U.S. EPA Proposing Temporary Pesticide-Free Zones For Honeybees

Organic Consumers Association's photo.

May 27, 2015, www.organicconsumers.org | “U.S. environmental regulators on Thursday proposed a rule that would create temporary pesticide-free zones to protect commercial honeybees, which are critical to food production and have been dying off at alarming rates.  The restrictions would cover times when specific plants are in bloom and when commercial honeybees are being moved through certain areas, EPA officials said.”

Kevin Phillips shared a photo to GoodNews FortheEarth‘s Timeline. Organic Consumers Association

The Environmental Protection Agency is finally making moves to ‪#‎SaveTheBees‬! Learn more about this important proposal to protect our precious pollinators: http://orgcns.org/1BDiy9R
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Victory! Australia Says No to Lion Hunting Trophies Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/victory-australia-says-no-to-lion-hunting-trophies.html#ixzz3bEVlWQWv

Victory! Australia Says No to Lion Hunting Trophies

March 18, 2015, www.care2.com | “According to the Department of the Environment, the measure was introduced in response to growing public concern about canned hunting, or “captive hunting,” where lions and other big game animals are bred specifically to be killed in an enclosure where they have no opportunity to escape. Animal advocates and conservationists have also raised concerns that lions and animals are often drugged and baited before being killed.”

 Greena Lachele Smith

“According to a coalition of wildlife advocacy organizations that recently petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to get African lions endangered species protection, in the past three decades their population in the wild has dropped by more than 50 percent, leaving potentially fewer than 32,000 remaining in the wild today.”

Even though hunter claim that canned hunting takes the pressure off of lions in the wild, numbers of wild lions continues to decrees.

 

Sri Lanka’s New President Puts Immediate Ban on Glyphosate Herbicides

sirisena

May 25, 2015, sustainablepulse.com | “Sri Lanka’s newly elected President Maithripala Sirisena announced Friday that the import of the World’s most used herbicide glyphosate will be banned with immediate effect. The release of already imported stocks has also been stopped.”

Sri Lanka’s newly elected President Maithripala Sirisena announced Friday that the imports of the World’s most used herbicide glyphosate will be banned with…
sustainablepulse.com
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Grassy Narrows 12-year blockade against clear cutting wins award

 

May 24, 2015, www.cbc.ca | “An Ontario environmental group is recognizing one of Canada’s longest standing blockades with a public service award.  Grassy Narrows First Nation in northwestern Ontario received Ontario Nature’s J.R. Dymond Public Service Award for exceptional environmental achievement at a ceremony on Saturday.”

Absolutely Awesome!
An Ontario environmental group is recognizing one of Canada’s longest standing blockades with a public service award.
cbc.ca
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Shell loses appeal of oil train project in Skagit County

May 21, 2015, wecprotects.org | “Today, Skagit County Superior Court dismissed Shell Oil Refinery’s appeal of a decision that required an environmental impact statement for their proposed oil-by-rail expansion. This decision follows the Skagit County Hearing Examiner’s February 2015 ruling that Shell’s proposed project posed a significant risk of harm to people, water and wildlife. ”

Judith Green shared a link to GoodNews FortheEarth‘s Timeline.
Skagit County Superior Court dismissed Shell Oil Refinery’s appeal of a decision that required an…
wecprotects.org
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This amazing village in India plants 111 trees every time a girl is born

May 21, 2015, www.globalcitizen.org | “In a country that historically favors the birth of a son, Piplantri village in India has created a new tradition that not only celebrates the birth of a daughter, but also benefits the community and the planet. You see, every time a girl is born they plant 111 trees. That’s right, 111 trees!”

Pamela Benda shared a link to GoodNews FortheEarth‘s Timeline.
A tradition that celebrates girls and benefits the community and planet.
globalcitizen.org
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Japanese aquariums vote to stop buying Taiji dolphins

May 20, 2015, www.theguardian.com | “Aquariums in Japan have voted to stop buying live dolphins from the town of Taiji, where the annual slaughter of hundreds of cetaceans has drawn widespread condemnation, after being threatened with expulsion from the world’s leading zoo organisation.”

Aquariums promise to stop acquiring live cetaceans from controversy-hit town amid threat of ejection from leading zoo organisation
theguardian.com|By Justin McCurry

They brought wolves to Yellowstone, but they had no idea this would be the result

http://www.viralthread.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/wolv.jpg

May 19, 2015, theshrug.net | “After a 70 year absence, wolves have finally been reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park in the United States.  The impact of their absence could not be fully realized until their return.”
An amazing account of the positive impact on the entire ecosystem of reintroducing wolves…
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Stand Up for the Endangered Species Act this Endangered Species Day

Bald Eagles are still prevalent today in large part thanks to the ESAMay 15, 2015, earthjustice.org | “Today is Endangered Species Day. With a new holiday popping up seemingly every day— for example, this month you can also celebrate “Lost Sock Memorial Day” and “Dance Like a Chicken Day”—some may roll their eyes at such a statement. But Endangered Species Day is one day worth noting.”

Pamela Benda shared a photo to GoodNews FortheEarth‘s Timeline. CELEBRATE! It’s hard to imagine the bald eagle – the symbol of America – going extinct in its own country, but that’s almost what happened in the 1960’s when DDT and mass hunting nearly wiped the noble bird from the continental US. But thanks to the passing of the Endangered Species Act and restrictions on DDT, the bald eagle recovered from just 400 to more than 10,000 nesting pairs!

The Endangered Species Act has been instrumental in protecting many of America’s beloved and iconic creatures — from grizzly bears to gray wolves. Unfortunately, the law is currently under attack by members of Congress who want to gut protections so industry can dig, blast, and pollute wherever they want. If they had their way, the very symbol of America would now only be found stuffed and preserved in museums. http://ejus.tc/1cEafEr
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Brazilian Ranchers Aren’t Cutting Down As Much Forest Anymore

May 12, 2015, thinkprogress.org | “Pressure from environmental groups and federal prosecutors is helping break the link between cattle ranching and deforestation in the Amazon, according to a new study.  Agreements with Brazil’s largest slaughterhouses have “dramatically” reduced deforestation by ranchers, research published Tuesday in Conservation Letters found.”

Pamela Benda shared a link to GoodNews FortheEarth‘s Timeline.
Breaking the cycle of deforestation in the Amazon is critical to fighting climate change.
thinkprogress.org
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