Estuary

GCT Celebrates Earth Day with New Partnership

Retrieved on: 
Monday, April 22, 2024

Vancouver, BC, Canada, April 22, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As we commemorate Earth Day on April 22, Global Container Terminals (GCT) reaffirms our commitment to environmental stewardship.

Key Points: 
  • Vancouver, BC, Canada, April 22, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- As we commemorate Earth Day on April 22, Global Container Terminals (GCT) reaffirms our commitment to environmental stewardship.
  • Through these proactive measures, GCT is continuously working to improve environmental performance at our terminals, surpassing regulatory standards, and embracing sustainable innovation.
  • Actively expanding EV charging infrastructure across GCT Deltaport and GCT Vanterm, with 28 operational EV chargers already in place.
  • The GCT Deltaport prime route optimization program continues to reduce kilometres traveled by on-terminal equipment and cut tire consumption.

The Housing Authority of the City of Alameda celebrates the start of construction at North Housing

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, April 24, 2024

ALAMEDA, Calif., April 24, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- To celebrate the start of construction of the North Housing Master Plan, the Housing Authority of the City of Alameda (AHA) and its affiliate Island City Development is hosting a start of construction celebration event on April 24th (from 3pm to 5pm) at 2000 Lakehurst Circle in Alameda.

Key Points: 
  • ALAMEDA, Calif., April 24, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- To celebrate the start of construction of the North Housing Master Plan, the Housing Authority of the City of Alameda (AHA) and its affiliate Island City Development is hosting a start of construction celebration event on April 24th (from 3pm to 5pm) at 2000 Lakehurst Circle in Alameda.
  • The North Housing Master Plan is a multi-year commitment for AHA, along with Island City Development, to create 586 homes to serve low-income Alamedans in need of affordable housing.
  • Island City Development ( www.islandcitydevelopment.org ), an affiliate of AHA, is the developer of this project and the Housing Authority of the City of Alameda owns the land.
  • Funders to the project include the City of Alameda (HOME, Community Block Development Grant, Permanent Local Housing Allocation, and Inclusionary Housing funds), US.

Postal Service Hopes Stamp Will Help Save Manatees

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, March 27, 2024

SILVER SPRINGS, Fla., March 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- It's Manatee Appreciation Day! The U.S. Postal Service celebrated the occasion by dedicating its new Save Manatees stamp here today beside a clear, warm spring that the marine mammals frequent.

Key Points: 
  • Postal Service celebrated the occasion by dedicating its new Save Manatees stamp here today beside a clear, warm spring that the marine mammals frequent.
  • "Postage stamps are miniature works of art designed to reflect the American experience," said Lisa Bobb-Semple, Stamp Services director for USPS.
  • "This adorable stamp will increase awareness and hopefully encourage people to learn how they can help save manatees, too."
  • The booklet cover features an enlarged crop of the stamp artwork, with the words "SAVE MANATEES" in white capitals.

A 380-million-year old predatory fish from Central Australia is finally named after decades of digging

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 6, 2024

More than 380 million years ago, a sleek, air-breathing predatory fish patrolled the rivers of central Australia.

Key Points: 
  • More than 380 million years ago, a sleek, air-breathing predatory fish patrolled the rivers of central Australia.
  • Known from at least 17 fossil specimens, Harajicadectes is the first reasonably complete bony fish found from Devonian rocks in central Australia.

Meet the biter

  • This group had strongly built paired fins and usually only a single pair of external nostrils.
  • Tetrapodomorph fish from the Devonian period (359–419 million years ago) have long been of great interest to science.
  • They include the forerunners of modern tetrapods – animals with backbones and limbs such as amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.

A long road to discovery

  • Packed within red sandstone blocks on a remote hilltop were hundreds of fossil fishes.
  • The vast majority of them were small Bothriolepis – a type of widespread prehistoric fish known as a placoderm, covered in box-like armour.
  • These included a lungfish known as Harajicadipterus youngi, named in honour of Gavin Young and his years of work on material from Harajica.
  • There were early attempts at figuring out the species, but this proved troublesome.
  • Then, our Flinders University expedition to the site in 2016 yielded the first almost complete fossil of this animal.

