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Live for today but work for everyone's tomorrow! Any views expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of any organisation/institution I am affiliated with.

Wednesday 31 December 2014

Best Blogs of 2014

So, as the sun sets on the last day of the year, here is my list of some of the best blogs of 2014. 



Blogs are typically short and punchy and express an opinion. The ones that I have chosen here are also brave, produced by experts and often touch on things we might not otherwise know.  I am undoubtedly biased in terms of topic and author but that is probably not entirely unique in end-of-year-type reviews.

Firstly, here is Birdlife's Luca Bonaccorsi on Europe's new attitude to nature (this is going to be a big issue in the coming year):

'... we keep destroying habitats and endangering the “festival of life”, through careless neglect and culpable plunder. It is us, human beings, that are impoverishing and degrading our living planet. We cover our fields with biocides, concrete and tarmac. We consume resources and dump our waste which poisons the water of rivers and seas. We chop down and burn trees way faster than they can possibly regrow. And we’re altering our climate, setting the stage for unpredictable and possibly catastrophic consequences.'  Full article HERE


Next, here is a short piece that for me reflects on one of the great achievements of 2015, when an international convention (a UN body no less) embraced culture within its lexicon of conservation and this time it is Whale and Dolphin Conservation's Philippa Brakes speaking on the New Scientist website:  

''The new resolution recognises both positive and negative consequences of non-human culture. Individuals passing on knowledge may increase population viability by allowing the rapid spread of innovations amid environmental challenges, which could mean more-resilient social groups. On the other hand, the effects of human-induced threats may be amplified by the presence of non-human culture...'
Full article HERE


In this next piece published in the Ecologist is a prelude to the last meeting of the International Whaling Commission and in it the Environmental Investigation Agency's Clare Perry focuses on Iceland:: 

"Iceland claims its whaling is sustainable when the best available scientific evidence reveals that its fin whale quota is more than three times greater than the level considered sustainable.Full article HERE. 


Leaving the whales, here now is Mark Jones (now with the Borne Free Foundation) looking at the contentious badger cull in the UK on the Huffington Post::

"After two years, the government's own results clearly show the pilot culls have failed to deliver on either effectiveness or humaneness. Its apparent determination to carry on regardless reflects the political motivation behind the policy, which has little or nothing to do with science-led disease control". In full HERE.





Chris Butler Stroud looks at foreign policy and whaling here in a rare analysis of the behavior of the USA in this matter:

"Some would argue that despite decades of the development of international law, some nation states still seek to avoid the ramifications of upholding this growing area of law, relying on historical soft and hard power to influence future policy. The ramifications of such a world-view are that such countries can therefore fail to hold other states to account for their failures under international law. But what has this to do with US foreign policy?" Find out HERE


Here Wayne Parcelle reviews the sixty year history of the Humane Society which was celebrated this year:

"In the post-World War II era, their first campaigns helped pass a federal humane slaughter law and restrict the seizure of pets from shelters for use in animal experiments. They realized that we would not be able to rescue our way out of the problems -- but needed to prevent cruelty by raising awareness, professionalizing our entire field of work, and driving sound public policies and corporate reforms."  Full blog HERE.


And, finally, amazing footage of  those (in my experience) very illusive and amazing Welsh Risso's dolphins leaping from the water off Bardsey Island taken last summer and  c/o Vicki James HERE

I started to blog on the Huffington Post this year and you can judge my seven offerings HERE



Happy New Year!

Wednesday 24 December 2014

Seasons Greetings



Images from in and around Bath at Christmastime to wish all friends, colleagues, students and readers a very happy end to the year and a peaceful 2015. 

(The centre image shows the Christmas Market with Bath Abby behind). 

Tuesday 23 December 2014

Final Blog of the Year!


One of the world's cetaceans is poised to go extinct.

This must not be allowed to happen.

In this final piece for the year for the Huffington Post HERE I explain a little more of this desperately urgent situation.



Galapagos Giants REV



The Galapagos Islands are extraordinary. They are populated by a rich variety of remarkable and accessible animals and their diversity famously helped Charles Darwin ferment his theory of evolution. 
Galapagos Mockingbird


The legend is that he was most taken by the birds. He recognised the subtle differences between the different species. The mockingbirds were allegedly the group that drew his attention most, although his name is more associated with the finch species.

Shy giant (they hiss to warn you off)
However, the animals that the island are best-known for, the tortoises whose evolution in this isolated archipelago allowed them to reach great size and develop into a number of subspecies attracted his attention for a different reason. Like many early visitors, famously including visiting whalers, Darwin captured and sailed away with a number of the giants because they survived for many months out at sea, providing a ready source of fresh meat. 

Poor tortoises! Here are some pictures of the descendants of some of those left behind which I met on the Islands of Santa Cruz and Floreana.

First a picture to show both scale and what the well-dressed Englishman is wearing in the tropics this year:
Man meets ancient tortoise (the tortoise is on the right)


A Giant has a snack


A Giant wallows in some lovely green slime


A youngster - maybe 3 years old - on Floreana 


Snack time at the Floreana feeding station - part of a reintroduction programme

Two subspsecies showing the more traditional shell shape on the left and the 'sadlleback' on the right


A small altercation - they soon settled down - when properly riled they bang noses!
And not far away - the tortoise's cousins - Pacific Green turtles


And by vast popular demand - a blue-footed booby
synchronous diving by blue-footed boobies

juvenile frigate bird

Galapagos sealion and marine iguana take a nap - Floreana
And finally one of Darwin's famous ground finches (small female)