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rbkwp

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consequences of, whats moe important?


A viable jaguar population could be reestablished in the US, but not if the wall is built.”

LIVING WITH JAGUARS
Trump’s Border Wall Would Condemn US Jaguars to Extinction
“A viable jaguar population could be reestablished in the US, but not if the wall is built.”
STEPHEN LEAHY
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/...-wall-would-affect-endangered-species-jaguars



DISGUSTING
minimal payment maybe
afte many years of court action?

Borneo oil spill: Environmental groups and victim's family call for accountability
By Indonesia correspondent Adam Harvey

Posted April 07, 2018 05:05:49

PHOTO: Rohani Baso mourns the death of her husband and says she doesn't know how to care for their daughter without him.(ABC News: Adam Harvey)

RELATED STORY: Deadly oil spill threatening more life and livelihoods off Borneo coast
RELATED STORY: Police question coal carrier crew over Borneo oil spill
RELATED STORY: After days of denials, Indonesian oil company admits responsibility for spill

MAP: Indonesia
Environmental groups want the head of Indonesia's state-owned oil company to be fired over an oil spill that has killed five people and polluted an estimated 80km of Borneo coastline.

Key points:
  • Five local men who were fishing in Balikpapan bay were killed
  • 7,000 hectares of mangroves have been affected by the spill
  • Environmental groups say Pertamina president should be fired


It took five days for Pertamina to admit the spill came from one of its crude oil pipelines.

For days the company claimed the huge quantity of oil in the bay had come from a ship — even though there was no evidence of any ships sinking or running aground.

When the spill ignited, the fire killed five local men who were fishing in Balikpapan bay, including 41-year-old Imam Nurokhim.

His boat was trapped by the burning oil.

His widow Rohani Baso told the ABC that no-one from Pertamina or the local government had contacted her.

PHOTO: It took five days for Pertamina to admit the spill came from one of its crude oil pipelines. (Supplied: Greenpeace)



"I don't know how we're going to continue paying for our daughter," she said. "We've lost the family's breadwinner."

Imam worked as a designer and embroiderer in the local clothing industry and fished as a hobby.

Last Friday he left home in Balikpapan at 6am to go fishing with two friends.

"At dawn he woke me so we could pray together," said Ms Rohani.

PHOTO: 41-year-old Imam Nurokhim was fishing when the oil spill ignited. (ABC News: Adam Harvey)



"I wasn't aware of the oil spill until my nephew knocked at the door in the afternoon and showed me pictures of my husband's ID card that was found."

"I went to the port, asking around then I went to the hospital and found him laying in the morgue. My daughter found out from her friend's Facebook."

"I miss him — it feels so strange without him around. He's fun, and always trying to make me happy."

The local authorities say that 7,000 hectares of mangroves are affected and the spill has killed an estimated 8,000 mangrove trees and seedlings.

Photographs from Greenpeace show thick oil covering the area's sensitive coastal mangrove swamps.

Pradama Rupang from the Borneo environment group Jatam says the official clean-up is haphazard and the spill remains a risk to locals.

PHOTO: 7,000 hectares of mangroves have been coated in oil killing an estimated 8,000 mangrove trees and seedlings.(Supplied: Greenpeace)



"People in the communities are joining the clean-up process and they are not equipped with safety gear like boots or gloves so they can avoid touching the oil directly," he said.

"If they touch it, their skin becomes irritated. This is very dangerous if they keep touching the oil."

He said locals were suffering because of Pertamina's lack of professionalism, and Pertamina president director Elia Massa Manik should be fired.

"The company should be charged with breaching environment laws, but this is mismanagement — someone in management should be charged also."

Media player: "Space" to play, "M" to mute, "left" and "right" to seek.

Setup Timeout Error: Setup took longer than 30 seconds to complete.



VIDEO: Aerial footage shows the oil spill has spread across a wide area (ABC News)


Topics: oil-and-gas, accidents, disasters-and-accidents, environmental-impact, indonesia, asia
 

rbkwp

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"Implicit Bias"

believe it or not i read it TWICE ha
very interesting
never heard of it before actually
even understood it, i think haha
maybe it needs to be in RPT?

How to Think about "Implicit Bias"

Amidst a controversy, it’s important to remember that implicit bias is real—and it matters
D7F1F062-EA33-4E70-995B9D7CFC672F95.jpg

Credit: theprint Getty Images
When is the last time a stereotype popped into your mind? If you are like most people, the authors included, it happens all the time. That doesn’t make you a racist, sexist, or whatever-ist. It just means your brain is working properly, noticing patterns, and making generalizations. But the same thought processes that make people smart can also make them biased. This tendency for stereotype-confirming thoughts to pass spontaneously through our minds is what psychologists call implicit bias. It sets people up to overgeneralize, sometimes leading to discrimination even when people feel they are being fair.

Studies of implicit bias have recently drawn ire from both right and left. For the right, talk of implicit bias is just another instance of progressives seeing injustice under every bush. For the left, implicit bias diverts attention from more damaging instances of explicit bigotry. Debates have become heated, and leapt from scientific journals to the popular press. Along the way, some important points have been lost. We highlight two misunderstandings that anyone who wants to understand implicit bias should know about.

