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Date

Is uranium mining still planned near the Grand Canyon?

By EarthTalk on Sunday, May 31, 2009.

EarthTalkTM
From the Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

Design for a Living World

By Deb Baker on Saturday, May 30, 2009.

The Nature Conservancy recently commissioned ten renowned designers to create beautiful, useful objects, selecting sustainable raw materials from places around the world where the Conservancy works.

New Hampshire Envirothon

By Deborah Schachter on Saturday, May 30, 2009.

In New Hampshire Envirothon students work in teams to solve real-life environmental and natural resourcss problems. Cliff Lerner is the Envirothon team advisor at Keene High School, and says the program is one of the most motivating activities for his students.

Ice Storm Debris May Cause Fire Concern This Year

By Amy Quinton on Friday, May 29, 2009.

Recent rainfall in the state has quenched much of the fire danger for the state’s forests.
But fire rangers say it only takes a few days of high temperatures and dry conditions to bring back that threat.
As New Hampshire Public Radio’s Amy Quinton reports, this year fire officials are especially concerned, given all the downed branches and trees from December’s ice storm.

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Saving Species from Climate Change

By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, May 27, 2009.

Conservation biologists are fretting about the “pizzly” bear. That’s right - half polar bear, half grizzly. One example of the hybrid species was shot in the Canadian Arctic and confirmed by a DNA test in 2006. Maybe the cross-breed is a fluke of nature, but to Dr. Anthony Barnosky, it’s a sharp-toothed harbinger of things to come.

Dr. Barnosky is a paleoecologist at the University of California-Berkeley. In his new book Heatstroke: Nature in an Age of Global Warming, he compares the combination of global warming and pre-existing ecological problems to “a wrecking ball breaking down in hours a building that took years to construct.” And he looks at what humans can do to save the animals, forests, reefs and other wild things facing extinction.

He suggests restructuring how we think about saving nature, and artificial steps we could take to save species from mass extinction, including “assisted migration” and an even more radical move involving repopulating landscapes with related species of now-extinct animals.

And from mass extinction to making way for ducklings. Each spring, farmers face a dilema: what to do with wildlife that nest in their fields over the winter. Ducks, for example, often build their nests in vetch – a cover crop that farmers plant to boost nitrogen levels. When tractors roll through to turn the soil, duck eggs get crushed along with the vetch. One family farm in the Sacramento Valley has come up with a solution. It involves an army of volunteers to scoop up the eggs and bring them to a local bird sanctuary. They call it “egg aid.” Living on Earth’s Beth Hoffman has the story. Click here to listen.

(Photo by EmmaJG via Flickr/Creative Commons)

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New Hampshire’s State Parks

By Laura Knoy on Tuesday, May 26, 2009.

With summer right around the corner, New Hampshire’s state park system is bracing itself for the warm-weather crowds – from hikers and fishers to campers and swimmers. We’ll get a state park update, and we'll see how our park management and funding have held up in a tough economy.

Guests

  • Ted Austin, New Hampshire State Parks director
  • Richard Ober, chairman of New Hampshire’s State Park System Advisory Council

We'll also hear from

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The Shad Loses Ground

By Tina Antolini on Tuesday, May 26, 2009.

The mystique of the spawning salmon running upstream has intrigued many. But there’s another migrating fish, outside of the limelight, that also has a passionate following. It’s called the American Shad.

As part of a collaboration of Northeast stations, WFCR’s Tina Antolini reports that the number of shad is declining in many rivers, along with knowledge about the fish.

The Greening of Southie

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, May 26, 2009.

We’ve heard a lot recently about efforts to boost our sagging economy and retool our manufacturing industry with green-collar jobs. A green-collar job is a lot like a blue-collar job, except that workers incorporate the principles of sustainability and environmental stewardship. Eco-friendly development might sound like a contradiction because, for one thing, the EPA ranks construction as our country’s most wasteful industry. Yet efforts to green the building industry are underway, including in the working-class neighborhood of South Boston. The new documentary The Greening of Southie chronicles Boston’s first residential green building – the Macallen – and the workforce that set out to construct the “city of tomorrow, today.” The film’s director, Ian Cheney, joins Word of Mouth with more.

(Photo by Taylor Gentry)

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Are microwaves energy-efficient?

By EarthTalk on Sunday, May 24, 2009.

EarthTalkTM
From the Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine