Beach Reads and Big Ideas: The 15 Best New Eco-books for July

Books coming out this month examine wildlife crime, polluted cities, the diversity of bees and how democracy can stand up to climate change.

Looking for a few new books to read during your summer vacation? Look no further than these 15 new environmentally themed titles coming out in July. Publishers have scheduled some thought-provoking new titles for just about every type of reader, from nature lovers to history buffs, and from political activists to budding young scientists and conservationists.

The Perils of Pollution:

poisoned cityThe Poisoned City: Flint’s Water and the American Urban Tragedy by Anna Clark — One of several books about the lead-plagued city coming out this year, this one promises to be a full account of the negligence that led to so much human suffering and death. With so many other cities poised to experience problems with their water pipes as well, learning from what happened in Flint could drive policy around the country for decades. A must-read.

Sites Unseen: Uncovering Hidden Hazards in American Cities by Scott Frickel and James R. Elliott — Is your home, workplace or favorite restaurant built on the remains of a polluted old industrial site? This book digs deep into the histories of four major U.S. cities — New Orleans, Minneapolis, Philadelphia and Portland, Ore. — and finds that about 90 percent of former industrial locations have been converted into parks, neighborhoods and commercial districts, rarely with environmental review. Yikes.

Environmental Pollution in China: What Everyone Needs to Know by David K. Gardner — An overview of the massive country’s worsening pollution problems and why they matter to the world.

Wildlife and Endangered Species:

buzzBuzz: The Nature and Necessity of Bees by Thor Hanson — A celebration of the incredible importance and diversity of those classic yellow-and-black insects, covering “leafcutters, bumbles, masons, miners, diggers, carpenters, wool-carders and more.” (Honeybees, too, but less so, since they already get so much press.)

Red Alert! Endangered Animals Around the World by Catherine Barr and Anne Wilson — This beautifully illustrated kids’ book delivers portraits of 15 species on the IUCN Red List, including snow leopards, blue whales and giant pandas. In addition to fully painted art, the text contains information on why these species are endangered and how we can help them.

The Wonderful Mr. Willughby: The First True Ornithologist by Tim Birkhead — A biography of the short but influential life of Francis Willughby, the overshadowed co-author of the first encyclopedia of birds back in the 17th century.

Wildlife Crime: From Theory to Practice edited by William D. Moreto — A timely textbook for conservationists and law-enforcement students and professionals to help them understand and combat this insidious practice, which is putting so many species at risk.

Climate Change:

we're doomedWe’re Doomed. Now What? Essays on War and Climate Change by Roy Scranton — The author of the classic New York Times essay “Learning How to Die in the Anthropocene” brings us a book-length series of meditations on the destructive forces affecting the world today. Oh, and he talks about Star Wars, too.

Can Democracy Handle Climate Change? by Daniel J. Fiorino — Geez, I sure hope so. (Quick answer: yes it can, and it much better than — ahem — autocratic regimes.)

Climate Scientists at Work by Rebecca E. Hirsch — This looks like the perfect book for the budding young scientists in your family, showing them not only what climate scientists do, but how we all can help them right now as citizen scientists.

Incredible Ecosystems:

immeasurable worldNorthland: A 4,000-Mile Journey Along America’s Forgotten Border by Porter Fox — A three-year journey along the border between the United States and Canada reveals how both countries are plagued by “climate change, water wars, oil booms and border security.” Maybe we should look toward that northward border a little more often.

The Promise of the Grand Canyon: John Wesley Powell’s Perilous Journey and His Vision for the American West by John F. Ross — The history of how the Grand Canyon was explored and ultimately protected resonates with questions we’re asking today about continuing to preserve the American West.

The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places by William Atkins — Five continents. Eight deserts. One lyrical travelogue that’s about sand but also so much more.

Inspirational How-to:

wonderbookWonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction by Jeff VanderMeer — This newly revised and expanded edition of VanderMeer’s essential guide to crafting fantastic stories includes a great section on writing environmentally themed fiction. The rest of the book is pretty darn good, too, as are the online extras.

Covering the Environment: How Journalists Work the Green Beat by Bob Wyss — The world needs more environmental journalists. Here’s a newly updated textbook on how to become one.


That’s our list for this month. For dozens of additional recent eco-books, check out our “Revelator Reads” archives. Did we miss any of your favorites? Feel free to post your own recommendations in the comments.

The Budget Crunch at America’s National Parks

With increased attendance and crumbling infrastructure, national parks need money. But President Trump wants to cut even more of their funding.