First, much of the controversy centers on the most famous implicit bias test, the Implicit Association Test (IAT). A majority of people taking this test show evidence of implicit bias, suggesting that most people are implicitly biased even if they do not think of themselves as prejudiced. Like any measure, the test does have limitations. The stability of the test is low, meaning that if you take the same test a few weeks apart, you might score very differently. And the correlation between a person’s IAT scores and discriminatory behavior is often small.

The IAT is a measure, and it doesn’t follow from a particular measurebeing flawed that the phenomenon we’re attempting to measure is not real. Drawing that conclusion is to commit the Divining Rod Fallacy: just because a rod doesn’t find water doesn’t mean there’s no such thing as water. A smarter move is to ask, “What does the other evidence show?”

In fact, there is lots of other evidence. There are perceptual illusions, for example, in which white subjects perceive black faces as angrier than white faces with the same expression. Race can bias people to see harmless objects as weapons when they are in the hands of black men, and to dislike abstract images that are paired with black faces. And there are dozens of variants of laboratory tasks finding that most participants are faster to identify bad words paired with black faces than white faces. None of these measures is without limitations, but they show the same pattern of reliable bias as the IAT. There is a mountain of evidence—independent of any single test—that implicit bias is real.

The second misunderstanding is about what scientists mean when they say a measure predicts behavior. It is frequently complained that an individual’s IAT score doesn’t tell you whether they will discriminate on a particular occasion. This is to commit the Palm Reading Fallacy:unlike palm readers, research psychologists aren’t usually in the business of telling you, as an individual, what your life holds in store. Most measures in psychology, from aptitude tests to personality scales, are useful for predicting how groups will respond on average, not forecasting how particular individuals will behave.

The difference is crucial. Knowing that an employee scored high on conscientiousness won’t tell you much about whether her work will be careful or sloppy if you inspect it right now. But if a large company hires hundreds of employees who are all conscientious, this will likely pay off with a small but consistent increase in careful work on average.

Implicit bias researchers have always warned against using the tests for predicting individual outcomes, like how a particular manager will behave in job interviews—they’ve never been in the palm-reading business. What the IAT does, and does well, is predict average outcomes across larger entities like counties, cities, or states. For example, metro areas with greater average implicit bias have larger racial disparities in police shootings. And counties with greater average implicit bias have larger racial disparities in infant health problems. These correlations are important: the lives of black citizens and newborn black babies depend on them.

Field experiments demonstrate that real-world discrimination continues, and is widespread. White applicants get about 50 percent more call-backs than black applicants with the same resumes; collegeprofessors are 26 percent more likely to respond to a student’s email when it is signed by Brad rather than Lamar; and physicians recommend less pain medication for black patients than white patients with the same injury.

Today, managers are unlikely to announce that white job applicants should be chosen over black applicants, and physicians don’t declare that black people feel less pain than whites. Yet, the widespread pattern of discrimination and disparities seen in field studies persists. It bears a much closer resemblance to the widespread stereotypical thoughts seen on implicit tests than to the survey studies in which most people present themselves as unbiased.

One reason people on both the right and the left are skeptical of implicit bias might be pretty simple: it isn’t nice to think we aren’t very nice. It would be comforting to conclude, when we don’t consciously entertain impure intentions, that all of our intentions are pure. Unfortunately, we can’t conclude that: many of us are more biased than we realize. And that is an important cause of injustice—whether you know it or not.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-to-think-about-implicit-bias/
 

rbkwp

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wouldent surprize me
as clever as, humans are supposed to be, why not
we are not superior to any living thing
- i said , and i dont give a F who disputes that
no different to humans rubbing aloe on whatever


Orangutans Use Plant Extracts to Treat Pain
Humans aren’t the only animals that have discovered medicinal products in nature

2D8FEFE2-E8B2-4755-82A3D4D6ABBD9923.jpg


https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/orangutans-use-plant-extracts-to-treat-pain/

Newly Discovered Orangutan Species Is Also the Most Endangered
The first new species of great ape described in more than eight decades faces threats to its habitat

1A781920-A66C-4371-99F506DD0AE00688.jpg


https://www.scientificamerican.com/...rangutan-species-is-also-the-most-endangered/

Orangutan Picks Cocktail by Seeing Ingredients

3EAD5EF5-FA13-472B-8962EB5799A203B8.jpg


https://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode/orangutan-picks-cocktail-by-seeing-ingredients/
 

rbkwp

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lucky you
its your educational day about caring for the OCEAN whats in it and around it
you can forget about the plastics we are discarding in them to destroy them, just for today that is

The puzzle of pilot whales
Yesterday, 33 pilot whales stranded on a remote beach, south of Haast NZ. Pilot whales strand on our shores in greater numbers than any other species of whale—but why?

There is much about these animals that remains an enigma, and the strandings continue to happen.

