Inventory of Moths

Biodiversity in the Andes: Teaming up international colleagues, an entomologist of Jena University identifies nearly 2,000 geometrid moth species in the South-American Andes The rain forests in the mountains of the tropical Andes are amongst the… From: www.innovations-report.com

GR:  Yes!  We need more work like this.  And we need repeated surveys to show when species are having trouble.
Biologists estimate that only about 10% of all moth species have been identified.  Nighttime pollinators as sensitive to pesticides as their daytime counterparts, the butterflies, these innocent creatures could be going extinct faster than we are finding them.  We, the only species capable of caring for the others, might never know how many moths there were before the current mass extinction.

New Scientist Interview: Zeke Hausfather on Temp Records

greenman3610's avatarThis is Not Cool

I was fortunate to include Zeke Hausfather among the scientists I interviewed in San Francisco last December.  Zeke is a researcher for the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, and is a star in my most recent video on surface temps.

I am breaking out the individual interviews, as much as I can, to become part of the Scientists Interviews Playlist I’m creating as a resource for journalists, historians, and citizens.

There are 135 videos now in that list – I’ll be adding more from Zeke, and others, regularly.

Below, Zeke on why temperatures are sometimes adjusted.

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Climate: New study shows how warm ocean currents affect Antarctic ice shelves

Bob Berwyn's avatarSummit County Citizens Voice

Erosion from beneath could lead to more sea-level rise

hlj If floating Antarctic ice sheets disintegrate, land-based glaciers and ice sheets will flow much faster to the sea, speeding sea level rise. @bberwyn photo.

Staff Report

Oceans warming under a thickening blanket of greenhouse gases are licking at the edge of Antarctica and carving new channels in the bottom of ice shelves all around the frozen continent, researchers said this week in a new study led by scientists with the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Those channels, characterized as “upside-down rivers” by the scientists, may make the ice shelves more prone to collapsing, which could speed up the flow of ice and the increase the rate of sea-level rise. Overall, some Antarctic ice sheets have thinned by about 18 percent and the rate of melting is accelerating, other research shows.

The findings, published in Nature Geoscience, are based on…

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Respect the Rhino

Tisha Wardlow's avatarFight for Rhinos

Rhino attacks on humans are extremely rare. By nature they are mainly solitary animals and will only charge if feeling threatened, something more common in the case of a mother protecting her calf.

Animals rarely, if ever attack without warning. The key is to be aware of the signs they exhibit. In the case of rhinos, they will show their irritation with curled tails, snorts, or stomping/digging at the ground.

When they get irritated enough, the first charge is often a “mock” charge, stopping short of a full on attack.

We were once charged by a male rhino who was following a female and calf, in hopes of breeding. The warning given to us was a quick snort and prolonged stare in our direction. He charged at the vehicle but stopped short of any real damage.

Needless to say, we apologized and left very quickly.

DSCF9169The male in the front was hoping for further…

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Animals vs Guns. Get this ad on TV!

Vegangirl's avatarVegan Lynx

In just days her safe haven will be transformed into a killing field. Help get this rapid-response ad onto TV screens THIS WEEK.

Click here to donate.

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Until 18 March, South Australia Nuclear Fuel Chain Royal Commission will accept responses to its Tentative Findings

Christina Macpherson's avatarAntinuclear

Royal Commission tentative findings

It’s a well kept secret from the whole of Australia, but the nuclear lobby plans to invite in the world’s most toxic nuclear trash – to poor old South Australia – the State with the greatest potential to be a world – leading renewable energy hub.

This plan can be stopped – as it has been before.

One step in exposing and stopping this noxious plan by a few greedy people is to RESPOND TO the ROYAL COMMISSION’S TENTATIVE Findings.    their Guidelines are here 

It’s not that difficult. The Commission put up fewer obstacles this time. Say what you really think.

You can find good advice on sending  a response at Action Australia

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Nature Conservation Is Impossible Without Field Inventories

Nature Conservation Requires Field Inventories

We are not meeting a fundamental requirement for nature conservation.  Simple repeated inventories of what is and what is not present is the first step toward preserving balanced ecosystems.  We have very few.  We can’t act to control invasive species or work to maintain native species when we don’t know where they are, and we don’t know how their numbers are changing.

