Earth Changes
Barn owls suffered their worst year on record in 2013 as they struggled in the bitterly cold spring, conservationists have said.
Results from barn owl monitoring schemes around the UK revealed the number of sites where nesting took place last year was significantly down in every area compared to previous years, and some surveys found no nests with eggs in at all.
Overall the number of occupied nests was down 71% on the average across all previous years, according to the Barn Owl Trust, which collated the information from 21 independent groups stretching from Jersey in the Channel Islands to south-west Scotland.
A survey in Berkshire which normally finds 14 nests in use and a surveyor in Yorkshire who normally finds 25-30 occupied nests both found none at all, while surveys in Buckinghamshire and Sussex were both down more than 90% on normal levels.
Conservationists described the situation as the "worst year ever recorded" for the flagship farmland species.

The area in yellow is at greatest risk of severe weather on Saturday. The green area could also see thunderstorms, which are not expected to be severe.
The storm is expected to develop in north central Texas on Saturday and move through Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas and possibly Nebraska by Sunday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service.
It's been 314 years since the last one in January of the year 1700. Scientists know of this quake because of written reports from Japan that recorded a tsunami. The reports of a giant wave also correlate with rings in old trees killed when marsh land along the Washington coast dropped several feet, allowing sea water to envelope their roots.
This week, scientists with the University of Washington gathered 55 experts from around the region. Their goal: to step up efforts to prepare for the next magnitude nine earthquake in the Northwest and the ensuing recovery.
A state of emergency has been declared in the Lithuanian western Neringa Municipality on the Curonian Spit due to a spreading fire on the peninsula, which is a Site of a UNESCO World Heritage.
A call about the fire was received at around 11.55 am.
Having arrived at the scene, Minister of the Interior Dailis Alfonsas Barakauskas told the fire has engulfed 35 ha.
12 firefighter's vehicles are involved in the fire-extinguishing operation, assisted by a Mi-8 helicopter of the Armed Forces. According to the minister, Latvia has been asked to send one more helicopter.
Due to the fire, power supply has been shut down on the whole peninsula.
A prolonged period of below-average rainfall has put the entire state of California under some level of drought, ranging in severity from moderate to exceptional, for the first time in 15 years.
The latest drought monitor released by the National Climatic Data Center this week shows that the entire state is under moderate drought conditions, but within that map, 76.6% of the state is experiencing extreme drought conditions, and for 24.7% of the state, the level of dryness is "exceptional."
During the same period last year, none of the state was considered to be under extreme or exceptional drought conditions, and just 30% fell under the "severe" category, according to the assessment released Thursday.
"This is a really serious situation here in California and people need to be cognizant of that and start conserving water as much as they can," said Jayme Laber, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service who is part of a team of scientists who contribute to the weekly drought monitor.
While April likely won't make those lofty heights (11th wettest on record), when combined with the soggy February and March, they make quite the rain trio.
It's now the wettest February-to-April on record in Seattle, with 19.33" as of Thursday and more is on the way. The old record was 18.97 inches set in 1972.
The relatively dry January will likely prevent us from setting the wettest four-month start to a year, currently at 23.03 inches -- 5th wettest, but well behind the all-time record of 26.21 inches set in 1972.
About the only good news was the time -- 3:45 a.m. -- when few people were in the business district of the Cascades foothills town about 30 miles east of Seattle.
"We are very, very fortunate that it happened in the early morning. If it was two hours later the street would have been very busy," said Josie Williams, public information officer for Eastside Fire and Rescue.
A couple of minor injuries were reported at an assisted living facility where windows were blown out, she said.
Comment: Another shoe is about to drop: Entire town in Wyoming evacuated after unexplained blast at gas plant
Final death toll from massive Harlem explosion: 8 - Cause remains unknown, but investigators suspect natural outgassing after discovering unusually high levels of methane in soil
Massive explosion destroys apartment complex in Ewing, New Jersey - 1 killed, seven injured
10 injured after massive explosion obliterates two houses in Essex, England
TransCanada pipeline explosion in Manitoba shuts off gas for 4,000 residents in sub-zero temperatures - Cause unknown
A local resident told the news agency that it was as dark as evening by 3pm, with fierce wind and dust battering the city. Another local internet user said it was pitch dark in Dunhuang, a county-level city in Jiuquan, by around 2pm on the same day. The sky turned reddish-orange around half an hour later, the internet user said.









Comment: Record rainfall is not the only natural calamity happening in Washington state, or the rest of the US for that matter:
Yet another natural gas explosion: Mysterious explosion jolts Washington town, destroys three buildings