Archive for 'The Nature Conservancy'
Nature Photo of the Week: White Sands National Monument
No, this isn’t a very good photo, is it? That’s probably because it’s an insanely good photo! Take a deep breath…and fall into White Sands National Monument in New Mexico, courtesy of Lightchaser/Flicker and shared through The Nature Conservancy’s Flickr Group.
Check out all The Nature Conservancy’s featured daily nature images, submitted to the Conservancy’s Flickr [...]
Posted: November 6th, 2009 under Deserts and Aridlands, Nature Photo of the Week, The Nature Conservancy, United States.
Tags: desert image, desert photo, Lightchaser, nature image, nature photo, Nature Photo of the Week, New Mexico, New Mexico image, New Mexico photo, White Sands image, White Sands National Monument, White Sands photo
Comments: none
What’s the Role of Science for Advocacy?
As the “energy sprawl” idea has been discussed and debated in the media, I (one of the paper’s co-authors) have grown a thick skin against criticism. Perhaps the harshest piece of invective, however, still bothers me: the criticism by Matt Wasson in the Huffington Post.
The factual criticisms Matt makes aren’t that troublesome to me, and [...]
Posted: November 5th, 2009 under Climate Change, Climate Science & Research, Energy, Media, Science, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: coal, coal energy, coal sprawl, energy sprawl, Huffington Post, land use sprawl, marketplace idea, Matt Wasson, nuclear energy sprawl, public debate, Rob McDonald, Science magazine, scientist role, Searchinger, TV science, wind power, wind turbine
Comments: 3
Cool Green Morning: Wednesday, November 4
This edition of Cool Green Morning is all about bringing people together, like Glenn Beck and PETA, who are bonding over their mutual dislike of Al Gore’s diet. Or German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who’s encouraging the U.S. to team up with Europe to fight climate change. Read on for more heart-warming tales of love and [...]
Posted: November 4th, 2009 under Air Pollution, Climate Change, Cool Green Morning, Europe, Green Living, Media, North America, Policy, The Nature Conservancy, United States.
Tags: air pollution, Al Gore, Angela Merkel, Associated Press, Atlanta, Barcelona, congress, Duncan Marsh, emissions targets, Germany, Glenn Beck, GreenBiz, Huffington Post, Las Vegas, PETA, Treehugger, Twilight Earth
Comments: none
Eat Lionfish and Stop These Caribbean Reef Invaders
My husband returns to the same reefs every year in the Bahamas, where he has been teaching a coral reef ecology class for the last 14 years. On his 2008 trip, he noticed that the reef fish were missing. The culprits were quickly identified — and during his 2009 course, he and his students were [...]
Posted: November 2nd, 2009 under Central America, Conservation Issues, Coral Reefs, Fish, Invasive species, Oceans & Coasts, Science, South America, Sustainable Livelihoods, The Caribbean, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: artisanal fishing, Bahamas, Bahamas lionfish, Caribbean Fisheries Management Council, Colombia lionfish, coral, coral reef, eat lionfish, grouper, grouper overfish, invasive fish, lionfish, lionfish recipe, Monterrey Bay Seafood Watch, reef fish, snapper Caribbean, Stephanie Wear, stop lionfish, Virgin Islands lionfish
Comments: 1
Worry About Air Pollution, Not Just Climate Change
Yes, global warming is a big deal and a big challenge. But sometimes I get so frustrated by conservation and environmental NGO’s for not being able to chew gum and walk at the same time — in other words, for failing to appreciate the real lesson of greenhouse gas emissions.
The real lesson is there is [...]
Posted: October 29th, 2009 under Air Pollution, Animals, Asia Pacific, Birds, China, Climate Change, North America, Protected Areas, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: air pollution, Arctic haze, asthma ozone, Climate Change, Copenhagen, dust storm West, EPA greenhouse gas, global nature, global pollution, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, greenhouse gases, mercury, mercury baby, mercury healthy, mercury wildlife, National Academy air pollution, National Academy of Sciences, Nature Conservancy air pollution, Nature Conservancy climate, organic pollutant health, ozone, particulate matter, particulate matter health, persistent organic pollutants, Peter Kareiva, pollution agreement, pollution biodiversity
Comments: 5
Beyond ‘The Tragedy of the Commons’: Why Conservation Needs a Rethink
Of course this year’s Nobel Peace Prize got all the press — as that prize nearly always does. The Nobel Prize in economics, by contrast, went almost unnoticed.
That’s a double shame. First, because it was given to Dr. Elinor Ostrom of the Indiana University and Arizona State University — the first woman ever to win [...]
Posted: October 27th, 2009 under Protected Areas, Sustainable Livelihoods, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: conservation funding, conservation fundraising, conservation strategy, easement, Elinor Ostrom, Garrett Hardin, international conservation, national park, Nobel economics, Ostrom commons, Sanjayan, Sanjayan commons, Science magazine, sustainability, Tragedy of the Commons, wilderness common
Comments: 9
Cool Green Morning: Tuesday, October 27
It’s indeed a bright green morning today, with positive news everywhere: International Climate Day of Action a big success! Smart meters galore! And here’s the big news: a new study shows your personal actions can make a difference in the fight against climate change! Take that, all you climate change pessimists.
Bill McKibben says we need to “stop whining [...]
Posted: October 27th, 2009 under Animals, Climate Change, Climate Science & Research, Conservation Issues, Cool Green Morning, Ecosystem Services, Energy, Environmental Science, Green Living, Green Technology, Markets, Media, Sustainable Livelihoods, The Nature Conservancy, United States.
Tags: 350.org, Bill McKibben, chytrid fungus, deadly fungus, energy efficiency, frogs, government energy grant, Grist, International Climate Day of Action, Mark Tercek, personal change reduces emissions, Reuters, smart meter
Comments: none
Haunted (Bat) House!
Late October brings a slight chill to the air and shadows fall early as we dare to tip-toe through the bat trailer. Secreted within a dark corner of The Nature Conservancy’s 12,000-acre Disney Wilderness Preserve in Florida, this trailer is not for the timid.
A rare maternity colony of southeastern big-eared bats has claimed the trailer as home. They [...]
Posted: October 26th, 2009 under Animals, Protected Areas, The Nature Conservancy, United States.
Tags: bat cave, bat colony, bat maternity colony, bat trailer, Disney Wilderness Preserve, florida, southeastern big-eared bat
Comments: 2
Is Tweeting Against Climate Change Accomplishing Anything?
“Dad, what did you do way back when to help solve climate change?”
“Well son, I tweeted my face off about it. I really did. I included some bit.ly links to petition sites, I updated my Facebook status almost every day and I even posted a video comment on YouTube. In short, I did everything I [...]
Posted: October 23rd, 2009 under Climate Change, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: 350.org, activism, Climate Change, cop15, Copenhagen, dave connell, global warming, online activism, online climate, Planet Change
Comments: 8
Great Nature Photos: The Conservancy’s Williamson River Delta Preserve
[Click the individual images to see them at full size, or click the "View With PicLens" link to see a slideshow.]
Volunteer photographer Rick McEwan just finished an assignment for The Nature Conservancy, shooting wetland restoration work in the Conservancy’s Williamson River Delta Preserve in Oregon. It’s a place he just can’t bring himself to leave.
Sure: [...]
Posted: October 22nd, 2009 under Fresh Water, Science, The Nature Conservancy.
Tags: nature image, nature photo, nature photography, Oregon nature, Oregon nature photo, Rick McEwan, The Nature Conservancy, The Nature Conservancy Oregon, wetland, wetland restore, Williamson River Delta
Comments: none



