Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Google helps crack down on illegal fishing ? from space and other top stories.

  • Google helps crack down on illegal fishing ? from space

    Google helps crack down on illegal fishing ? from space
    Illegal and unreported fishing is a multibillion-dollar business around the globe, and one that has proven notoriously difficult to combat. In part, that’s because it involves a constant stream of renegade fishermen being pursued by countries that have only limited resources to carry out a perpetual cat-and-mouse game on the high seas. But a new satellite-based surveillance system powered by Google, which was publicly unveiled Thursday at a global oceans conference at the State Department, ai..
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  • The bigger the marine animal, the greater the risk of extinction, says study

    The bigger the marine animal, the greater the risk of extinction, says study
    The bigger you are, the tougher you'll find it to survive in the ocean. This is the somewhat counter-intuitive conclusion of a new study examining the extinction threat levels of marine animals. It found that larger-bodied creatures are at a greater risk, a pattern never seen before on Earth and most likely the result of our growing appetite for seafood. Led by Jon Payne, an environmental scientist at Stanford University, a team of researchers set out to explore the relationship between the e..
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  • ANU researchers lead groundbreaking enzyme study

    ANU researchers lead groundbreaking enzyme study
    It may soon become easier to remove blood clots or get rid of pesticides from waterways thanks to research carried out at the Australian National University.A team of ANU scientists has just finished work on a six-year study looking into how enzymes can change their function. Team of researchers at ANU (l-r) Associate Professor Colin Jackson, Eleanor Campbell and Galen Correy just completed a groundbreaking study into how enzymes can be made. Photo: Jay Cronan Lead researcher, Associate ..
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  • Mystery over hundreds of horseshoe crabs washed up on Japanese beach

    Mystery over hundreds of horseshoe crabs washed up on Japanese beach
    Hundreds of horseshoe crabs have washed up dead on a beach in southern Japan, leaving experts mystified. The blue-blooded creatures arrive on the shore in southern and western Japan each year to lay eggs, and it is normal for some to die. But this year the death rate has been more than eight times higher than normal, according to the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun. Usually around 50 to 60 dead horseshoe crabs are found on the Sonehigata tidal flats, but 490 have already been discovered this y..
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  • August equals July as hottest month in modern times: UN

    August equals July as hottest month in modern times: UN
    By: AFP | Geneva | Published:September 16, 2016 9:58 pm Heating trend has begun because of fossil fuel burning. (File) August equalled July as the hottest month in modern times, the UN’s weather agency said today, warning that extraordinary temperatures were “set to become the new norm”. The United Nations Meteorological Organisation (WMO) also forecast that 2016 will prove to be the warmest year on Earth over 137 years of record-keeping. “It is looking likely that ..
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  • The Greatest Shipwrecks Still Out There

    The Greatest Shipwrecks Still Out There
    Just this week, explorers made history by discovering the remains of the HMS Terror, one of the ships on the ill-fated voyage of Sir John Franklin. So just how many more history-making wrecks are still waiting?It’s estimated that, beneath Earth’s waters, 3 million undiscovered shipwrecks exist. And right now, all across the planet, the locations of a select few of these lost ships are actively being sought.Some of these expeditions are publicly sanctioned by governments and others are privately ..
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  • Qld extends reef invite to DiCaprio

    Qld extends reef invite to DiCaprio
    Jamie McKinnellAustralian Associated PressThe Queensland government has extended an invitation to Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio to visit the Great Barrier Reef and learn about its conservation efforts.DiCaprio this week cited the plight of the reef at the Our Oceans Conference in Washington DC.He told the gathering over 600 miles (965km) of reef previously "teeming with life" had been devastated in an unprecedented coral bleaching event."We are seeing this level of impact to coral reefs aroun..
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Kenya: State House Spokesperson's Press Briefing At State House, Nairobi On 11th September 2016 .What's in a name? "Organic" orange juice claims questioned .
Magpies send Canberrans ducking for cover as swooping season starts .Rocket with NASA asteroid probe blasts off .

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