Environmental Updates and Mysterious Deaths of 2000 Atlantic Brant Geese

"Scientists can't remember ever seeing a situation like this
where we've just had one species die, especially in this large a number."

- Tracy Casselman, U. S. Fish and Wildlife -

Dead Atlantic brant geese collected for lab studies by U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service at Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Oceanville, New Jersey. Photo courtesy USFWS.
Dead Atlantic brant geese collected for lab studies by U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service at Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Oceanville, New Jersey. Photo courtesy USFWS.

February 18, 2001  New York City - Increasing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the earth's atmosphere ARE raising the global average mean temperature, physicists say, and 100 nations have ratified the Kyoto Protocol that requires a cutback in emissions. But none of those nations are industrial like the United States, which is responsible for 25% of the world's atmospheric pollution. So far the U. S. refuses to ratify the Kyoto Protocol because American industry argues it cannot afford the economic costs of complying with emission cutbacks. This week the United Nations agreed to delay greenhouse talks until June or July, hoping for American involvement. But this delay further frustrates environmental groups who argue that President Bush was quick to create a high-level team to develop new sources of oil and other fossil fuels that will put even more CO2 into the atmosphere, while ignoring the consequences of burning fossil fuels.

 

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