Crowded visitor centers, crumbling roads and aging buildings — those are the sights at some of America’s national parks lately, caused by years of chronic underfunding. Will the situation soon get even worse? The Trump administration has proposed stripping national parks’ funding even further, despite the fact that people are visiting our public lands more and more often.

John Garder, senior director of budget and appropriations at the nonprofit National Parks Conservation Association, says the majority of national parks have been short on cash for years.

“As a general rule, parks are underfunded,” Garder tells me in a telephone interview. “The two main issues are understaffing and the deferred maintenance backlog.”

Courtesy National Park Conservation Association

The National Park Service maintenance backlog is estimated at $11.6 billion as of fiscal year 2018. Lawmakers and experts are huddling over the problem even as the president again proposes cutting the parks’ budgets.

In 2017 the National Park Service completed more than $519 million in maintenance and repair work. However, high visitation, aging infrastructure and budget constraints have kept the price for repairs high, according to the Department of the Interior.

Ironically, the very popularity of national parks is driving the unmet budget need.

“The increase in visitation just makes the problem worse,” Garder says.

Crunched Budgets

The National Park Service’s budget was $3.4 billion in 2017, $2.9 billion of which came from Congress. The additional $594 million came from other sources, including $282 million generated by user fees.

The data provided by the National Parks Conservation Association show that while discretionary funding for the National Park Service has grown since fiscal year 2009, it has still not been enough to keep up with all maintenance and repairs amid increased visitation.

Discretionary funding includes all programs for which money is appropriated by Congress on an annual basis.

Only 117 out of 417 sites in the national park system collect fees. At the fee-collecting parks, 80 percent of the funds generated by fees remain in the parks where they were collected, while 20 percent go into a funding pool for other parks.

In recent years the budget appropriation process has become even more constrained, exacerbating the challenge of providing enough money to the National Park Service.

Garder says the Trump administration provided a “very damaging” budget blueprint for fiscal year 2018, asking Congress for cuts to the Park Service. Congress refused the administration’s proposed budget, which would have eliminated thousands of jobs at the agency, and instead provided it with more money than was originally proposed.

But Trump’s $2.7 billion 2019 budget blueprint, unveiled earlier this year, calls for a 7 percent budget cut to the Park Service. This would result in a loss of nearly 2,000 ranger jobs. The proposal also includes specific cuts to cultural programs, land acquisition and the Centennial Challenge, a program that manages philanthropic donations, according to the National Parks Conservation Association.

“National parks are a victim of what has become a broken appropriations system, and they are not receiving the support they should and not being prioritized,” Garder says.

Visitation Increasing

One site typifies the budget constraints felt across the country: Zion National Park in southwestern Utah.

This year more than 30,000 visitors flooded the park the Sunday before Memorial Day.

Zion is the only national park where management is considering a reservation system, as its visitation has been growing at a fast clip.

Just under 150,000 acres, Zion has only one main road that stretches for 6 miles. In 2017 the park had approximately 4.5 million visitors, making it the third most-visited national park in the country.

The park’s Twitter account has warned visitors often in recent weeks about parking restrictions.

A tweet on June 15 read: “Parking is full at the Zion Visitor Center and the lot has been closed. Visitors should not to go to the visitor center to park. Park in Springdale.”

Officials at Zion didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.

Similar situations are occurring around the country. Last year 331 million people visited the 417 National Park Service sites across the country, according to the Department of the Interior.

Grand Canyon and Great Smoky Mountains national parks were the second and first most-visited, respectively.

Dana Soehn, spokesperson for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, says park visitation has increased by 25 percent over the past decade, while staffing has decreased by 23 percent.

To counteract the impact of the increased visitation, Soehn says, park officials started to remind visitors to travel to the park during less busy times like early mornings and mid-week, and have worked to make some of its most-used facilities more sustainable, including the park’s most popular trails.

Meanwhile the total deferred maintenance for Great Smokies is more than $215 million. While deferred maintenance is spread across thousands of physical assets, more than 75 percent of the repair needs, or $167 million, is associated with the park’s road system, Soehn says.

“This is not surprising when you consider the millions who choose to experience the Smokies from behind the driver seat every year,” she says.

Aging buildings are another primary concern in the Smokies, accounting for 8 percent of repair needs, or $16 million. The current deferred maintenance backlog for the trails system exceeds $16 million, which accounts for 7 percent of the park’s total deferred maintenance needs.

In 2018 and 2019, Soehn tells me, the park is embarking on a $2.5 million public-private partnership opportunity to fund deferred maintenance needs for the infrastructure of 9 radio repeater sites, which help the park ensure a safe visitor experience for visitors and safe operations for field employees.

