tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/ecological%20services1 ecological services news from mongabay.com 2013-05-18T04:38:43Z tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11436 2013-05-15T17:37:00Z 2013-05-18T04:38:43Z How Business and Society Thrive by Investing in Nature - An interview with Mark Tercek <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay-images.s3.amazonaws.com/13/0515tercek150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In 2008, The Nature Conservancy (TNC) surprised the conservation world when it selected Mark Tercek, an investment banker at Goldman Sachs, as its new president and CEO. For people familiar with Tercek, however, the move made perfect sense: he was a leading figure in Goldman's efforts to pursue new environmental policies. While at the helm of TNC, Mark Tercek has continued his focus on ecosystem services or attributing economic value to nature. In his new book, Nature’s Fortune, Mark discusses the fruit of this work. Rhett Butler 38.882748 -77.112308 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11398 2013-05-09T18:13:00Z 2013-05-09T18:21:34Z Scientists discover that marine animals disperse seagrass Lesser known than coral reefs, marine seagrass ecosystems are rich in biodiversity and are powerhouses when it comes to sequestering carbon dioxide. Yet, much remains unknown about the ecology of seagrass beds, including detailed information on how seagrass spread their seeds and colonize new area. Now a recent study in <i>Marine Ecology Progress Series</i> documents that several species of marine animal are key to dispersing seagrass, overturning the assumption that seagrass was largely dispersed by abiotic methods (such as wind and waves). Jeremy Hance 37.644685 -76.070252 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11316 2013-04-29T16:55:00Z 2013-04-29T17:08:18Z Europe bans pesticides linked to bee collapse The EU has banned three neonicotinoid pesticides (imidacloprid, clothianidin and thiamethoxam) linked to the decline of bees for two years. The ban will apply to all flowering crops, such as corn, rape seed, and sunflowers. The move follows a flood of recent studies, some high-profile, that have linked neonicotinoid pesticides, which employ nicotine-like chemicals, to the widespread decline of bees seen both in Europe and North America. Jeremy Hance 46.83765 3.799438 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11315 2013-04-29T15:39:00Z 2013-04-29T16:02:22Z What if companies actually had to compensate society for environmental destruction? <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/kenya/150/kenya_0414.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The environment is a public good. We all share and depend on clean water, a stable atmosphere, and abundant biodiversity for survival, not to mention health and societal well-being. But under our current global economy, industries can often destroy and pollute the environment&#8212;degrading public health and communities&#8212;without paying adequate compensation to the public good. Economists call this process "externalizing costs," i.e. the cost of environmental degradation in many cases is borne by society, instead of the companies that cause it. A new report from TEEB (The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity), conducted by Trucost, highlights the scale of the problem: unpriced natural capital (i.e. that which is not taken into account by the global market) was worth $7.3 trillion in 2009, equal to 13 percent of that year's global economic output. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11169 2013-04-04T19:41:00Z 2013-04-04T19:50:05Z Greener neighborhoods have less violent crime Turn your neighborhood green and it may prevent violent crime in the long run, according to a new study in <i>Landscape and Urban Planning</i>, which found that violent crimes (assaults, robberies, and burglaries) occurred less often in greener areas of Philadelphia. The connection between greener neighborhoods and less violent crime even stood up after researchers accounted for education, poverty, and population levels. Jeremy Hance 39.935013 -75.165939 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11164 2013-04-04T14:32:00Z 2013-04-04T20:33:36Z An insidious threat to tropical forests: over-hunting endangers tree species in Asia and Africa <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/sabah_3131.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A fruit falls to the floor in a rainforest. It waits. And waits. Inside the fruit is a seed, and like most seeds in tropical forests, this one needs an animal&#8212;a good-sized animal&#8212;to move it to a new place where it can germinate and grow. But it may be waiting in vain. Hunting and poaching has decimated many mammal and bird populations across the tropics, and according to two new studies the loss of these important seed-disperser are imperiling the very nature of rainforests. Jeremy Hance 4.199107 114.041848 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11155 2013-04-03T13:00:00Z 2013-04-03T13:23:38Z Domesticated bees do not replace declining wild insects as agricultural pollinators <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0403.Squash-bee-Peponapis-sp.-and-cucumber-beetles-in-cucumber-flower.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Sprinkled with pollen, buzzing bees fly from one blossom to another, collecting sweet nectar from brilliantly colored flowers. Bees tend to symbolize the pollination process, but there are many wild insects that carry out the same function. Unfortunately, wild insect populations are in decline, and, according to a recent study, adding more honey bees may not be a viable solution. