Friday, September 3, 2010

Most new farmland cut from tropical forests {Earthship Friday}

by eKos

PhotobucketWelcome to the eKos Earthship, your one-stop-shop for green diaries and series.

Beneath the fold you will find news and notes, community announcements, and our eco-diary roundup.

Peruse the eKos Library to find previously listed diaries. You can also follow eKos on Twitter.

Tonight's editor: patrickz

Please remember to rec the BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 101

All views expressed by today's editor do not necessarily represent those of eKos or eKos listed diarists.



continued at Daily Kos....

Okavango Wildlife - A Photo Diary

by Haole in Hawaii

Another one of these diaries meant to provide a brief respite from.. well you know.  These photos were taken in the Okavango and Linyanti regions of northwest Botswana.

073010_2597
Savuti Sunset



continued at Daily Kos....

The new 'Anthropocene Epoch' Means the Doom of Most Species on Earth

by RobertConnors

The 10,000+ years of the Holocene Epoch have ended abruptly, and a new Epoch is coming to dominate the Earth: that of the Anthropocene.



continued at Daily Kos....

We Need Clean Energy Jobs Now

by Congressman Paul Hodes

Yesterday, we learned that another oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico. Thankfully, nobody was hurt and no oil has leaked into the Gulf as a result of the explosion.

But this most recent explosion happened less than five months after the tragic explosion at BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig, which killed 11 workers, dumped 4.9 billion barrels of oil into our waters and wreaked havoc on the local economies of Gulf communities.

The most dangerous thing these spills have in common is this: there were warnings that disaster might occur. Just like BP, Mariner Energy, who owns the oil rig that exploded yesterday, was cited for two safety violations in the past six months alone.

It’s clear now, more than ever, that we need to rethink America’s energy strategy.  We need to rethink the way we power our economy.



continued at Daily Kos....

My White House is Solar Cool. Barack, why isn't yours?

by A Siegel

Sometimes, your kids tell you great things.

We have the coolest house on the street.

Wow.  We're cool -- according to the kids.  Certainly isn't the non-existent slide for the pool that isn't there.  Our lack of a huge media room and the glaring absence of a gym didn't contribute.  And, while I've always thought it cool that we live on the white house of the street, that isn't it either.  Why is it cool? According to my soon-to-be fourth-grader son:

Because we know where our electricity comes from.



continued at Daily Kos....

This One Really Stings

by Michael Brune

We called it, simply, The Test. I grew up on a house on Barnegat Bay in Chadwick Beach, New Jersey. With four little children scampering around, my parents had a hard and fast rule for us and our friends: No one was allowed to play in the front yard, on the docks or anywhere outside without wearing a life preserver. Whether we were playing baseball, digging up worms, or going crabbing, those big orange puffy preservers had to be on, and buckled, at all times.

We hated it. The only way to freedom was to pass a test by swimming all the way across the lagoon and back. It was a rite of passage. Those of us who were ready would talk about it for weeks. We'd practice and ask questions of our older siblings. I remember lying in bed the night before, wondering what I'd do if I got tired. Would I drown? Would I have to wait another month before trying again?

I live in the San Francisco Bay Area now, but I come home to Barnegat Bay every summer with my wife and our two kids. It's a highlight of our year. This summer our daughter Olivia was going to take her shot. She'd been practicing at the pool for weeks. My dad, unable to resist the urge to spoil his granddaughter, sweetened the pot with the promise of a bowl of ice cream at the end.



continued at Daily Kos....

A Match Made in Smoggy Toxic Hell: Koch and Prop 23

by RLMiller

The secretive, many-tentacled Koch Industries has just donated a million dollars to the Yes on 23 campaign.  Tesoro Industries, another Texas oil business, has matched that amount.  Scorecard:

Total Contributions to date:                    $8,221,096

Contributions from oil interests:              $7,987,995 (97% of the total)

Contributions from out of state:              $7,307,995 (89% of the total)

Valero, Tesoro & Koch Industries:           $6,575,000 (80% of the total)



continued at Daily Kos....

Rolling the dice with evolution

by mwmwm

A new study by J. Alroy, just published in Science (subscription required for full text), has been getting some reporting by other sources. It's mildly entitled "The Shifting Balance of Diversity Among Major Marine Animal Groups."

It prods me to my keyboard.

Evolution, and biodiversity, and the interrelationships of biosystems, are to me the imprint of the universe's organizing principles. It's what I grew up with instead of religion.

My father was an evolutionary biologist and animal behaviorist, and so I grew up with dinnertime discussions about evolutionary pressures on butterfly wing designs, or the evolutionary explanations for beehive altruism, or why mating behavior affected peacock feather development.

Elroy's analysis -- while not a surprise -- hit me surprisingly hard, because it drove home the full impact of the "sixth extinction."



continued at Daily Kos....

Whistleblowers at contaminated egg facility were ignored

by Deep Harm

On the heels of FDA revelations of filthy conditions at large production facilities, the Associated Press reports that USDA ignored whistleblowers who called attention to the problems.

Two former workers at Wright County Egg facilities, Robert and Deanna Arnold, said they reported problems such as leaking manure and dead chickens to USDA employees, but nothing was done. (AP)



continued at Daily Kos....

Finding Common Ground to Improve Livelihoods and Conserve Wildlife

by NourishingthePlanet

This is the first part in a two-part interview with Steve Osofsky, Director of Wildlife Health Policy for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). In this first part of the interview, Osofsky discusses how his field work informs his policy work, as well as how farmers can both help, and benefit from, wildlife conservation. Crossposted from the Worldwatch Institute's Nourishing the Planet.



continued at Daily Kos....

BP Poor-Mouthing

by Crashing Vor

Headlining the New York Times today is BP's claim that, unless they are allowed to keep drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, times might get so tight they won't be able to pay the fines and restitutions they've pledged to cover their accident. . . in the Gulf of Mexico.



continued at Daily Kos....

BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 101

by Gulf Watchers

The current ROV DIARY: Daily Kos Gulf Watchers ROV #353 - Lifting Day Redux - BP's Gulf Catastrophe- Lorinda Pike

The digest of diaries is here

Rules of the Road

  • We take volunteers for subsequent diaries in the sub diaries or ROV's as we have playfully coined them.
  • Please rec this mothership diary, not the ROVs.
  • Please be kind to fellow kossacks who may have limited bandwidth and refrain from posting images or videos.

PLEASE visit Pam LaPier's diary to find out how you can help the Gulf now and in the future. We don't have to be idle! And thanks to Crashing Vor and Pam LaPier for working on this!



continued at Daily Kos....