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The enemy no more, fire helps regenerate forests

The enemy no more, fire helps regenerate forests Virginia Mercury Photos/Sarah Vogelsong Members of a fire team carry out a prescribed burn last month on Summers Mountain in Highland County. Sam Lindblom of the Nature Conservancy prepares a drone to drop ignitable “Dragon Eggs” over Summers Mountain during the prescribed burn. We do know that Indigenous people were burning. The Shenandoah Valley was open. We had bison, we had elk. So they were burning historically to keep these places open for grazing lands. Justin Barnes, state forester HIGHLAND COUNTY — On the warmest day of 2021 yet, the fire swept over Summers Mountain in a remote corner of Highland, a Virginia county so lightly populated that cattle outnumber humans by almost seven times.

The birds have been helping us through this pandemic Let s help them in Illinois

Joan Dittmann~For Sun-Times Media During the COVID-19 pandemic, birds enriched the lives of many Illinoisans who saw them out their windows or when going for a walk Now Illinois should do something to help the birds. Editorials Last month, Virginia became the first state to restore protections for migratory birds from unintended but predictable killings resulting from human activities. Such so-called “incidental take” will be banned under a regulation approved by the state’s Department of Wildlife Resources. Illinois should adopt a similar rule. Migratory birds long were protected from incidental take by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, which encouraged such commonsense measures as using red lights on communication towers, screening off toxic waste pits, marking power lines to reduce collisions and ensuring wind turbines are not placed directly in the paths of migrating birds. Bird deaths caused in ways for which there is not always a straightforward solution, such

Virginia wants to make Fort Wool island an avian habitat Historical groups say plan is for the birds

Virginia wants to make Fort Wool island an avian habitat Historical groups say plan is for the birds
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Virginia wants to make Fort Wool island an avian habitat Historical groups say plan is for the birds

Virginia wants to make Fort Wool island an avian habitat Historical groups say plan is for the birds
dailypress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailypress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bat Disease Continues Deadly March, Killing 90% Of 3 Species: Study

UpdatedFri, Apr 23, 2021 at 9:31 am ET Reply So called because of the characteristic way it appears, white-nose syndrome first appeared in the U.S. near Albany in 2007. (Shutterstock) April 23, 2021 Virginia populations have suffered really severe impacts from white-nose syndrome, so there are unfortunately just not that many bats left, said Virginia Tech infectious disease ecologist Kate Langwig, who has studied the disease extensively. Subscribe So called because of the characteristic way it appears, white-nose syndrome first appeared in the U.S. near Albany in 2007 and by 2009 had spread to Virginia, traveling southward through the Appalachian region. The fungus that causes the disease (

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