Mexico sets out search to find vaquita marina, the world’s most endangered marine mammal

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Experts from the US, Canada, and Mexico will conduct the search in the Gulf of California, the only place the vaquita lives

Associated Press

https://www.foxnews.com/world/mexico-search-find-vaquita-marina-worlds-most-endangered-marine-mammal

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Mexican officials and the conservation group Sea Shepherd said Monday that experts will set out in two ships in a bid to locate the few remaining vaquita marina, the world’s mostendangered marine mammal.

Mexico environment secretary said experts from the United States, Canadaand Mexicowill use binoculars, sighting devices and acoustic monitors to try to pinpoint the location of the tiny, elusive porpoises. The species cannot be captured, held or bred in captivity.

The trip will run from May 10 to May 27 in the Gulf of California, also known as the Sea of…

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Reward raised to $15,000 for information on AR Bald Eagle killings

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By: Staff

https://www.ktlo.com/2023/05/09/reward-raised-to-15000-for-information-on-ar-bald-eagle-killings/

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May 9, 2023 5:04 am,

The reward for information leading to a conviction for the illegal killing of four bald eagles in northern Arkansas has increased to $15,000.

According to the Center for Biological Diversity, they are boosting the reward by $10,000. In April, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services announced at $5,000 reward.

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Will Harlan, a senior scientist at the Center states “We grieve the senseless and illegal killing of these majestic birds and want the perpetrator brought to justice. This cowardly act against America’s national bird can’t go unpunished. I hope someone steps forward with information.”

A joint investigation by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that the bald eagles were shot between mid-January and mid-February. Evidence suggests the birds were shot from County Road 3021 near the rural town of…

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Greenland glacier discovery shows sea level projections are too low

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Andrew Freedman

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A picture of meltwater flowing on top Petermann Glacier in northwestern Greenland in 2016.
A 30-mile-long meltwater river runs through Petermann Glacier in August 2016. Photo: Whitney Shefte/The Washington Post via Getty Images.

Scientists may be significantlyunderestimating the amount of melting yet to come fromglaciersthat end in the sea, according to anew study.

Why it matters:The study reveals that seawater is intruding deep into northwest Greenland’s Petermann Glacier, thinning the ice from below.

  • Petermann acts like a doorstop, holding back vast quantities of land-based ice. As the glacier thins, inland ice moves faster into the ocean, raising global sea levels.
  • If all that inland ice were to melt, it would raise global sea levels by about 1.6 feet, the study found.

Zoom…

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Greens want to slow Biden’s climate roll

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Environmentalists are fighting projects around the country that aim to transport carbon dioxide and bury it underground.

A section of the Mississippi Power Co. carbon capture power plant.

The Mississippi Power Co. carbon capture power plant in DeKalb, Miss. | Rogelio V. Solis/AP Photo

ByALLISON PRANG

05/09/2023 10:00 AM EDT

President Joe Biden wants to combat climate change by taking carbon dioxide out of the air and burying it underground. But some environmental activists on the left are working to stop him.

The activists say a focus on carbon capture would give industry political cover to keep polluting instead of reducing emissions, and their argument is gaining traction in communities across the country. They convinced the New Orleans City Council to pass a resolution opposing underground carbon storage last year. Elsewhere in Louisiana, they’re trying to delay the permitting of a pipeline that would carry carbon to storage facilities.

The growing opposition is threatening to delay the full rollout…

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Kansas angler receives multiple citations after attempt to fish with 9 mm

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Officials seize a 9 mm in Garden City after an attempt to use it to catch fish on May 2, 2023.
Officials seize a 9 mm in Garden City after an attempt to use it to catch fish on May 2, 2023.(Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks)

BySarah Motter

Published: May. 7, 2023 at 10:05 AM PDT

https://www.wibw.com/2023/05/07/kansas-angler-receives-multiple-citations-after-attempt-fish-with-9-mm/

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (WIBW) – An angler in Kansas received multiple citations after he attempted to fish in Garden City with a 9 mm.