Grand Canyon National Park, which saw more than 6.2 million visitors in 2017, has over $329 million in deferred maintenance.  That figure includes The Trans-Canyon Pipeline, which carries water to the South Rim and its visitor centers and hotels. The pipe’s condition continues to deteriorate as it leaks and breaks.

The deferred maintenance backlog at Yosemite National Park in California currently stands at over $582 million.

Scott Gediman, spokesperson for Yosemite, says the park’s critical needs include three wastewater-treatment plants.

Similarly to Great Smokies, which receives outside help, Yosemite gets help from Yosemite Conservancy, a nonprofit organization that provides grants and supports the park’s 750 miles of trails. Most recently, Gediman says, the conservancy donated $20 million toward the renovation of Mariposa Grove, a sequoia grove that reopened in mid-June.

When asked if the park has enough staff to manage all of its visitors, Gediman says they are able to operate the park with its current 700-800 employees. “We could always use more people, but we have a very talented and dedicated staff and we feel that we are able to protect the park.”

Yellowstone National Park, meanwhile, needs over $800 million to address its maintenance backlog. The most pressing issues revolve around visitors services, says park spokesperson Neal Herbert.

“Those include constant repair and upkeep to roads, historic structures, water, wastewater, trails and boardwalks,” Herbert says. “For example, thermal basins change constantly and boardwalks need to be moved.”

This year’s Memorial Day contributed to May 2018 being the busiest May ever recorded in the park.

“Visitation has increased by 37 percent over the last five years,” he says. “This increase creates challenges for park staff, facilities, visitors, and the resources people come here to enjoy. Right now we’re collecting data on visitor expectations and how they move through the park.”

Possible Solutions

Several bills aimed at reducing maintenance backlog at the National Park Service are currently making their way through Congress.

The National Park Service Legacy Act, introduced by U.S. Sens. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio), would allocate $500 million annually from revenues that the government receives from oil and natural gas royalties into a National Park Service Legacy Restoration Fund until 2047.

Rachel Cohen, communications director for Sen. Warner, says they are currently securing the steps for the bill to go forward, including discussions with the Senate Committee on Energy and National Resources.

Another measure geared toward reducing the financial woes of the National Park Service is the National Park Restoration Act, introduced by U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and Rep. Michael Simpson (R-Idaho) on March 7.

Under the bill half of the excess revenue from controversial offshore and onshore drilling would be funneled to the National Park Service. The bill would create a fund for projects at national parks.

Ashton Davies, communications director for Sen. Alexander, says that there have been no hearings on the bill, but it has already received support from some Democrats. The legislation also would need to go through the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

Last year a proposed fee increase at the nation’s 17 most popular national parks caused a public outcry, as it would have nearly tripled vehicle entrance fees during peak seasons. Following the uproar the Trump administration scaled back its plans and implemented more moderate $5-10 fee hikes.

Garder argues that fee hikes alone can’t solve the issue. He says any further fee increases on top of the increases that have already taken place could drive away visitors.

“While fees play an important role in supplementing federal funds, they are no substitute, and they have to remain at a reasonable rate so as not to discourage visitation,” he says. “These are lands Americans own, and they have a right to visit them affordably. What’s most needed is a more robust federal investment.”

© 2018 Daria Bachmann. All rights reserved.

Saving California Condors — With a Chisel and Hand Puppets

Conservationists have helped to save North America’s largest bird from extinction, but it’s still important to give every chick a chance to fly free.

Sometimes saving a species from extinction requires a helping hand — or a jailbreak.

That may sound like a mixed metaphor, but it’s actually the case for critically endangered California condors (Gymnogyps californianus), North America’s largest birds. Every once in a while, a condor chick needs a little help getting out of its egg, and human caretakers need to step in to gently assist it on its journey out of the shell.

Take the chick known as OZ07, whose egg was laid this past February in Oregon Zoo’s condor captive-breeding program, about 50 miles south of Portland. In April, as the egg approached its hatch date, keepers could tell that the chick was active but unable to break through the shell. Condor eggs only contain enough air for a chick’s first breath, so keepers knew they needed to let in more air. They chiseled a tiny hole in the shell, giving OZ07 a source of much-needed oxygen.

