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01 / 05
One of Europe’s Most Endangered Birds Is Bouncing Back

Smithsonian Magazine | Conservation & Biodiversity

One of Europe’s Most Endangered Birds Is Bouncing Back

“The increased availability of food and nesting habitat for the Azores bullfinch led to a gradual increase in the bird’s numbers. In 2010, with a population estimate of about 1,000 birds, IUCN downlisted the species to ‘endangered.’ In 2016, the organization downlisted the bird again to ‘vulnerable.’ The current population size of the Azores bullfinch is estimated to be around 1,300 individuals distributed across nearly 5,000 acres of suitable habitat in the Pico da Vara/Ribeira do Guilherme area.”

From Smithsonian Magazine.

The Guardian | Conservation & Biodiversity

Rare Birds Discovered in Western Australia Desert

“The largest known population of one of Australia’s rarest birds has been found living in Western Australia’s Great Sandy desert.

A team of Ngururrpa rangers and scientists detected the stronghold of up to 50 night parrots – a critically endangered species once feared extinct – living on Indigenous-managed land, according to a study published in Wildlife Research.”

From The Guardian.

The Atlantic | Energy Consumption

North Carolina’s Coming Run on Electric Cars

“When Hurricane Helene knocked out the power in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Friday, Dustin Baker, like many other people across the Southeast, turned to a backup power source. His just happened to be an electric pickup truck. Over the weekend, Baker ran extension cords from the back of his Ford F-150 Lightning, using the truck’s battery to keep his refrigerator and freezer running. It worked so well that Baker became an energy Good Samaritan. ‘I ran another extension cord to my neighbor so they could run two refrigerators they have,’ he told me.

Americans in hurricane territory have long kept diesel-powered generators as a way of life, but electric cars are a leap forward. An EV, at its most fundamental level, is just a big battery on wheels that can be used to power anything, not only the car itself. Some EVs pack enough juice to power a whole home for several days, or a few appliances for even longer. In the aftermath of Helene, as millions of Americans were left without power, many EV owners did just that. A vet clinic that had lost power used an electric F-150 to keep its medicines cold and continue seeing patients during the blackout. One Tesla Cybertruck owner used his car to power his home after his entire neighborhood lost power.”

From The Atlantic.

The Guardian | Conservation & Biodiversity

Canis Aureus Makes Sudden Tracks Into Western Europe

“The golden jackal, Canis aureus, may seem an exotic creature from a far-off country but the species has suddenly expanded its range into western Europe. Much smaller than a wolf but larger than a fox, the jackal will compete with both species for food and territory. The animals have been found as far north as Finland and Norway and have also reached Spain.

Genetic research shows the individual jackals studied had travelled at least 745 miles (1,200km) from their original homes, and sometimes twice as far. This is comparable with wolves looking for new territories.”

From The Guardian.

Hakai Magazine | Conservation & Biodiversity

The Australian Oyster Reef Revival

“Over the past decade, however, scientists have become reacquainted with the historical reach of Australian flat oyster reefs, which decorated about 7,000 kilometers of the country’s coastline from Perth to Sydney and down around Tasmania. Australian flat oysters—not to be confused with the far more common European flat oyster, commonly known as the native oyster—form gigantic reefs comprised of billions of individuals that can be found as deep as 40 meters. ‘They’re like the trees in a forest or the coral in a tropical sea,’ McAfee says. Besides providing habitat and boosting biodiversity, oyster reefs are known to filter water and bolster fish production. 

On the back of this learning, scientists have been working to restore these lost ecosystems—an endeavor that got a major boost in 2020 when the nonprofit the Nature Conservancy Australia teamed up with the government of South Australia on an ambitious project to bring flat oyster reefs back to the coastline near Adelaide, one of the country’s biggest cities. That project, as McAfee and his team show in a recent study, has been a resounding success so far, with the restored reef now hosting even more Australian flat oysters than the last remaining natural reef in Tasmania.”

From Hakai Magazine.