Ocean Quest: The Race To Save The World’s Coral Reefs

Published on Thursday, July 17, 2008 by The Independent/UK

Ocean Quest: The Race To Save The World’s Coral Reefs

Last week, scientists issued their latest, grim assessment of the world’s coral reefs. But as Steve Connor reports from Florida, extraordinary new ocean ‘reseeding’ techniques mean there may still be time to halt – or even reverse – the destruction of mother nature’s marine marvels

Coral reefs are often described as the tropical rainforests of the oceans. But marine biologists sometimes use another analogy: that of the canary in the coalmine. These birds were used by miners as an early warning for lethal gas; corals, too, are extraordinarily sensitive to environmental change. For Nancy Knowlton, a scientist at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum, it’s an apt description: “If that’s the analogy, then the canary has passed out on the floor of the cage. Coral reefs are potentially immortal. They only have to die if we make them.”

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EPA Quietly Releases Climate Change Health Effects Report

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 17, 2008
3:12 PM

CONTACT: Government Accountability Project
Rick Piltz, Climate Science Watch Director
director@climatesciencewatch.org
Dylan Blaylock, Communications Director
202.408.0034 ext. 137, 202.236.3733 cell
dylanb@whistleblower.org
 
EPA Quietly Releases Climate Change Health Effects Report
 
WASHINGTON – July 17 – Today, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a major study by the US Climate Change Science Program synthesizing current scientific knowledge of climate change-induced threats to human health. This information should be critical to the EPA’s previous “endangerment finding” for carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. However, the EPA Office of Air and Radiation, the branch assigned rulemaking responsibility, evidently did not rely on and did not cite the CCSP report.

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American Rivers Proposes Agenda to Overhaul Nation’s Flood Response

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 16, 2008
2:32 PM

CONTACT: American Rivers
Amy Kober, 206-213-0330 x23
 
American Rivers Proposes Agenda to Overhaul Nation’s Flood Response
More Help for Today’s Victims, Prevent Tomorrow’s Victims
 
WASHINGTON – July 16 – As the Midwest continues to recover from June’s devastating floods, American Rivers, the nation’s leading river conservation organization, today released a national agenda for responding to the floods in a manner that both helps today’s victims and prevents tomorrow’s.

“This is the second “500-year flood” in less than two decades and the overwhelming scientific consensus is that climate change means more severe and more frequent storms, including more record-breaking floods,” said Rebecca Wodder, President of American Rivers.  “Clearly business as usual won’t work for the communities struggling to recover from this year’s floods — and the communities at risk in the coming years.” 

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Sea Die-Out Blamed on Volcanoes

Sea Die-Out Blamed on Volcanoes

Undersea volcanic activity has been blamed for a mass extinction in the seas 93 million years ago.

In the so-called “anoxic event” of the late Cretaceous Period, the ocean depths became starved of oxygen, wiping out swathes of marine organisms.

Researchers from the University of Alberta, Canada, found a tell-tale signature of underwater volcanism in rocks dating to the period.
Their findings have been published in the journal Nature.

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