134_waste_header

Waste not, want not
A ban on plastic microbeads is about to come into force in New Zealand, as the government considers the merits of single-use plastic bags.

There's no denying that we leave behind a mountain of rubbish that gets a little higher every year. The problem starts in our homes—so does the solution.



Conversations with Cetaceans, Gull Guano,
Māori Mussel Memory


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bhzCS03ip6lyCQgAhw-4rPUF0RFpE9CHavKAck-7PhHhozWTXFI7ESgULKDLArNT34A0qRPrDZmYEADo9e53pZaMc_2lfWc6ZHtC9EA38utY4EX7-ovGkYmqzdtrKKhNcOVtMQIAAuFM7_OTH-UMyK0aEXv1oHZ5Lc-Htks=s0-d-e1-ft


Do you have conversations with your dog? Does your cat know how to read your mood better than your spouse? Have you ever been pooped on by a gull and been certain the bird was aiming for you? While our April 1 story about gull guano was an April Fool’s Day joke (gotcha!), the idea that humans and animals share a deep connection is very real. This week, writer Krista Langlois beautifully explores how Arctic people have been communicating with cetaceans for centuries—and how scientists are finally taking note—in her feature, “When Whales and Humans Talk.”

“If you start looking at the relationship between humans and animals from the perspective that Indigenous people themselves may have had, it reveals a rich new universe,” Matthew Betts, an archaeologist with the Canadian Museum of History, says in the story. “What a beautiful way to view the world.”

Another story this week also looks at the ways in which Indigenous knowledge can improve science. In “Māori Mussel Memory,” journalist Asher Mullard takes us to Okahu Bay, New Zealand, where Ngāti Whātua women wove flax ropes using traditional techniques to create safe havens for mussels. You’ll have to read the story to find out why.

Raina Delisle
Associate Editor

This Week’s Stories



When Whales and Humans Talk

Arctic people have been communicating with cetaceans for centuries—and scientists are finally taking note.

by Krista Langlois • 3,100 words / 16 mins



How California Clear Air Laws May Have Helped the Whales

Regulations aimed at reducing pollution pushed ships to slow down.

by Julia Rosen • 650 words / 3 mins




Māori Mussel Memory

A shellfish restoration project in New Zealand weaves together traditional Māori knowledge and marine ecology to foster mussel growth.

by Asher Mullard • 850 words / 4 mins




For a Healthy Beach, Leave the Seaweed Alone

Beaches with thick mats of seaweed support more diverse ecosystems.

by Samantha Andrews • 350 words / 2 mins




Marine Noise Is Mentally and Physically Disturbing Fish

Noise pollution is making fish stressed, tired, deaf, and increasingly susceptible to predation.

by Richard Kemeny • 800 words / 4 mins
 

MickeyLee

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Albino plants can not make their own food, good old photosynthesis, cuz they got no green. When you see a big ass albino plant like this one it's being fed by the roots of other trees of the same species.
 
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rbkwp

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quite a funny article me thoughts
in the sense that it may well be going too far
ie
humans need some enjoyment stess free living etc haha
not that we deseve it mind you

for eg
i totally enjoyed going to and living it up as an 18/ 25 yo once a year to NZs equivalent
a Govt therefore cheap as stay a week and enjoy the scenic beauty in warmth, on what the world had to offer, 70s

averge person cant afford such now, in fact the place doesent exist now


upload_2018-4-10_8-47-42.jpeg


the chateu nz

iIs Vail Resorts Killing the Spirit of Whistler?

When Vail bought Canada’s famed Whistler Blackcomb ski mountain, locals were nervous. Now, after a season of record visitors, they’re enraged.



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Photographer: David McColm
TRAVEL
Is Vail Resorts Killing Whistler’s Spirit?
When Vail bought Canada’s famed Whistler Blackcomb ski mountain, locals were nervous. Now, after a record season of visitors, they’re enraged.
By
Natalie Obiko Pearson
April 10, 2018 3:54 AM GMT+12:00


The takeover of Canada’s most iconic ski resort by an American corporation was never going to go smoothly. But Vail Resorts Inc.’s $1 billion acquisition ofWhistler Blackcomb has Canadians seething.

The new owner’s offenses include the adoption of an on-mountain app that features Fahrenheit and inches, rather than Celsius and centimeters, and a season-pass pricing system that benefits globetrotting jet-setters at the expense of locals. Then there’s general discontent over the assimilation of a quirky, homegrown success story by an American corporate behemoth.

“They’re trying to cater to a wealthy, sheltered audience—I don’t know if that crowd really wants what we have,” says Cathy Zeglinski, a competitive athlete and family doctor who closed her Whistler practice last September, forced out by rising living costs and staff shortages in the town. “What we have is snow, extreme terrain,” she explains. “It's blustery, it's very hard to see. That’s why people come to Whistler—it's very extreme.”

