The latest on the coronavirus pandemic and vaccines

NOW PLAYING’Striking piece of evidence’: WHO researcher on products in Wuhan marketCNN03:27/05:17‘Striking piece of evidence’: WHO researcher on products in Wuhan market5:17

By James GriffithsBrett McKeehan and Amy Woodyatt, CNNUpdated 12:14 p.m. ET, February 13, 2021

https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/coronavirus-pandemic-vaccine-updates-02-13-21/index.html

2 hr 30 min ago

FDA moved too fast to authorize coronavirus antibody tests, two top officials admit

From CNN Health’s Maggie Fox

A health worker in Torrance, California, processes a Covid-19 antibody test in May 2020.
A health worker in Torrance, California, processes a Covid-19 antibody test in May 2020. Valerie Macon/AFP/Getty Images

The US Food and Drug Administration moved too quickly to allow the marketing of antibody tests for coronavirus without authorization last spring and ended up with a lot of tests that did not work well, two top officials said Saturday.

The FDA won’t be doing that again, and agencies need to prepare ahead of time for quick development of tests in pandemics, Dr. Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health and Dr. Timothy Stenzel, director of the FDA’s Office of In Vitro Diagnostics and Radiological Health, wrote in a joint commentary in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Flawed” policy: At the time it seemed important to get antibody tests onto the market so researchers could assess just how widespread the virus was, they said. So, FDA published guidance in March allowing developers to market tests without emergency use authorization as long as the test was validated, and the tests carried warnings that they were not FDA-reviewed.

“In hindsight, however, we realized that the policy outlined in our March 16 guidance was flawed,” they wrote.

By April, they wrote, “the market was flooded with serology tests, some of which performed poorly and many of which were marketed in a manner that conflicted with FDA policy.”

Later, the FDA worked with the National Cancer Institute to evaluate antibody tests developed by university labs. That worked better, they said.

“Knowing what we know now, we would not have permitted serology tests to be marketed without FDA review and authorization, even within the limits we initially imposed,” Shuren and Stenzel wrote.

Lessons learned: “First, our experience with serology tests underscores the importance of authorizing medical products independently, on the basis of sound science, and not permitting market entry of tests without authorization,” they wrote.

Plus, the federal government needs to coordinate research better, and evaluate tests before they are needed so they can be checked quickly in an emergency.4 hr 54 min ago

Covid passports could deliver a “summer of joy,” Denmark hopes

From CNN’s Nina dos Santos, Antonia Mortensen and Susanne Gargiulo

Like many countries around the world, Denmark is desperate to reopen the parts of its economy frozen by the pandemic.

The kingdom of under 6 million people has become one of the most efficient vaccination distributors in Europe and aims to have offered its whole population a jab by June.

But before that target is reached, there’s pressure for life to return to normal for Danes already inoculated and to open up borders for Covid-immune travelers from overseas.

Morten Bødskov, Denmark’s acting finance minister, last week raised the prospect of a so-called coronavirus passport being introduced by the end of the month.

“Denmark is still hard hit by the corona pandemic,” he said. “But there are parts of Danish society that need to move forward, and a business community that needs to be able to travel.”

The government has since indicated that a February deadline might be ambitious, but the relatively small Scandinavian country could still become the world’s first to formally embrace the technology to open its borders in this controversial way.

Read the full story:

Covid passports could deliver a 'summer of joy,' Denmark hopes

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Covid passports could deliver a ‘summer of joy,’ Denmark hopes

Nina dos Santos, Antonia Mortensen and Susanne Gargiulo, CNN5 hr 32 min ago

For the first time in 100 days, the US is averaging fewer than 100,000 new Covid-19 cases per day

From CNN’s Amanda Watts and Haley Brink

For the first time in 100 days, the United States is averaging fewer than 100,000 new Covid-19 cases per day, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

The nation has a current 7-day average of 96,609 new cases per day, according to JHU data. The last time this metric was below 100,000 was on Election Day, November 3, 2020. 

On November 3, the US saw an average of 925 deaths per day. Right now, the US is seeing an average of 3,024 deaths per day, which is more than a 200% increase in daily deaths since November.

