Sri Lankan coconut farmers predict yields for future climates

Millions of people in the tropics depend on coconuts for food, raw materials and livelihood. Coconuts are also a high value commercial crop. But like any crop, coconuts are at risk of drought and other prolonged events. By using climate science and better agricultural forecast models, the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI)…
Read Further

Hygienic Honeybees to Save Hives

Back in November 2008, avid followers of hand picked……..and carefully sorted will remember my blog about how Rowse Honey were investing £100,000 in honeybee (Apis mellifera) health research, to be undertaken by Britain’s only professor of apiculture, Francis Ratnieks. Well, after months of research it seems that significant headway has been made to breed hygienic…
Read Further

Earthworm Week and Charles Darwin’s worms

This week (23-29 March 2009) is Earthworm Week and Buglife, the Invertebrate Conservation Trust, has put together resources, including a Worm Poetry Competition, aimed at schools to raise the earthworms' profile and raise awareness of their importance for agriculture. Read on to find out more…
Read Further

The UN ask an expert programme – Invasive Species Q&A transcript

I was catching up on my reading of invasive species blogs during my coffee-break this morning, so unfortunately this is now a historical post, but still worth checking out. Jennifer Forman Orth over at the Invasive Species Weblog noticed that it was "Ask an Expert" Invasives Day on the 4th and 5th March over at…
Read Further

World Water Day – 22 March 2009

Yes, it’s World Water Day this Sunday, which coincides with the last day of the 5th UN World Water Forum, being held in Istanbul, Turkey, from 16 to 22 March 2009. I know we seem to have a day for everything now, but if there is one resource which deserves a day of its own,…
Read Further

Scientists deliver a strong message for the world’s leaders on climate change

At the culmination of the Climate Congress in Copenhagen last week (10-12 March 2009), representatives of the 2500 scientists who attended delivered a clear message to politicians that not enough is being done globally to combat climate change. The primary aim of the congress was to capture and synthesize the recent research effort devoted to…
Read Further

Some burning eco-questions – part 5

I thought it’s about time I posted other three eco-questions here, after a long pause. I had to catch up with a big pile of journals on my desk, which needed screening for the database among other work we do here at Cabi I’m sure these three questions are in many hand picked readers’ minds…Read…
Read Further

Managing risk and creating opportunities for development in a low carbon economy – day three from the Copenhagen climate change conference

The final day of the conference addresses the thorny problem of adapting to the inevitable impacts and examining the human dimensions of climate change.   I attended the morning opening session at which Professor Lord Nicholas Stern, author of the widely respected Stern Report published in 2006, gave a presentation on the economics of responding…
Read Further

What’s next after Kyoto? Day 2 at the Copenhagen Climate Conference

The second day of the Climate Change conference in Copenhagen opened with plenary session speakers examining how the global energy system needs to change to mitigate the impacts of climate change. The magnitude of the changes required is huge and needs to globally integrated and engaged at local, national and international levels. Professor William Nordhaus,…
Read Further

Rising sea levels are set to have major impacts worldwide

 This week, at the International Congress on Climate Change in Copenhagen, more than 2000 participants are gathered to consider more than 1,600 contributions from researchers from more than 70 countries. Preliminary conclusions from the conference will be developed into a synthesis report (to be published in June) which will inform policymakers and scientists at the…
Read Further