Blog Archive
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2009
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September
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- Sixty gun salutes fired marking China’s 60th anniv...
- China kicks off National Day extravaganza
- The60th anniversary of the founding of the People'...
- 60th anniversary of China's National Day
- News Today
- Rome: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Do-It-Yourself Translations Through Facebook Connect
- 1-800-Flowers Gets Analytics Tool for Measuring Fa...
- Mad Men Keeps Viewers Involved Through Interactive...
- YouTube Falls Short In Facebook Popularity Contest...
- Love, pleasure, duty: Why women have sex
- Plan your ideal walking workout
- Parents clueless when it comes to kids' growth charts
- 'Sorry I Haven't Written': A Scientific Explanation
- What You Need To Know About The H1N1 Vaccine
- News Today
- T-ara Celebrates Chuseok
- Rain’s Shanghai Concert Is A Scam
- Wonder Girls’ Diary in America Part 1
- Kris Allen Working With Adele and Duffy's Collabor...
- Rob Thomas' 'Someday' Music Video Debuted
- Radiohead's Thom Yorke Forms New Band With RHCP's ...
- Mitchel Musso's 'Shout It' Music Video Comes Out
- Lady GaGa Reveals Storyline of Her Joint Tour With...
- Mayday Parade Premiere 'The Silence' Music Video
- '90210' 2.05 Preview: Naomi Goes Green
- Preview of 'Melrose Place' 1.05: Canon
- 'Grey's Anatomy' Welcomes Sarah Drew as New Doctor
- A New Trailer of Epic Miniseries 'The Pacific'
- The Sue Storm of 'Fantastic Four' is in talks to j...
- Jessica Alba to Stir Things Up in 'Little Fockers'
- 'Whip It!': On the Set With Jimmy Fallon, Ellen Pa...
- Sylvester Stallone in New 'The Expendables' Photo
- 'Avatar' Sequel Could Explore Pandora Deeper
- Mandy Moore Talks Disney's 'Rapunzel'
- Emmy Rossum Reportedly Dating Counting Crows' Adam...
- Jon Cryer and Wife Lisa Joyner Adopt a Baby Girl
- Christina Milian and The-Dream Planning Another We...
- Private Memorial Service for Patrick Swayze Set fo...
- Scarlett Johansson: 'I Have Terrible Stage Fright'
- Karina Smirnoff Has New Boyfriend
- News Today
- The Obama Assassination Poll — Another Story About...
- New England Patriots Use Facebook As Primary Onlin...
- Taylor Swift’s Facebook Page Still Growing Fast, W...
- Miami: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Want to Lose Weight? Avoid Skinny Overeaters
- Scientists Announce Trove of Fragile New Species i...
- Miss Switzerland 2009 Linda Faeh
- News Today
- Giant panda twin cub
- T-ara And Supernova To Unleash TTL Listen.2
- What’s long, black and fits nicely in SNSD’s hands?
- Opening Dance Stage at Girl Groups Chuseok Special
- Sugababes' Amelle Reportedly Receives Death Threat...
- Snippet of The Queen Project's Debut Single
- Weezer Will Duet With Lil Wayne on 'Can't Stop Par...
- Lady GaGa Named Billboard's Rising Star
- 50 Cent Rushed to Hospital After Listening to Fat ...
- 'Camp Rock 2' Invites Fans to Join the Filming
- 'One Tree Hill' 7.04 Preview: Believe Me, I'm Lying
- Preview of 'Gossip Girl' 3.04: The Stars Are Coming
- Recap: Jive, Tango and Quickstep on 'Dancing with ...
- 'Wizards of Waverly Place' Receives More Episodes
- 'Heroes' 4.04 Preview: Tracy Is Back
- Oren Peli's 'Paranormal Activity' Expands to 20 Mo...
- Salma Hayek Gets a Vision in New 'The Vampire's As...
- 'New Moon' Unleashes Three Fresh Character Posters
- No 'Valentine's Day' for Joe Jonas
- First Look at Amanda in 'Saw VI'
- Plot Details on Robert Rodriguez's 'Predators'
- 'The Princess and the Frog': Extended Clip and Fea...
- Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush 'Totally Back Toget...
- Emmy Rossum's Husband Justin Siegel Files for Divorce
- Robert Pattinson Isn't an 'Attention-Seeker'
- Hayden Panettiere Denies Dating Kevin Connolly
- Fred Durst and Wife Divorcing
- Taylor Lautner Feels Uncomfortable With His Muscul...
- News Today
- Iran Says It Test-Fires Longest-Range Missiles
- Five insider strategies for avoiding a hotel billi...
- Chicago: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Cartoons of the Week, September 26, 2009 - October...
- How Can A Pregnant Woman Get Pregnant Again?
- Why Doctors Are Giving Heroin to Heroin Addicts
- News Today
- Follow Ivy Behind the Scenes
- Lee Hyori’s New Album is going to be off the hook!
