Tanzania Opens Pristine Reserve for Logging, Hydropower

Published by the Environmental News Service DAR es SALAAM, Tanzania, May 16, 2018 (ENS) – Tanzania is proposing large-scale logging in the middle of the Selous Game Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most iconic wildlife areas in Africa. Read the full article at: http://ens-newswire.com/2018/05/16/tanzania-opens-pristine-reserve-for-logging-hydropower/

Catching Some Rays

Published by Ocean Conservancy Let’s face it, manta rays and stingrays look pretty similar and you can only spot the differences if you know what you’re looking for. Both manta rays and stingrays are related to sharks under the cartilaginous fish group chondrichthyes, meaning their structure is built on material similar to that found in our […]

A win on Capitol Hill

Published by the World Wildlife Fund As WWF’s lead advocate on Capitol Hill, I spend much of my time with Members of Congress and their staff advocating for the organization’s top conservation priorities. Over the past year, friends and acquaintances often ask how that work is going, and whether there’s any hope for those priorities given […]

Collaring elephants in one of Africa’s last great wildernesses

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Thanks to satellite collars, 60 elephants will be monitored for better protection against poaching in one of the last great African wildernesses, Tanzania’s Selous Game Reserve. It’s an ambitious undertaking—the country’s largest ever elephant collaring effort—carried out by the Tanzanian government in collaboration with WWF. Once an elephant stronghold, rampant […]

An illegal logger in Tanzania becomes a forest defender

Published by the World Wildlife Fund When his three daughters were hungry, Omary Mbunda would turn to illegal timber for money. For him and others in his village of Mbondo, Tanzania, the trees and wildlife in nearby Liuninga Forest Reserve were reliable sources of income and food. That changed when the CARE-WWF Alliance—a partnership focused on […]

Last male northern white rhino dies

Published by the World Wildlife Fund He was known as the Last Male Standing and attracted the attention of people around the world, but on March 19, 2018 the last male northern white rhino died. Sudan, 45 years old, had been under armed guard to protect him from the threat of poachers. His death is heartbreaking. […]

Legal East Asian Markets Are Gutting Africa’s Wildlife

Published by the Environmental News Service CAPE TOWN, South Africa, March 15, 2018 (ENS) – Quite apart from the decimation of illegal poaching, legal export to Asian markets is tearing the wild heart out of Africa. Each year thousands of tonnes of live animals, bones, skins and meat head East in a plunder with no […]

Mosquito & Tick-borne Viruses Thrive on Climate Change

Published by the Environmental News Service BRUSSELS, Belgium, March 19, 2018 (ENS) – Enabled by climate change, international travel and international trade, disease-bearing insects are spreading to ever-wider parts of the world. They have existed in Africa and Asia for many years and are now becoming more widespread. Read the full article at: http://ens-newswire.com/2018/03/19/90411/

Scientists to Florida’s Flamingos: Welcome Home

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund A flamingo in Fort Myers, Florida © Ray Hennessy With stilts for legs and necks as long as your arm, American flamingos can stand nearly five feet tall. When it’s time to breed, these coral-colored birds hustle about in perfectly orchestrated dance groups that are both hilarious and […]

​​Interior and National Park Service Announces $12.6 Million in Grants to Preserve African American Civil Rights History

Published by the Department of the Interior The grants will go to 51 projects in 24 states that preserve sites and highlight stories related to the African American struggle for equality in the 20th century. Read the full article at: https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/interior-and-national-park-service-announces-126-million-grants-preserve-african

Week 59: Trump Called Elephant Hunting a Horror Show. Now He Wants a Front-Row Seat.

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Welcome to our weekly Trump v. Earth column, in which onEarth reviews the environment-related shenanigans of President Trump and his allies. See No Science, Hear No Science The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Science Advisory Board, which used to meet six to eight times annually to ensure that the […]

COALLUSION: The US and Japan’s Global Pro-Pollution Agenda

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund In US Energy Secretary Rick Perry’s opening address at the CERAweek conference, he tried to garner interest for a global pro-fossil fuel alliance. This misguided initiative, supported wholeheartedly by Japan’s Prime Minister Abe, is yet another way Perry is trying to bail out the coal companies. How does […]

Across Mozambique and Tanzania, women show us how to improve communities and protect our planet

Published by the World Wildlife Fund As WWF works with communities around the world to preserve habitats, wildlife, and natural resources, we know that it is critical to engage both women and men for the best results—environmentally, socially, and economically. In sub-Saharan Africa, women make up at least half of subsistence, smallholder farmers, yet have far […]

A Tale of Two EPAs

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Homes next to an oil refinery in Wilmington, California Citizen of the Planet/Alamy Sometimes you really do have to stop and wonder what U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt is thinking. And once you do, the conclusions you inevitably draw can be so frustrating that you just […]

Ten Facts about Big Cats on World Wildlife Day

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund So, what’s up with big cats? First, let’s understand what we’re talking about when we talk about big cats. I’m not talking about fat cats. Source: Wikipedia Commons Wikipedia Commons And I’m not talking about someone wearing a top hat and walking around with a bag of money. […]

A Conversation with Dr. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson

Published by Ocean Conservancy A few months ago, I wrote a blog about searching for traces of Dr. Roger Arliner Young’s legacy on her alma mater, Howard University’s campus and coming up empty handed. Despite being the first African-American woman to earn her doctorate in zoology, her absence speaks volumes about equity, diversity and inclusion not […]

Accelerating Global Energy Access

Published by Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions at Duke University Conversation during the launch of Duke University’s Energy Access Project on February 23, 2018. Storified by · Mon, Feb 26 2018 16:43:03 At 8:20 a.m. programming for Accelerating Global Energy Access begins. @jp_phillips10 of @NichInstitute leads us off. #EAPLaunch — Nicholas Institute · Fri, Feb […]

Q & A with Environmental Journalist Mona Samari

Published by Ocean Conservancy The Ocean Sciences Meeting in Portland, Oregon, had a strong focus on science and communication. While I was there, I spoke with someone whose work relies on both. Mona Samari is an investigative journalist from Tunisia who works on ocean issues. Samari answered several questions about what motivates her. What do you […]

Driving the Market for Heat Pumps in the Northeast

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund This blog is co-authored with Emily Levin, Vermont Energy Investment Corporation Northeastern states are developing the market for super-efficient electric heat pumps to warm and cool homes and businesses, enabling a significant reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from buildings in the region. A new report commissioned by […]

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