Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Podcast #53: US power plants, Farm in a box + Great Barrier Reef



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. US Environmental Protection Agency's bid to curb emissions from power plants
  2. Inventor in Kenya wants everyone to become farmers
  3. My web picks
  4. UNESCO and Leonardo DiCaprio warn Australia over Great Barrier Reef
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here

The Smallest Farm in the World
Satao - A Legend (Mark Deeble)
Armadillo of the World cup (BBC - Science in Action)

Saturday, 10 May 2014

Podcast #52: Japan whaling ban, Selling human waste + YearsOfLivingDangerously



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. What does the ban on Japan's Antarctic whaling mean?
  2. Selling sewage to help boost sanitation in Kenya
  3. My web picks
  4. Deal to start mining the sea bed in Papua New Guinea
  5. Reviews of the US documentary series Years of Living Dangerously

Saturday, 26 October 2013

Podcast #49: Peru's dolphin cull, making airlines pay for emissions + trees that point to gold


This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. World's 'largest illegal dolphin slaughter'
  2. Battle for control of airline emissions
  3. My top environmental web picks
  4. Banning damaging PIB dumping at sea
  5. Australian bushfires: No climate change link, says PM
  6. Trees that point to gold

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Wednesday, 22 May 2013

Podcast #46: Astronaut Chris Hadfield bows out, Why we should eat more insects + Our vocal ancestors



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Astronaut Chris Hadfield returns to Earth a celebrity
  2. Timetable agreed for ending EU fish discards
  3. Eat insects, says UN
  4. Top picks in environmental news
  5. Peugeot pioneers air-powered car
  6. Report: 97% of scientists agree on man-made global warming
  7. Baboons reveal clues about our vocal ancestors 
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here

Sunday, 7 April 2013

Podcast #45: Is the US oil industry causing quakes? Pope Francis the Green + Teeny weeny froglets



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Can pumping wastewater from the oil industry underground cause earthquakes?
  2. The ExxonMobil pipeline spill in Arkansas
  3. Combatting ash dieback by planting more trees
  4. Stricter sulphur limits for car fuels in the US
  5. Are MSC-labelled fish being mislabelled? (Answer: No)
  6. Will Pope Francis be the greenest pontiff yet?
  7. Breeding frogs in captivity to save a species 

Saturday, 16 March 2013

Episode #44: The battle to stop ivory poaching, Fish fraud in the US + The electric Grand Prix



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Efforts to stop the deepening crisis over ivory poaching
  2. Fish fraud: A third of US products mislabelled
  3. More than 7,500 dead pigs found in Chinese river
  4. Keystone XL passes environmental impact report
  5. Mars Rover finds evidence that life could have existed
  6. 2012 saw second steepest CO2 rise since records began
  7. President Obama appoints environment champions
  8. Should weather forecasters talk about climate change
  9. Formula One to go electric 
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here

Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Back from the dead?

An animal specimen discovered in the basement of the Natural History Museum in London has raised hopes that a species long thought to have been extinct in Australia may still be living in the remote outback.

An echidna in the wild in New Guinea (Tim Laman)

The long-beaked echidna looks like a cross between a platypus and a porcupine, but with the elongated snout of an anteater. It is one of just five mammal species on Earth that lays eggs.

It was thought that the last few animals were living in the rainforests of New Guinea where hunting has driven them to the brink of extinction.

But a surprise discovery in the museum's huge collection of preserved animals has raised the tantalising possibility that they have been living in Australia's remote North-West all along.

Podcast #43: Europe's horse meat scandal, The sound of glaciers + An Australian species back from the dead?



This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Europe's horse meat scandal
  2. EU ministers vote for a phased ban on fish discards
  3. EU plans boost to cap and trade scheme by withholding new permits
  4. Global Ocean Commission formed to look at threats to the High Seas
  5. Chinese businessman offers reward for river dip
  6. The sound of glaciers melting
  7. Museum find raises hopes for 'extinct' Australian oddity
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here

Saturday, 12 January 2013

Japanese restauranteur pays $1.76m for a single tuna


A Japanese restauranteur has paid a record-breaking $1.76 million for a single bluefin tuna. The new record was set at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo.

The amount paid doesn't just reflect the rarity of the catch - although bluefin tuna are increasingly rare - but also the fame and publicity associated with buying the first tuna of the season.

The record was broken just days before new research from the Pew Environment Group showed that bluefin numbers in the Pacific are 96.4% below pre-fishing levels. More worryingly, nine out of ten of all the bluefin tuna being caught today are youngsters who have not yet reproduced.

Here are some photos I took on a visit to the Tsukiji fish market several years ago:

The market is a fascinating place to wander but you have to arrive at 6 or 7am to see any of the action.


The market demonstrated Japan's deep connection with seafood, and especially tuna, like no-where else I visited. Japanese sushi-eaters are extremely attuned to the quality of the tuna they eat.

Each torpedo-like tuna is rolled onto the floor and carefully examined by potential buyers, before being auctioned and packed into ice coffins or carted away.





Podcast #41: Aussie bushfires, A setback for Shell's Arctic drilling plans + Your chance to be an astronaut



 This podcast includes the following stories:
  1. Bushfires engulf southern Australia
  2. Beached Kulluk drilling platform proves a major headache for Shell
  3. Report: Half of the food produced on Earth is wasted
  4. Transocean to plead guilty over Gulf oil spill
  5. Kenya's largest ivory poaching massacre
  6. Lake Ellsworth team downs tools
  7. Ghana bans imports of fridges
  8. Record price paid for bluefin tuna in Japan
  9. Wanted: Volunteers to colonise Mars
Listen to more CoolGreen episodes here