Breaking Waves: Ocean News

10/01/2024 - 00:00
A project on Spain’s Costa Brava is reviving dwindling populations of the prized seafood – and keeping small-scale fishers in business Clinging to almost vertical cliffs on the Costa Brava in north-east Spain, the resort of l’Estartit has a dramatic location but the real drama is unfolding under the waves, where an innovative approach to ancient techniques is helping to revive declining populations of prized cuttlefish Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis) are a valuable catch for Spanish fishers and a popular dish, either on their own or as a key ingredient in seafood paella. However, their numbers have declined on the Catalan coast through a combination of pollution and unregulated recreational fishing. Continue reading...
10/01/2024 - 00:00
Kew study reveals areas with at least 100,000 undiscovered plant species – most likely to be under threat of extinction Botanists have identified 33 “dark spots” around the world where thousands of plant species are probably waiting to be discovered, according to new research. From a palm tree in Borneo that flowers underground to a Malagasy orchid that spends its life growing on other plants, researchers are still making dozens of new species discoveries every year. Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 20:28
A human rights-based approach to coral reef protection could ensure governments are held to account for safeguarding marine ecosystems.
09/30/2024 - 20:27
This blog is now closed Burke accuses Dutton of trying to ‘throw kerosene’ on public debate over Middle East Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast National weather forecasts Sticking with the weather, here’s a look at the forecasts across Australia’s capital cities today: Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 17:39
It’s difficult to overstate how rapidly Australians have embraced solar power – there’s now more rooftop solar than coal-fired power. The key question is what policymakers can learn from its success Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Australia was a different place in 2011. Julia Gillard’s Labor government, the Greens and a couple of country independents were rewriting the country’s climate policies, including introducing a world-leading carbon pricing system and creating three agencies to back it up. Those organisations – the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency and the Climate Change Authority – have survived and help shape the investment and policy landscape. The carbon pricing system – falsely described as a tax – famously didn’t. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 16:14
Bethany Beach firefly, found in Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, faces dangers to habitat because of climate change The US government is seeking to consider a firefly species as endangered for the first time, according to a proposal from the US Fish and Wildlife Service. The Bethany Beach firefly, found in coastal Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, is facing increasing dangers to its natural habitat because of climate change-related events. They include sea level rise, which is predicted to affect all sites within the known distribution by the end of the century, and the lowering of groundwater aquifers. Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 12:53
Birds outnumber residents in Hilario Ascasubi, after deforestation leads them to seek food, shelter and water The town of Hilario Ascasubi near Argentina’s eastern Atlantic coast has a parrot problem. Thousands of the green, yellow and red birds have invaded, driven by deforestation in the surrounding hills, according to biologists. They bite on the town’s electric cables, causing outages, and are driving residents around the bend with their incessant screeching and deposits everywhere of parrot poo. Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 11:29
Asteraceae, a family of flowering plants which includes daisies, sunflowers and asters, are the most diverse group of flowering plants in the world. This plant family comprises around 34,000 species, some of which are well-known, such as artichokes, chamomile, dahlias and lettuce. An international research team has now compiled and analyzed a new global database on the distribution and evolutionary history of all Asteraceae species. The researchers found that an unexpectedly high number of evolutionary events -- known as 'speciation' where a new species of plants evolves from a common ancestor -- occurred in the aster family within relatively short time periods on many islands worldwide.
09/30/2024 - 10:00
We learn about butterflies when we are small because it is foreshadowing: you too will change. But they are an imperfect metaphor for what it feels like to live The very funny naturalist and writer Redmond O’Hanlon was on a sandbank on the edge of a river in Borneo when hundreds of butterflies started to fly towards him and his travel companion and landed on their boots, trousers, and shirts, and “sucked the sweat from our arms.” He watched them for a while – “there were Whites, Yellows and Blues, Swallow-tails, black, banded, or spotted with blue-greens” – and then stood up and brushed them off gently. Continue reading...
09/30/2024 - 10:00
Labor government has undermined case to co-host 2026 UN climate summit with island nations, Dr Maina Talia declares Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Tuvalu’s climate minister says Australia’s decision to approve three coalmine expansions calls into question the country’s claim to be a “member of the Pacific family” and undermines the Australian case to co-host the 2026 UN climate summit with island nations. Dr Maina Talia said last week’s mine approvals, which analysts say could generate more than 1.3bn tonnes of carbon dioxide across their lifetime once the coal is shipped and burned overseas, was “a direct threat to our collective future”. Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email Continue reading...