passionate advocate for the passive house movement. "German Passivhaus," which originated decades ago in Frankfurt, is the unsexy sibling of the eco-starchitecture movement. Instead of flaunting platinum-LEED certified plaques with all kinds of Jetsons-style enviro bells and whistles, "passive homes" are beloved by engineers: insulated in airtight shells that temperature-regulate themselves. Across the globe only some 15,000 passive homes exist. Most are in Germany and Scandinavia, while in the US a tiny movement is percolating in Urbana, IL. And last week The New York Times devoted a feature story to the bare bones design practice, in which homes run on roughly one-twentieth of the energy of a conventional house and only cost some 5% more to build.

On January 2nd, White submitted a proposal to the incoming Obama Administration for a new Passive House Certification that would stand as an alternative to LEED, which many critics view solely as a marketing standard (see his proposal below). To push White's call to action even further, we challenge president-elect Obama to convert The White House into a passive home to set the ultimate example for a country that is now reeling from the environmental and economic backlash of decades-worth of unsustainable McMansion fetish. We realize this is ambitious, and that it wouldn't be the first time a President has attempted to green The White House. In 1979, Jimmy Carter installed a $28,000 solar water heater on the roof of the West Wing (which lasted seven years). Then in 1993 Bill Clinton assembled a team of 100 green architects, engineers, and scientists--including William McDonough and Bob Berkebile--and commissioned a comprehensive "Greening the White House" report by The Rocky Mountain Institute.


Obama's already on the right track: just last week he told Barbara Walters that he plans on auditing the environmental efficiency of his new digs. But as a model for the rest of the country, we need larger scale change. Energy consultant White told me that "deep energy retrofits are estimated at roughly $50 a square foot." This would be a hefty investment for the new administration, costing over $3 million to overhaul the 55,000 square foot white house. But, as Environmental Building News editor Alex Wilson recently said: "For what we are spending on the war in Iraq, we could be investing in a politically stable, environmentally safe, and economically strong future built upon such energy sources as wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, and efficiency." Let's start renovating...