Tag Archives: oceans

Cows on the London Undergound: A Good Stunt, But What’s It For? (Video)

Image credit: Friends of the Earth UK What’s a herd of cows doing on the London Underground? Having enlisted singing cows to help fix the food chain , Friends of the Earth UK has now launched an underground (sorry!) “Moovement” to demand rainforest free meat and dairy. Click below the fold to see some very confused commuters. The only trouble is, I’m confused about the whole thing too…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

View post:
Cows on the London Undergound: A Good Stunt, But What’s It For? (Video)

Coral Species in Red Sea Barely Growing, Thanks to Global Warming

A CT scan showing slow coral growth of a coral species in the Red Sea. Guest bloggers Andrea Donsky and Randy Boyer are co-founders of NaturallySavvy.com . Global warming is wreaking havoc on plant and animal populations around the world: Polar bear habitats are melting, giant trees in Yosemite are thinning , and

View original post here:
Coral Species in Red Sea Barely Growing, Thanks to Global Warming

‘The Cove’ Documentary Finally Opens in Japan Despite Protests (Video)

As the celebrities above state, we have a friend who is in need of help . And there’s a documentary working hard to do just that. After a lot of struggling, from earning money for translation of The Cove in… Read the full story on TreeHugger

See the original post:
‘The Cove’ Documentary Finally Opens in Japan Despite Protests (Video)

Greenland Glacier Retreat One Mile Overnight

NASA's just released some pretty dramatic satellite photos of the north branch of Greenland's Jakobshavn glacier from July 6 and 7–when an area of ice 2.7 square miles in size ( more than twice the size of New York City's Central Park), where the glacier meets the ocean, broke up overnight and the glacier retreated one mile inland. That's as much retreat in one night as the average for nearly two years. Thomas Wagner, cryospheric program scientist at NASA, commented: While there have been ice breakouts of this magnitude from Jakobshavn and other glaciers in the past, this event is unusual because it occurs on the heels of a warm winter that saw no sea ice in the surrounding bay. While this exact relationship between these events is being determined, it lends credence to the theory that warming of the oceans is responsible for the ice loss observed throughout Greenland and Antarctica…. http://bit.ly/b1jf2R added by: ras_menelik

American Sea Otters Could Be Worth $700 Million in Carbon Credits

photo: Mike Baird via flickr Yes, really… An interesting presentation at the annual meeting for the Society of Conservation Biology explains how if sea otters were restored to historically high populations along the coasts of North America, the amount of carbon stored by their activities would be worth more than $700 million on the European carbon trading market. Here’s why:… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read this article:
American Sea Otters Could Be Worth $700 Million in Carbon Credits

Irreversible Changes in Oceans Leading to Global Mass Extinction

Photo by coolmikeol It feels like reading a tabloid headline when we see reports about irreversible damage to ocean systems and the worldwide mass extinctions that could result. Unfortunately, it’s an all too real possibility. Renowned marine scientists Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, Director of The University of Queensland’s Global Change Institute, and Dr John F. Bruno, an Associate Professor at The University of North Carolina, have completed a comprehensive study pulling together information from the most recent oceanographic research. Their … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Follow this link:
Irreversible Changes in Oceans Leading to Global Mass Extinction

BP Oil Spill Causing More Gulf Dead Zones as Methane Levels Increase

BP oil spill protest in New Orleans, photo: Infrogmation of New Orleans via flickr It’s only been a few days since NOAA-backed scientists forecasting the size of this year’s Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone –that area of ocean so deprived of oxygen than little can live in it–mentioned that it wasn’t clear yet what effect the BP oil spill would have on its size.

Read more from the original source:
BP Oil Spill Causing More Gulf Dead Zones as Methane Levels Increase

Is Toxic Corexit Killing Crops In Mississippi?

Kurt Nimmo at infowars. June 25, 2010. “Yobie Benjamin writing for The San Francisco Chronicle, is reporting what nobody else in the corporate media is reporting — a mysterious disease has stricken crops in Mississippi and it may be connected to the BP oil gusher. “It seems like damage brought by the oil gusher has spread way beyond the ocean, coastal areas and beaches. Collateral damage now appears to include agricultural damage way inland Mississippi,” writes Benjamin. The disease has caused widespread damage to plants from weeds to farmed organic and conventionally grown crops. Benjamin believes the disease is the result of BP spraying the oil dispersant Corexit 9500 in the Gulf of Mexico. Corexit 9500 is believed to be responsible for widespread reports of oil cleanup crews reporting various injuries including respiratory distress, dizziness and headaches. “Dispersants have never been applied on this scale, leaving environmental scientists guessing about the consequences. Corexit may have caused seven cleanup workers to be admitted to the hospital with shortness of breath and nausea,” reports Popular Science. “Many have focused their concerns about Corexit… on what it’s doing under the water. But as we know, the oceans are part of a larger precipitation cycle, and scientists are worried that soon the consequences of using dispersants could be falling from the sky,” writes Beth Buczynski for Care2, an environmental website. The EPA asked BP to stop using Corexit, which is banned in 18 countries due to its toxicity, but the oil transnational has refused.” added by: futuregen

"Recycled Island" Turns Ocean Plastic into a Paradise

Image via Recycled Island Ever dreamed of living on a giant island of plastic? Well, with all the plastic that floats around in the ocean as a toxic soup threatening all manner of marine life, one architecture firm has a bold vision to create an eco-paradise called “Recycled Island” in the Pacific Ocean with sustainability at its core. It’s a bold plan, but not only would the project help clean the oceans, the firm claims, it might just be a perfect home for

Visit link:
"Recycled Island" Turns Ocean Plastic into a Paradise

Antarctica Might Have Its Own Garbage Patch

Image: Wikipedia , CC. March of the Garbage By now most of you probably know about the giant garbage patches in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like this water pollution problem is stopping there. The more we look, the more we find……. Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading here:
Antarctica Might Have Its Own Garbage Patch