A strange apex predator

  • Likely the top predator of those ancient rivers, its big mouth was lined with closely-packed sharp teeth alongside larger, widely spaced triangular fangs.
  • It seems to have combined anatomical traits from different tetrapodomorph lineages via convergent evolution (when different creatures evolve similar features independently).
  • Similar giant spiracles also appear in Gogonasus, a marine tetrapodomorph from the famous Late Devonian Gogo Formation of Western Australia.
  • They are also seen in the unrelated Pickeringius, an early ray-finned fish that was also at Gogo.

The earliest air-breathers?


Other Devonian animals that sported such spiracles were the famous elpistostegalians – freshwater tetrapodomorphs from the Northern Hemisphere such as Elpistostege and Tiktaalik. These animals were extremely close to the ancestry of limbed vertebrates. So, enlarged spiracles seem to have arisen independently in at least four separate lineages of Devonian fishes.

  • The only living fishes with similar structures are bichirs, African ray-finned fishes that live in shallow floodplains and estuaries.
  • It was recently confirmed they draw surface air through their spiracles to aid survival in oxygen-poor waters.


Brian Choo receives funding from the Australian Research Council and is employed by Flinders University. Alice Clement receives funding from the Australian Research Council and is employed by Flinders University. John Long receives funding from The Australian Research Council.

Protecting coastal aquatic ecosystems in British Columbia through important restoration work

Retrieved on: 
Friday, December 1, 2023

We are proud to help fund the work of these recipients in restoring and enhancing priority coastal and upstream aquatic areas.

Key Points: 
  • We are proud to help fund the work of these recipients in restoring and enhancing priority coastal and upstream aquatic areas.
  • Under the Oceans Protection Plan—the largest investment ever made to preserve Canada's coasts and waterways—the Aquatic Ecosystem Restoration Fund will help us continue to protect and restore aquatic ecosystems across British Columbia."
  • "British Columbia is home to vibrant marine ecosystems that sustain wild pacific salmon and a diversity of aquatic life.
  • Community building was started under the Coastal Restoration Fund in 2017, and the Aquatic Ecosystems Restoration Fund will continue to bring Indigenous groups, resource users, community organizations and other groups together to encourage local capacity to support aquatic habitat restoration, maintenance and revitalization.

Saltwater crocodiles are slowly returning to Bali and Java. Can we learn to live alongside them?

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Nothing unusual about that – except this croc was on Legian Beach, one of Bali’s most popular spots.

Key Points: 
  • Nothing unusual about that – except this croc was on Legian Beach, one of Bali’s most popular spots.
  • Only four months later, a large crocodile killed a man who was spearfishing with friends in Lombok’s Awang Bay, about 100 kilometres east of Bali.
  • And in Bali, it’s unlikely we’ll see any crocodile recovery because of the importance of beaches to tourism and a high human population.

What happened to Indonesia’s crocodiles?

    • They’re the largest living reptile, reaching up to seven metres in length – far larger than Indonesia’s famous Komodo dragon, which tops out at three metres.
    • We have records of attacks on humans in Bali from the early 20th century and across much of Java until the 1950s.
    • Salties are now being regularly sighted in Indonesia’s densely populated island of Java, including in seas off Jakarta.

Are crocodiles returning in numbers?

    • On many Indonesian islands, there’s very limited mangrove habitat suitable for crocodiles, and many creeks and rivers may be naturally too small for more than a small number of them.
    • Dominant males push out smaller male crocodiles, who set out in search of new habitat.
    • Read more:
      Friday essay: reckoning with an animal that sees us as prey — living and working in crocodile country

Where are Bali’s crocs coming from?

    • You might look at a map and think crocodiles moving back into Bali are coming from Australia.
    • But there is currently no evidence of significant crocodile movement between Australia and Indonesia.
    • It would be a brave crocodile to swim more than 1,000 kilometres from Australia to Bali.