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/11021 2013-03-11T14:33:00Z 2013-04-03T13:26:35Z Seeing the forest through the elephants: slaughtered elephants taking rainforest trees with them <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0311.Omphalocarpum-sp.-showing-large-fruits-on-the-trunk.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Elephants are vanishing. The booming illegal ivory trade is decimating the world's largest land animal, but no place has been harder hit than the Congo basin and its forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis). The numbers are staggering: a single park in Gabon, Minkebe National Park, has seen 11,100 forest elephants killed in the last eight years; Okapi Faunal Reserve in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has lost 75 percent of its elephants in fifteen years; and a new study in PLoS ONE estimates that in total 60 percent of the world's forest elephants have been killed in the last decade alone. But what does that mean for the Congo forest? Jeremy Hance -2.657738 20.834656 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10983 2013-03-05T23:01:00Z 2013-03-05T23:17:33Z Warnings of global ecological tipping points may be overstated <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/sabah/150/sabah_2092.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>There's little evidence that the Earth is nearing a global ecological tipping point, according to a new Trends in Ecology and Evolution paper that is bound to be controversial. The authors argue that despite numerous warnings that the Earth is headed toward an ecological tipping point due to environmental stressors, such as habitat loss or climate change, it's unlikely this will occur anytime soon&#8212;at least not on land. The paper comes with a number of caveats, including that a global tipping point could occur in marine ecosystems due to ocean acidification from burning fossil fuels. In addition, regional tipping points, such as the Arctic ice melt or the Amazon rainforest drying out, are still of great concern. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10811 2013-02-05T19:49:00Z 2013-02-05T20:03:30Z EU pushes ban on pesticides linked to bee downfall <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0205.800px-Bees_Collecting_Pollen_2004-08-14.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Following a flood of damning research on the longterm impact of neonicotinoid pesticides on bee colonies, the EU is proposing a two year ban on the popular pesticides for crops that attract bees, such as corn, sunflower, oil seed rape, cotton. The proposal comes shortly after European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) released a report that found neonicotinoid pesticides posed a "number of risks" to bees. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10790 2013-01-30T18:29:00Z 2013-01-30T18:46:42Z Featured video: the miracle of mangroves Mangroves are among the most important ecosystems in the world: they provide nurseries for fish, protect coastlines against dangerous tropical storms, mitigate marine erosion, store massive amounts of carbon, and harbor species found no-where else. However, they are vanishing at astonishing rates: experts say around 35 percent of the world's mangroves were lost in just twenty years (1990 to 2010). Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10789 2013-01-30T17:19:00Z 2013-01-30T18:44:49Z Controversial research outlines physics behind how forests may bring rain <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/sabah/150/sabah_1962.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>It took over two-and-a-half-years for the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics to finally accept a paper outlining a new meteorological hypothesis in which condensation, not temperature, drives winds. If proven correct, the hypothesis could have massive ramifications on global policy&#8212;not to mention meteorology&#8212;as essentially the hypothesis means that the world's forest play a major role in driving precipitation from the coast into a continent's interior. The theory, known as the biotic pump, was first developed in 2006 by two Russian scientists, Victor Gorshkov and Anastassia Makarieva of the St. Petersburg Nuclear Physics, but the two have faced major pushback and delays in their attempt to put the theory before the greater scientific community. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10773 2013-01-28T16:52:00Z 2013-01-28T17:22:34Z Over $8 billion invested in watersheds in 2011 Unlike cars, hamburgers, and computers, clean drinking water is a requirement for human survival. In a bid to safeguard this essential resource, more and more nations are moving toward protecting ecosystems, such as forests, wetlands, and streams. In fact, according to a new report by Forest Trends' Ecosystem Marketplace, nations spent $8.17 billion in 2011 to secure freshwater by conserving watersheds. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10761 2013-01-24T18:06:00Z 2013-01-24T18:16:50Z Forests in Kenya worth much more intact says government report <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/kenya/150/kenya_3984.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Kenya's forests provide greater services and wealth to the nation when they are left standing. A landmark report by The Kenyan Government and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) addresses the importance of forests to the well-being of the nation, putting Kenya among a pioneering group of countries that aim to center development plans around nature-based assets. