ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS PICKS

Environmental News Picks presents a summary of news regarding the environment, conservation, science, politics, and other interesting subject matter. The Conservation Report does not endorse any content found in these news picks, but the information is provided to put readers on notice of the various different beliefs and viewpoints. Comments, corrections, and suggestions are very much welcomed. Send your news tips and picks: .

oak-leafAMAZON: Amazon Pollution Case Could Cost Chevron Billions

AMPHIBIAN EXTINCTIONS: Amphibian Extinctions: Is Global Warming Off the Hook?

ANIMAL WELFARE: Clinton’s Socks the Cat Near Death, Walruses Threatened by Shrinking Ice, Group Says

ART: 5 Amazing Cardboard Artists and Their Sculptures

BIOFUELS: Biofuel Plantations on Tropical Forestlands Are Bad for the Climate and Biodiversity, Study Finds

BIODIESEL: Multitasking canola: A California miracle crop?

BIODIVERSITY: Antarctica Has More Species Than Galapagos, First Comprehensive Inventory Of Antarctic Life Shows

BIRDS: Iceland Puffin Threatened, Developing Oil from Canadian Tar Sands Could Kill 160 Million Migratory Birds by 2038

CAPE WIND: Ted Kennedy Rebuffed: Mass. Wind Farm OKed, Wind Farm decision delayed again

CLIMATE CHANGE: Can the Climate Survive the Financial Crisis?: Just as the world gathers in Poland to come up with a new climate treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, the global financial meltdown threatens to torpedo the effort. But could a world recession actually help the climate?, Climate change experts ‘lose faith’ in renewable technology: Specialists less optimistic that wind, solar and hydro power have ‘high potential’ to solve climate crisis, survey shows, European Butterflies Threatened by Climate Change

COAL: Saboteur breezes in to shut 500MW turbine; Act single-handedly cuts UK carbon output by 2%, Oops…There’s Fly-Ash In The Clean Coal Ointment

CONSERVATION: 2009: ‘Year of the Gorilla’

CONSUMERISM: A Saner Cyber Monday

CORAL REEFS: New Deep-Sea Reefs Found With Sonar

CROSSBREEDING: The quagga, a zebra subspecies that is only partly striped, has been crossbred back into existence after a hundred years of extinction, scientists say.

ECO-FRIENDLY GIFTS: FSC-Certified Holiday Gift Guide

ECO-MYTH: Five Dire Green Myths Causing the Greatest Global Harm

ECOSYSTEM HEALTH: Biologists find new environmental threat in North American lakes

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Tesla Motors Getting Some Cash, Germany Wants One Million Electric Cars on the Road by 2020, California To Become The Electric Vehicle Capital of the US, 4,000 Electric Vehicles To Be Leased by US Army

ENDANGERED SPECIES: Cheetah joins UN’s endangered species list, Study: California fish face extinction, Rare Lions Bred Successfully

ENERGY: Whole Foods’ canola oil isn’t just for cooking: It makes electricity, too: Reuse plan will power commissary that supplies 43 stores

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW: Lawyers call for international court for the environment: A former chairman of the Bar Council is calling for an international court for the environment to punish states that fail to protect wildlife and prevent climate change.

EPA: Activists slam EPA decision on mining rule change

EVERGLADES: Opponents Mount Last Stand on Everglades Plan: Proposed $1.3 Billion Land Sale Unites Environmentalists and U.S. Sugar Executives, but Critics Allege It’s a Sweetheart Deal

ENERGY INDEPENDENCE: No electricity? Island now energy independent

EVOLUTION: Move Over, Christianists, A chart showing public acceptance of evolution in 34 countries, Bracing for Islamic Creationism

FISHERIES: EU faces battle over fish quotas: EU fisheries ministers have begun an annual round of talks to decide the quantities of fish which can be caught from Europe’s seas in 2009., Fishing leaders warn of difficult EU quota carve-up, EU argue for greater access to Irish fish, Brussels annual fish haggle begins

FUEL SPILL: Antarctic Cruise Ship Runs Aground; Oil Leak Spreading?

GLOBAL WARMING: Global warming is changing organic matter in soil, Turtle Egg-Laying Season Thrown Off by Warming

GREEN CONSTRUCTION: Strong, lightweight green material could replace concrete, but contains no cement

GREEN POLICY: ‘Now Is the Time for a Green New Deal’: With the world gathered in Poznan, Poland to work out a successor deal to the Kyoto Protocol, UN Environment Program Director Achim Steiner spoke with SPIEGEL ONLINE about sustainable transportation and the failures of the auto industry.

HIV/AIDS: Getting high on HIV drugs in S Africa: Anti-retroviral drugs used to treat HIV/Aids are being bought and smoked by teenagers in South Africa to get high., Discovery of virus in lemur could shed light on AIDS

INVASIVE SPECIES: Super-Ant Taking Over Europe, Invading Starfish Plague Reefs, Arthritis ‘killing’ Australia’s cane toads: It seems a bad back might be the only thing that can stop the relentless spread of Australia’s poisonous cane toads, which are killing native animals as they hop across the nation, researchers say.

LEGAL NEWS: Colo. man charged with libel over Craigslist posts

LOBBYING: Green Is the New Color of Lobbying: Makers of Energy-Saving Products See Opportunities in Big Stimulus Bill

MARINE MAMMALS: Whale song drowned by humans, Canada Ignores Rescue Option, Kills 500 Endangered Narwhals: The Canadian government opted last week to allow the killing 500 narwhals trapped beneath ice rather than calling in icebreakers to free the animals, claiming the process would have been too stressful for the whales.

