Written by Jace Shoemaker-Galloway
Published on January 28th, 2010

Officials from 13 nations are meeting to discuss conservation efforts to save the endangered tiger. Officials from countries where tigers still roam – Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Russia, Thailand and Vietnam - are taking part in the Asia Ministerial Conference (AMC) on Tiger Conservation. The conference runs from January 27 to January 30, 2010, in Thailand. Read the rest of this entry »
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Asia Ministerial Conference on Tiger Conservation,
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Global Tiger Initiative,
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tiger summit,
wild tigers,
world bank,
World Wide Fund for Nature,
wwf
Written by Zachary Shahan
Published on January 22nd, 2010

Continuing a series on Ecovillages I started last month, this article delves into some of the unique features and successes of the extraordinary Auroville ecovillage in India.
Auroville’s main goal has always been “to realise human unity — in diversity”. It is also concerned with “sustainable living and the future cultural, environmental, social and spiritual needs of mankind.” It is involved in ongoing researching on these topics. Ideally, it’s intended that Auroville (City of Dawn) eventually consist of 50,000 people from India and around the world.
The idea for the ecovillage or township started to sprout in the mid-1960s by its main founder, Mirra Alfassa, “The Mother” (born in Paris by an Egyptian mother and Turkish father), and the project was founded in 1968.
In 1966, before it was founded, the project (located in southern India) had already received the backing of UNESCO, support which has continued in a variety of ways since then. “In 1966 UNESCO passed a unanimous resolution commending it as a project of importance to the future of humanity, thereby giving their full encouragement.”
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Written by Govind Singh
Published on January 10th, 2010

Average surface temperature predictions for the Indian sub-continent
In keeping with the recently announced voluntary and unilateral targets to reduce the emissions intensity of its increasing GDP, the Ministry of Environment & Forests (MoEF) of the Government of India has just put together an Expert Group with an objective of making India a Low Carbon Economy. Predicted to be one of the worst climate change affected regions in the near future, India has already gotten on its toes with the various Indian states putting together their Action Plans on tackling climate change and by taking the lead in calling for global cooperation on green technology.
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Written by Jerry James Stone
Published on January 4th, 2010

A report, citing figures obtained from the government, says Hong Kong’s roadside air pollution reached life-threatening levels one in every eight days last year.
The air pollution index was recorded by the Environmental Protection Department. It said there were 44 days of “very high pollution” last year. That number is up from the 39 reported days in 2008 and the 13 days in 2005. Read the rest of this entry »
Written by Jace Shoemaker-Galloway
Published on January 3rd, 2010

Time is running out for one of the world’s most beautiful, charismatic and powerful species, the tiger. According to conservationists, the wild tiger population has declined by 95 percent during the past century. Only 3,200 tigers, Panthera tigris, remain in the wild today. Read the rest of this entry »
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2010 the International Year of Biodiversity,
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Caspian tiger,
Chinese Year of the Tiger,
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giant panda,
javan rhinoceros,
javan tiger,
leatherback turtle,
magellanic penguin,
monarch butterfly,
mountain gorilla,
Pacific walrus,
Panthera tigris,
polar bear,
South China tiger,
Ten to Watch in 2010,
tigers,
wwf,
WWF Tiger Initiative
Written by Rhishja Larson
Published on December 22nd, 2009

A Chinese court has sentenced a man to 12 years in jail, plus a fine, for killing an endangered Indochinese tiger – which was made into a stew and eaten.
The Mengla county court in Xishuangbanna has sentenced Kang Wannian to 12 years in jail, plus a fine of over $14,642 USD, for killing an endangered Indochinese tiger in southwest China’s Yunnan Province.
Kang claimed he did not know the animal he shot was a tiger.
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china,
chinese,
endangered species,
illegal wildlife trade,
Indochinese tiger,
Panthera tigris corbetti,
poachers,
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tiger,
tiger extinction,
tiger farm,
Xishuangbanna,
Year of the Tiger 2010,
Yunnan Province
Written by Rhishja Larson
Published on December 21st, 2009

Two greater one-horned rhinos were found murdered with their horns missing inside India’s Kaziranga National Park – and authorities believe it was the work of poachers posing as park visitors.
Forest guards covering the Agartoli range of Kaziranga National Park have discovered the bodies of a male and female rhino – both with their horns removed.
Officials say the killers simply entered the park posing as visitors.
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rhino horn,
rhinoceros,
Rhinoceros unicornis,
superstition,
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Viet Nam,
Vietnam,
vietnamese
Written by Michael Ricciardi
Published on December 8th, 2009

The Przewalski’s horse of Mongolia’s Gobi desert–considered the world’s only remaining, “true” wild horse–has had its share of existential challenges over the centuries. Once considered “extinct in the wild”, due primarily to habitat loss, the horse’s status has been upgraded recently to “critically endangered”, based upon criteria set by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (UICN) in Switzerland.
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4270,
American Mustang,
Central Asian steppes,
Chris Walzer,
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foal survival rate,
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Hustai National Park,
International Union for Conservation of Nature,
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livestock,
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nature reserve,
reproductive success,
Society for Conservation Biology,
starting population,
Takhin Tal,
UICN,
University of Veterinary Medicine in Vienna,
veterinary medicine,
wild,
wild horses
Written by Rhishja Larson
Published on December 1st, 2009

India’s Bagha-Chitauni rail link has unexpectedly created a swampy new home for a family of rhinos.
Although in the 1990’s, Bihar forest officials fought – and lost – a legal battle to stop the railway track relaying project, today they couldn’t be happier: The obstruction has created 1,000 hectares of swampy rhino habitat.
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Bagha-Chitauni,
bihar,
conservation,
endangered species,
greater one-horned rhino,
India,
indian rhino,
nepal,
Patna,
rail link,
railway track,
rhinoceros,
Rhinoceros unicornis,
rhinos
Written by Jace Shoemaker-Galloway
Published on November 28th, 2009

Only 80 wild elephants are left in Vietnam, according to Vietnam’s state-run newspaper, Lao Dong. Experts at the Vietnam Forest Management Agency workshop, held earlier this week, reported the elephant population in Vietnam is in rapid decline. Read the rest of this entry »
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80 wild elephants,
asian elephants,
deforestation,
elephants,
extinction,
habitat loss,
human-elephant conflict,
illegal poaching,
illegal wildlife trade,
ivory trade,
poaching,
Vietnam