 Over those 100 days — from November 3, 2020 to February 12, 2021 — the US tallied 18,141,364 new Covid-19 cases and 248,148 reported deaths, JHU data shows. 6 hr 19 min ago

The AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine will be tested in kids as young as 6 

From CNN’s Maggie Fox and Jo Shelley

An NHS staff member prepares an AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccination near Truro, England, on January 26.
An NHS staff member prepares an AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccination near Truro, England, on January 26. Hugh Hastings/Getty Images

University researchers plan to start testing AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine on children as young as six in Britain on Saturday. 

A team at the University of Oxford, which developed the vaccine, said it will test the vaccine on children and teens aged 6-17 there and at sites in London, Southampton and Bristol. 

Few trials of coronavirus vaccine involve children as yet. In the US, Pfizer/BioNTech’s and Moderna’s vaccines are being tested in children as young as 12. 

“This new trial, a single-blind, randomized Phase II trial, will enrol 300 volunteers, with up to 240 of these volunteers receiving the (AstraZeneca) vaccine and the remainder a control meningitis vaccine, which has been shown to be safe in children but is expected to produce similar reactions, such as a sore arm,” the Oxford team said in a statement. 

Grace Li, a pediatric researcher in the Oxford Vaccine Group, said in a statement: “We’ve already seen that the vaccine is safe and effective in adults, and our understanding of how children are affected by the coronavirus continues to evolve.”

While children are much less likely than adults to be hospitalized or die from Covid-19, children are as just as likely as adults to become infected.

“While most children are relatively unaffected by coronavirus and are unlikely to become unwell with the infection, it is important to establish the safety and immune response to the vaccine in children and young people as some children may benefit from vaccination,” added Dr. Andrew Pollard, chief investigator for the trial at Oxford. “These new trials will extend our understanding of control of SARS-CoV2 to younger age groups.” 7 hr 1 min ago

UK could live with Covid-19 “like flu,” says Health Secretary

From CNN’s Amy Woodyatt in London

Health Secretary Matt Hancock speaks during a virtual news conference at 10 Downing Street in London, on February 8.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock speaks during a virtual news conference at 10 Downing Street in London, on February 8. Tolga Akmen/WPA Pool/Getty Images

The UK’s Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he hopes that vaccines and treatments for Covid-19 will turn the disease into something we “live with, like we do flu” by the end of the year. 

Hancock said he hoped that by the end of the year, Covid-19 “will become a treatable disease,” and that he anticipated new drugs to tackle the virus should arrive.

In an interview with the UK’s Daily Telegraph, Hancock said new treatments would be key in “turning Covid from a pandemic that affects all of our lives into another illness that we have to live with, like we do flu. That’s where we need to get Covid to over the months to come.”

Some 14 million people have received their first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine as of Thursday, according to the UK government, and more than 530,000 have received a second dose.

Hancock said he was “confident” that the vaccine would be offered to all adults in the UK by September.

Here’s some context: There have been more than 4 million confirmed cases of Covid-19 in the UK, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

In March last year, the UK government said it was hopeful the country could cap its coronavirus deaths at 20,000. But more than 116,500 have died, according to figures from JHU — and the country has one of the highest number of confirmed deaths in the world, proportionate to population.8 hr 14 min ago

At least 109 employees at a Colorado ski resort test positive for Covid-19

From CNN’s Leslie Perrot, Chris Boyette and Leah Asmelash

Winter Park Resort in Grand County, Colorado.
Winter Park Resort in Grand County, Colorado. KMGH

A ski resort in Colorado has had a Covid-19 outbreak, with more than 100 active infections among its employees.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment announced the outbreak at Winter Park Resort in January but released the data in its weekly outbreak summary on Wednesday.

There are at least 109 employees with active infections, they said.

“It has been determined that these cases have not been traced back to transmission through interaction with visitors but, rather, from social gatherings outside of the workplace and congregate housing,” Grand County, Colorado, officials said Monday in a joint statement with Winter Park Resort.