Game Wardens with TheKansas Department of Wildlife and Parkssay that on Tuesday, May 2, Finney Co. wardens seized a 9 mm handgun that had been used to take fish in Garden City.

KDWP noted that the illegal fisherman received violations for illegal means of taking fish and no fishing license.

As a reminder, Game Wardens said it is illegal to use firearms to catch a fish. They said nonsport fish can only be caught with a fishing pole and line, trotlines, set lines, gigs, crossbows or bow…

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The End of Joe Biden Has Arrived

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Story by Brent M. Eastwood•Yesterday 5:16 PM

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In what must be seen as an alarming trend for the White House and theBiden campaignmanagement team for hisre-election bid, President Joe Biden islanguishingin another new poll. Biden is garnering an overall approval rating of just 36 percent – down from 42 percent approval fromthe same survey in February. He has high disapproval ratings, low support for running again, and a dipping number that measures his mental acuity.

TheABC News/Washington Post pollshowed that in a match-up with Donald Trump, Biden was down six points: 44 to 38. When asked about a hypothetical match-up with Florida GovernorRon DeSantis, Biden was behind by five points: 42 to 37. Overall, 56 percent of the people surveyed expressed disapproval of Joe Biden. A noteworthy 58 percent of Democrats in…

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Stop trying to make more babies

BY JENNIFER D. SCIUBBA, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR – 05/07/23 10:00 AM ET

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Studying population fertility rates and responses to them is like reading the children’s fairy tale Goldilocks: governments generally think their country’s fertility rates are “too high” or “too low” — they’re rarely “just right.”

The ideal remains elusive; yet a new report from the United Nations Population Fund reveals that the majority of the globe’s population now lives under governments with a stated intent to influence individual childbearing.

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For decades, the global emphasis was on lowering high fertility rates, and it worked. As recently as the year 2000, women in two-thirds of the world’s countries had five or more children on average, while only 8 percent of countries had total fertility rates under two.

Now, the proportions are reversed: Only 4 percent of countries have fertility rates as high as five, while the total fertility rate is below replacement in 71 percent of the world’s countries. As low fertility has become the norm — and populations are rapidly aging — more governments have switched their policy emphasis to try and incentivize births.

This is a fool’s errand and risks doing more harm than good.

The policies are expensive, and they don’t work. While we know how to lower fertility rates, we don’t really know how to raise them — at least not in a sustained manner. Research shows that the expense of children — housing and childcare, primarily — depresses fertility rates, so governments have offered cash, subsidies and tax breaks in an effort to alleviate that objection to larger families. But these expenditures don’t lead to a sustained fertility increase because expense is never the only reason for deciding whether or not to have a child.

South Korea has spent $210 billion over the last 16 years trying to raise fertility and it keeps hitting record lows — now 0.79 children per woman on average. That money could have gone elsewhere, such as health initiatives or education, for a greater return on investment and to broader social benefit. What policy-makers seem not to think about is that while some of these efforts at making life better for those who are already born might have the byproduct of raising fertility rates, without making life better, the rates certainly won’t go up.

That’s because economic solutions generally don’t question or revise the social structures that pressure fertility lower in the first place. A better approach, and one that could only yield net good, is thinking less about the collective and more about how the individual operates within that collective.

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What social structures give people who want to have a second or third child the support they need to realize those desires? Are work practices, like paid leave shared between multiple caregivers, in place to allow for flexible use? Are there quality, affordable and convenient childcare options available starting at early ages for those who need or want to make use of them?

These questions are just a start at recognizing the complex decision making behind childbearing, something that is an individual decision — at least, for now. There are reasons to worry that autonomy over childbearing is being eroded.

Perhaps the most worrisome part of normalizing efforts to increase births as a solution to population aging is that once the norm takes hold, we can’t control how governments pursue it, and the risk of coercion increases.