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10727 2013-01-21T14:53:00Z 2013-01-21T15:01:06Z The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity in Local and Regional Policy - a book review The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity in Local and Regional Policy, edited by Heidi Wittmar and Haripriya Gundimeda, provides thoughtful and actionable approaches to integrate nature’s benefits into decision-making frameworks for local and regional policy and public management institutions. Filled with numerous case studies, The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity in Local and Regional Policy, delivers a compendium of concepts and ideas. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10683 2013-01-14T14:32:00Z 2013-01-14T14:41:50Z Scary caterpillar fungus could lead to new cancer drug <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/13/0114.675px-Cordyceps_Sinensis.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Cordyceps sinensis, commonly known as caterpillar fungus, may be a groundbreaking new treatment for a number of life-threatening conditions including asthma, kidney failure and cancer according to a paper recently published by The RNA Society. If you’re a caterpillar of the Tibetan Plateau, the fungus Cordyceps is your worst nightmare. It hits you when you’re most vulnerable, during hibernation. You can try to stay awake, but on the Tibetan plateau, which reaches −40 degrees Celsius during the winter, you’ll have to hibernate sooner or later, and the fungus will be waiting for you. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10479 2012-11-29T14:26:00Z 2013-02-05T15:09:09Z World has lost half its wetlands <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/brazil/150/brazil_1314.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Half of the worlds wetlands have been destroyed in just the last 100 years, says a new report. Published by the Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB), the report found that of the 25 million square kilometers of wetlands that existed in 1900 just 12.8 million square kilometers now remain. The rate of destruction varies geographically with notable loses in East Asia running at 1.6 per cent per year. In places where aquaculture, over-exploitation (e.g. unsustainable harvesting of fish) and storm damage have been severe, the rate of destruction can be as high as 80 percent. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10478 2012-11-29T13:47:00Z 2012-11-29T13:52:06Z Investors shouldn't ignore financial risk of environmental damage Environmental damage poses a long-ignored risk to sovereign bonds, according to a new report by the UNEP FI (The United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative) and the Global Footprint Network. The report, <i>E-RISC Report, A New Angle on Sovereign Credit Risk</i>, finds that the overuse of natural resources and their degradation has put considerable, and largely unrecognized, risk against national economies. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10455 2012-11-27T16:47:00Z 2012-11-27T16:58:18Z Legislation leaves future of world's largest temperate rainforest up in the air <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/20110625RedBluff-4660.tongassinterview.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Although unlikely to pass anytime in the near term, recurring legislation that would hand over 80,000 acres of the Tongass Rainforest to a Native-owned logging corporation has put local communities on guard in Southeast Alaska. "The legislation privatizes a public resource. It takes land that belongs to all of us, and that all of us have a say in the use and management of, and it gives that land to a private for-profit corporation," Andrew Thoms, Executive Director of the Sitka Conservation Society, told mongabay.com in a recent interview. Jeremy Hance 59.481358 -139.296112 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10442 2012-11-20T20:47:00Z 2012-12-02T22:24:11Z Wolves, mole rats, and nyala: the struggle to conserve Ethiopia's highlands <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/GiantMoleRat_MartinHarvey.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>There is a place in the world where wolves live almost entirely off mountain rodents, lions dwell in forests, and freshwater rolls downstream to 12 million people, but the place&#8212;Ethiopia's Bale Mountains National Park&#8212;remains imperiled by a lack of legal boundaries and encroachment by a growing human population. "Much of the land in Africa above 3,000 meters has been altered or degraded to the point where it isn’t able to perform most of the ecosystem functions that it is designed to do. Bale, although under threat and already impacted to a degree by anthropogenic activities, is still able to perform its most important ecosystem functions, and as such ranks among only a handful of representative alpine ecosystems in Africa." Jeremy Hance 6.913252 39.599059 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10318 2012-10-25T22:20:00Z 2012-10-25T22:39:41Z Future of the Tongass forest lies in salmon, not clear-cut logging <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/TongassStream(byIanMajszak).150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The Parnell administration's Timber Task Force recently unveiled a proposal to carve out two million acres of the Tongass National Forest for clear-cut logging under a state-managed "logging