With ski season in full swing in Colorado, other resorts have also reported Covid-19 cases. But the outbreak at Winter Park is currently the largest, according to CDPHE data.

“We have been working closely with public health authorities since the pandemic began,” said Jen Miller, communications manager at the ski resort. “We did extensive planning and had to get approval from the state on our operations before we could open on December 3.”

Cases linked to socializing and living situations: Most of the cases have been traced back to social gatherings outside of work and to congregate housing, Miller said.

Precautions, according to Miller, include: reconfiguring lift corrals and lift-loading procedures, extra staff, new signage reminding visitors about mask requirements, limitations on dining, a reservation system to manage visitation and the number of people at the resort, contactless lodging and a state-approved testing site for their 1,700 active employees.

But some visitors have reported that mask mandates were not being enforced.

When asked about those reports, Miller said, “We’ve done extensive work and continue to evolve our operations as necessary. I can’t speak to one individual’s experience, but we do appreciate feedback and will continue to make modifications with the health and well-being of our employees, guests and community as our top priority.”

Conor Cahill, press secretary for Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, said ski resorts across the state need to “do a better job planning for and managing surge weekends.”

Read the full story here.PAID CONTENT

Recommended by8 hr 49 min ago

Nearly a third of US adults are undecided about the Covid-19 vaccine. They say friends and family could sway them

From CNN’s Madeline Holcombe

A sticker given to people who have received the Covid-19 vaccine in New York City.
A sticker given to people who have received the Covid-19 vaccine in New York City. Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Though officials and health experts say the end of the Covid-19 pandemic will rely on a large proportion of Americans being inoculated, nearly a third of US adults say they have not decided if they will get the vaccine when it is offered to them.

Could be swayed: About 31% of US adults say they plan to “wait and see” how it works out for other people, according to a report released by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) Friday. Many said that a close friend or family member getting vaccinated would be most likely to sway their decision.

Vaccinations have been ramping up across the country as officials race to get most Americans inoculated by the end of summer, aiming for a return to normality while trying to get ahead of the coronavirus variants.

To reach herd immunity, about 70-85% of Americans would need to be vaccinated, National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease director Dr. Anthony Fauci has estimated.

Though many states have complained that their supply of doses from the federal government does not meet their demand, the pace has quickened in recent weeks.

The US has averaged nearly 1.6 million doses administered per day over the past week, higher than the daily average of about 1.3 million last week, according to a CNN analysis of data published Thursday by the CDC.

And more than 6,500 retail pharmacies around the country opened appointments Friday for the 1 million doses they have been allocated.

Here’s some background: The United States recorded an additional 97,525 new coronavirus cases and 5,323 more deaths Friday, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

Friday’s figures bring the national total to 27,490,037 cases and 480,767 deaths, across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and US territories.

Read the full story here.10 hr 28 min ago

US records 97,525 more coronavirus cases and 5,323 related deaths

From CNN’s Alta Spells in Atlanta

A worker checks in a person with an appointment to receive a dose of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at a CVS Pharmacy location in Eastchester, New York on February 12.
A worker checks in a person with an appointment to receive a dose of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at a CVS Pharmacy location in Eastchester, New York on February 12. Gabriela Bhaskar/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The United States recorded an additional 97,525 new coronavirus cases and 5,323 more deaths Friday, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

Friday’s toll includes more than 2,400 backlogged deaths from Ohio. The state’s health department said on February 10 that some 4,000 deaths “may have been underreported through the state’s reporting system” and would be added to future tallies.

“Process issues affecting the reconciliation and reporting of these deaths began in October. The largest number of deaths were from November and December,” the department said in a statement. “Although being reported this week, the deaths will reflect the appropriate date of death on the state’s Covid-19 dashboard.”

Friday’s figures bring the national total to 27,490,037 cases and 480,767 deaths, across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and US territories.

So far, at least 69,014,725 vaccine doses have been distributed, with some 48,410,558 shots administered, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.13 hr 5 min ago

Flights to Australian state of Victoria suspended during snap lockdown

From CNN’s Angus Watson in Melbourne

Flights to Victoria have been suspended as the Australian state begins a hard five-day lockdown, Premier Daniel Andrews said Saturday. 

