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Thread: Thú
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02-09-2022, 09:22 AM #261
Nước non ngàn dặm ra đi:
Maine family’s lost cat turns up after six years – in Florida
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...rida-six-years
A Maine family that long ago gave up on a lost family cat is being reunited – more than six years and 1,500 miles later.
Denise Cilley, of Chesterville, said she was shocked to get a voicemail last week announcing her cat, Ashes, had been located in Florida.
Rằng tôi chút phận mèo già
Sáu năm lìa cửa lìa nhà đến đây
(Đoạn đường miêu thanh)
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02-10-2022, 06:32 PM #262
Eats shoots and leaves:
Koala listed as endangered
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...lt-its-decline
The Australian government has officially listed thekoala as endangered after a decline in its numbers due to land clearing and catastrophic bushfires shrinking its habitat.
The koala is under pressure from multiple ongoing threats including disease, global heating and clearing of its habitat for development.
In 2020, a NSW parliamentary inquiry found the species would be extinct in that state by 2050 unless governments took urgent action to protect its habitat and turn the declines around.
Samuel found Australian governments had comprehensively failed in their duty to protect the environment and the country’s iconic wildlife had suffered because of it.
(còn tiếp)
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02-11-2022, 12:58 PM #263
Ăn sóc học hay?
The chefs putting invasive species on the menu
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...n-the-menu-aoe
Paul Wedgwood’s Royal Mile has had grey squirrel on the menu since 2008. Wedgwood has even made haggis from the North American rodent that has driven the local extinction of the native red across much of England and Wales.
“It’s mellow, nutty and a bit gamey. It’s just a really nice flavour, and it’s easy to match. Anyone who’s doing rabbit could just easily swap in squirrel,” he says.
The Wild Meat Company, which sells game from Suffolk, England, sold about 10,000 grey squirrels last year, hardly enough to dent the population of 2.7 million in the UK.
Wedgwood is not alone among chefs putting invasive species on the menu. At Dai Due restaurant in Austin, Texas, owner and chef Jesse Griffiths is encouraging Americans to hunt and eat more of the millions of feral hogs that cause billions of dollars of damage to farmland.
In the Bahamas, Michelin-starred chef José Andrés is serving up invasive lionfish to help protect reefs in the Caribbean. At Fallow in London, chefs are planning to cook king crab, the latest arrival on British shores that has sparked fears for native brown crab and scallop populations.
At Miya’s, a sustainable sushi restaurant in New Haven, Connecticut, head chef Bun Lai developed a dedicated invasive species menu and won the White House champions of change award in 2016 for his sustainable food.
New Haven chef Bun Lai's deep-fried Asian shore crab served with another invasive, Japanese knotweed. (Andrew Douglas Sullivan)
Roman runs the website EatTheInvaders.org, hosting recipes for invasive species in the US that include the green iguana, wakame seaweed and nutria or coypu – a river rat.
Để cho con sóc xổng chuồng leo cây...
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02-14-2022, 09:36 PM #264
Why do birds fall down from the sky? (Closed to You)
Why did birds fall from sky in Mexico?
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...xperts-say-aoe
Hundreds of yellow-headed blackbirds have been filmed appearing to fall from the sky, some of them dying, in mysterious circumstances in the northern Mexican city of Cuauhtémoc.
The incident happened on the morning on 7 February, according to local reports. The birds tend to breed farther north, in the US and Canada, and migrate south for winter in Mexico.
The deaths of 225 starlings in Anglesey in December 2019 were later discovered to have been caused by them diving into the tarmac, possibly after being chased by a predatory bird and failing to pull up in time.
Người từ trăm năm
Về gây tai họa...
(Nguyễn thiên nhiên)
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02-14-2022, 11:33 PM #265
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02-14-2022, 11:34 PM #266
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02-15-2022, 08:22 AM #267
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02-15-2022, 11:58 AM #268Tự dưng cả đám ào xuống, rồi ào lên, rồi cả đống nằm chết co giò.
Last edited by ốc; 02-15-2022 at 12:00 PM.
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02-16-2022, 10:05 AM #269
Coi chừng chó dữ:
Dystopian robot dogs
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...nce-technology
The robot dogs would be one of many technologies deployed as part of the “smart wall”, but they aren’t limited to the border. US police departments started trying out the devices in recent years. Massachusetts state police tested the robot dogs in 2019. Police in Honolulu used the same model to remotely screen its unhoused citizens for Covid and scan their temperatures.
Also, they’re expensive, ranging anywhere between $90,000 and $150,000, when many are discussing police budgeting.
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02-19-2022, 05:48 PM #270
Đất lành chim đậu, đất độc chim đau:
Nearly half of bald eagles tested across US show signs of chronic lead exposure
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...-lead-exposure
While the bald eagle population has rebounded from the brink of extinction since the US banned the pesticide DDT in 1972, harmful levels of toxic lead were found in the bones of 46% of bald eagles sampled in 38 states from California to Florida, researchers reported in the journal Science.
Similar rates of lead exposure were found in golden eagles, which scientists say means the raptors probably consumed carrion or prey contaminated by lead from ammunition or fishing tackle.
The blood, bones, feathers and liver tissue of 1,210 eagles sampled from 2010 to 2018 were examined to assess chronic and acute lead exposure.
Lead is a neurotoxin that even in low doses impairs an eagle’s balance and stamina, reducing its ability to fly, hunt and reproduce. In high doses, lead causes seizures, breathing difficulty and death.
Laura Hale, board president at non-profit Badger Run Wildlife Rehab in Klamath county, Oregon, said she’ll never forget the first eagle she encountered with acute lead poisoning, in 2018.
She had answered a resident’s call about an eagle that seemed immobile in underbrush and brought it to the clinic.
The young bald eagle was wrapped in a blanket, unable to breathe properly, let alone stand or fly.
“There is something hideous when you watch an eagle struggling to breathe because of lead poisoning – it’s really, really harsh,” she said, her voice shaking. That eagle went into convulsions, and died within 48 hours.
Như chim đau quên mùa xuân
(Lê Uyên Ương)