What does this mean for residents and tourists?

    • The spike in sightings and attacks suggests we’re going to have to find ways of living alongside these reptiles.
    • The coastal waters and estuaries of Lombok and western Java are now likely home to a small resident population.
    • Does it mean you should cancel your next Bali trip?
    • Read more:
      The Northern Territory does not have a crocodile problem – and 'salties' do not need culling

The BC Bird Trail invites you to soar into fall with the launch of 11 new birdwatching experiences across BC!

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, September 26, 2023

RICHMOND, British Columbia, Sept. 26, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Grab your binoculars and get ready to experience the beauty of BC's birding migration this fall! The BC Bird Trail announces today the addition of 11 birdwatching communities to its vast list of self-guided experiences found on bcbirdtrail.ca, a platform designed to inspire people of all ages and levels to explore and enjoy the best birdwatching BC has to offer.

Key Points: 
  • Experience birding migration in BC this fall with 11 new birdwatching itineraries added to The BC Bird Trail.
  • The BC Bird Trail announces today the addition of 11 birdwatching communities to its vast list of self-guided experiences found on bcbirdtrail.ca , a platform designed to inspire people of all ages and levels to explore and enjoy the best birdwatching BC has to offer.
  • “As we launch the 4th year of this campaign, it's so rewarding to see our biggest year of growth ever!
  • The expansion of The BC Bird Trail is timely because the fall season is when large numbers of bird migrations take place.

Florida-Based Belvedere Terminals Announces $750 Million Investment in Florida to Improve State's Fuel Supply Chain

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, September 19, 2023

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Sept. 19, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Belvedere Terminals announced the company is planning to invest approximately $750 million in Florida to develop multiple fuel terminals for storage and supply.

Key Points: 
  • ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Sept. 19, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, Belvedere Terminals announced the company is planning to invest approximately $750 million in Florida to develop multiple fuel terminals for storage and supply.
  • Belvedere Terminals is a new company working to support state leaders who are focused on improving Florida's fuel supply chain and ensure gasoline is accessible during hurricane season, when Florida has faced gas supply shortages in the past due to port closures.
  • Belvedere Terminals will meet the growing need for fuel in the state by providing refined petroleum products to multi-location retailers.
  • From there, fuel products will be delivered by trains with state-of-the-art safety standards, over existing railways to the various Belvedere Terminals storage locations throughout Florida.

Water Quality Sensor Market to increase by USD 1.58 billion from 2022 to 2027, Increasing focus on Monitoring the Water Quality in the industrial sector to Drive Growth - Technavio

Retrieved on: 
Friday, September 15, 2023

NEW YORK, Sept. 14, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The water quality sensor market size is expected to grow by USD 1.58 billion from 2022 to 2027.

Key Points: 
  • NEW YORK, Sept. 14, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- The water quality sensor market size is expected to grow by USD 1.58 billion from 2022 to 2027.
  • Increasing focus on monitoring the water quality in the industrial sector is a key factor driving market growth.
  • In addition, utilities are finding it difficult to manage water distribution due to increasing water scarcity and rising energy costs.
  • The report analyses the market size and growth and provides accurate predictions on the growth of the market.

San Diego Canyonlands Awarded $3MM State Grant to Help Restore City Heights’ Manzanita Canyon

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, August 31, 2023

“Climate change is driving hotter and longer heatwaves and more intense rainstorms,” said California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot.

Key Points: 
  • “Climate change is driving hotter and longer heatwaves and more intense rainstorms,” said California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot.
  • “San Diego’s canyons are precious community assets, and a saving grace in the face of climate change,” said Clayton Tschudy, Canyonlands CEO.
  • Kris McFadden, Deputy Chief Operating Officer for the City of San Diego, remarked, “Manzanita Canyon is the perfect location for this type of project because the kids who come here can see what we are doing.
  • And this isn't the only canyon in San Diego where we have similar issues.