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Twenty years ago, nearly all of the world’s aging countries were democracies. Now, a quarter of those countries with a median age over 35 years — the world’s oldest countries — are not free. Defining low fertility as a “problem” and offering government policy as a “solution” opens the door for whomever is in charge to define and pursue their definition of whatever their demographic ideal is. We have seen plenty of examples of coercive policies to lower fertility rates, like China’s One Child Policy, but coercion can force change in the opposite direction as well.

One egregious example is Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu’s campaign for more Romanian babies starting in the 1960s. Through invasive measures, like subjecting women under 45 to monthly gynecological exams in their workplace, fertility rates spiked, but at the expense of women and children. The damage has reverberated for decades.The GOPs Ukraine policy must balance responsibility and pragmatismA satellite-cellular merger could be the next revolutionary tech innovation

Too often, governments consider “making more people” as the primary solution to population aging and depopulation and neglect those already born. In many societies, however, large groups of people are left behind. According to the World Bank, just 23 percent of Indian women perform paid work, and much of that is in the informal economy, putting them at risk of greater poverty in old age. Among the OECD, only 15.5 percent of those over 65 years old still work, on average. Given that there are 131 million people just between the ages of 65 and 74 in high-income countries, this is a tremendously untapped resource.

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Policies to try and raise fertility are not nearly as politically unpalatable as raising pensionable ages, and they seem much more straightforward than trying to decrease inequalities in education or health disparities, so governments keep pursuing them. But unless we first accept that low fertility and population aging are here to stay, we will keep wasting money on this elusive goal — and our rights may be under fire as a result.

Jennifer D. Sciubba is the author of “8 Billion and Counting: How Sex, Death, and Migration Shape Our World” and senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Protecting Migratory Birds is Crucial for Ecosystems Balance

African sacred ibises in Tana River Delta, Kenya.

Published 8 May 2023

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OPINION

A handout photo made available by Syrian Presidential Office shows Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (C) visiting the site struck by earthquake in Aleppo, Syria, 10 February 2023.

The West Should Lift Sanctions on Syria

by Rahim Volkov

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Biodiversity protection makes it possible to maintain rural livelihoods and promote the resilience of ecosystems.

On Monday, Peter Njoroge, the head of the Ornithology Section and senior research scientist at the National Museums of Kenya, stressed that protecting natural habitats for migratory birds will unleash a range of ecological, health and economic benefits.

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Kenya is a major corridor for migratory bird species escaping from winter in Europe and Asia and heading to the warmer tropical regions where they forage for food in important biodiversity areas such as wetlands, forests and wildlife sanctuaries.

This African country hosts about 200 migratory bird species native to Europe, Asia and other parts of Africa from September to April, adding that their presence is a boon to tourism.

Migratory birds are part of Kenya’s cultural heritage and are crucial in pest control, helping clean up urban waste, and limiting the spread of disease-causing pathogens.

Migratory birds inhabiting Kenya’s diverse ecological zones like savannah grasslands, coastal mangroves, the Rift Valley and mountainous landscapes include Eurasian water birds, flamingos, eagles, cranes and storks, said Njoroge.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9iYWNrZW5kIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19yZWZzcmNfc2Vzc2lvbiI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZm9zbnJfc29mdF9pbnRlcnZlbnRpb25zX2VuYWJsZWQiOnsiYnVja2V0Ijoib24iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X21peGVkX21lZGlhXzE1ODk3Ijp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRyZWF0bWVudCIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZXhwZXJpbWVudHNfY29va2llX2V4cGlyYXRpb24iOnsiYnVja2V0IjoxMjA5NjAwLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X3Nob3dfYmlyZHdhdGNoX3Bpdm90c19lbmFibGVkIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19kdXBsaWNhdGVfc2NyaWJlc190b19zZXR0aW5ncyI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdXNlX3Byb2ZpbGVfaW1hZ2Vfc2hhcGVfZW5hYmxlZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdmlkZW9faGxzX2R5bmFtaWNfbWFuaWZlc3RzXzE1MDgyIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRydWVfYml0cmF0ZSIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfbGVnYWN5X3RpbWVsaW5lX3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9mcm9udGVuZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9fQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1613629621794394112&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.telesurenglish.net%2Fnews%2FProtecting-Migratory-Birds-is-Crucial-for-Ecosystems-Balance-20230508-0014.html&sessionId=a68262af5b6a0986c1a265da8b1305059754922f&siteScreenName=teleSURenglish&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