No flights will be allowed into Victoria until next Thursday, other than those carrying more than 100 passengers who have already commenced travel to the state.

“A lot of people will be hurting today,” Andrews said at his daily news briefing, adding “we can’t have a situation where in two weeks’ time, we look back and wish we had taken these decisions now.” 

Victoria recorded one additional Covid-19 case Saturday, connected to the recent Holiday Inn cluster. A total of 14 confirmed cases of the UK variant have been linked to the cluster. 

The state entered the five-day “circuit breaker” lockdown at 11:59 p.m. local time on February 12.  13 hr 8 min ago

California to expand vaccine eligibility to millions with pre-existing conditions

From CNN’s Stephanie Becker and Cheri Mossburg

A health care worker administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a mass vaccination site in Las Mesa, California, on February 11.
A health care worker administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a mass vaccination site in Las Mesa, California, on February 11. Bing Guan/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The US state of California is adding millions of people to its Covid-19 vaccination priority list, including residents “at high risk with developmental and other disabilities” and those with “serious underlying health conditions.”

The plan, outlined by state health officials in a briefing Friday, will begin March 15 and allow cancer patients, pregnant women, and other disabled individuals to join health care workers, seniors, teachers, and farm staff in line for a vaccine. The expansion could add as many as 6 million more Californians to the priority list.

It also broadens the ages from 65 and over to ages 16 to 64 in those categories.

California Health and Human Service Agency Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly told reporters the March 15 start will give officials time to work out details on how to get vaccines to those with various disabilities and could include at-home visits.

Ghaly acknowledged the timing could be optimistic, cautioning “we are still dealing with the scarcity of vaccine. This week the drastic shortfall of vaccines in the state led to the closure of the mass vaccination centers in Los Angeles.”

The expanded list of those eligible includes people with cancer, chronic kidney disease, oxygen-dependent heart disease, Down Syndrome, immune-suppressed organ transplant recipients, pregnant women, people with sickle cell disease, severe obesity and certain type-2 diabetes.

Ghaly expressed concern about the inequity of distribution among communities of color and low-income areas. There are plans to reach out to community clinics, public health systems and what they’re calling “trusted messengers in communities that data shows are reluctant to get vaccinated.”

Senior state health officials acknowledged complaints from rural counties that they have not been given their fair share of vaccines. However, officials say these areas have historically been medically underserved and much of the early distribution was in areas with high numbers of medical workers.

Officials say the focus will now be shifting to rural areas in California’s agricultural community, which has been disproportionally impacted by the pandemic.

Officials also believe a focus on Californians with development disabilities and severe underlying conditions will allow more vaccinations in vulnerable settings, like jails, homeless shelters and areas where homeless reside.

The state estimates 13 million Californians are eligible for the Covid-19 vaccine, including 3 million health care workers, 3.4 million food and agricultural workers, 1.4 million in the education sector, a million in emergency services and more than 6 million people over the age of 65.

More: https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/coronavirus-pandemic-vaccine-updates-02-13-21/index.html

SPAIN’S WOLF-HUNTING BAN SPARKS BITTER DEBATE IN RURAL NORTH

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

2/12/2021

https://www.agriculture.com/markets/newswire/spains-wolf-hunting-ban-sparks-bitter-debate-in-rural-north

By Vincent West

ERRIGOITI, Spain, Feb 12 (Reuters) – A ban on wolf hunting in Spain’s rural north is ratcheting up tension between agriculture and conservation, pitting farmers who fear for their livelihood against environmentalists who applaud the move.

Following a decision by the Environment Ministry last Thursday, protections for the Iberian wolf in the south of Spain will be extended north of the Douro river, where controlled hunting had still been allowed.

“We think it’s a great success,” said Nerea Larrabe, who manages the Basondo animal refuge in the northern Basque region, where hunting will soon be outlawed.

“It’s legislating to make sure an important species from our environment doesn’t disappear,” she told Reuters.