That wasn’t quite enough, though. “Oz” was still stuck. Zoo staff removed another small piece of shell, hoping it would encourage the chick to hatch. Four days later, it still hadn’t budged. Finally the team opted to slowly snip open additional portions of the shell and carefully ease this tiny bird out into the world:

California condor chick
Photo by Liz Musich, courtesy Oregon Zoo

The de-egging — technically called a “hatch assist” — was a success, and OZ07 became the sixth out of seven California condor chicks born this year at Oregon Zoo. The zoo has now raised 71 condor chicks overall.

That’s a pretty amazing number when you consider that there were only 22 California condors left in the entire world back in 1982, following years of habitat loss, shootings, powerline collisions and poisoning (condors are particularly susceptible to lead, which paralyzes their digestive systems). The last surviving members of the species were brought into captivity over the next five years in order to save them from extinction.

That last-ditch effort worked. Today, although the species is still critically endangered, captive-breeding and reintroduction programs have helped to boost the population to more than 460, the majority of which once again live in the wild.

How has this success been possible? It helps that, other than the occasional hatch assist and other minor problems, the birds do relatively well in captivity.

“It turns out to be not too difficult to raise California condors,” says David Shepherdson, Oregon Zoo’s deputy conservation manager. “They don’t seem to have any particular disease problem. They’re relatively easy to pair up with each other. Their needs are fairly simple. You just throw some dead animals in there for them to eat and then, you know, we have a lot of eggs.”

Of course, Shepherdson says, there are still plenty of issues to deal with. For example, another chick from this year’s hatching class was, for an unknown reason, abandoned by its parents 18 days after it was born. Without mom and dad to feed it, the chick would have died. That meant intervention became necessary.

But human interaction with condor chicks is always kept to a minimum in order to prevent chicks from becoming acclimated to people, something that will help keep them safe once they’re released into the wild. To get around this problem, staff members ended up feeding the chick using a special tool — hand puppets designed to look like adult condors.

condor hand puppet
Photo by Liz Musich, courtesy Oregon Zoo

That’s actually a longstanding solution to similar chick abandonments. In fact, Shepherdson says, most problems the breeding programs encounter already have solutions. “The community as a whole has a lot of experience at this point,” he says. “We have 30-plus years of rearing them. Some of the people in these programs have been involved almost right from the beginning. So, you know, we don’t tend to come up against too many problems now we haven’t seen before in the past that somebody had to deal with.”

Another one of those problems that zoos have learned to solve was getting over a basic physical limitation. Condors, it turns out, typically only lay one egg at a time in the wild. On that schedule, boosting the condors’ population would have been painstakingly slow. To get around this, zookeepers developed a technique called double clutching. “You take one of the eggs and then you foster it with another couple of birds,” Shepherdson explains. “Then the original pair will usually lay another egg, so it’s a way of doubling production.”

Double clutching isn’t done as much anymore, though. “We’re further into the program, so the emphasis is more on producing the highest quality chicks and the ones most likely to survive and thrive in the wild, rather than just sheer numbers,” Shepherdson says. That’s another reason caretakers step aside and let young condors learn to be condors.

That doesn’t stop zoo staff from watching them. “They’re just really interesting,” Shepherdson says. “I’m an animal behaviorist by training, and I’m always intrigued about what they think and what they do. There appears to be a lot going inside their heads, and they are clearly one of the more intelligent bird species, up there with parrots and corvids. They also engage in a lot of interesting social behavior — in some ways they’re more like primate groups than bird groups in that they have such rich social interactions.”

As this year’s chicks start to grow large enough to fly on their own, Shepherdson says it’s an honor to work on such an iconic conservation program. “It’s the kind of program I dreamed about being involved with when I first started studying biology.” Meanwhile he says the entire condor recovery team is proud of its collective success and that they have prevented the California condor from going extinct.

He notes, however, that the species still has a long way to go before it can be considered recovered. In particular, lead remains a huge problem for condors in the wild. The zoo, like several other organizations, has been conducting outreach to hunters to try to get them to switch away from lead ammunition, which can leave traces of the metal in carcasses and gut piles that condors eat.

“We hope we can persuade a significant number of hunters to switch to non-lead ammunition,” Shepherdson says. “That would help condors, and it would also have a huge benefit for other scavenging birds, primarily bald eagles and golden eagles.”

One more step toward recovery looms in the near future. Over the past few years, condors have been released back into the wild in three sites southern California, plus two more sites near the Grand Canyon and in Baja California. Now, after years of work among state and local agencies and other partners, it’s possible that condors could be also reintroduced at a sixth site, the Yurok tribe’s land in Northern California. Shepherdson says that could happen as early as 2019 or 2020.

