Friday, February 07, 2020

Fireflies face extinction risk - and tourists are partly to blame
By Georgina Rannard BBC News
 

GETTY IMAGES
Firefly tourism is growing in countries including Mexico, 
Japan, Malaysia and India

Firefly tourism is on the rise globally but scientists are warning it may contribute to risk of the insect's extinction.

"I spotted a hundred flickering lights, illuminating a palm like a Christmas tree."

"Our guide waved his flashlight at the fireflies. They slowly engulfed us - we were surrounded by a shiny galaxy of glowing beetle stomachs."

"I reached out a hand and captured one in my fist."

Reading this travel blogger's enchanting experience in 2019 makes it clear why firefly tours are popular, but done badly, it risks killing the insects.

Habitat loss and light pollution from urbanisation and industrialisation are the leading threats to firefly populations, according to research published this week.

But firefly tourism, which attracts thousands of visitors in countries including Mexico, the US, the Philippines and Thailand, is a growing concern for conservationists.

"Getting out into the night and enjoying fireflies in their natural habitat is an awe-inspiring experience," Prof Sara Lewis at Tufts University, who led the research, told the BBC.

But tourists often inadvertently kill fireflies by stepping on them, or disturb their habitat by shining lights and causing soil erosion.

Firefly festivals are organised in countries including Japan, Belgium, and India, and social media is magnifying this tourism, she adds.
How tourism can kill fireflies

The tiny town of Nanacamilpa in Mexico became a celebrated firefly spot in the past decade.

Some visitors post their sparkling photos on Instagram, flouting the ban on photography that many site managers impose, says local photographer Pedro Berruecos.

The Mexican fireflies are especially vulnerable to tourists, Prof Lewis explains.
Estimated annual visitors to firefly sites
Malaysia: 80,000
Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee: 30,000 in two-three week summer season
Taiwan: 90,000
Mexico: 200,000 in 2019, up from 180,000 in 2018

The female insects are wingless and cannot fly, meaning they live on the ground, where visitors walking around will trample on them.

"No blame on the tourists, but if they walk on the forest floor, they will be standing on the female fireflies who will be carrying eggs. They are killing the next generation," Prof Lewis says.

In Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines, the industry has existed for a few decades, but is usually poorly-managed, she explains.

PEDRO BERRUECOS
Firefly season is just three months in Mexico meaning the 
concentrated visits put extra pressure on the eco-system

Congregating Mangrove fireflies live exclusively in mangrove trees along rivers.

Males gather in huge numbers to attract females, producing the appealing glowing swarms that tourists desire.

Motorised boats are driven up the rivers, creating water swells that erode the banks, killing the trees where the fireflies live.


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"Operators also crash boats into the banks to disturb trees and make fireflies fly out, creating a swarm for tourists to see," Prof Lewis explains.

"There is evidence that even just camera flashes disturb fireflies and interfere with their reproductive success, in addition to the flashlights used by tourists".
Is firefly eco-tourism even possible?

Prof Lewis is keen to emphasise that firefly tourism is often crucial to local economies and should not be banned.

Instead tour operators and tourists can develop eco-friendly practices.

KATIE DIEDERICHSImage 
Travel bloggers rave about their firefly experiences - 
Katie Diederichs chose an eco-friendly tour operator

Travel blogger Katie Diederichs and her husband, both from the US, chose an eco-friendly tour operator in Bohol, Philippines for their firefly experience in 2015.

Travelling in a small group at night in kayaks with just one light, the experience was designed to be as unobtrusive as possible, Katie explains.

"The amount of light from the fireflies made the mangroves look like Christmas trees - it was really magical.

Chief Raoni Metuktire's fight to save the Amazon rainforest

"The male fireflies were flying around, giving the illusion of twinkling, while the females blink."

The company is run by locals who love the fireflies and want to protect their environment, she explains.

But Katie says they witnessed other operators with "large motorboat of tourists" passing by them "sending waves in our direction."

CARLA RHODES PHOTOGRAPHY
Wildlife conservation photographer Carla Rhodes snaps
 the Big Dipper Firefly in the Catskill Mountains in New York, US

In Taiwan, the tourist board has invested in sustainable firefly tours and created "thoughtful and effective" firefly eco-tourism, Prof Lewis explains.

Sites have regulated guided tours with raised walkways that allow small groups of people to walk through the habitat without trampling on fireflies.

Instead of flashlights or headlamps that would disturb the insects, white paint illuminates the routes.

A group of scientists will meet in 2020 to set down guidelines for how to run a sustainable firefly tourism company, Prof Lewis says.