800x-1.jpg

The base of Whistler, with the mountain in the background. It was acquired by Vail Resorts for $1 billion.
Photographer: Justa Jeskova Photography
This is the first season that Whistler Blackcomb was included in Vail’s $879 Epic Pass (now $899 for the 2018-2019 season), a program that gives holders unlimited access to the company’s 14 resorts in North America and Australia. The impact has been immediate. Other sites on the pass include Beaver Creek and Vail in Colorado and Park City in Utah, where snowfall was at the lowest levels recorded in 30 years.

800x-1.jpg

A skier on Whistler. The resort is arguably the most famous ski mountain in Canada.
Photographer: Paul Morrison
That helped push a chunk of Vail's estimated 750,000 Epic Pass holders to look farther north this past season. More than 8 percent of holders visited Whistler Blackcomb, helping make it the most-visited mountain resort in North America, according to a March 13 Vail investor presentation.

Visitor numbers at Whistler set a record for the third straight year, thanks to visitors from the U.S., Mexico, Australia, and the U.K., Vail Resorts Chief Executive Officer Robert Katz said in a March 8 investor call. “That has been a pretty strong example, I think, of the power of the Epic Pass.”

Alienating the Locals
Canadians aren’t as impressed. Whistler Blackcomb’s tickets are now priced with a base rate in U.S. dollars—unfortunate for Canadians who hold the second-worst-performing major currency this year. The exchange rate for the two currencies is published above ticket prices, which fluctuate daily.

800x-1.jpg

Whistler village, with a lift in the foreground. The area has a severe housing shortage, affecting seasonal workers and locals alike.
Photographer: Leanna Rathkelly/All Canada Photos
800x-1.jpg

The summit lodge. Whistler is now part of Vail’s Epic Pass program; for a flat fee, skiers have unlimited passes to all 14 Vail resorts.
Photographer: Noel Hendrickson/Digital Vision
In the 1980s, when snowboarding was still banned at most North American mountains, Blackcomb welcomed the sport. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was a snowboard instructor there, calls it his favorite ski resort.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...r&utm_term=180409&utm_campaign=bloombergdaily
 

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LOVE RURAL Australia ha


txT8xLm8VbXHrkjhyWWEqoEuBWcZSBmlXEjVBWm-Cs2Ho3_ve5q6oZTixY4Uq_1_VRKMwSza87hAnFtXK5_nrO6Ndsoma2GUrxE5ERY1nBjoeV-WzKaEcbU-28hcrSrpkxX87mf-jMa3svgsWYCd2HxTiq4ld429Exdy=s0-d-e1-ft



Join the conversation with ABC Rural on Twitter or Facebook or contact us via our feedback page.

When penguins won and land owners lost
In the 1980s on Victoria's Phillip Island, a little-known state government decision was made to secure the future of the resident little penguin population. But the decision came with considerable heartache.




Latest tests show white spot disease still in wild caught seafood
White spot disease found for second year running in northern Moreton Bay.



After a downpour, this is where all the water goes
Parts of Australia have received huge amounts of rain recently, so what happens to all that water?



Fruit fly found in suburban Launceston not cause for alarm, authorities say
Authorities are playing down a new fruit fly discovery in Tasmania, despite it being in an area not previously affected.




Channel Country rejuvenated by floodwaters heading for Lake Eyre
Floodwaters are making their way through Queensland's Channel Country through Birdsville towards South Australia's Lake Eyre.

 

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mmmmm oysters/grapes
go down and out well


Mining billionaire scopes build of one of Australia's biggest oyster farms
Andrew Forrest's Minderoo group plans to build one of Australia's largest oyster farms.



2018 'a cracker of a year' for South Australian wine
The 2018 wine vintage is looking good with warm, dry weather helping produce exceptional grapes.



CRAP 2

still waiting
geesus NZ METSERVICE they all need to be sacked, 30 years ago



Worst of storm ahead
Snow and heavy rain that fell overnight just a taste of the freezing blast to come.
 

rbkwp

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CUTE
we dont need no W...humans

How Culture Guides Belugas’ Annual Odysseys Across the Arctic
Strong, multi-generational ties help the cetaceans make the same migrations year after year

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/bxa4...38ca3b-5d41-4aca-917c-33d8b57f435e/e48695.jpg

e48695.jpg

A flock of beluga whales in the Sea of Japan, off the coast of Russia. (Andrey Nekrasov / Alamy)
By Joshua Rapp Learn
SMITHSONIAN.COM APRIL 11, 2018 9:20AM
article in Hakai Magazine.

Amy Van Cise, a post-doctoral scholar at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, studies social structure, genetic relationships and dialects among different groups of short-finned pilot whales in the Pacific. She says that theories about a migratory culture have been around for a while, but this multi-decade examination brings a lot of this theory together.

“(Their) results support this idea that people have had for a long time, that there is a strong link between culture and genetics in social cetaceans,” Van Cise says.

Other whales, like orcas, have been studied extensively for decades, meaning much more is known about the cultural evolution of different social groups and how that might influence their genetic evolution. “But we have a lot less information about belugas in that way,” she says. The new study makes it clear that “migratory culture is an important part of the evolution of beluga whales.”

