Outils pour utilisateurs

Outils du site


tripscan

Différences

Ci-dessous, les différences entre deux révisions de la page.

Lien vers cette vue comparative

Les deux révisions précédentes Révision précédente
Prochaine révision
Révision précédente
tripscan [2024/06/17 03:43]
146.70.111.132
tripscan [2025/07/01 00:32] (Version actuelle)
46.8.10.86
Ligne 1: Ligne 1:
 ====== tripscan ====== ====== tripscan ======
-Pacific Indigenous leaders have new plan to protect whales. Treat them as people ​[[https://trip-scan.top/​|tripscan ​tor]]+A plant that’s everywhere is fueling ​growing risk of wildfire disaster ​[[https://tripscan.biz/​|tripscan ​top]]
  
-For Māori conservationist Mere Takoko“losing one whale is like losing ​an ancestor.” The animals “taught our people about navigation across the Pacificparticularly across ​the Milky Way… And this is information that was given to our ancestors.+  
 +A ubiquitousresilient and seemingly harmless plant is fueling ​an increase in largefast-moving and destructive wildfires in the United States.
  
-The environmental activist from the small town of Rangitukia, on New Zealand’s east coast, ​is spearheading a movement of Indigenous groups in the Pacific pushing to protect the magnificent marine mammals, inking ​groundbreaking treaty ​to make them legal persons with inherent rights.+Grass is as plentiful as sunshine, and under the right weather conditions is like gasoline for wildfires: All it takes is a spark for it to explode.
  
-The document is part of a multi-pronged effort to safeguard whales, which also includes quantifying their monetary value as carbon-depleting “bioengineers of our oceans”, and deploying ​the latest tech to track boats that harm them.+Planet-warming emissions are wreaking havoc on temperature and precipitationresulting in larger ​and more frequent fires. Those fires are fueling ​the vicious cycle of ecological destruction that are helping ​to make grass king.
  
-While the declaration is non-binding ​and would still need government recognition to become lawconservationists hope personhood will lead to enhanced protection for these creatures, with many species endangered.+“Name an environment ​and there’s a grass that can survive there,” said Adam Mahoodresearch ecologist ​with the US Department of Agriculture’s research service. “Any 10-foot area that’s not paved is going to have some kind of grass on it.
  
-“Our mokopuna (grandchildren) deserve an ocean brimming with lifewhere the melodies ​of whales echo across ​the vast expanses,” Māori King Tūheitia Pōtatau said at the signing ​of the treaty ​in the Cook IslandsAlong with the Māori ​of New Zealand and groups from the Cook IslandsIndigenous leaders from TahitiTongaHawaii, and Easter Island signed ​the He Whakaputanga Moana treaty.+Grass fires are typically less intense and shorter-lived than forest firesbut can spread exponentially faster, outrun firefighting resources and burn into the growing number ​of homes being built closer to fire-prone wildlands, fire experts told CNN. 
 + 
 +Over the last three decadesthe number of US homes destroyed by wildfire has more than doubled as fires burn bigger and badder, a recent study found. Most of those homes were burned not by forest fires, but by fires racing through grass and shrubs. 
 + 
 +The West is most at risk, the study found, where more than two-thirds ​of the homes burned over the last 30 years were located. Of those, nearly 80% were burned in grass and shrub fires. 
 +One part of the equation is people are building closer to fire-prone wildlands, ​in the so-called wildland-urban interfaceThe amount of land burning in this sensitive area has grown exponentially since the 1990s. So has the number ​of houses. Around 44 million houses were in the interface as of 2020an increase of 46% over the last 30 yearsthe same study found. 
 + 
 +Building in areas more likely to burn comes with obvious risksbut because humans are also responsible for starting most firesit also increases the chance a fire will ignite in the first place. 
 + 
 +More than 80,000 homes are in the wildland-urban interface, in the sparsely populated parts of Kansas ​and Colorado that Bill King manages. The US Forest Service officer said living on the edge of nature requires an active hand to prevent destruction. 
 + 
 +Property owners “need to do their part too, because these fires – they get so big and intense and sometimes wind-driven that they could spot miles ahead even if we have a huge fuel break,” King said.
  
tripscan.1718588637.txt.gz · Dernière modification: 2024/06/17 03:43 par 146.70.111.132