Red knots are shorebirds that like to eat crabs and shrimp. (Joe Austin Photography, Alamy, via The New York Times) |
"Red knots are plump, neatly proportioned sandpipers that in summer sport brilliant terracotta-orange underparts and intricate gold, buff, rufous, and black upperparts," Cornell University's bird lab says. The species took a population nosedive, but seems to be recovering, reports Jon Hurdle of The New York Times: "The count, by land and boat, tallied about 22,000 of the robin-sized birds, an encouraging sign for a shorebird that is listed as federally threatened . . . a sharp increase from a record low of 6,880 in 2021. . . . Crab harvesting bans were partly credited for the rise."
A tiger shark is a type of reef shark. (Photo by Gerald Schömbs, Unsplashed) |
Seaweed may be a climate-saving game-changer, reports Bridget Huber of National Geographic. "A bold experiment to use seaweed as part of a solution to climate change is underway in Iceland, where millions of small buoys made of wood and limestone, some bearing seaweed, will be dropped into the ocean in the coming months. . . . [A system will] sink the buoys, festooned with long locks of seaweed, to the deep ocean floor, where the carbon they contain will remain sequestered for 800 years or more."
Photo by John Tlumacki, The Boston Globe |
Container gardens grow neatly on trellises. (Photo by Vaivirga via Lancaster Farming) |
Don't have time for a garden this year? Try this site to plan next year's garden.
Another wonderful fresh food option is visiting a local farmers' market.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/9OsDM4H Fur/feather/fin quick hits: Red knots gain from crab-harvest ban; overfishing hurts sharks; rabbits eat gardens and trees - Entrepreneur Generations
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