That’s just stage one. Once they become established in Northern California, it’s likely the birds could then spread their massive wings and fly over the border, bringing them once again to the skies of Oregon, where they haven’t lived for decades.

“That would be very exciting,” Shepherdson says. “We’ve always hoped that we might at one point bring them back to Oregon because it’s definitely part of their former range and there are historical accounts of people like Lewis and Clark seeing them here.”

That’s still a few years away, though. Until then they’ll keep their chisels and puppets at the ready and stay prepared to give the species every helping hand it needs.

We Need Bold Protests, Says ‘Stop Shopping’ Activist Rev. Billy Talen

The often-arrested social activist discusses his court case against Monsanto and the lessons it offers for other protestors.

This is a tough time to be a protestor.

the askAround the country a new wave of legislation has attempted to criminalize people speaking out about environmental and social issues or standing up against governments and corporations. Last month legislatures in Minnesota advanced bills that would have made it illegal for protestors to block highways or associate with people who want to damage oil pipelines. A similar bill in Louisiana also aims to criminalize “conspiracy” to trespass on pipeline property.

These most recent bills join dozens of similar legislative attempts that have been proposed in at least 20 states over the past few years.  To date all of these proposed bills have either not passed or been modified to remove unconstitutional language, but one thing about them remains clear: They’re what the ACLU calls a nationwide attempt at “chilling protest.”

But that makes the need for protest even more important, says Reverend Billy Talen, the head of the singing social activist group known as the Stop Shopping Choir. Talen and his team —perhaps best known for their masks of extinct frogs or their song “Monsanto Is the Devil” — have been jailed dozens of times around the country for their bold and purposefully over-the-top protests. The arrests don’t seem to slow them down: They’ve been arrested nine times this year alone.

One of the group’s most noteworthy arrests took place in 2016 in Des Moines, Iowa, where they were protesting Monsanto’s World Food Prize and the company’s glyphosate pesticide. You can see footage of the arrest below:

That arrest — for trespassing, despite the fact that the protestors remained more than 300 feet away from the event — recently resulted in a court victory for Talen and peace activist Father Frank Cordero after the arrest was ruled unlawful. They, and dozens of other arrested protesters, received a shared judgement of $50,000 from the state of Iowa and the guarantee that they could sing and protest across the street from future events.

We spoke with the perpetually outrageous Rev. Billy, author of the book The Earth Wants You, about their First Amendment victory, the need for bold protests, and what other issues they have on their agenda.

There have been so many attempts by various states over the past couple of years to limit protest and free speech by advocates. Is this win in court a step in the right direction for everyone, or at least for activists in Iowa?

This is a small victory against a company that is a vastly scaled crime spree, protected by Clinton/Obama Democrats and Koch Republicans. These are real cowboys, from DDT to Agent Orange to PCBs to killing the honeybees. Corrupting government, placing executives in regulatory positions, is their M.O.

Did we make a difference? “A step in the right direction” is a modest enough phrase for what we’ve done.

What can other concerned citizens learn from your protests, or from this victory?

Our court decision was expected. Their position was ludicrous. The lesson here for our comrades in the Earth struggle would be that you have to be more ludicrous than the corporations. Our choir’s singing invasion of the glyphosate hearings at the EPA — we need more of this kind of thing. We have been too boring to change the world with our march-and-rally, and then another, and then another… Protesters need to remember the outright boldness of the social revolutions that worked. Think of a thousand black people walking on a highway across Alabama. Remember the Redwood Summer, the kayaktivists, Black Lives Matter and Standing Rock.

Looking more broadly, what do you feel is the continued value of protest, especially in this political and corporate environment?

We are approaching the totalitarian environment that the corporations envisioned. In New York you have to get a permit to shout a political opinion in the park. All public space is privatized. Laws govern behavior for the consumer environment, or to avoid annoying rich people. So this makes protest all the more important. We go through oppression cycles in the U.S. The right-wing libertarians of Silicon Valley have combined with the evangelicals and patriots to create a suffocating world. We have to reclaim the First Amendment, a law that makes our better angels fly.

What comes next? Will you be back at the World Food Prize again this fall?

Yes, we will return this fall. Father Cordero and his Occupy the World Food Prize friends have invited us, and we are honored to make the trip. I have family ties in Iowa. My daughter’s namesake, my great-grandmother Lena, lived in an Iowa Dutch community. And the Des Moines community of activists put us up and drove us around and waited outside the jail. We love them.