We focus too much of our energy and resources on inventories made from satellites.  Remote sensing that cannot identify species of plants and is totally blind to animal presence has very little value compared to what observers can record during on-the-ground surveys.

inventory (ecologyllc.com)So what can we do?  We can call for citizen-naturalist volunteers to take pencil and paper outdoors and record what they see.  A few weeks training can prepare most people to make useful observations.  For an example of the value of such work, look at the Audubon Society’s Christmas Bird counts.

Here’s an article that discusses the lack of information on species distribution.

Gaps in our information about biodiversity means we are at risk of focussing our conservation efforts in the wrong places.

“New research from Newcastle University, UK, University College London (UCL) and the University of Queensland, Australia, highlights the uncertainty around our global biodiversity data because of the way we record species sightings.

The study explains how a lack of information about a species in a particular location doesn’t necessarily mean it’s not there and that recording when we don’t see something is as important as recording when we do.

Publishing their findings today in the academic journal Biology Letters, the team say we need to change the way we record sightings — or a lack of them — so we can better prioritise our conservation efforts in light of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

“Dr Phil McGowan, one of the study’s authors and a Senior Lecturer in Biodiversity and Conservation at Newcastle University, said:

“Where there is no recent biodiversity data from an area then we might assume a species is no longer found there, but there could be a number of other possible reasons for this lack of data.

“It could be that its habitat is inaccessible — either geographically or due to human activity such as ongoing conflict — or perhaps it’s simply a case that no-one has been looking for it.

“Unless we know where people have looked for a particular species and not found it then we can’t be confident that it’s not there.”

“To test the research, the team used the rigorously compiled database of European and Asian Galliformes — a group of birds which includes the pheasant, grouse and quail.

“Our long-standing love of the Galliformes goes back hundreds of years which means we have records that are likely to be much better than for other groups of animals or plants,” explains Dr McGowan.

“Not only have these birds been hunted for food, but their spectacular colours made them valuable as trophies and to stock the private aviaries of the wealthy. In the late 1800s and the turn of the last century, the Galliformes were prized specimens in museum and private collections and today they are still a favourite with bird watchers.”

“Analysing 153,150 records dating from 1727 to 2008 and covering an area from the UK to Siberia and down to Indonesia, the team found that after 1980, there was no available data at 40% of the locations where Galliformes had previously been present.” Newcastle University. (2016, March 8). Scientists call for a shake-up in the way we record biodiversity. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 9, 2016 from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/03/160308211807.htm

Climate: U.S. West very dry in February

The Febuary to early March map certainly reflects our experience here in central Arizona. The rain that just hit California didn’t do much here. The deer are staying put, and if this continues, more will be arriving this summer. High hopes for March.

Bob Berwyn's avatarSummit County Citizens Voice

Very dry across the West in February 2016. Very dry across the West in February 2016.

Where’s El Niño?

Staff Report

El Niño didn’t exactly go gangbusters in southwest Colorado last month, where the key river basins received only about 35 percent of average February precipitation. Statewide mountain precipitation was only slightly better, at 56 percent of normal.

“February in the mountains of Colorado is typically a slightly drier month than compared to say, April. But a dry February like this could have big ramifications should April and May not pan out” said Brian Domonkos, Snow Survey Supervisor with the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

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Climate: Study sees global warming fingerprint on long-running drought in Mediterranean region

Thanks to Bob Berwyn for more details on one of the regions discussed in the climate-emergency declaration (bit.ly/1R3dN6k).

Bob Berwyn's avatarSummit County Citizens Voice

Current regional dry spell appears to be the most severe in more than 900 years

Staff Report

The Mediterranean region may already be feeling the impacts of human-caused climate change, according to a new tree ring study that compared an ongoing drought in the region with historic climate conditions.

Based on the findings, NASA scientists concluded the current drought — spread across Cyprus, Israel, Jordan Lebanon, Palestine, Syria and Turkey — is the worst in at least 900 years. Nearly all climate models project that global warming will dry up the Mediterranean region.

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