O’Corry-Crowe says that belugas have a very diverse diet in general, including arctic cod, crustaceans and migrating salmon in the summer. He also noted that populations in different areas feed on different prey, but there is no evidence yet of specific learned feeding strategies associated with those different groups such as with orcas.

While culture may be helping beluga whales find their way through the Pacific and Arctic oceans now, O’Corry-Crowe does worry about whether multi-generational cultural learning can adapt to long-term environmental shifts caused by climate change—or whether it will lead whales back to the same traditional spots, even as they become inhospitable.

“You could see how culture has this two sides to it,” he says. “Will it be a liberator or will it hold them hostage?”


Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/scie...-across-arctic-180968761/#lc1uzSl3qwUYsU0s.99

GOOD NEWS fom the UK for once


Palm Oil Banned by Major UK Supermarket


Climate Change Threatens Rare Orchid’s Survival Strategy


Native Shrimp Must Be Saved From Neonics, Washington State Rules
 

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SICKEST bit of news i have heard for many years
and its AUSTRALIA thats created it
now F'kn embarrasing and no one has the guts to propose instant change
absolutley SICK
why have/need a dress code anyway
kids not adults?


Singlet ban only for blokes 'discriminatory', Queensland surf clubs warned
By Talissa Siganto and Jacqui Street
Posted April 12, 2018 05:28:31

PHOTO: Men in singlets are now welcome at Coolum Beach Surf Club. (ABC News: Jacqueline Street)


MAP: Maroochydore 4558
Surf clubs in southern Queensland are facing increasing pressure to rethink dress standards seen to be discriminating against men because the rule does not apply to women.

The problem arises in venues that set different standards for men and women on the same item of clothing — namely singlets.

Clubs Queensland is taking the issue seriously and recently sent out a newsletter to member clubs drawing attention to the possibility of a club's dress code inadvertently being discriminatory.

The Anti-Discrimination Commission has backed the move, warning it was against the law to set different rules for men and women.

One Sunshine Coast surf club has just changed its dress code after complaints from customers.

Coolum Beach Surf Club general manager Mal Wright said its previous rules, which only allowed women to wear singlets and not men, were clearly "sexist".

PHOTO: The Anti-Discriminaion Commission said rules for men and women need to be consistent. (iStockPhoto/wrangel)



"We'd have a couple come in they'd both be wearing singlets we'd say yes to her and no to him," he said.

Mr Wright admitted the old policy made no sense and was losing them customers.

"If people have got a good attitude we want them to be customers at the club, we don't want them to go away and be unhappy just because of the clothes they're wearing," Mr Wright said.

He said the changes had mostly been welcomed but there were still some people with "old-fashioned" views.

"At the end of the day we're a beach club we're situated right on Coolum Beach it's a beautiful spot and people spend their time, whether it be locals or tourists, on Coolum Beach dressed in a singlet with a hat on we'd like to make it easier for people to come into the club and this is just one way of doing that," he said.

Maroochydore Surf Life Saving Club recently relaxed its rules during the day, but after 5:00pm still banned singlets for men while allowing them for women.

Noosa Surf Life Saving Club's website declares "singlets OK" without offering gender distinction.

Alexandra Headland Surf Life Saving Club CEO Ashley Robinson said men were refused service if they wore singlets in their main upstairs bar and bistro, but rules were more relaxed at their downstairs bar and eatery.

PHOTO: Coolum surf club manager Mal Wright said banning men in singlets made no sense. (ABC News: Jacqueline Street)


"It's the committee's decision this has come up before on a couple of occasions and they voted to stay on what we've currently got," he said.

"In general we don't see it as a massive issue, but I will be interested to see now that Coolum have done what they've done whether our committee and our members change their mind."

Most Gold Coast surf clubs set no gender-specific dress standards, but Kurrawa Surf Club at Broadbeach still banned men in singlets at its upstairs venues after 5:30pm.

The Anti-Discrimination Commission warned some venue owners could be in breach of the law when demanding inconsistent rules for men and women.

Acting Commissioner Neroli Holmes said complaints about dress codes were nothing new and businesses had been prosecuted.

"They will recognise there are differences between male and female fashion and what's appropriate and reasonable for the circumstance, but each case will depend on its own particular facts," she said.

Ms Holmes said it was good practice for venues across Queensland to continually review their policies and employ a gender-neutral standard.

"Every couple of years, really the fashion's changed and what's an acceptable standard 20 years ago might be different to what's acceptable in 2018," she said.

"Venues just need to be sensible fair and reasonable about what they're doing when they're applying a dress code to make sure that they are being even handed with both genders."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-04-...tm_content=ABCNewsmail_topstories_articlelink
 

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to pollinate the above Spring flowets
we dont need no was/chemicals to knock themoff !!!

Book creates buzz about native bees of North America

BeeCropped.jpg


A close-up view of a male blue orchard bee, also known as Osmia lignaria. This type of bee, which is native to North America, is known to be one of the world's best pollinators.

Credit:
Image courtesy of Paige Embry © 2018 Published by Timber Press, Portland, Oregon. Used by permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.