We’re also continuing to be involved in a lot of related issues. Our band of radical singers worked against toxins and their corporate suppliers all those years, and then suddenly six months ago one of our singers, Ravi Ragbir, was taken by ICE (Immigration Customs Enforcement). He was taken to Miami and then flown back to New York City as lawsuits were filed. Ravi spoke eloquently at our rally at the Varick immigration jail rally on June 21 and may succeed in remaining with his family. The impact of losing our friend was so painfully clear: We turned overnight into partisans of immigration rights.

The through-line of the two causes is a strong reminder that these toxins and deportation are not such separate issues. For instance, they both harm children.

If the human race was facing its last moments and the Earth willed one last breath for us all, then it might occur to us during that final exhale that there is only one issue, and that is life itself. Facing Monsanto and facing Trump, life is the thing that is being attacked and life is our common power. Life-a-lujah!

How do you feel about Monsanto merging with Bayer and the Monsanto name going away? Do you need to rewrite all of your songs?

We’ll have to see with the songs. We sang “Monsanto Is the Devil” on our last tour in Minnesota and Wisconsin. It still works. As for Bayer, the modern company was founded by a Nazi, Fritz der Meer, who spent seven years in prison after the Nuremburg trials, because he designed the shower heads that sprayed the gas Zyklon B at Auschwitz. Der Meer’s company had a factory next to Auschwitz, where Elie Wiesel worked as a boy. Cheap labor, don’t you know. After release, der Meer was reinstated as Bayer’s president. As Bernie Sanders stated, “Monsanto and Bayer is a marriage made in Hell.”


From protesting to preaching, here’s Reverend Billy taking to the pulpit to proclaim the perils of climate change:

It Takes a Village (and a Video Stream) to Raise an Albatross

YouTube is inspiring viewers across the globe to protect Hawaii’s Laysan albatross — but will that be enough in the face of climate change?

It had been six weeks since Jett, a Laysan albatross, had lifted off the volcanic Hawaiian soil and soared over the Pacific in search of squid. He had not returned. His black-and-white-feathered mate, Bennie, was now their daughter’s sole caretaker, and the effort was exhausting her. Each day that passed saw the daughter, a small ball of gray fluff named Kiamanu, growing ever-hungrier from lack of food.

In April 2018 members of a Kauai seabird-rehabilitation group called Save Our Shearwaters declared Jett deceased, although exactly what happened to him remains a mystery. Perhaps he’d been snagged in an industrial fishing line or caught in a bad storm.

In Jett’s absence, staff from the group visited his nest, where they examined Kiamanu. She wasn’t gaining enough weight from Bennie’s feedings alone, so they decided it was necessary to supplement her diet.

But hiring a licensed wildlife rehabilitator to provide regular check-ups and feed Kiamanu every day with calorie-rich squid slurries would cost about $3,000 — and there was no coverage for that expense in budgets already stretched thin. Finding funding to save Kiamanu’s life became an urgent priority.

Luckily, Save Our Shearwaters knew just whom to ask for help: The tens of thousands of people all over the world who were watching Jett, Bennie and Kiamanu online through the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s “TrossCam,” which livestreams albatross activity daily on YouTube.

The call went out, and contributions poured in. In a matter of eight hours, Save Our Shearwaters collected $7,000 in aid for Kiamanu. According to the group, donations came from as far away as Norway. (Excess funds will go toward the organization’s seabird conservation efforts.)

It’s just one way that the TrossCam is inspiring efforts to conserve these threatened birds.

“In my mind, caring fuels learning,” says Hob Osterlund, founder of Kauai Albatross Network, who helps manage TrossCam and has received a fellowship from the Safina Center for her work in albatross conservation. “When we share images and stories, people have feelings. They won’t necessarily remember what we said, but they will remember how we made them feel.”

A recent TrossCam screen grab.

According to Osterlund, more than a million people from “virtually every country in the world” have tuned into the cam since it was set up in 2012. Viewers engage in lively conversations on Twitter and Facebook as they watch Laysan albatrosses (Phoebastria immutabilis) mate, nest, lay eggs and raise chicks at sites on Kauai between November and July. (Laysans spend the rest of the year living at sea.) The exact locations of the nests aren’t disclosed to keep the birds safe.

Most moments captured on the TrossCam are sweet, such as eggs hatching to reveal cute chicks and affectionate mates nuzzling on their nests. But others are more serious, such as the time two young albatross chicks coughed up pieces of plastic that had been fed to them by their parents, who may have mistaken the material for food:

After that moment was broadcast live, viewers immediately wanted to know more — and many changed their behavior. “Multiple viewers reached out following this experience to remark on how little they knew about the issue of plastics in the ocean, and that they were going to work to change their own lives to reduce the amount of plastic waste they are generating,” says Charles Eldermire, project leader for Cornell Lab of Ornithology Bird Cams.