A photographer's tips for snapping responsibly

"It is very important to not disturb the fireflies' habitat while photographing," advises wildlife conservation photographer Carla Rhodes.

She regularly photographs the Big Dipper firefly, as well as other wildlife, where she lives in the Catskill mountains in New York.

Watch where you walk, she says, and be careful with your light sources.

"And for goodness sake, please don't ever capture them!"




SEE  https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/search?q=FIREFLIES

Indian man allegedly rapes girl, five, on US embassy grounds



Representational image: protest against sexual violence against women in India.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionIndia has seen a wave of protests against sexual violence in recent years

A 25-year-old man has been arrested for allegedly raping a five-year-old girl on the premises of the US embassy in the Indian capital, Delhi.
The man was arrested on Sunday after the child's parents registered a police complaint, police told PTI news agency.
The girl, who was assaulted on Saturday morning, is in a stable condition. Doctors have confirmed she was raped.
Her family lives on the grounds of the embassy, where her father works as a member of the housekeeping staff.
Police said the accused, a driver, is not employed by the embassy. However, he lives with his parents in the embassy's staff quarters as his father works there.
The US embassy is located in Chanakyapuri, a smart diplomatic enclave in central Delhi which is home to several embassies and high commissions.
The heavily-guarded compound is spread over 28 acres and employs local staff.
The families of the accused and the victim knew each other well, according to investigators, who told the Hindustan Times newspaper that he "lured" the girl to his house when he saw her playing outside. His parents were away at the time of the attack.
When the girl returned home, she told her mother what had happened. She was immediately taken to hospital, where, police said, doctors confirmed that she had been raped.
Police said the man is being investigated under India's stringent child protection laws.





Media captionHas India become a safer place for women?

In 2018, the government introduced the death penalty for those who rape children amid an uproar over two high-profile cases - the rape and murder of an eight-year-old, and the rape of a 16-year-old.
According to India's latest crime figures, every fourth rape victim is a child. In an overwhelming number of rape cases - 94% - the victims know the perpetrators.
India's poor record of dealing with sexual violence came to the fore after the 2012 gang rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus. This led to huge protests and changes to the country's rape laws.
In November, the gang rape and murder of a 27-year-old vet in the southern city of Hyderabad also made global headlines and sparked protests.

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Australia fires: Heavy rain extinguishes third of blazes in NSW



The Sydney Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge seen through a cloak of heavy rainImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionThe Sydney Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge seen through a cloak of heavy rain

Torrential rain across the east coast of Australia has extinguished a third of the fires in the region - and could put more out, officials say.
A wide band of rain sweeping New South Wales (NSW) has put out 20 of about 60 fires in the state in the past day.
Authorities have welcomed the downpour, but warned of flash flooding in Sydney and other cities along the coast.
Some of the affected areas had received the most rain recorded in over a year, said the Bureau of Meteorology.
Australia's largest city, Sydney, recorded its wettest day in over 15 months on Friday. Many locals cheered on the downpour despite the inconvenience.
"It was fantastic to wake up to much-needed rain this morning!" tweeted the city's lord mayor Clover Moore.
Much of NSW has been in drought for over three years, and such conditions have fuelled the intensity of the summer's unprecedented fires.


Crowd of commuters hold umbrellas as they walk through heavy rain in central SydneyImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionSydney locals woke up to heavy downpours

Fire officials in NSW said they were "over the moon" to see the state's forecast for a week-long drenching finally eventuate.
"This is that constant, steady, decent rainfall that we've been praying for for so long," said NSW Rural Fire Service (NSWRFS) spokeswoman Angela Burford.
She told the BBC: "This isn't just one of those scattered showers we saw a month ago. This is really helping our firefighters, and in some places, giving them a well-needed rest."


Presentational white space

However, Ms Burford warned that the largest blazes, in the state's inland south and near the capital city of Canberra, had received limited showers so far and were still of concern.
The weather system hit south-east Queensland on Wednesday before moving south to affect neighbouring NSW.
Authorities have issued a severe wet weather warning for a 1,000km (621 miles) stretch of the state - with damaging winds, heavy rainfall, and "abnormally high" tides forecast.
Over 280mm of rain was recorded at the holiday town of Byron Bay in northern NSW. Locals there described the downburst on Thursday night as heavier than that experienced in a 2017 cyclone.
Rescue services said they had rescued a number of people trapped in cars amid rising water. There have been close to 1,000 calls for help in NSW and Queensland since Wednesday.


