Category Archives: From Around The Web

Liberals & Conservatives Join Fight Against Fracking

By Amy Mall, senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council

As oil and gas production continues to expand by leaps and bounds across the country, more and more people are concerned about the threats to human health and the environment. New organizations are cropping up every place, and their members are not necessarily people who would describe themselves as environmentalists or liberals. Some of these individuals are politically conservative and may even be very supportive of the oil and gas industry or be mineral owners.

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Finally! Good News for the Animal Kingdom

By Andrew Wetzler, director of the Land & Wildlife Program at Natural Resources Defense Council

Ready for some good news?  I sure am.  Particularly when it’s about conserving the wild things that share this planet with us.  From one of the biggest cats in world to the world’s smallest chameleon–which has only just been found–check it out:

  • *Scientists have confirmed the presence of resident snow leopards in Bhutan. The discovery is important, as snow leopards remain a critically endangered animal and it was unclear whether Bhutan had enough viable habitat to support any of the cats.  Check out a video of the leopard, below:

  • *Reuters’ Gopal Sharma profiles Nepal’s efforts to save the Gharial crocodile through a captive breeding program and intensive management. Nepal’s had quite a bit of sucess, too.  While only 100 crocs are left in the wild, that’s double the number a few decades ago.
  • *There’s some good news for the United State’s struggMexican gray wolf puppy (AZDFG)ling Mexican gray wolf population.  Results from a recent wolf census show that population has climbed 16%, and it’s the first time we’ve seen a population increase for two consecutive years since 2003.  Despite this good news, however, there are still only 58 wild grey wolves in Arizona and New Mexico.
  • *The St. Louis Zoo and federal biologists are preparing to reintroduce endangered American burying beetles to Missouri’s Wah-Kon-Tah pprairie.  The Zoo has been raising the beetles for seven years and has over 350.  In a Colombian article covering the reintroduction Bob Merz, director of the Center for American Burying Beetle Conservation at the Saint Louis Zoo, said: “I’ve lived in Missouri my whole life. And when something that used to be found in the wild within my lifetime is not there anymore, there’s something wrong.”  Amen.
  • *Scientists have just discovered an entirely new family of limbless amphibians, that look more like earthworms than frogs of salamanders, while surveying the northeastern India.  Sevens new species have been identified so far.
  • *Scientists also announced the discovery of the world’s smallest chameleon in Madagascar.  And this one (unlike their limbless friends half a world away) are just about as cute as a lizard can get:

world's mallest chameleon (PLOS1)

Finally, because it’s cool:

  • *Scientists have successfully germinated 30,000 year old seeds, found buried in ancient–and now frozen–squirrel mittens in Siberia.  The flower, grown successfully and pictured below, has not been seen on this earth since well before mammoths disappeared from a once grassy and arid ancient Russian steppe.

The New York Fracking Debate: Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

by Kai Olson-Sawyer, research and policy analyst, GRACE Communications

As the last reverberations died from Governor Cuomo’s 2012 resounding New York State of the State address, it must be noted that not a single syllable was uttered about the controversial issue of hydraulic fracturing (fracking). No doubt, Cuomo and his advisors – aware of how inflammatory the topic has become in New York state (NYS) – made the political decision to sidestep it, and his silence spoke volumes. Just outside the Albany convention center where Cuomo was speaking, an anti-fracking rally called loudly for a permanent state ban on the practice. Continue reading