Plastic, according to the Cornell Lab, is a major threat to albatrosses. More than 90 percent of the world’s seabirds, including albatross, have ingested plastic at some point in their lives. On Midway Atoll, an uninhabited former military base about 1,500 miles from Hawaii where more than 70 percent of all Laysan albatrosses nest, albatross parents unintentionally feed their chicks more than five tons of marine plastic each year.

But Lindsay Young, executive director of Pacific Rim Conservation, says while plastic is a serious threat today, it’s not nearly as concerning as the long-term effects of sea-level rise. Based on current sea-level rise trends, many experts fear that a 15-acre spit of Midway and all low-lying areas of the other two Midway Islands will be completely inundated by 2100. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature estimates that the Laysan albatross population, currently stable, will rapidly decline over the next 80 years as sea-level rise intensifies.

To help mitigate this risk, conservation groups on Hawaii, including Pacific Rim Conservation, are already working to establish flood-safe high-elevation nesting habitat for Laysans.

Once again, the TrossCam just might be the best tool conservationists have at their disposal to educate the public and move them to action. People exposed to both the beauty and harsh realities of life for Laysan albatrosses do appear more inspired to care. The TrossCam has saved Kiamanu’s life, and perhaps it will save many other albatrosses going forward.

“Once viewers watch the cam they almost cannot help but fall in love,” says Osterlund. “Once in love, they are eager to learn more about the birds’ life cycle and risks” — and, she adds, are more likely to contribute to and support the creation of new nesting habitat and other conservation efforts.

To avoid major losses of Laysan albatrosses, allies like Osterlund say they will have to act fast — and together. Millions of YouTube viewers just might make that possible.

© 2018 Erica Cirino. All rights reserved.

Disclosure: The writer previously received a conservation fellowship from the Safina Center.

Inhumanity at the Border — and Beyond

If the Trump administration can show such disregard for society’s most vulnerable people, what does that mean for clean water, endangered species and other environmental issues?

The media images from the past few weeks have horrified us.

Children being torn from their grieving parents’ arms, locked in warehouses, abused and neglected, left crying and alone for the first time in their lives.

Such brutal actions showcase the stark indifference of President Trump, his administration, his cronies and his supporters when it comes to basic humanity. They don’t appear to care about individuals or families, and sometimes it looks as if they don’t care about anyone but themselves. Trump even announced this week that the U.S. would pull out of the United Nations Human Rights Council, which in itself sends a pretty clear message. And Trump’s midweek executive order ending the policy of family separations does nothing to solve the problems he’s already created. He has shown no signs that he will take steps to reunite families, let alone that he feels any remorse for his administration’s actions.

In the light of Trump’s public display of inhumanity — this shameful neglect of the people most in need of support and help — it becomes increasingly obvious that the administration and its supporters pose a threat not just to immigrant children, but to everyone on the planet.

After all, if someone can order a child to be ripped away from its crying mother and locked behind a metal chain-link fence, then they also likely have the disposition to pollute a river, build a fracking operation near a school, bulldoze habitat for an endangered species, allow a species to go extinct, prioritize the burning of planet-warming fossil fuels to enrich their cronies, and so much more.

Want proof that the planet is in peril from the same people perpetrating these civil-rights violations? Just look at the threads running through the actions the Trump administration has taken since these immigrant internment camps came to light. In the past week alone, they’ve rescinded protections for oceans and the Great Lakes; sold mining rights on land once part of Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument; launched a plan to weaken greater sage grouse protections; moved to block chemical-disaster safety rules; backed a plan to lift restrictions on 800,000 acres of public lands in Montana, including key wilderness areas; passed the latest Farm Bill in the House, which would roll back pesticide restrictions that protect endangered species; and initiated a process to make sweeping changes to the National Environmental Policy Act, which governs how all federal agencies analyze their environmental impacts.

These and other actions form an ever-growing quilt of industry-friendly decisions that will hurt people, wildlife and the environment we all live in for decades — and they happened while we were (quite rightly) focused on the border and angry about the seizure of immigrant children.

And sadly, not one of these actions received much media attention.

That’s exactly the way administration wants it. Presidential advisor Stephen Miller, architect of the immigration policy, has said that he feels voters will see immigration as the only topic worth voting on, and that the anger and fear Trump has stoked will drive more wins for his team. That will just leave the administration with even more power to target additional environmental regulations and protections that hold back corporate profits — and to make the world a dirtier, sicker, less natural place.