trust." The stated goal is to revive Southeast Alaska’s timber industry that collapsed two decades ago amid changing market conditions, logging cutbacks and evolving public opinion about timber harvesting on national forests. Jeremy Hance 59.481358 -139.296112 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10279 2012-10-18T18:45:00Z 2012-10-18T19:06:10Z India pledges over $60 million for biodiversity, but experts say much more needed The Prime Minister of India, Manmohan Singh, pledged around $50 million (Rs. 264 crore) for domestic biodiversity protection, reports the Hindu. The pledge came this week at the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) meeting in Hyderabad, India. The CBD has set bold goals on stemming the rate of extinction worldwide, but these have suffered from a lack of funding. India also said it had set aside another $10 million (Rs. 50 crore) for biodiversity projects abroad. Still, such funds are far below what scientists say is necessary to stem ongoing extinctions. Jeremy Hance 17.384716 78.494453 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10265 2012-10-11T20:12:00Z 2012-10-11T20:28:37Z Saving the world's species from oblivion will cost around $80 billion a year, but still a good deal If the world is to conserve its wealth of life&#8212;species great and small, beautiful and terrible, beloved and unknown&#8212;it will cost from $3.41-4.76 billion annually in targeted conservation funds, according to a new study in Science. But that's not all, the cost of protecting and managing the world's conservation areas was estimated at an additional $76.1 billion a year. Jeremy Hance 17.375542 78.480034 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10231 2012-10-04T15:04:00Z 2012-10-04T15:30:16Z Forest destruction leads to more floods in temperate regions Keeping forests standing would lessen both the number and size of spring floods in temperate regions, according to a new study in Water Resources Research, by slowing seasonal snow melts. In deforested areas, snow melts faster due to a lack of shade causing at least twice as many, and potentially up to four times as many, flood events. The new research highlights a largely unknown ecosystem service provided by temperate forests: flood mitigation. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10172 2012-09-18T15:02:00Z 2012-12-02T22:29:16Z Learning to live with elephants in Malaysia <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/ahimsa.Jerek-498.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Humans and elephants have a lot in common: both are highly intelligent, intensely social, and both are capable of having a massive impact on their local environments. Given their similarities, it might not be surprising that elephants and human have often run afoul of one another. Conflict between these two great species has probably been going on for thousands of years, but as human populations have grown dramatically, elephant populations have been crippled and forced into smaller-and-smaller pockets. No-where is this more true than in Southeast Asia. Jeremy Hance 4.757098 102.441788 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10169 2012-09-17T21:41:00Z 2012-09-17T23:15:19Z Arachnopocalypse: with birds away, the spiders play in Guam <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/browntreesnake.47588.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The island of Guam is drowning in spiders. New research in the open-access journal PLOS ONE has found that in the wet season, Guam's arachnid population booms to around 40 times higher than adjacent islands. Scientists say this is because Guam, a U.S. territory in the Pacific, has lost its insect-eating forest birds. Guam's forests were once rich in birdlife until the invasion of non-native brown tree snake (Boiga irregularis) in the 1940s decimated biodiverse bird communities. Now, the island is not only overrun with snakes, but spiders too. Jeremy Hance 13.462418 144.778404 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10147 2012-09-13T17:01:00Z 2013-02-05T15:18:56Z Bird diversity at risk if 'agroforests' replaced with farmland <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/Orange-billed-nightingale-thrush1.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Agroforests contain much higher levels of bird diversity than their open agricultural counterparts, according to new research from the University of Utah. If large forests and agroforests continue to be replaced by simple open farms, bird communities will become much less specialized and entire groups may become extinct. Important roles for birds, such as pollination, pest control or seed dispersal, may remain unfilled if ongoing trends toward open agriculture continues and biodiversity decreases. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10108 2012-09-07T17:41:00Z 2012-09-07T17:43:37Z Mangroves protect coastal areas against storm damage Mangroves reduce wave height by as much as 66 percent over 100 meters of forest providing a vital buffer against the impacts of storms, tsunamis, and hurricanes, according to a new report published by The Nature Conservancy and Wetlands International. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10100 2012-09-06T00:13:00Z 2012-09-06T00:51:33Z Amazon deforestation could trigger drop in rainfall across South America <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/colombia/150/colombia_0727.