This scientists noted that despite their enormous contribution to ecosystems’ health, migratory birds continue to face multiple threats including climate change, habitat destruction and loss, pollution and poaching. 

Rapid urbanization, energy infrastructure, and poisoning by herders and farmers threaten the survival of migratory birds in Kenya, to the detriment of eco-tourism.

“Transmission lines are a major threat to migratory birds amid regular electrocution. Some communities are also poisoning them for food or during retaliatory attacks,” Njoroge said, stressing that the population of migratory birds in the country has been on the decline amid climate change.

He cited an action plan at the draft stage geared toward enhanced protection of flamingos and cranes, stressing that the government has also developed regulations that spell out penalties for poaching or poisoning of these migratory bird species.

World Migratory Bird Day seeks to highlight the critical ecosystem services while rallying the international community to act on threats facing these iconic species.

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Spain records hottest and driest April on record

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https://apnews.com/article/spain-climate-drought-rain-farmers-ccc7426e4fdf8d00ad0436868f83ed88

FILE - A man sunbathes on a hot spring day in Madrid, Spain, on April 18, 2023. Drought-stricken Spain says last month was the hottest and driest April since records began in 1961. The State Meteorological Agency, said Monday May 8, 2023 the average daily temperature in April was 14.9 degrees Celsius (58.8 Fahrenheit), that is 3 degrees Celsius above the average. (AP Photo/Paul White, File)

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FILE – A man sunbathes on a hot spring day in Madrid, Spain, on April 18, 2023. Drought-stricken Spain says last month was the hottest and driest April since records began in 1961. The State Meteorological Agency, said Monday May 8, 2023 the average daily temperature in April was 14.9 degrees Celsius (58.8 Fahrenheit), that is 3 degrees Celsius above the average. (AP Photo/Paul White, File)

MADRID (AP) — Drought-stricken Spain says last month was the hottest and driest April since records began in 1961.

The State Meteorological Agency, known by the Spanish acronym AEMET, said Monday the average daily temperature in April was 14.9 degrees Celsius (58.8 Fahrenheit), that is 3 degrees Celsius above the average.

AEMET said average maximum temperatures during the month were up by 4.7 Celsius.

Rainfall was a fifth of what would normally be expected in the month, making it…

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Kansas canceled its fall turkey hunting season. What does it mean for Missouri?

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https://www.news-leader.com/story/sports/outdoors/2023/05/08/kansas-cut-fall-turkey-hunting-season-what-does-it-mean-for-missouri/70188236007/

Ryan Collingwood

Springfield News-Leader

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A Missouri turkey hunter Telechecks her adult gobbler using MDC's MO Hunting mobile app following a successful public land hunt.

Missouri’s spring turkey hunting season concluded Sunday. In four months, local archers will again be seeking gobblers for what they hope is a robust fall season.

Neighboring Kansas won’t have that luxury.

The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parksrecently announced that its fall season will be canceled on account of a dwindling turkey population, the firsttime Kansas has canceled a season in the modern turkey-restoration era.

Kansas wildlife officials hope that cutting the fall season for the foreseeable future will help boost the population, which recently hit a 15-year low. Fall turkey season hunting participation in Kansas has also been reportedly low.

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Kansas also imposed a one-turkey bag limit for the spring of 2024, similar to neighboring states Oklahoma and Nebraska, which also imposed stricter bag limits due to declining turkey populations.

Turkey population declines in the Great Plains states…

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