Since the 1960s Spain’s Iberian wolf population has rebounded from a few hundred to an estimated 1,500-2,000, with more than 90% of the population concentrated in the north.

As apex predators, wolves help…

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The Siberian Tundra Is Doing That Exploding Thing Again

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

https://earther.gizmodo.com/methane-is-blowing-more-holes-in-the-arctic-1846242991

Dharna NoorWednesday 5:45PM201

A photo taken on August 25, 2014 shows a crater on the Yamal Peninsula, northern Siberia.
A photo taken on August 25, 2014 shows a crater on the Yamal Peninsula, northern Siberia.

The Siberian tundra is still out here exploding. A newstudyfrom the Woodwell Climate Research Center has identified three new craters in the region’s increasingly volatile permafrost, and the climate crisis is to blame.

Researchers have been seeing giant holes form in western Siberia’s Yamal Peninsula for years. The first, discovered by workers back in2014, measured 262 feet (80 meters) in diameter. Since then, scientists have found another six craters on Yamal and the nearby Gydan peninsula, most recentlydiscovering a crateras deep as half a football field last year. While researchers have suspected explosive methane gas has welled up into the tundra as it thaws and caused the explosions, it’s been an area of active research.

“These craters represent an Earth system…

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How the cold weather we’re having is related to global warming

The question is, why aren’t we hearing about it in the media?

I’ve been posting a lot of articles lately on the record-breaking cold we’re getting in the Lower 48 thanks to the Polar Vortex. Fatal 100 car pileups on icy highways in Texas aren’t the norm for states that far South. But while reporting the facts of newsworthy fatalities, our nations news sources have been remiss in making any mention of a climate change connection.

It’s almost like a conspiracy to make our new president look better than the last one, so we won’t risk adding a line about the climate connection while there’s an impeachment to cover. Besides, people would like to think that the climate crisis was solved the minute they voted Biden in and Trump out.

It really wouldn’t have taken much time or ink to inform folks about the climate change link to our current Polar Vortex temperatures. I simply googled Climate Change + Polar Vortex and came up with:

“How climate change is affecting the polar vortex?

How Is the Polar Vortex Affected by Climate Change? … The change is warming higher latitudes and reducing the temperature difference between the warmer mid-latitude and polar regions. This weakens and destabilizes the polar jet stream, causing it to dip into lower latitudes, bringing polar air farther south.”

Or for a wordier explanation of what’s going on:

31 January 2019  16:56

Q&A: How is Arctic warming linked to the ‘polar vortex’ and other extreme weather?

Robert McSweeney

ROBERT MCSWEENEY

31.01.2019 | 4:56pmEXTREME WEATHERQ&A: How is Arctic warming linked to the ‘polar vortex’ and other extreme weather? 

The past week has seen some brutal weather hitting the US and Canada. With cold Arctic air plunging south down to the US midwest, six states have seen temperatures lower than the south pole and at least eight people have died due to the extreme cold.

The UK, too, is braced for snow this week, but nothing close to the scale seen in the US.

The very cold weather prompted President Trump to tweet: “What the hell is going on with Global Waming? [sic].” This followed an earlier tweet that it “wouldn’t be bad to have a little of that good old fashioned Global Warming right now!”

Trump’s comments received widespread derision from scientists and the media, with many articles pointing out that Trump is confusing short-term weather events with long-term climate, and that extreme cold weather still occurs in a warming world.

The cold, snowy weather has also been accompanied by a flurry of stories about the “polar vortex” and how it can bring extreme weather to the northern hemisphere mid-latitude regions of North America, Europe and Asia. But that is not the only way that the Arctic can affect conditions further south.

Over the past decade or so, a growing body of research has proposed ways in which rapid Arctic warming can lead to harsh winters, summer heatwaves and even floods and droughts across the mid-latitudes.

Some scientists say that climate change and Arctic sea ice loss are the root cause of these events, but others are more circumspect.

In this detailed Q&A, Carbon Brief speaks to scientists about the potential connections between Arctic warming and extreme weather across the mid-latitudes, what those theories look like, and how the evidence measures up.

What is the theory?