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Deforestation could cause rainfall across the Amazon rainforest to drop precipitously, warns a new study published in the journal <i>Nature</i>. Using a computer model that accounts for forest cover and rainfall patterns, Dominick Spracklen of the University of Leeds and colleagues estimate that large-scale deforestation in the Amazon could reduce basin-wide rainfall 12 percent during the wet season and 21 percent in the dry season by 2050. Localized swings would be greater. Rhett Butler -3.946461 -53.718567 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10085 2012-09-04T17:31:00Z 2012-09-04T17:32:20Z Rainforest fungi, plants fuel rainfall Salt compounds released by fungi and plants in the Amazon rainforest have an important role in the formation of rain clouds, reports research published in the journal <i>Science</i>. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10069 2012-08-28T16:45:00Z 2012-12-02T22:25:08Z Private reserve safeguards newly discovered frogs in Ecuadorian cloud forest <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay-images/12/N.-lasgralariasmb.lasgralarias.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Although it covers only 430 hectares (1,063 acres) of the little-known Chocó forest in Ecuador, the private reserve las Gralarias in Ecuador is home to an incredible explosion of life. Long known as a birder's paradise, the Reserva las Gralarias is now making a name for itself as a hotspot for new and endangered amphibians, as well as hundreds of stunning species of butterfly and moth. This is because the reserve is set in the perfect place for evolution to run wild: cloud forest spanning vast elevational shifts. "The pacific slope cloud forests [...] are among the most endangered habitats in the world," explains Reserva las Gralarias' founder, Jane Lyons, in a recent interview with mongabay.com. Jeremy Hance 0.00412 -78.788681 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/10052 2012-08-22T18:50:00Z 2012-08-22T19:11:49Z Human society surpasses 'nature's budget' today As of today, August 22nd, humanity has overshot the world's annual ecological budget, according to the Global Footprint Network, which tracks global consumption related to resource availability and sustainability. The organization looks at a variety of data including the world's fisheries, forests, agriculture, water, mining, and greenhouse gas emissions. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9956 2012-08-02T18:34:00Z 2012-08-02T19:41:53Z Mangroves should be part of solution to climate change Mangroves are under-appreciated assets in the effort to slow climate change, argues a new <i>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences</i> paper which makes a argument for including the coastal ecosystems in carbon credit programs. Rhett Butler tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9935 2012-07-30T15:32:00Z 2012-08-16T14:06:19Z Guyana rainforests secure trust fund <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/129230anteater-XL.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The nation of Guyana sports some of South America's most intact and least-imperiled rainforests, and a new $8.5 million trust fund hopes to keep it that way. The Guyanese government has teamed up with Germany and Conservation International (CI) to create a long-term trust fund to manage the country's protected areas system (PAS). Jeremy Hance 6.79724 -58.147945 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9875 2012-07-23T11:27:00Z 2012-12-02T22:29:59Z Saving 'Avatar Grove': the battle to preserve old-growth forests in British Columbia <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Ancient_Forest_Clearcut_Photo_TJ_Watt.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A picture is worth a thousand words: this common adage comes instantly to mind when viewing T.J. Watt's unforgettable photos of lost trees. For years, Watt has been photographing the beauty of Vancouver Island's ancient temperate rainforests, and documenting their loss to clearcut logging. The photographer and environmental activist recently helped co-found the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA), a group devoted to saving the island's and British Columbia's (BC) last old-growth while working with the logging industry to adopt sustainable practices. This February the organization succeeded in saving Avatar Grove&#8212;which was only discovered in 2009&#8212;from being clearcut. The grove, a rare stand of massive and ancient trees named after the popular eco science-fiction movie, has become a popular tourist destination, providing a new economic incentive for communities to protect rather than cut Canada's last great forests. Jeremy Hance 49.639177 -125.388794 tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9803 2012-07-10T13:41:00Z 2012-07-10T14:07:38Z 2,600 scientists: climate change killing the world's coral reefs <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/maui/150/maui_0938.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In an unprecedented show of concern, 2,600 (and rising) of the world's top marine scientists have released a Consensus Statement on Climate Change and Coral Reefs that raises alarm bells about the state of the world's reefs as they are pummeled by rising temperatures and ocean acidification, both caused by greenhouse gas emissions. The statement was released at the 12th International Coral Reef Symposium. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9685 2012-06-20T15:42:00Z 2012-06-20T17:39:28Z Congolese experts needed to protect Congo Basin rainforests <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Congo20112-058-lower-res.forest.river.