- Aquaculture – a growth sector « World Ocean Review
However, in the long term more intensive seaweed farming alone will not be enough to stop global warming While the world’s kelp forests remove roughly 173 million tonnes of carbon from the Earth’s climate system every year, humans added around ten billion tonnes by burning coal, oil and gas in 2019 alone
- Major Findings - #BringBirdsBack
Each year, many birds produce young while many others die But since 1970, on balance, many more birds have died than have survived, resulting in 2 9 billion fewer breeding birds today—that’s a loss of more than 1 in 4 birds that were alive in 1970
- The Pig Who Sang to the Moon: The Emotional World of Farm Animals
Far from being unfeeling brutes, the billions of animals bred, farmed and slaughtered for human consumption (10 billion annually in the U S alone) have complex emotional and intellectual lives Some of their emotions – such as the strong maternal instinct – mirror our own, while other emotions and intellectual abilities far surpass those
- By 2020, Male Chicks May Avoid Death By Grinder | National . . .
By 2020, Male Chicks May Avoid Death By Grinder The fate of male chicks in the egg industry has long been controversial In-shell DNA technology to identify male embryos may ease concerns
- What If Earths History Compressed Into One Year - Our Planet
Timeline and important events of the Earth’s history compressed into one year First, some numbers to put things in perspective: In one day of a year, 12 44 million years of Earth time passed In one hour of a year, 518,264 years passed In one minute of a year, eight thousand years (or most of human history) passed
- Review on Salmonella Infection in Poultry
and stay in farm environments, allowing for its uncontrolled spread [10] Fuche, et al revealed that the global burden of NTS is approximately 94 million cases of NTS gastroenteritis worldwide each year, causing 155,000 fatalities With the great expansion of poultry rearing and farming,
- The thought experiment: What would happen if everyone on the . . .
Believe it or not, releasing billions of domesticated animals into the wild would presents a few logistical problems (but also solves some others)
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