The heavy rains are predicted to continue until next week, providing relief to some drought and fire-ravaged zones. Some fires, which were finally contained this week, have been burning for over two months.
"This has been an absolute welcome disruption to the weather pattern and a massive reprieve and relief to so many people," said NSWRFS Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons on Friday.
He said while hotter and drier conditions would likely return in the coming weeks, this particular period of rain "is breaking the back of this fire season, no doubt".
The state's bushfire season, which began in September, could run until as late as April. Officials have also warned that the peak of fire danger is still to come for the southern states of Victoria and South Australia.
NSW has been the state most devastated in Australia's bushfires crisis this year. The unprecedented scale and intensity of the blazes is a direct effect of climate change, scientists say.
Nationally, blazes have killed at least 33 people and destroyed thousands of homes. More than 11 million hectares of land - an area comparable to the size of England - has been scorched.



UK
Contraception shortage  


GETTY IMAGES

A shortage of contraception is causing chaos and risks unplanned pregnancies and abortions, doctors are warning.

Leading sexual health experts have written to ministers warning that the supply shortage is beginning to lead to serious problems across the UK.

A number of daily pills and a long-acting injectable contraceptive are thought to be affected.

The problem follows a shortage of hormone replacement therapy for menopausal women last year.

But there are signs that those supply difficulties might soon start to be resolved as a key ingredient is now being manufactured again.

It is currently unclear what has caused the contraception shortages.

Drug firm Pfizer first reported supply problems with Sayana Press, which provides three months' protection and can be self-administered by women, last year.

It is the only self-injectable contraceptive on the market and is also used to help women control period-related problems, such as heavy bleeding.

The Faculty of Sexual and Reproductive Healthcare said there were also now shortages of a number of daily pills, including Noriday, Norimin and Synphase.
'I was upset'  
  

Nikki Heresford, 34, from Lancashire, had been using Sayana Press to control her periods.

She liked the fact she could administer the injection herself as it meant she did not have to take time off work to make regular trips to the doctor's.

But when she ran out of her supply last autumn she did not find out there were supply issues until she went to her local pharmacy to pick up her next prescription.

She said it left her "upset" because she had no choice but to start using another injectable contraceptive.

She managed to get a last-minute appointment at her GP surgery to have the injection that time.

But this week when she needed another one, she could not get an appointment for five weeks so was forced to travel to an evening clinic at a community health centre.

"It's obviously inconvenient as I have to drag my five-year-old to the next town when he should be in bed."

It is unclear how many women use these types of contraception - overall around three million women take daily pills, and more than 500,000 use long-acting contraception, such as coils, implants and injections.

The Royal College of GPs said its members were doing their best to help women find alternatives - there are many different types of daily pill available.

Faculty president Dr Asha Kasliwal said; "We are aware that women are sent away with prescriptions for unavailable products and end up lost in a system. This is causing utter chaos."

The faculty has teamed up with the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and the British Menopause Society to write to ministers, asking them to set up a working group to address the problems.

The letter warns women are becoming distressed by having to find alternative products that might not necessarily suit them or go without contraception altogether.

It said this was affecting the "physical and mental wellbeing of girls and women" and could lead to a "rise in unplanned pregnancies and abortions".

The government in England said it was working with manufacturers to resolve the problems and expected the shortages to ease soon.

---30---

What happens to all the old wind turbines?


By Padraig Belton 
BBC Technology of Business report
Image copyrightGLOBAL FIBREGLASS SOLUTIONS
Image captionTurbines from the 1990s are reaching the
 end of their working lives

Welcome to the wind turbine graveyard. It stretches a hundred metres from a bend in the North Platte River in Casper, Wyoming.

Between last September and this March, it will become the final resting place for 1,000 fibreglass turbine blades.

These blades, which have reached the end of their 25-year working lives, come from three wind farms in the north-western US state. Each is about 90m (300ft) long, and will be cut into three, then the pieces will be stacked and buried.

Turbines from the first great 1990s wave of wind power are reaching the end of their life expectancy today. About two gigawatts worth of turbines will be refitted in 2019 and 2020. And disposing of them in an environmentally-friendly way is a growing problem.Image copyrightGLOBAL FIBREGLASS SOLUTIONSImage captionMany unwanted blades are just buried

Burying them doesn't sound very green. Can they not be recycled?

Wind power goes as far back at least as 9th Century BC Persia, where sails were used to grind grain and draw up water on the windy Sistan plains.

Scottish professor James Blyth built the first windmill to make electricity in 1887, powering his holiday home in Maykirk.

His second powered the Lunatic Asylum, Infirmary and Dispensary in Montrose (later Sunnyside Royal Hospital).