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>This summer, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is expected to approve a new higher education strategy which the country has developed with the World Bank and other international donors. The shape of this educational reform initiative will be critical to Congo's future in many ways. It could finally offer Congo’s long-suffering people a route into the 21st century. It will also help determine the future of the DRC’s forests. Nearly half of the Congo Basin’s remaining rainforest is in the DRC&#8212;yet the critical role of Congolese experts in forestry, agricultural science, wildlife management and other rural sciences in protecting this forest is not widely recognized. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9697 2012-06-19T19:33:00Z 2012-06-19T22:21:24Z Rio+20 and economic perils in Europe: opportunity for linkage This month, momentous events will occur on the global scene that will set the tone for whether 2012 will be a hopeful year or one in which dislocations and disconnects are further exacerbated by political failings. The EU will decide on its fiscal and monetary union that hinges on Greece’s recent June election, which backed the political party that wants to stay in the Euro zone, but insists on adjustments to the earlier-negotiated economic rescue package. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9649 2012-06-11T17:35:00Z 2012-06-18T00:22:19Z Should we devote 2014 to wilderness? <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://www.mongabay.com/images/gabon/150/gabon_2845.JPG" align="left"/></td></tr></table>American writer and philosopher, Henry David Thoreau once said, "In wilderness is the preservation of the world." Anyone who has spent time in vast untouched wild space likely understands Thoreau's comment. Yet wilderness everywhere&#8212;already vanishing&#8212;remains imperiled by a variety of threats. To draw attention to the importance of the keeping wilderness in the world, PAN Parks, an organization that works to protect wilderness in Europe, has proposed to make 2014 the International Year of Wilderness. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9646 2012-06-11T13:32:00Z 2012-12-02T22:19:13Z Forgotten Species: the wonder-inducing giant clam <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Ardea-Licuanan-IMG_0468.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The first time I ever saw a giant clam was at a ride in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom. My family and I piled into the Nautilus submersible at the 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea: Submarine Voyage and descended into the playtime depths. While we saw sea turtles, sharks, lobsters, mermaids, and even a sea monster, the creature that lingered in my mind most was the giant clam, raising and closing its pearly shell in the weedy abyss. Of course, none of these aquatic wonders were real&#8212;they were animatronics&#8212;but to a child with a vivid imagination they stirred within me the deep mystery of the boundless ocean, and none more so than that monstrous clam with its gaping maw. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9644 2012-06-11T12:35:00Z 2012-06-18T00:23:06Z Ten African nations pledge to transform their economies to take nature into account Last month ten African nations, led by Botswana, pledged to incorporate "natural capital" into their economies. Natural capital, which seeks to measure the economic worth of the services provided by ecosystems and biodiversity&#8212;for example pollination, clean water, and carbon&#8212;is a nascent, but growing, method to curtail environmental damage and ensure more sustainable development. Dubbed the Gaborone Declaration, the pledge was signed by Botswana, Liberia, Namibia, Mozambique, Rwanda, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, and Tanzania following a two day summit. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9635 2012-06-07T21:22:00Z 2012-12-02T22:39:11Z Scientists: if we don't act now we're screwed <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/peru/150/peru_aerial_0166.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Scientists warn that the Earth may be reaching a planetary tipping point due to a unsustainable human pressures, while the UN releases a new report that finds global society has made significant progress on only four environmental issues out of ninety in the last twenty years. Climate change, overpopulation, overconsumption, and ecosystem destruction could lead to a tipping point that causes planetary collapse, according to a new paper in Nature by 22 scientists. The collapse may lead to a new planetary state that scientists say will be far harsher for human well-being, let alone survival. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9631 2012-06-06T17:07:00Z 2012-06-18T00:23:47Z Scientists to Rio+20: save biodiversity to save ourselves <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/indonesia-java/150/java_0654.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>World leaders need to do much more to protect the Earth's millions of species for the services they provide, according to a new scientific consensus statement in Nature based on over 1,000 research papers. Written by 17 top ecologists, the statement points out that despite growing knowledge of the importance of biodiversity for human well-being and survival, species continue to vanish at alarming rates. The statement comes just weeks before the UN'S Rio+20 Summit on Sustainable Development, which is supposed to chart a path for a less impoverished and more equitable world including an emphasis on greater environmental protections, but which has been marred by a lack of ambition. