The Glory of the Garden
81
Food for Thought
Curated by David Rowing
Follow
Scooped by David Rowing onto The Glory of the Garden
Scoop.it!

Development halted in crucial wildlife corridor in Malaysia

Development halted in crucial wildlife corridor in Malaysia | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Kenyir Wildlife Corridor in northeast Malaysia is teeming with wildlife: elephants, gibbons, tigers, tapirs, and even black panthers (melanistic leopards) have been recorded in the 60 kilometer (37 mile) stretch of forest.

 

In fact, researchers have recorded over 40 mammal species (see species list below), including 15 threatened with extinction according to the IUCN Red List. When these findings were presented by scientists to the Terengganu state government action followed quickly: all development projects have been halted pending a government study.

 

"We will not hesitate to gazette the site if the findings reveal that it is of environmental importance," Datuk Toh Chin Yaw, chairman of the Terengganu State Industry, Trade and Environment Committee, told fz.

No comment yet.
David Rowing is also curating
100 Acre Wood The Barley Mow In Deep Water Insight Europe
Discover Topics David Rowing is following
Content Curation World Upcycled Garden Style Social Media Content Curation Vertical Farm - Food Factory EPIC Infographic World Environment Nature News
and 112 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by David Rowing from The Agrobiodiversity Grapevine
Scoop.it!

Why bees & biodiversity benefit from indigenous wildflowers - Green Living - The Ecologist

Why bees & biodiversity benefit from indigenous wildflowers - Green Living - The Ecologist | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Filling your garden with wildflowers helps honeybees and butterflies, and creates a relaxed mood.

Via Bioversity Library
No comment yet.
Scooped by David Rowing
Scoop.it!

Pesticides hit queen bee numbers

Pesticides hit queen bee numbers | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Some of the world's most commonly used pesticides are killing bees by damaging their ability to navigate and reducing numbers of queens, research suggests.
Gina Stepp's comment, March 30, 2012 1:14 AM
Need those bees!!
Scooped by David Rowing
Scoop.it!

Subtle poison

Subtle poison | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
IN THE winter of 2006 beekeepers in America noticed something odd—lots of their hives were dying for no obvious reason.
No comment yet.