Instead of using cloth to catch the wind like Prof Blyth and the ancient Iranians, today's turbine blades are built from composite materials - older blades from glass fibre, newer ones from carbon fibre.

Such composite materials might be light and strong, but they are also extremely hard to recycle.
GLOBAL FIBREGLASS SOLUTIONSDon Lilly of Global Fiberglass Solutions hopes to sell pellets made from recycled turbine blades

That doesn't mean they have to go into landfill, according to Don Lilly, chief executive of Global Fiberglass Solutions in Bellevue, Washington.

Mr Lilly has been transforming fibreglass composites into small pellets he calls EcoPoly.

The pellets can then be turned into injectable plastics, or highly waterproof boards that can be used in construction, he says.

Mr Lilly has received interest from "several manufacturers" for his pellets.

He's also developed a programme to track blades throughout their life cycle, and make it easier to recycle them at the end.
GLOBAL FIBREGLASS SOLUTION
Pellets made from old turbine blades can be used to make new products

If we "holistically think about the end of life, there are simple choices we could make now that could make fibreglass in the blade easier to recycle," says Richard Cochrane, professor of renewable energy at Exeter University.

A second avenue for recycling turbine blades is called pyrolysis.

After first chopping up the blades, pyrolysis breaks up the composite fibres in ovens with an inert atmosphere, at about 450-700C.

The process recovers fibres other industries can reuse for glues, paints, and concrete.

Other products include syngas (synthesis gas) that can be used in combustion engines. And char (charcoal) which can be used as a fertiliser.

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The problem is significant amounts of energy are needed to activate the pyrolysis, which might limit its environmental usefulness. It has mainly been done at a laboratory scale. Germany's subsidiary of the French recycling group Veolia is researching the technology.

In Rotterdam unwanted blades have been put to a different use. The Dutch city boasts a 1,200sq m children's playground called Wikado, with a slide tower, tunnels, ramps, and slides all made from five discarded wind turbine blades.

Decommissioned blades have also been turned into another playground and outdoor seats in the Dutch city of Terneuzen, two bus stops in Almere, a seat beside Rotterdam's famous Erasmusbrug bridge. 
DENIS GUZZO
Rotterdam's Wikado playground has found a use for old turbine blades

Césare Peeren, an architect from Rotterdam's Superuse Studios is currently waiting for planning permission to turn two 55m blades into a bridge in Denmark's city of Ålborg, he says.

Meanwhile new rotors are only getting bigger.

"Twenty years ago, my colleagues and I used to ask ourselves what is the most powerful offshore wind turbine that we could imagine," says Vincent Schellings, who works for General Electric in the Dutch city of Enschede.

"We couldn't picture anything much more powerful than a three megawatt (MW) output, but even that seemed a challenge," he says.

Mr Schellings recently led the development team for GE's Haliade-X, now the world's largest wind turbine 
GETTY IMAGESThe Haliade-X from GE is the world's biggest turbine

It produces 12MW - four times the amount he imagined 20 years ago. Its 107m blades yield 45% more energy than previous offshore turbines.

"So we are going to see much bigger turbines offshore in this decade, and the reason is size matters," says Rolf Kragelund, Danish-based director of offshore wind for the energy research firm Wood Mackenzie.

Bigger onshore turbines can access faster wind speeds, higher in the sky. They can produce more energy, meaning you need fewer of them, which saves money on transport, installation and servicing.

Siemens Gamesa says 20 of its new 10MW turbines, announced last year with 94m blades, could power Liverpool, with a population of half a million. 
SIEMENS GAMES
Blades made at this Siemens Gamesa plant are up to 94m long

Bigger always better?

But large turbines bring along their own challenges, including what to do with them when they are no longer needed.

Bigger blades "need bigger factories, bigger vessels, cables, foundations, and handling equipment," says Ray Thompson, global business development head at Spanish-headquartered Siemens Gamesa, one of the world's two largest wind turbine makers.

Longer blades can make for bigger recycling headaches, too.
SIEMENS GAMES
Turbine blades are the most difficult and expensive part of a wind farm to dispose of

The composite fibreglass in blades is "the most difficult, and the most expensive part" of turbines to recycle, Mr Kragelund says. And there's more of it.

There's some reselling of second-hand turbine components from Europe to the Middle East and Asia pacific, he says. Big data, leading to better maintenance regimes and more reliable components could also mean today's blades might last longer, says Siemens's Mr Thompson.

Recycling has made more progress so far in the onshore than offshore industry, which is newer, he adds.

But while "there is work being done to find ways to recycle materials from old turbines," it "would be nice to see more design input now, so that's easier in the future," says Prof Cochrane.