Earth ChangesS

Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills teacher and six children at Tanzania school

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A lightning strike killed six children and their teacher at a school in northwestern Tanzania on Tuesday, nearly two months after lightning storms caused deaths at another school in the area, a senior police official said.

Fatalities during lightning storms are common in northwestern regions of Tanzania during its two rainy seasons, which typically occur in October/November and March/April.

"The school children killed by the lightning strike were aged between seven and nine years old," Ferdinand Mtui, Kigoma regional police chief, told Reuters by telephone.

Mtui said 15 other people, including schoolchildren and teachers, were injured. Another person was killed by lightning at another location in the region on Tuesday, bringing the death toll to eight.

Attention

Dead sperm whale found on beach in Pacifica, California

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© Edgar TeranThe dead sperm whale found on Sharp Park State Beach
Biologists are heading to the San Mateo coast Wednesday morning to try and determine what killed an endangered sperm whale.

The 50-feet sperm whale was found bleeding from its head and into the water along at Mori Point on the south end of Sharp Park State Beach in Pacifica Tuesday.

On Wednesday, scientists from the Marine Mammal Center and the Academy of Sciences will perform a necropsy. They'll have their work cut out for them since adult sperm whales can get up to 50 tons in size.

It's unknown at this point if they will then leave the decomposing whale ashore or tow it out to sea.

Whale strandings are fairly rare. The Center said they do not see many stranded animals of this species, dead or alive, on shore.


Attention

Dead whale washes up on Southampton beach, New York

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The dead whale on a Southampton beach
The whale was seen floating in the water on Monday and found on the beach on Tuesday.

A dead whale that was seen floating in the water on Monday, has washed up on a Southampton beach on Tuesday, according to the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation.

The foundation is working with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to assess the situation and will provide more details as they become available.

They also remind residents to report all sightings to their 24-hour hotline at 631-369-9829.

Black Cat 2

Literally, feral cats are eating all of Australia's wildlife

feral cat
© www.abcbirds.orgA hunger strike, to a feral cat, means lunch!
Australia wants its cats dead. But not because it's a nation of fanatical dog people โ€” rather, the country's enormous feral cat population now constitutes a major threat to its biodiversity. To save the country's native wildlife, the cats need to go.

Due to hotter days, longer dry periods, and increasingly intense bush fires caused by climate change, Australia's biodiversity is diminishing. Despite being one of the world's 17 "megadiverse" countries, Australia has not done a bang-up job of protecting its wildlife. As mammalian extinction rates go, Australia's is pretty dang high: Twenty-one percent of Australian native land mammals are threatened.


Comment: Brush fires leave threatened species more exposed to feral cats.


But, shockingly, climate change is actually not the No. 1 enemy of koalas and kangaroos: Feral cats are the "single biggest threat" to protecting Australia's wildlife, according to a new piece from VICE News. There are about 20 million of these little cutthroat barbarians pawing, nuzzling, and murdering (in equal measure) their way across the continent, eating three to 20 animals each day โ€” which adds up to a loss of 80 million native animals per week.

Comment: While the feral cat crisis is a CATaclysmic scenario for Aussie wildlife running out of control, this article doesn't mention the public health consequences of feral cat colonies, whose populations are rapidly increasing. Rabies, toxoplasmosis, cat scratch fever and other potentially serious infectious diseases can affect humans and other wildlife. Another solution is TNR (trap, neuter and release) however, this method is less reliable and discouraged by health and wildlife organizations.

The $2M pledged to slow biodiversity loss is not allocated to killing feral cats, per se, but to boost the recovery of threatened species in Australia's national parks via 10 projects targeting key species' habitats and threats, both flora and fauna. Specifically they will benefit Norfolk Island green parrot, Cocos buff-banded rail, long-nosed potoroo, southern brown bandicoot, northern quoll, partridge pigeon, brush-tailed rabit-rat, the plants of the Arnhem Plateau and the Kakadu Threatened Species Strategy. The feral cat massacre is the idea of Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt. According to the mammal action plan assessments, it will take decades. They are now working on an engineered virus. (Oh! Oh!... call David Lynch!!!)


Phoenix

Massive grassland fire: 23 dead, 900 injured in Siberia


The massive fires that swept through nearly 60 villages and towns in the Siberian republic of Khakassia have left 23 people dead, and more than 900 injured, according to an official committee investigating the tragedy.

forest fire in the village of Smolenka
© RIA Novosti / Evgeny YepanchintsevA forest fire in the village of Smolenka and summer house settlement Dobrotny in the Chitinsky district. The fire got close to residential buildings because of strong winds.
"Currently the committee can confirm 23 deaths," head of the investigative committee Vladimir Markin was quoted as saying by TASS.

More than 1,400 homes were destroyed in the fire, leaving some 6,000 people homeless, according to regional governor Viktor Zimin.

Russian President Vladimir Putin had personally coordinated emergency services operations in Khakassia, according to his spokesperson.