- JQT Releases Teaser
- Brown Eyed Girls @ Circle Nightclub Teaser!
- Carrie Underwood's 'Cowboy Casanova' Music Video A...
- Artist of the Week: Mariah Carey
- Video: Jenny Slate Dropped the F-Word on 'Saturday...
- 'Amazing Race' Eliminates Two Pairs Early in Its S...
- Cloudy with a Chance' Sticks to Box Office's Top
- A 'Predators' Role for Danny Trejo
- Tickets for Michael Jackson's 'This Is It' On Sale
- Jaime Pressly Ties the Knot
- Khloe Kardashian and Lamar Odom's Wedding Is On, t...
- Justin Guarini Weds Fiancee Reina Capodici
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September
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Scientists Announce Trove of Fragile New Species in Mekong
Right now, bird-eating frogs with fangs wait for their prey in the streams of eastern Thailand. Technicolor geckos scurry up trees on the Thai-Malaysian border, and ruby-red fish — previously only found in the Ukrainian ornamental fish trade — are swimming in the rivers of Burma. These are three of the 163 species discovered by various researchers in the Greater Mekong region of Southeast Asia last year, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) announced on Sept. 25. But conservationists warn that these and other rare species around the world may not be around for long if nothing is done to stop global climate change. The Mekong region — Thailand, Vietnam, Burma, Cambodia, Laos and China's Yunnan province — is particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Rising seawaters will damage coastal areas; more powerful storms will pummel the region, and warming temperatures will transform ecosystems, the WWF says. A recent Vietnamese study estimated that if its coastal water level rises about 2.5 ft. — a not unreasonable prospect, particularly during the region's periodic storm surges — nearly one fifth of the delta in Vietnam would be submerged. With endangered species already living in shrinking areas — as little as 5% of the region's natural habitat remains — animals like the musk shrew and the Nonggang babbler would have nowhere to go. "The treasures of nature are in trouble if governments fail to agree a fair, ambitious and binding treaty that will prevent runaway climate change," said Kathrin Gutmann in a press release, the head of policy and advocacy at the WWF Global Climate Initiative. It was not an accident that the WWF released its report three days before the world's top climate change negotiators met in Bangkok today to iron out drafts of a global climate agreement to be debated in Copenhagen this December. Ten of the remaining 15 days of negotiation before the make-or-break Copenhagen summit are in Thailand, and gridlock there could derail any chance that an enforceable, global climate change agreement gets implemented anytime soon. The executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Yvo de Boer said he expects serious progress to be made during the Bangkok meetings and promised to be ready for Copenhagen: "There will be a draft ready, no doubt about it." While the one-day climate change summit at the U.N. General Assembly on Sept. 22 in New York had some encouraging moments, it remains to be seen whether the solidarity expressed by U.S. President Barack Obama, Chinese President Hu Jintao and other leaders will trickle down to the delegates from 180 countries. The delegates' previous meeting in Bonn, Germany ended with a 200-page document with over 2,000 bracketed statements, indicating areas of disagreement. Still, de Boer is confident that last week's General Assembly meeting made it clear that countries are dedicated to making a Copenhagen agreement happen. "Leaders are telling their negotiators they should get off their backsides and get it done," de Boer said. But others fear that an enforceable climate agreement is still a long ways off, due in no small part to the enduring differences between developed and developing countries. Wealthy countries have long wanted global emissions curbs for emerging — and growing — economies. In 1997, the U.S. Senate voted 96-0 against the Kyoto Protocol because it did not cap emissions for India and China. And while India, China and developing countries in the greater Mekong region and elsewhere have expressed a willingness to help, they also say they need financial support from wealthier countries like the U.S., still the world's biggest emitter of green house gases if given responsibility for the energy used to make imported goods, and that emissions caps at home could slow their economic growth. "When it comes to the negotiations, they are in fact slowing down; they are not going in the right direction," Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told reporters at the G20. Aree Wattana Tummakird, the director of Thailand's Office of Climate Change Coordination, hopes the industrialized countries would help poorer countries deal with the impacts of climate change, but is worried that the differences were still too much to overcome. "We need the developed countries to fulfill their commitment," she says. "We will try to achieve significant progress, but I'm not sure we can have a good outcome." That would be bad news for a newly discovered tiger-striped pit viper, which scientists expect only live on one small island off the coast of Vietnam, or the Cat Ba leopard gecko whose extraordinary colors and large, cat-like eyes suggest Roswell rather than northern Vietnam. Southeast Asia accounts for only 12% of global greenhouse gas emissions, but according to the Asia Development Bank, with its long coastlines and low-lying areas, it's the world's most vulnerable region to climate change. If scientists are to keep discovering strange new species in the region — and they say there are many more left to find — negotiators need to come together. Protecting both the rare species and at-risk populations in the Greater Mekong and elsewhere depends on the U.N. talks in Bangkok to smooth the way for a December agreement in Copenhagen. source: Time.com