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9625 2012-06-05T14:44:00Z 2012-06-05T15:03:05Z Highest priority conservation sites provide essential services for people too <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Santa-Marta47-XL.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Preventing the extinction of the world's most imperiled species would also bring untold benefits to people according to new research in the open-access journal PLoS ONE. Looking at the world's nearly 600 Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE) sites, the study found that preserving these ecosystems would benefit humans even beyond preserving biodiversity, including safeguarding freshwater, carbon storage, and protecting cultural diversity. AZE sites are identified as habitats containing one or more species listed as Endangered or Critically Endangered by the IUCN Red List, in which the survival of the species is highly dependent on the conservation of the ecosystem in question. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9547 2012-05-22T17:52:00Z 2012-05-22T18:01:41Z Seagrass beds store 20 billion tons of carbon <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/seagrass.meadows.mad.128232-L.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Just below the ocean's surface lies a carbon powerhouse: seagrass meadows. New research in Nature Geoscience estimates that the world's seagrass meadows conservatively store 19.9 billion metric tons of carbon, even though the threatened marine ecosystems make up only 0.2 percent of Earth's surface. The findings lend support to the idea that seagrass protection and restoration could play a major role in mitigating climate change. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9523 2012-05-15T21:00:00Z 2012-05-15T21:43:58Z Consumption, population, and declining Earth: wake-up call for Rio+20 <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/new_mexico_061.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Currently, human society is consuming natural resources as if there were one-and-a-half Earths, and not just a single blue planet, according to the most recent Living Planet Report released today. If governments and societies continue with 'business-as-usual' practices, we could be consuming three years of natural resources in 12 months by 2050. Already, this ecological debt is decimating wildlife populations worldwide, disproportionately hurting the world's poor and most vulnerable, threatening imperative resources like food and water, heating up the atmosphere, and risking global well-being. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9518 2012-05-15T15:32:00Z 2012-05-17T01:55:24Z Wildlife in the tropics plummets by over 60 percent <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/animals_02478.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In 48 years wildlife populations in the tropics, the region that holds the bulk of the world's biodiversity, have fallen by an alarming 61 percent, according to the most recent update to the Living Planet Index. Produced by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), the index currently tracks almost 10,000 populations of 2,688 vertebrate species (including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish) in both the tropics and temperate regions. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9467 2012-05-02T17:33:00Z 2012-05-02T17:55:21Z Biodiversity loss cripples plant growth <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/indonesia-java/150/java_0760.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>For decades scientists have been warning that if global society continues with "business-as-usual" practices the result will be a mass extinction of the world's species, an extinction event some researchers say is already underway. However, the direct impacts of global biodiversity loss has been more difficult to compile. Now a new study in Nature finds that loss of plant biodiversity could cripple overall plant growth. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9431 2012-04-23T16:44:00Z 2012-04-23T16:58:21Z Doing good and staying sane amidst the global environmental crisis <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/wl_Sarah_PandaBase_5387(2).150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Several years ago while teaching a course in environmental science a student raised her hand during our discussion of the circumstances of modern ecological collapse and posed the question, "what happens when there is no more environment?" At the time I had no response and stumbled to formulate some sort of reply based on the typical aseptic, apathetic logic with which we are programmed through education in the scientific tradition: that there will always be some sort of environment, that life has prospered through the five previous mass extinctions and that something will survive. While this may be the case, the time has come for more of us to consider the broader spectrum of what global humanity is facing as the planet’s ecology is decimated. Jeremy Hance tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/9425 2012-04-22T14:46:00Z 2012-04-23T20:56:47Z Featured video: How to save the Amazon The past ten years have seen unprecedented progress in fighting deforestation in the Amazon. Indigenous rights, payments for ecosystem services, government enforcement, satellite imagery, and a spirit of cooperation amongst old foes has resulted in a decline of 80 percent in Brazil's deforestation rates. Jeremy Hance