Some 5,000 firefighters as well as thousands of volunteers worked to contain the blazes through the night, extinguishing the fires by Monday morning. Temporary camps have been set up in the Beisky and Shirinksy districts nearby for those displaced by the fire.
Grassland fire
© RIA Novosti / Denis MukimovLocal residents observe the fire on the outskirts of Abakan.
The fires started after mass grass burning by residents in the region. Grass burning is a springtime tradition among farmers in some parts of Russia, meant to clear the fields of dry grass and prepare them for planting. Officials blamed the extreme severity of this year's fire on "uncontrolled burning, dry weather and uncharacteristically strong and rough winds."

Comment: See also:


Binoculars

Great blue heron from North America turns up on the Isles of Scilly, UK

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© Robin MawerThe great blue heron
Scilly's birdwatchers had a treat yesterday as what's been described as a 'mega rarity' turned up.

A great blue heron was seen around Old Town Bay yesterday evening after making an earlier appearance around the Lower Moors of St Mary's.

If it's still here later today, it's thought that it will encourage ornithologists to travel over because it is so unusual.

This is only the second sighting in the UK and Scilly of the bird, which is normally seen in North America or in the Canaries or Azores.


Cloud Precipitation

Thousands evacuated from flood areas in Karaganda, Kazakhstan

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© Rushan BarayevFlooding in Karaganda Oblast
Floods in Karaganda Oblast continue to wreak havoc as Kazakh authorities are forced to evacuate dozens of settlements, Tengrinews reports citing the Oblast's Department of Emergency Situations. 1,760 houses have been flooded in 35 villages. 340 livestock have drowned.

A sharp rise in temperature to 20 degrees Centigrade between March 23 to 29 intensified the melting of snow and caused flooding of villages in Semey and Ayagoz districts in East Kazakhstan Oblast and of four districts in Karaganda Oblast.

The second wave of floods began on April 6 as a result of another sharp rise in temperatures, again to 20 degrees Centigrade, creating a threat of flooding of settlements in Karaganda and Akmola Oblasts in central Kazakhstan. Moreover, the threat now extends to Astana suburbs located near the riverbed of Nura.

Comment:




Attention

Villager killed by elephant in Bankura, India

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Attacking elephant
A villager was trampled to death by an elephant in Bankura district when he was returning home after attending 'Gajan' festivities last night.

50-year-old Swapan Bauri was cycling back home in Baguli village after attending 'Gajan' or 'Charak Puja' festivities in Kandashole village when he was chased by two male elephants.

One of the pachyderms lifted him by his trunk and then trampled him to death
at Kadashole, Borjora Forest Ranger, Mohan Chandra Shit said today.

The villagers sat on a protest today demanding adequate compensation to the victim's family following which the Forest Ranger was asked to be present at a meeting between the residents and the police at the local police station, he said.

The Ranger said as per official norms, Rs 1.25 lakh was paid as compensation to Bauri's family and another Rs 1.25 lakh would be paid to them after his postmortem.

Man-elephant conflict is a problem in Purulia, Bankura and West Midnapur districts of the state as elephant herds from Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary of neighbouring Jharkhand migrate to the areas resulting in degradation of crops and property as well as injury and loss of human lives.

Source: Press Trust of India

Snowflake

Unseasonably early snowfall in New Zealand

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The Chateau Tongariro Hotel at Mt Ruapehu looks spectacular on Tuesday morning after the first snow dump of the season.
An unseasonably early dump of snow on the North Island's ski fields has excited skiers and snowboarders, prompting a few to hit the slopes for some pre-winter fun.

A brutal southerly blast straight from Antarctica swept New Zealand on Monday and blanketed the country's ski fields in snow.

North Island's four fields - Whakapapa, Turoa and Tukino on Mt Ruapehu, plus Manganui on Mt Taranaki - were all celebrating the snowfall. "Everyone is excited about it," New Plymouth snowboarder Craig Balks said.

The 27-year-old spent Tuesday morning on Mt Taranaki with girlfriend Aleisha Tippett after the lure of early snow proved irresistible, despite his taking a day off work because of a nasty cold.

About 6cm of snow covered Manganui Ski Area's top car park by early Tuesday morning, he said. "I definitely think this is the earliest snow for ages."

While it was unlikely the snow would last till the end of the week, and was too little to snowboard on, he hoped it boded well for a "nice cold winter".

Stratford Mountain Club spokesman Rob Needs said it was the most significant snow to fall at such low levels and so early in the winter season for several decades.

Attention

Millions of prawns found on the shores of Playa Brava, Chile - Sign of an uncoming earthquake?

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Dead prawns on Playa Brava in Iquique
Playa Brava in Iquique has now turned red... Prawn red! A sign of the next big one?

Scientists are baffled by this apocalyptic mass die-off and will conduct various tests - water and shellfish - to determine the cause of this kill!

Yesterday morning the entire coast of Playa Brava in Iquique was blanketed by millions of dead or dying prawns.

The reason for this mass die-off is still unknown.

The apocalyptic event started at around 07:00. Rescue was launched directly after. But rough sea hampered the work of the rescuers, whose efforts were unsuccessful.


Comment: See also: SOTT Exclusive: Mass whale beaching in Japan is a reminder of Earth-changing events surrounding the 2011 earthquake and tsunami