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      Labour says UK nature under threat and pledges to halt decline

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 16:45


    Shadow minister Steve Reed vows to uphold targets on biodiversity loss and protecting land and sea

    Labour has pledged to halt the decline of British species and protect at least 30% of the land and sea by 2030 if it is elected.

    Steve Reed, the shadow environment secretary, also vowed to set a new land use framework that would prioritise the protection of nature, and to deliver on targets to improve the UK’s environment.

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      Nature destruction will cause bigger economic slump in UK than 2008 crisis, experts warn

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Yesterday - 05:00

    Green Finance Institute report said further pollution could cut 12% off GDP by 2030s

    The destruction of nature over the rest of the decade could trigger a bigger economic slump in Britain than those caused by the 2008 global financial crisis and the Covid pandemic, experts have warned.

    Sounding the alarm over the rising financial cost from pollution, damage to water systems, soil erosion, and threats from disease, the report by the Green Finance Institute warned that further breakdown in the UK’s natural environment could lead to a 12% loss of gross domestic product (GDP) by the 2030s.

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      ‘These birds are telling us something serious is happening’: the fading song of the marsh tit

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 08:00

    The songbird’s dramatic decline in an ancient Cambridgeshire woodland is a story repeated across the UK as human activity drives species towards extinction

    Richard Broughton has been nosing around this neighbourhood for 22 years. He gossips about inhabitants past and present, reeling off information about their relationship status, openness to visitors, brawls and neighbourly disputes. “They used to have a big punch up in spring here,” he says, pointing out where one family’s territory ends and the next begins.

    Some areas are eerily quiet, with popular old haunts lying uninhabited. “I always get a bit of a pang now, walking through here and it’s empty. It’s like walking down your local high street and seeing your favourite shops are closed and the pub is boarded up.”

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      World faces ‘deathly silence’ of nature as wildlife disappears, warn experts

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 11:00

    Loss of intensity and diversity of noises in ecosystems reflects an alarming decline in healthy biodiversity, say sound ecologists

    Read more: No birdsong, no water in the creek, no beating wings: how a haven for nature fell silent

    Sounds of the natural world are rapidly falling silent and will become “acoustic fossils” without urgent action to halt environmental destruction, international experts have warned.

    As technology develops, sound has become an increasingly important way of measuring the health and biodiversity of ecosystems: our forests, soils and oceans all produce their own acoustic signatures. Scientists who use ecoacoustics to measure habitats and species say that quiet is falling across thousands of habitats, as the planet witnesses extraordinary losses in the density and variety of species. Disappearing or losing volume along with them are many familiar sounds: the morning calls of birds, rustle of mammals through undergrowth and summer hum of insects.

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      Soundscape ecology: a window into a disappearing world – podcast

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 04:00

    What can sound tell us about nature loss? Guardian biodiversity reporter Phoebe Weston tells Madeleine Finlay about her visit to Monks Wood in Cambridgeshire, where ecologist Richard Broughton has witnessed the decline of the marsh tit population over 22 years, and has heard the impact on the wood’s soundscape. As species lose their habitats across the world, pioneering soundscape ecologist Bernie Krause has argued that if we listen closely, nature can tell us everything we need to know about our impact on the planet

    Find more reporting from the Age of Extinction team here

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      Ways to solve a crisis in our national parks | Letters

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 14 April - 16:22

    Woodland grant schemes bring the potential for many ecosystem benefits, writes Dr Robert Mills

    It is of deep concern to see the core funding for national parks fall, and it is widely known that the UK has a considerable challenge to tackle nature depletion and the biodiversity crisis ( National parks in England and Wales failing on biodiversity, say campaigners, 9 April ).

    There should be an overhaul of how parks are funded to emphasise these issues, and how actions by all interest groups, from landowners to tenant farmers, can be supported towards positive outcomes and maintaining livelihoods.

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      Earthworm – the soil-maker, without whom we’d struggle to feed ourselves

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 12 April - 11:30

    Their diggings aerate soil, recycle organic matter, boost microbial activity and support plant growth

    The people have spoken and the choice of Guardian readers for the final nominee for UK invertebrate of the year is resounding: all hail Lumbricus terrestris , the common earthworm.

    The common earthworm – also known as the lob worm , dew worm, nightcrawler and, in Germany, the rain worm – is the soil-maker. Without its labours, we would struggle to feed ourselves.

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      Rare truffle find in Scottish spruce forest sends fungi experts on alien species hunt

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 12 April - 11:00

    Chamonixia caespitosa found during rewilding project in west Highlands while removing non-native Sitka spruce

    Naturalists have found a very rare type of truffle living in a Scottish forestry plantation which is being cut down so a natural Atlantic rainforest can grow in its place.

    The discovery of the globally rare fungus near Creagan in the west Highlands has thrown up a paradox: the work to remove the non-native Sitka spruce, to allow rewilding by native trees, means the truffle will be lost.

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      Dinosaur data: can the bones of the deep past help predict extinctions of the future?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 12 April - 06:00

    Millions of years ago, animals adapted to become warm-blooded amid huge climactic changes. Now scientists hope these clues from the past could help us understand what lies ahead

    In Chicago’s Field Museum, behind a series of access-controlled doors, are about 1,500 dinosaur fossil specimens. The palaeobiologist Jasmina Wiemann walks straight past the bleached leg bones – some as big as her – neither does she glance at the fully intact spinal cord, stained red by iron oxides filling the spaces where there was once organic material. She only has eyes for the deep chocolate-brown fossils: these are the ones containing preserved organic matter – bones that offer unprecedented insights into creatures that went extinct millions of years ago.

    Wiemann is part of the burgeoning field of conservation palaeobiology, where researchers are looking to the deep past to predict future extinction vulnerability. At a time when humans could be about to witness a sixth mass extinction , studying fossil records is particularly useful for understanding how the natural world responded to problems before we arrived: how life on Earth reacted to environmental change over time, how species adapted to planet-scale temperature changes, or what to expect when ocean geochemical cycles change.

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