The Arctic is warming more than twice as quickly than the global surface average. This phenomenon is known as “Arctic amplification”. In part, this stems from the rapid loss of sea ice cover in the region. As Arctic sea ice diminishes, energy from the sun that would have been reflected away by the bright white ice is instead absorbed by the ocean, causing further warming. (Declining snow cover over Arctic land areas has the same effect.)

Late summer and early autumn have seen the largest declines in Arctic sea ice cover. Average September sea ice extent, for example, has decreased by around 13% per decade since 1979.

Average September Arctic sea ice extent from 1979 to 2018. Black line shows monthly average for each year; blue line shows the trend. Source: NSIDC

Arctic amplification is also caused by temperature feedbacks. As the Earth’s surface warms, it emits more energy back to space. But less energy is radiated back from the Arctic compared with lower latitudes, meaning the region warms more quickly.

Recent research has suggested that these rapid changes in the Arctic could be having knock-on impacts further south. While a warmer Arctic Ocean further inhibits sea ice growth, it also generates warmer and more moist air masses over the Arctic and nearby continents. A warming Arctic also reduces the temperature difference with the mid-latitudes, which has consequences for circulation patterns in the atmosphere (more on this later).

The theory goes that these changes contribute to an increase in unusual and extreme weather across the North America, Europe and Asia.

More: https://www.carbonbrief.org/qa-how-is-arctic-warming-linked-to-polar-vortext-other-extreme-weather

Covid live updates: CDC announcing new school reopening guidance; physicians warn virus may never go away

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

FEB 12 20211:54 PM ESTSHAREShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/12/covid-live-updates.html

CNBC.com staff

This is CNBC’s live blog covering all the latest news on thecoronavirus outbreak. This blog will be updated throughout the day as the news breaks.

The number of new Covid-19 cases in the U.S. is declining to levels last seen before the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays. In an effort to pick up the pace of vaccinations, President Joe Biden announced Thursday his administrationfinalized deals for another 200 million vaccine doses, bringing the U.S. total to 600 million. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said about 34.7 million people have received at least their first vaccine dose and of that amount, 11.2 million people have received both doses of the two-shot regiment.

Here are some of the biggest developments Friday:

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Retired Louisiana State Police trooper dies in fishing accident

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Skip to content33°Monroe, LA

https://www.knoe.com/2021/02/11/retired-louisiana-state-police-trooper-dies-in-fishing-accident/

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Robert Patrick
Robert Patrick((Source: Family))

ByMatthew SeguraPublished:Feb. 11, 2021 at 10:30 AM PST

LAKE PROVIDENCE, La. (KNOE) – A retired Louisiana State Police trooper has died in a fishing accident in West Carroll Parish.

Robert Patrick was found dead on Feb. 10 near a boat ramp at the Hogue Island Hunting Club near Lake Providence. His phone was nearby and his vehicle was still running. Officials say his boat trailer was in the water.

No foul play is suspected.

According to a post on Oak Grove’s Facebook page, Patrick began his career in law enforcement with the West Carroll Parish Sheriff’s Office before going to the Town of Oak Grove. Later, he became a Louisiana State Trooper and retired in 2019. He leaves behind a wife, a daughter and two grandchildren.ADVERTISEMENThttps://109a8798a84167c9f4d73a4eb4501c69.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

“Robert was a fine man, a great…

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Court grants Kansas trophy hunters’ request to open season on Wisconsin wolves​

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

February 11, 2021 0Comments

Court grants Kansas trophy hunters’ request to open season on Wisconsin wolves​

Even during a regular trophy hunting season, trophy hunting is devastating for wolf populations. Killing a single wolf can cause entire families to break apart and lead to young pups, still dependent on their mothers, dying of starvation or predation.Photo by Marco Arduino/Alamy Stock Photo1.4KSHARES

A ​state court has granted a Kansas-based trophy hunting group’s request for a wolf hunt in Wisconsin for the remaining weeks of February. It’s a terrible decision that could result in the slaughter of hundreds of wolves in a matter of weeks, including by such cruel methods as trapping and hounding, during their breeding season. ​​And it proves that now, more than ever, gray wolves need federal protections restored to protect them from short-sighted and lethal state management—an outcome we’refighting for in federal court.

