
Guardians of the Forest Seeds: Restoring Brazil's Atlantic Forest
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Four new wildlife ponds created in Lake District valley
Four new wildlife ponds have been created in Newlands Valley. West Cumbria Rivers Trust has supported the project, which also includes blocking a man-made ditch and creating a natural channel through wetland pools. This work is aimed at allowing water to settle and flow more slowly, benefiting the ecosystem. The trust said: "England has lost around 75 per cent of its wetlands since the Industrial Revolution. "That's had a huge impact on biodiversity, water management, and carbon storage. "Projects like this help turn the tide, one pond at a time." The pond creation is part of a larger initiative by landowners at Rowling End, who are transforming their land with habitats like wood pasture and scrub. The work was carried out by TM Lindsay Contractors, funded by Farming in Protected Landscapes through the Lake District National Park, with help from partners, including the Woodland Trust.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
More than 700 objections in ferocious backlash to plans for 200 new homes
More than 700 people have objected to plans to build 200 new homes on farmland between Holbury and Blackfield, as the application continues to face ferocious backlash. The homes could be built across 60 acres on Lynwood Farm, which is part of the "green lung" between the two New Forest villages. Applicant Wates Developments is proposing to build up to 200 homes, of which 70 to 35 per cent would be affordable, and also includes biodiversity enhancement areas such as "children's play fields", a community orchard and allotments. But the plans have been criticised by neighbours, receiving 720 objections on New Forest District Council's public planning portal. Neil Wadmore was one of those speaking out against the proposal after growing up alongside Rollestone Road near the farmland. READ MORE: "I see it as such a shame that this area of outstanding beauty and a natural habitat for so many animals and creatures is going to be destroyed, especially as there are so many Brownfield sites available for this type of plan," he said. Mr J M Pointer, who said he has been a resident of the area for more than 50 years, called the development "unacceptable" and said it could have a "disastrous effect" on the neighbouring New Forest National Park. Councillor Peter Armstrong joined the rest of Fawley Parish Council in objecting to the plans. (Image: Fawley Parish Council) Independent councillor Peter Armstrong joined hundreds of residents in blasting the plans, protesting the development alongside the rest of Fawley Parish Council. "The New Forest National Park has said they're against it and it's very unusual to get their objection," he said. READ MORE: Cllr Armstrong said the plans have caused "a lot of upset locally" because a national developer has "come in and just wanted to do its own thing". He said the farmland was supposed to be a "strategic gap" to separate the two villages. Julie Clarke standing at the meeting. (Image: Cristiano Magaglio) More than 100 people met at Bethany Gospel Hall, which overlooks the proposed site, in March to object to the plans. Julie Clarke is a nurse and she fears that the increase in population would stretch local resources past their limit. At the meeting, she said: "From my point of view, it is the impact on nursing in the area. We are struggling as it is."


E&E News
a day ago
- E&E News
Federal judge hears arguments on environmental risks from ‘Alligator Alcatraz'
MIAMI — A federal judge on Wednesday heard arguments in a lawsuit against the immigration detention center in the Everglades known as 'Alligator Alcatraz,' in which advocacy and tribal groups allege state and federal officials violated environmental laws. Friends of the Everglades, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida argue federal and state officials did not conduct legally required environmental reviews, examine alternative sites or collect public feedback when they quickly built the tented facility on the airstrip of the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport. They allege noise, lights, traffic and other activity from the facility will harm endangered nocturnal species, such as the Florida panther and the Florida bonneted bat. Wildlife ecologist Randy Kautz, a panther expert, predicted the facility would create fewer opportunities for the animals to find prey or mate, and warned higher traffic could result in more deaths from car accidents. Advertisement 'It's pretty obvious panthers have been here and have succeeded and prospered here,' he said of the surrounding area, near the federally protected Big Cypress Natural Preserve.