LOCKWOOD: What s in your future? | Local News mcalesternews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mcalesternews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Monmouth County Library schedules events during January
Monmouth County Library schedules events during January
A radio play, the good and bad of coffee, and the magic and importance on bees are all available at the Monmouth County Library during January.
Historian Michael Adelberg, recognized as one of the foremost authorities about Monmouth County during the American Revolution, and author of several books on this area during the Revolutionary War, will present “Rebellion Before Revolution: Pre-war Tremors in Monmouth County” on Jan. 21 at 7 p.m. in a program presented by the Monmouth County Historical Association and co-sponsored by the library, according to a press release.
Start on your Green New Year’s resolutions with the 2021 Rutgers Environmental Stewards Program
Online. Rutgers Cooperative Extension is offering its 2021 online Rutgers Environmental Stewards class, which educates volunteers about current environmental issues so they can help tackle environmental problems in their communities. | 28 Dec 2020 | 09:30 Rutgers Cooperative Extension is offering its 2021 online Rutgers Environmental Stewards class, which educates volunteers about current environmental issues so they can help tackle environmental problems in their communities. Source: evensi.us/rutgers-environmental-stewards
Rutgers Environmental Stewards online class worked with the Borough of Middlesex Public Library to teach children about the life cycle of the Monarch butterfly and established a native plant garden that included milkweed and nectar plants.
One. Covering the critical early pandemic weeks of March to June 2020, the researchers also looked at landings reports and found that catches for some species like squid and scallops declined compared with the same time period of previous years.
But some other landings, including black sea bass and haddock, were on par or even higher than earlier years. Alongside their survey results, the researchers say that suggests some fishermen kept fishing hard even as they earned less.
“Groundfishermen were more likely to continue fishing” than those in other fisheries, said Smith. Even as the dominant restaurant market – accounting for 70 percent of U.S. seafood sales – vanished in those early months, local retail demand especially in New England helped keep crews working to find cod and haddock.
Weird 2020 nature news: Murder hornets, dead mink, goats and lions jsonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jsonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.