This September 1 is the 100th anniversary of a landmark event in the history of biodiversity. On that day in 1914, at about one o'clock in the afternoon, Martha - the last surviving passenger pigeon - died at the Cincinnati Zoo. It is extraordinary to know with virtual certainty the day and hour when a species ceases to be a living entity. And it was a stunning development because less than half a century earlier, the passenger pigeon had been the most abundant bird in North America, if not the world. As late as the 1860s, passenger pigeons had likely numbered in the billions, and their population was neither evenly distributed across the landscape nor in any way subtle. These birds had a propensity for forming huge aggregations that are difficult to imagine today. John James Audubon, America's best-known student of birds, recorded a flight of passenger pigeons along the Ohio River in Kentucky that eclipsed the sun for three days. Other accounts, written over the course of three centuries and in several languages, testify to the birds darkening the sky for hours at a time over the major cities of the eastern third of the United States and Canada.
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Mientras que la economía del compartir parece tener un número creciente de fans, también parece generar más preguntas sobre sus impactos económicos y sociales. Curiosamente, un aspecto que aún no se encuentra en estas discusiones (bueno, no del todo) es el impacto ambiental de la economía del compartir. La idea general es que la economía del compartir tiene...
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Do you have any plants in your office? What about at home? It may take a green thumb to keep these potted floras alive and well, but studies show that indoor plants have multiple benefits and are worth the care and attention. Some benefits include helping us breathe easier, purifying air and improving health, and even sharpening our focus. According to a new study, plants can even make work environments more productive. Researchers claim that 'green' offices with plants make staff happier and more productive than 'lean' designs stripped of greenery.
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Forget your reusable bottle at home this morning and find yourself towing an unwanted plastic bottle? If you are in Beijing, you are in luck — you could trade in that empty bottle for a subway ticket. "Reverse vending machines" in subway stations around the city allow riders to deposit polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottles in exchange for a commuter pass or mobile phone credit.
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"Esta es una de las mejores cervezas que he probado", dice Andrés Barrera. Mi amigo está disfrutando de una cerveza artesanal llamada Atrapaniebla, una cerveza hecha con agua condensada de la niebla de la montaña en dos condensadores de niebla. La cervecería que la produce, situada en Peña Blanca (a unos 360 kilómetros al norte de Santiago, la capital chilena), es una de las primeras empresas chilenas que hacen uso de la tecnología para "capturar niebla"; otros lo utilizan para regar el tomate y los cultivos de aloe vera. "El agua de los condensadores de niebla tiene menos nitrito y nitrato que el agua potable en el norte de Chile, lo cual es bueno para la cerveza", dice Miguel Ángel Carcuro, de 29 años de edad, co-propietario de la cervecería que hace Atrapaniebla.
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As California suffers through the third year of a record-breaking drought, state lawmakers agreed today to require more sweeping oversight of the state’s groundwater resources. California legislators approved Senate Bill 1168 and Assembly Bill 1739, which together call for stricter management of groundwater supplies by local agencies while giving the state the ability to step in when necessary. Up until now, California was the only state in the nation that did not comprehensively monitor or regulate groundwater.
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