When it comes to bees, honeybees get all the attention. But as a new book will tell you, honeybees are just one fraction of the many types of bees buzzing outside the collective consciousness of most Americans.

The book is “Our Native Bees: North America’s Endangered Pollinators and the Fight to Save Them.” The Seattle-based author, Paige Embry, began her quest to discover some of the approximately 4,000 species of bees that call the continent home after learning five years ago that bumblebees (and not honeybees) were needed to pollinate tomatoes, given their specific skill of shaking the pollen out of the fruit.

“I was flabbergasted that I hadn't learned it” earlier, Embry says. “I felt sort of dim, in fact. But then I went and started asking other people, and none of them knew that honeybees couldn't pollinate tomatoes, but that there were some native bees that could."

As she gathered the information that would become the foundation of the book, Embry says her eyes opened to all of the bees native to North America. Honeybees came by way of Europe.

Not all bees are yellow-and-black honey producers that live in hives. Some are blue. Some are smaller than a grain of rice. Some have colorful, iridescent exoskeletons. Some live in snail shells, cow manure and rose stems. In fact, a majority of bees live in the ground in places like old beetle burrows, not the traditional hives that we tend to envision.

“I absolutely think that the other bees deserve more press,” Embry says. “A lot of them do a lot of pollination services for crops that they probably aren't getting recognized for. And then there's all the other plants out there that they're busy pollinating, and nobody even notices them … They’re really diverse group of animals, and we've sort of shoehorned them into this word that we call a bee.”

The book talks about one of North America's top pollinators: blue orchard bees.

“A hive box of honeybees has maybe 10,000 worker bees who go out and do the pollinating on an acre of almonds,” Embry says. “For example, you put two of those hive boxes, but you can replace one of them with just 400 female blue orchard bees. So they are much more efficient pollinators.”

The problem with blue orchard bees is figuring out how to manage them. Embry says out of approximately 20,000 species found around the world, only about a dozen can be managed.

“The hard part is how do you raise enough of them? So people have been working on that,” she says.

One type of bee Embry describes in her book is called cleptoparasites (you can read an excerpt about them here). Mother cleptoparasite bees — instead of gathering pollen and nectar for their babies — go into holes of other bees' nests and lay their eggs inside.

Says Embry, “So I asked the guy who's been studying these bees: ‘Well, how come the mother bee who was making the nest doesn't know and do something about it?’ And he said, ‘Well, it's dark in there, and they don't have a flashlight.’”

The ‘lazy lawnmower approach’

Susannah Lerman serves as a research ecologist with the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service based out of Amherst, Massachusetts. She has devoted much of her career to the study of native bees. Lerman was recently part of a research team that conducted studies to see if native bees would be attracted to the largest green areas in most suburbs: lawns. By her estimation, there are approximately 65,000 square miles of lawns in the US, an area slightly smaller than the size of Florida.

It is understood that bees love areas such as community gardens and flower beds, but she wanted to see how they would respond to traditional grass lawns — by seeing how many bees that would visit an area based on how often it was mowed.

“A lot of my colleagues have really dismissed lawns as non-habitats, because you look at a lawn and it's just grass,” Lerman says. “It's very low, there's no structure to it, but I kept thinking, ‘Well, there's so much lawn available. How do we make these lawns less bad?’ and so [we were] really trying to figure out, are there ways that we can manage these lawns so that they can provide bee habitat?”

Lerman’s team found the “sweet spot” to attract native bees appeared to be lawns that were mowed every other week. They called this the “lazy lawnmower approach,” given the native bees’ attraction to plants such as dandelions, clover, yellow wood sorrel and horseweed that tend to grow on less well-kept lawns.

“I think some people might consider these weeds, but they actually seem to be providing some nectar and pollen sources for bees,” Lerman says. "I think for a lot of people who want to do something good [for bees] but don't have the time, this might resonate for them.”

Lerman’s team studied 16 suburban lawns near Springfield, Massachusetts. On those lawns alone, they found more than 1,100 different species of bees using the grounds.

When you go out in your yard and you really start looking, you'll see them, and it's like they've been there all along,” Embry says. “And they're there and it's so fun when you plant a specific plant, thinking this is going to be good for bees and you go out and they've come. It's like the easiest conservation ever.”

This article is based on an in

https://www.pri.org/stories/2018-04...eates buzz about native bees of North America
 

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no i wouldent have TURTLE SOUP now
did in the 70s when alternative lifestyle living under a bridge in Qld/Au
but that was then, because i thought it/i was ccoll living off the land?? ha
but even then??
gotta think sensibly now others to come after us,mmmmm




On April 5, EcoWatch reported on a rule change proposed by the Department of Interior (DOI) that the Center for Biological Diversity warned could remove protections for more than 300 threatened species.

