More than 200 manatees killed in Florida by ‘red tide’ algae

“Wildlife officials in Florida are facing an especially stiff challenge this year in saving the state’s manatee population from a poisonous brand of algae that has spread around the coast. CBS News reported on Friday that 207 manatees have died this year after being infected by toxins released by ‘red tide’ algae. The poisonous materials found in the algae attach themselves to the manatees’ food, and can paralyze manatees after digestion, causing them to drown. ‘When you do find them it’s almost too late,’ said Virginia Edmonds, director of a manatee critical care facility at Lowery Park Zoo in Tampa. ‘They’re out there struggling. They’re going to end up drowning.'” Continue reading

Continue Reading More than 200 manatees killed in Florida by ‘red tide’ algae

Constitutional Liberty Coalition Has New Resources to Share and New Information Streams

Constitutional Liberty Coalition is expanding our information streams and creating new ways to share information. Here is a button to link back to our main website on your website. Our contributor sites are featured in the footer on the home page along with their own sharing buttons. We would of course appreciate you linking to us and to our network providers too. Please share IF you are in agreement and find that our work complements yours. We are all for limited constitutional government. We also share a love for life and for liberty as well as a deep desire to please our heavenly Father. We provide news and information from activists on the move. We are all grassroots and an all volunteer network.

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Continue Reading Constitutional Liberty Coalition Has New Resources to Share and New Information Streams

Plants use underground fungus network to send ‘distress signals’ to each other

“The scientists isolated the plants from each other above ground, covering them with bags and thereby preventing airborne chemicals (one form of plant communication) from traveling from one plant to the other. Then, the team introduced the aphids. In the plants that were connected by fungi, when a single plant was infected with aphids, the other two plants began to mount their chemical defenses, secreting aphid-repelling substances that also attract the wasps that feed on aphid larvae. The plants that were not connected by mycorrhizae were apparently not warned of the attack on the single plant in their group because they secreted no defensive chemicals.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Plants use underground fungus network to send ‘distress signals’ to each other

Scientists: Plants communicate with one another through ‘nanomechanical vibrations’

“A study reveals that plants are able to communicate with each other even when light, scent and touch have been removed from the equation, leading scientists to speculate that there’s a wholly different mechanism they use to encourage each other’s growth. It’s long been known that planting basil near other species can tend to encourage its neighbor’s growth, and it’s not new that plants communicate with each other through shade, chemical smells, root structures and other forms of touch. By planting chili pepper next to basil, then separating them from all known methods of plant interaction, the chili plant still grew as if it knew the basil was there.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Scientists: Plants communicate with one another through ‘nanomechanical vibrations’

Millions spent to begin razing of 7,000 abandoned properties in Dayton

“Kevin Powell, the city’s acting manager of housing inspection, says officials plan to use $5.2 million to raze 475 abandoned properties by the end of September. The city knocked down 1,172 abandoned structures – single-family homes, strip malls, multi-unit buildings, commercial properties etc. — between 2009 and 2012, using money that included $8 million in federal funds. The average cost for a demolition, which includes asbestos removal, is $11,000. Abandon properties have a negative impact on the city’s tax collection, which are used to remove abandon properties and pay for other city services. ‘It’s a complete circle that keeps eating upon itself,’ Powell said.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Millions spent to begin razing of 7,000 abandoned properties in Dayton

Wildlife trafficker kills 5 crocodiles, 90 rare birds as police descend on his compound

“Five dead crocodiles, 14 critically endangered turtles and a cache of other rare species have been found in the home of a suspected wildlife trader in one of the Philippines’ biggest slums, the government said Friday. The juvenile saltwater crocodiles, as well as 90 birds, were killed by the trader or his aides shortly before police and environment officials raided the place Wednesday, Environment Secretary Ramon Paje said. He denounced the unnamed suspects’ ‘cruelty’. ‘What’s particularly alarming about this poaching incident is that there were reports that most of these endangered animals were intentionally killed to avoid detection by authorities,’ Paje said in a statement.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Wildlife trafficker kills 5 crocodiles, 90 rare birds as police descend on his compound

Government plans to euthanize hundreds of desert tortoises after budget cuts to refuge

“The Desert Tortoise Conservation Center — a 23-year-old federal refuge in Las Vegas for the threatened species — has collected only $290,000 from its primary funding source of local developer fees over the last 11 months, the AP reports. The center can’t count on the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or Nevada Department of Wildlife to make up the shortfall on the center’s $1 million annual operating budget because of federal and state budget constraints. The result? Center administrators are planning to close the 220-acre facility in 2014 and euthanize about half of the 1400 tortoises under their protection.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Government plans to euthanize hundreds of desert tortoises after budget cuts to refuge

Smog crisis creates ‘apocalyptic’ conditions in Singapore

“Fast-food deliveries have been cancelled, the army has suspended field training and even Singapore’s top marathon runner has retreated as residents try to protect themselves from the smog that has descended on the city-state. In Singapore’s worst environmental crisis in more than a decade, the skyscrapers lining the Marina Bay financial district were shrouded by thick smoke Thursday as raging forest fires in neighbouring Indonesia’s Sumatra island pushed air pollution levels to an all-time high. The acrid smell of burning wood lingered everywhere, including inside air-conditioned metro trains, and cars were covered with a thin film of grey ash.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Smog crisis creates ‘apocalyptic’ conditions in Singapore