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Poop core records 4,300 years of bat diet and environment

Poop core records 4,300 years of bat diet and environment
miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Feeding cows seaweed could solve the big bovine burp problem

Jacques Kleynhans Methane-spewing cow burps are killing the planet. Livestock contributes 14.5 per cent of human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, and cows make up two-thirds of that figure. Four years ago, Josh Goldman read research from Australia s national research agency CSIRO and James Cook University in Queensland that suggested a solution: seaweed. Sprinkle a tiny bit of Asparagopsis taxiformis into a cow s dinner, making up about 0.2 per cent of their total meal, and they burp 85 per cent less methane – and, early trials show, require less food overall, as all that belching wastes energy. But for this red seaweed to solve cow burps, it needs to be easy to grow: 200 million tonnes of it will be needed if it is to feed the world s cattle.

Wildlife expert pours cold water on claims Tasmanian tiger family spotted

But Nick Mooney, honorary curator of vertebrate zoology at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery reviewed and assessed the material provided by Waters. In a statement, TMAG said Mooney had “concluded that based on the physical characteristics shown in the photos provided, the animals are very unlikely to be thylacines, and most likely Tasmanian pademelons”. “TMAG regularly receives requests for verification from members of the public who hope that the thylacine is still with us. However, sadly there have been no confirmed sightings documented of the thylacine since 1936.” The thylacine is believed to have been extinct since 1936, when the last living thylacine, Benjamin, died in Hobart zoo. But unconfirmed sightings have regularly been reported for decades.

Tasmanian tigers spotted in Australia are unlikely to be extinct thylacines: Wildfire experts

Article content An Australian group of enthusiasts searching for extinct thylacines believes it has discovered three Tasmanian tigers, but its evidence has been dismissed by wildlife experts, who said the photographed animals were most likely pademelons.  The Thylacine Awareness Group of Australia (TAGOA), a non-profit organization dedicated to the research and discovering of thylacine – an extinct Tasmanian tiger, the last of which died almost 90 years ago – reported that it had photographed the three animals in north-east Tasmania. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Tasmanian tigers spotted in Australia are unlikely to be extinct thylacines: Wildfire experts Back to video

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