Help Save People s World
The economic crisis has hit People s World hard. We need the support of all our friends and readers to continue publishing.
Oregon wolf makes historic journey to California, raising conservation hopes March 1, 2021 1:12 PM CDT By Olivia Rosane
OR-93 traveled hundreds of miles from Oregon to California. Austin Smith Jr. / Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs / California Department of Fish and Wildlife
An Oregon-born wolf named OR-93 has sparked conservation hopes with a historic journey into California.
A young male, OR-93 traveled hundreds of miles from an area southeast of Mount Hood, Oregon, to California’s central Sierra Nevada mountain range, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) announced Friday. The agency said he traveled farther south into California than any previous collared wolf. His trek is also the longest tracked journey of any gray wolf during the
Oregon Wolf OR-93 Makes History, Traveling to California s Central Sierra Nevada defenders.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from defenders.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog:
In the dynamic world of oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) trading, one of the hottest new products is the carbon-neutral transaction. Designed to make oil and LNG more competitive environmentally with renewable energy in response to environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) pressures, climate change and the decarbonization megatrend, carbon-neutral oil and carbon-neutral LNG provide for the offset of the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with a defined set of oil or LNG activities. A carbon-neutral oil or LNG transaction is effected through terms in the underlying transaction documents that govern the sourcing, purchase and retirement of carbon credits as offset units (COUs).
Print
A year after piloting a remote vehicle into the depths of the Pacific Ocean off Southern California, researchers for the marine nonprofit Oceana revealed the submerged treasures they found there and the promise they hold for restoring fisheries in some areas and protecting them in others.
The five-day expedition explored habitat in and around the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, gathering data to support Oceana’s bid to place a large swath of undersea habitat off limits to bottom trawling.
That fishing method uses large nets dragged along the sea floor to catch fish. In the process, however, it can also pull up corals and other organisms.