MARINE MAMMAL STRANDINGS: Mass stranding: All whales found dead

MEDICINE: ‘Injectable bone’ helps fractures: A material that can be squirted into broken bones, where it hardens within minutes, has been developed by UK scientists.

NEW SPECIES: Green-blood and turquoise bones. Very unusual new species of frog discovered in Cambodia, New Bizarre Monkey Group Found, Thousands of New Species Discovered on Tiny Island

RECOMMENDED IMAGE: Our Atmosphere

RECOMMENDED WEBSITE: Earth View

RECOVERING SPECIES: Giant Prehistoric Fish Rebounding in Canada

RECYCLING: Recycling Manure Safely To Avoid Polluting Rivers and Streams: Researchers at North Wyke Research, and Lancaster and Exeter universities, have come up with an advice system to help farmers recycle manure safely and avoid polluting watercourses., Should we recycle urine on Earth, too?

RENEWABLE ENERGY: Race for Scotland’s $15 Million Marine Energy Prize Begins

OBAMA: Obama’s Science Team: 4 Top Members Named, Steven Chu: ‘Coal is My Worst Nightmare’, More on the case for Steven Chu at energy

POACHING: Poaching May Erase Elephants From Chad Wildlife Park

POVERTY: The Infuriating New Face Of Poverty

PUBLIC LANDS: Conservation Coalition Protests Utah BLM Lease Auction: 100,000 Acres of Public Land for Oil and Gas Development

SCIENCE: Scientists film inner workings of the immune system: Forget what’s number one at the box office this week. The most exciting new film features the intricate workings of the body, filmed by scientists using ground-breaking technology.

SHARKS: Shark pregnancy baffles aquarium, ‘Virgin Birth’ By Shark Confirmed: Second Case Ever: Scientists have confirmed the second-ever case of a “virgin birth” in a shark, indicating once again that female sharks can reproduce without mating and raising the possibility that many female sharks have this incredible capacity.

SOLAR: World’s most efficient solar cells created, Near Barcelona, Spain, a large solar power plant is in an unlikely location: a cemetery., Los Angeles Unveils World’s Largest Solar Plan

T. BOONE PICKENS: Pickens Plan Reality Check: Energy Freedom or Farce?

TRAFFIC: New York City Grew, but Traffic Didn’t: As the city’s economy soared and its population grew from 2003 through 2007, something unusual was happening on the streets and in the subway tunnels.

WATER AVAILABILITY: LIFESAVER: World’s First Ultra Filtration Water Bottle, LifeStraw

WHALING: Japan Plans to Arrest Sea Shepherd Crew

WIND POWER: Offshore Wind Power Could Alter Ocean Currents, New Wind Turbine Design Good for Rural, Urban Environment

“Environmental News Picks” are made possible with help from Kevin.

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank :: post to facebook

INVASIVE SPECIES: Burmese pythons, an invasive species in south Florida, could spread to one third of United States

Current areas of the U.S. suitable as Burmese python habitat:

Year 2100 projected U.S. climate based on global warming models:

IMAGE by Lori Oberhofer shows an American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) attempting to consume a Burmese python. However, Burmese pythons have been recorded consuming American alligators whole.

Burmese pythons or Python molurus bivittatus are very large snakes that kill their prey by asphyxiation, which is achieved through constriction. To prevent its prey from escaping, the python uses specially designed teeth to seize hold of its prey as it’s killed. Afterwards, the prey is swallowed completely.

Burmese pythons are native of Southeast Asia but are established in the Florida Everglades. The invasion comes via the pet trade where the snakes are purchased as curiosities. However, a small Burmese python will grow into a very large Burmese python; therefore, the snakes become too large to handle, since Burmese pythons have been recorded just shy of 30 feet and weighing just over 400 pounds.

To make matters worse, the climatic map of the United States is changing due to milder winters and climate change. As a result, suitable habitat for the Burmese python is  expanding. The large constrictor is just one example of many invasive species that have become established via pet owners who release unwanted pets into non-native habitat. The poisonous lionfish is another example, in addition to a slew of other bird, reptile, and plant species. Since invasive species occupy new ecosystems, they have no natural predators.  Sometimes other foreign species are carefully introduced to control invasive species; however, biological pest control can fail, because some introduced species that are suppose to control invasive species, may find natives easier to prey upon. Currently, Burmese pythons in Florida are being tracked to understand their movements and biology. In order to stop the pythons from expanding, special sniffer dogs are being used to find the snakes, and “pheromones can potentially be used to lure pythons into traps.”

The impact of invasive species on their new environments can be severe. From ScienceDaily:

Biologists with Everglades National Park confirmed a breeding population of Burmese python in the Florida Everglades in 2003, presumably the result of released pets. Python populations have since been discovered in Big Cypress National Preserve to the north, Miami’s water management areas to the northeast, Key Largo to the southeast, and many state parks, municipalities, and public and private lands in the region….

Burmese pythons have been found to eat endangered Key Largo woodrats and rare round-tailed muskrats. “This makes it that much more difficult to recover these dwindling populations and restore the Everglades,” said park biologist Skip Snow, “and all the more important that pet owners be responsible in their choice of pet and dispose of it properly should they need to. Releasing them into the environment is bad for that pet, bad for native species, and also illegal.”

On the Net: Everglades Burmese Python Project
On the Net: USGS Maps Show Potential Non-Native Python Habitat Along Three U.S. Coasts

Image Found Here
Image Found Here

add to del.icio.us :: Add to Blinkslist :: add to furl :: Digg it :: add to ma.gnolia :: Stumble It! :: add to simpy :: seed the vine :: :: :: TailRank :: post to facebook