Aloha World Snake Friday!
There are more than 3,000 snake species, and snakes can be
found on every continent except Antarctica. They live in most
countries, although they aren't found on a few island
countries like Iceland, Ireland, and New Zealand, or on the
autonomous island territory of Greenland. Snakes live in
almost any environment: in forests, grasslands, deserts,
savannas, swamps, and mountain regions. About 70 species of
sea snakes even live in water, being found in the Indian and
Pacific oceans. The largest snake is the reticulated python,
which may reach over 30 feet in length; the smallest is the
threadsnake, which is less than four inches long. World Snake
Day raises awareness about snakes and educates the public
about them; it dispels fears and misconceptions about them and
enlightens the public on how they should be dealt with. A
focus is often put on conservation, which is valuable because
snakes face habitat loss on account of development, and there
are around 100 species that are listed as endangered by the IUCN Red List.
Marbled
murrelet gets endangered status in Oregon as climate change
threatens its survival
The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission voted Friday to
reclassify the marbled murrelet’s status from threatened to
endangered under the Oregon Endangered Species Act.
At
Meadowdale Beach, the salmon will return to a new estuary
One day not long from now, threatened salmon species will
return to Lunds Gulch at Meadowdale Beach Park. After a decade
of planning, construction has begun on renovations at the
waterfront park to create a 1.3-acre pocket estuary that will
bring back Chinook, chum and coho salmon, as well as cutthroat
trout.
Clock
starts on Nooksack basin water rights inventory;
stakeholders yet to discuss solutions
Weeks of sparse rainfall and a historic heat wave marked the
end of June — and the start of a process to establish water
rights among various users in Whatcom County’s Nooksack River
basin.
Newly
discovered fungus spores spurred by heat and drought are
killing Seattle street trees
...So-called sooty bark disease is named for the black,
powdery patches that are the telltale marks on tree bark of
the fungus Crypotostroma corticale.
Canada
and the United States release new action plan for Salish Sea
Ecosystem
...Today, the governments of Canada and the United States
announced that they have signed a new four-year "Action Plan"
under their Joint Statement of Cooperation—first signed in
2000—that commits both countries to work together on
transboundary issues and challenges facing the Salish Sea
ecosystem.
How healthy is the Salish Sea? Canada-U.S. study tracks ecosystem decline
A joint Canada-U.S. report on the health of the Salish Sea has found
either an overwhelming decline or stable trend in nine out of 10
environmental indicators tracked by researchers. The only positive?
Shellfish.
This
Bellingham Bay cleanup is taking longer than expected.
Here’s why
The city of Bellingham has big plans to clean up two former
industrial sites, transforming the waterfront area into a
public access point informally called Cornwall Beach
Park....The cleanup planning process has been in the works for
nearly a decade, due to lengthy bureaucratic processes at the
city, state and federal levels.
Can
biologists estimate the massive loss of shellfish caused by
low tides, high temps?
The putrid smell of rotting shellfish on some beaches in Puget
Sound and elsewhere along the West Coast were a clear sign
that large numbers of clams, mussels, oysters and other
intertidal creatures were killed from exposure to extreme low
tides, record-breaking temperatures and a blazing hot sun.
Drought
emergency declared in Washington state
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on Wednesday declared a statewide
drought emergency because of hot, dry conditions that have
plagued the region and water supply.
Biden
to Restore Protections for Tongass National Forest in Alaska
Former President Donald J. Trump invited mining and logging to
a vast wilderness of bald eagles, black bears and 800-year-old
trees. President Biden is reversing course.
A
Study Predicts Record Flooding In The 2030s, And It's Partly
Because Of The Moon
A new study on high tide flooding predicts that the mid-2030s
could be catastrophically wet in U.S. coastal regions — and it
could stay that way for an entire decade.
Ship crash in Vancouver harbour blamed on 'systematic failure,' communications 'breakdowns'
A federal investigation into two bulk carrier ships that crashed in
Vancouver's Inner Harbour two years ago has blamed the collision on
"breakdowns in situational awareness and communications."
Hot NW summer: More high temps and low precipitation ahead
Crews are trying to contain wildfires that have already burned tens of
thousands of acres throughout the Northwest. The already dire situation
is being made worse by gusting winds, a lack of rain, and above-average
heat. The coming months aren't likely to be much better.
Fully vaccinated Americans may enter Canada as of mid-August
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday Canada could start
allowing fully vaccinated Americans into Canada as of mid-August for
non-essential travel and should be in a position to welcome fully
vaccinated travelers from all countries by early September.
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected
in Salish Sea
News and Weather which is compiled as a community
service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at no cost to the weekday
news clips or to this weekly compilation, send your name and
email to mikesato772 at gmail.com. Your email information is
never shared and you can unsubscribe at any time.
Salish Sea News: Communicate, Educate, Advocate
Follow
@savepugetsound
Salish Sea Communications: Truth Well Told
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.