Proposed DOI Rule Change Would Gut Protections for Future Threatened Species

https://www.ecowatch.com/proposed-d...ail&utm_term=0_49c7d43dc9-377c47ff5e-85968677
 

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smile
love oysters/mussells?? ha mmmmm

Why Ireland's Oysters Should Be on Your Bivalve List


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Love Oysters? Why Ireland Should Be on Your Bivalve Bucket List
“The oyster, not the potato, should be the symbol of Irish food.”
http://www.google.com/url?q=http://...sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNEMDb_UXOpBpKfBUdxhwWFpGCvfng
Chances are you’ve had an Irish oyster, though you might not know it. Standing knee-deep in an inlet of Galway Bay, two brothers methodically rock crate after crate at a spot where shellfish have lived for more than 4,000 years.



Hw much should you be saving for retirement?

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Bloomberg News’ personal finance Facebook group, Money Talks, is filled with tips to help you save money, become better informed about where your money goes, or better organize your financial life.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...r&utm_term=180413&utm_campaign=bloombergdaily
 

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smile,buggers ha

laugh actually ha FUNNY BAST...DS
damn feral cats on island killing EVERYTHING fom wildlife to geckcos/very rare
so hard to kill themselvs grrr


| 2:29 | NEWS |
Two Lynx Cats Scream at Each Other
—Can You Stand It?

The sound of a lynx almost defies description. Maybe a power saw cutting through another power saw? While these beautiful animals don't tend to pose any threat to people, videographer Amos Wiebe of Alberta, Canada, shares that he felt some fear as two of the wild cats raced past him. I would have, too. It's a testament to his skill with a camera that he could keep filming, and bring us the sights and sounds of a contest that few will ever witness.



| 1:57 | NEWS |
Is This Mongoose Playing Dead or Just Playing?
I challenge you not to smile while listening to Safari Live guide Tayla McCurdy laugh hysterically at a silly mongoose pup playing with a hornbill. This video shows three mongoose pups wrestling, when a hornbill approaches from up the road. Then, in a never-before-seen-behavior, one brave and curious mongoose approaches the hornbill and proceeds to flop on its back multiple times. Hornbills have been known to eat vertebrates the size of these pups so it makes this playful behavior even more surprising.
—Richie Hertzberg, producer/editor


| 1:53 | ONE STRANGE ROCK |
Ants Help Clean New York City by Eating Your Food Scraps

Ants are roaming our cities and providing a vital cleanup service. In this deleted scene from National Geographic’s One Strange Rock, former astronaut Mike Massimino explains how ants eat a staggering equivalent of 60,000 hot dogs per year on the streets of Manhattan. With over a million ants for every human being on the planet, it’s easy to see them as unwanted pests, but they’re actually a part of the Earth’s incredibly complex ecosystem. Remember that the next time you drop your hot dog on the street.
 

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smile Rural

SUNDAY NZ like
get a bit of life/living into you
staid ole

they reckon cannd SALMON is as good as fresh these days
good standby meal on island like/love ha
isent lways best when fresh these days
prervatives/additives in super small writing does the trick???

New cannery hopes to bring canned Australian salmon to dinner tables of Aussie families
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  • First posted about 3 hours ago

    Parry's Beach salmon crews are hoping to raise the profile of Australian salmon.


    (ABC News: Robert Koenig Luck)
    Australian salmon has a poor reputation with consumers, but a new cannery to be opened in Perth hopes to bring life back to an industry that is struggling to stay afloat.

    It has been more than two decades since Western Australia had an operational cannery.

    The well-known Albany cannery closed down in the late 80s due to a collapse of markets.

    It left only a sardine cannery, operated by Perth-based company Mendolia Seafoods.

    It has been more than 20 years since a cannery has operated in WA.


    (ABC Rural: Tyne Logan)
    But when a herpes virus decimated sardine stocks in WA in the 90s, that too was no longer viable.

    Now, that same seafood company is giving the tinned line a second go, with its multi-million-dollar processing facility set to be fully operational in coming weeks.

    Part-owner and long-term sardine fisherman Jim Mendolia cannot wait for the new venture to begin.

    "It's so exciting. I've got a very good friend who believed in our products for many years and he and his family have kind-of backed this big project," he said.

    "It's a product that people know and understand, so it's easy to sell."

    Aussie salmon in the can
    It is not just their sardines that are destined for the tins.

    The Mendolias are also going to experiment canning other types of fish.

    They are hoping to create a market for canned Australian salmon, a fish that, in the past, has been likened to cat food.


    Schools of salmon circle at Hamelin Bay.


    (ABC News: Anthony Pancia)
    On the south-west coast in Hamelin Bay, fisherman Shane Miles spends his days reeling in tonnes of Australian salmon to be sold to local markets.

    But with a limited local market, only a small portion of that is sold.

    Mr Miles said the new cannery would give them an opportunity to make the most of that catch.

    "Some days we're taking eight or 10 tonne out of 30 and 40 tonne," he said.


    The Parry's Beach fishermen come from families who have been fishing at the beach for generations.


    (ABC Rural: Tyne Logan)
    Further south in Denmark, Parry's Beach fishermen cannot wipe the smile off their faces.

    Tom Brittain said their small operation, run by a handful of families over generations, had been trying to raise the profile of Australian salmon.

    He believes this is their opportunity.


    Salmon is brought into shore and immediately spiked and put in ice, to make sure it tastes good.