The ​trophy hunting group filed its lawsuit last week after Wisconsin’s…

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A newly discovered space object called ‘Farfarout’ is the most distant thing in our solar system

Morgan McFall-Johnsen 20 hours ago

https://www.businessinsider.com/astronomers-discover-solar-system-most-distant-object-farfarout-2021-2

farfarout planetoid most distant object solar system
An artist’s interpretation of Farfarout. 
  • Astronomers discovered a planetoid orbiting the sun further than any known object in the solar system.
  • Called “Farfarout,” the object orbits the sun every 1,000 years.
  • Objects like Farfarout could help astronomers figure out whether a massive planet hides in the outskirts of our solar system.
  • Visit the Business section of Insider for more stories.

Astronomers have discovered the most distant object ever found in our solar system.

The planetoid — the term for a small chunk of rock or dust or ice orbiting the sun — is appropriately nicknamed “Farfarout,” after the previous record-holder, “Farout,” which was discovered by the same astronomers in 2018. After years of observing the object’s trajectory across the sky, that team of researchers announced on Wednesday that they could confidently say Farfarout is, well, much farther out than any solar-system object seen before.

Farfarout is 132 astronomical units (AU) from the sun, meaning it’s 132 times farther from the sun than Earth is, and about four times as far as Pluto. It takes about 1,000 years for the planetoid to complete one orbit around the sun. 

The researchers estimate that Farfarout is about 250 miles (400 kilometers) across, which would place it on the low end of being a dwarf planet like Pluto.https://3a47e1a231c959540928e2fa5f1044e5.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

“The discovery of Farfarout shows our increasing ability to map the outer solar system and observe farther and farther toward the fringes of our solar system,” Scott Sheppard, one of the astronomers who discovered the object, said in a press release. Sheppard works as a researcher at the Carnegie Institution for Science.

farfarout planetoid distance
Solar system distances to scale, showing the newly discovered planetoid, “Farfarout,” compared to other known solar system objects. 

“Only with the advancements in the last few years of large digital cameras on very large telescopes has it been possible to efficiently discover very distant objects like Farfarout,” he added. “Even though some of these distant objects are quite large — the size of dwarf planets — they are very faint because of their extreme distances from the Sun. Farfarout is just the tip of the iceberg of solar system objects in the very distant solar system.”

Finding and studying other similarly distant objects could help scientists determine whether there’s an unidentified massive planet hiding in the outskirts of our solar system. Scientists have found hints of such a planet, often referred to as Planet Nine or Planet X, in the distant dark. These clues come in the form of smaller objects whose orbital paths appear skewed.

Farfarout most likely cannot contribute to that effort, however, because Neptune appears to have significantly altered its orbit.

A snippet of a 1,000-year orbit

Action Needed To Ban ‘Sport Hunting’ of Black Bears Throughout California

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://worldanimalnews.com/urgent-action-needed-to-support-newly-introduced-bill-that-would-ban-sport-hunting-of-black-bears-in-california/?fbclid=IwAR0mFaISAdgQ9oKTBd7fyZOeVrENmgRvywUquitSYGQ_0KZAxXyCC5gAZ5o

January 27, 2021ByKaren LapizcoSHARE

A groundbreaking bill that has offered a glimpse of hope for animal advocates inCalifornia,has just been introduced bySenator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco).The Bear Protection Act (SB 252),that is sponsored by theHumane Society of the United States (HSUS),would finally ban all ‘sport hunting’ of black bears in the state.

Shockingly, theCalifornia Department of Fish and Wildlife (DFW)currently allows hunters to kill up to1,700 black bearsin a single season. This legislation would ban all ‘sport hunting’ of black bears, while this is a historical move in protecting bears throughout California, there are sadly still exemptions including situations in which bears can be killed to protect human safety, public property, livestock, and endangered and threatened species, and for scientific research.

If successful, California would be the first state to offer this level of protection…

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