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WITH rising temperatures, courtesy of greenhouse gas emissions, you might expect birds to linger on at migration time, taking an extra ‘sus beag’, before the arduous journey to far-off lands.
Mon, 09 Dec, 2013
SCIENTISTS from Inland Fisheries Ireland, led by Debbi Pedreschi of UCD, have studied the history of pike in Ireland.
Mon, 02 Dec, 2013
MORALITY is the glue which binds society together. Without each individual’s sense of fair play, empathy and abhorrence of unnecessary violence, we could never co-operate. But when and how did these propensities develop?
Mon, 25 Nov, 2013
IN 1855 David Livingstone, a Scottish missionary, became the first European to set eyes on Tokalaya Tunya, the ‘thundering smoke’.
Mon, 18 Nov, 2013
ACCORDING to the Woodland Trust, autumn lasted two weeks longer than usual this year and there were lots of berries. This augurs well for wild creatures facing the trials and tribulations of winter.
Mon, 11 Nov, 2013
THE seabird populations of Scotland have declined over the last decade and a report just issued confirms numbers are continuing to fall. According to Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH), there may be 46% fewer seabirds now than there were in 1986 when systematic monitoring began.
Mon, 04 Nov, 2013
above, the smooth newt. There is no evidence the frog-killing chytrid fungus is in Ireland, but we cannot be complacent.
Mon, 28 Oct, 2013
THE anniversary of a great Welsh naturalist looms; Alfred Russel Wallace died on Nov 7, 1913. The ‘father of biogeography’, independently of Darwin, hit on the Principle of Natural Selection and discovered the ‘line’ through Southeast Asia which bears his name.
Mon, 21 Oct, 2013
WILDFOWL and Wetlands Trust (WWT) scientists, at Martin Mere, in Lancashire, England, are preventing swans from crashing into cables.
Mon, 14 Oct, 2013
One of the world’s rarest whales was photographed from the deck of the Celtic Mist on Sep 4.
Mon, 07 Oct, 2013