    (ABC News: Robert Koenig Luck)
    "It's opened a new door for Parry's," he said.

    "We've always wanted to supply human consumption fish and this is a bit of a shining light really. For all salmon fishermen."

    Salmon has long been known as a fish for pet food and bait.

    But Mr Brittain said they were trying to dispel that myth.

    "Prior to the cray fishing boom, [salmon] was always sold for human consumption in tins and it was a staple for many families for generations," he said.

    "Hopefully it's going to repeat and it will be back on the dinner table."

    International markets excited

    Long-term fisherman Jim Mendolia returns to land at dawn each morning, hopefully with a boat full of sardines.


    (ABC Rural: Tyne Logan)
    Mr Mendolia said the canned salmon, along with their sardines and tuna, had been well received by the public.

    "We did a promotion at Sydney fine foods and it's incredible how many overseas people are interested in Australian product," he said.

    "There were people from China, Singapore, Hong Kong … people from everywhere."

    Mr Mendolia said they would first service the domestic market before moving into exports.

    Western Australian Fishing Industry Council chief executive John Harrison said the new cannery would give people in the industry confidence into the future.

    "Knowing there's a market for their product, [the fishermen] can then go ahead and make some investment to get new boats or new facilities where they can capture and process the fish," he said.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2018-04-15/wa-first-fish-cannery-to-tin-australian-salmon/9648348?utm_source=sfmc&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=:8935&user_id=cb53a1c368e708ac713d21ca78e70f2312c4d01d8c26bf97af51ee964c35adbc&WT.tsrc=email&WT.mc_id=Email||8935&utm_content=ABCNewsmail_topstories_articlelink
 

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Turtle That Breathes Through Its Genitals Lands on Endangered Reptiles List

ahem
TURTLE SOUP perhaps not mmmm yuk Trump lookaleke/esp the hairdo/piece

Australia’s Mary River turtle was a popular pet in the 1960s and 70s, but raids of the animal’s nests have driven it towards extinction

image: https://thumbs-prod.si-cdn.com/oobQ...nk_30_-_elusor_macrurus_-_chris_van_wyk_3.jpg

mary_river_turtle_-_rank_30_-_elusor_macrurus_-_chris_van_wyk_3.jpg

(Chris Van Wyk)
By Brigit Katz
SMITHSONIAN.COM APRIL 13, 2018
Guardian, the Mary River turtle has ranked high on a new list of the world’s most endangered reptiles.

The Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered (EDGE) list, which is compiled by the Zoological Society of London, assigns a score to species based on their extinction risk and their evolutionary uniqueness. The organization has previously compiled rankings of endangered mammals, amphibians, birds and corals.

The Mary River turtle, which diverged from all other living species 40 million years ago, ranks 30th out of the 50 animals included on the new reptile list. The most endangered, according to the ranking, is the Madagascar Big-headed turtle, followed by Central American River Turtle and the Madagascar Blind Snake.

As its name suggests, the Mary River turtle lives only in the flowing streams of the Mary River in Queensland, Australia. It is one of several species of turtle that can breathe using specialized glands in their cloacas—organs that are used for both excretion and mating—which allows it to stay submerged in water for up to 72 hours. According to Carly Cassella of Science Alert, the critter boasts a number of features that are not seen in any other modern turtle, like the two rows of tubercles that act like feelers. The tail of the Mary River turtle can also grow to exceptional lengths—up to 70 percent longer than the length of its shell.

The species has a gentle disposition, which, in the 1960s and 70s, made it a popular pet. During that period, 15,000 Mary River turtle eggs were sold to pet shops every year, and the unchecked raiding of the animal’s nests played a large part in driving the turtle towards extinction. According to the Australia Zoo, Mary River turtles are also threatened by habitat degradation, which includes “problems such as a deterioration of water quality through riverside vegetation being cleared, water pollution through siltation, agricultural chemical contamination and water flow disruptions through the construction of weirs for irrigation and predation.”

n a statement, EDGE reptile biologist Rikki Gumbs said that reptiles “often receive the short end of the stick in conservation terms, compared with the likes of birds and mammals.” He hopes the new ranking will give conservationists a helpful tool for prioritizing species’ conservation needs, and bring the public’s attention to at-risk reptiles—many of whom are the only remaining survivors of ancient lineages.

“If we lose these species,” Gumbs says, “there will be nothing like them left on Earth.”

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smar...-reptiles-list-180968788/#KiEE5GfGdiUY7Yz7.99
 

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helping keep folk aware of the importancene of animal/insect life
as to there storys behing it,live with it ha
big cock site or mo,lifes one of info sharing these days on social media sites


How mosquitoes without mojo could help stop disease
Australian scientists release sterile mosquitoes in a bid to help stop the spread of dengue fever and zika virus. They hope to be the first in the world to eradicate the disease-carrying mosquitoes from an urban area.



'Very angry badger' invades Scottish castle
Craignethan Castle was no match for the irate mammal, which forced part of the castle to close as staff attempted to lure it out with cat food.





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