Because after all, if you can take children away from the most vulnerable parents in the world, what’s to stop you from taking away everything else?

Big Cities, Bright Lights: Ranking the Worst Light Pollution on Earth

The Blue Marble is turning into a glowing globe – and in many places that’s becoming a problem for human health.

The amount of artificial lighting is steadily increasing every year around the planet. It’s a cause for celebration in remote villages in Africa and the Indian sub-continent that recently gained access to electricity for the first time, but it is also harming the health and well-being of residents of megacities elsewhere that continue to get bigger and brighter every year.

Health impacts of this artificial illumination after daylight hours range from depression to cancer, including a range of sleep disorders.

A less tangible effect: 80 percent of people on Earth have lost their view of the natural night sky due to the overpowering glow of artificial lights.

The Revelator analyzed light pollution levels around the world, revealing the planet’s worst affected cities as well as the most light-polluted metropolitan areas, where development is mixed and diffused over massive distances. The areas on our top 10 lists are all well above the global urban average, which you’d find in major American cities like Pittsburgh or Raleigh.

The results on the lists may surprise you. The brightest cities have large populations, of course, but in many areas lighting is also geographically or culturally influenced. For example, cities in northern latitudes, where the sun shines less, or in arid countries, where hot daytime sun inspires more evening activity, are often brightly lit. This means they can outshine the usual light-pollution suspects like New York and Tokyo.

Top 10 Brightest Metropolitan Areas
Compared to the Global Urban Average

10. Miami, USA, 2.6 times brighter
9. Denver-Aurora, USA, 2.7 times brighter
8. Mexico City, Mexico, 2.8 times brighter
7. Detroit, USA, 2.9 times brighter
6. Buenos Aires, Argentina, 3.5 times brighter
5. Toronto, Canada, 3.6 times brighter
4. Chicago, USA, 4.5 times brighter
3. Montréal, Canada, 4.8 times brighter
2. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 6.7 times brighter
1. Moscow, Russia, 8.1 times brighter

Top 10 Brightest Cities
Compared to the Global Urban Average

10. Tangier, Morocco, 5.3 times brighter
9. Helsinki, Finland, 5.9 times brighter
8. Medina, Saudi Arabia, 6.0 times brighter
7. Kazan, Russia, 6.1 times brighter
6. Edmonton, Canada, 6.5 times brighter
5. Calgary, Canada, 6.6 times brighter
4. Kuwait City, Kuwait, 7.0 times brighter
3. Chelyabinsk, Russia, 7.1 times brighter
2. Mecca, Saudi Arabia, 7.4 times brighter
1. Saint Petersburg, Russia, 8.1 times brighter

Light pollution isn’t exclusive to the places on these lists. The problem is worldwide. Explore light pollution in this map of the world’s highest populated urban areas and see how they compared to the global urban average.

(Mobile users: click on places to select; desktop users: mouse over places for results. Brightness or radiance is measured in nanoWatts/cm2/sr)

Previously in The Revelator:

Blinded by the Light Pollution – We mapped light pollution from oil and gas fields and found they outshine American cities — and that’s bad news for birds.

Data sources:

Definitions:

  • Urban areas are discrete agglomerations of contiguous “urban and built up” areas identified in satellite land cover data.
    This custom data was built to maintain global comparable standards, as the definition of “cities,”, “metropolitan areas,” “urban agglomerations.” etc. vary greatly by regional and global authorities, and even in cultural understanding.
  • The global urban average is the mean radiance value of all urban areas weighted by their size.
  • Cities were classed as urban areas of size under 300 square miles, and metropolitan areas were classed as urban areas of size equal to, or larger than, 300 square miles.
  • The most populated places are the 600 urban areas with population 500,000 or more as identified by the United Nations.
    Some Vietnamese cities were excluded as light pollution satellite data were not available for them due to persistent cloud cover.

Tools:

  • ESRI ArcGIS Pro, CARTO, Apache OpenOffice

It’s No Mystery Why These Crime Novels Are Set in National Parks

We have five questions about environmental justice for Scott Graham, author of the National Park Mystery series.

America’s national parks are the perfect setting for a murder or two — just ask novelist Scott Graham, whose National Park Mystery series has been slaying readers since 2015.

The series stars archaeologist Chuck Bender, a traveler who gets in a lot more trouble than your typical national parks visitor. In the latest book, Yosemite Fall, just released on June 12, Bender starts out trying to solve the 150-year-old murders of a pair of indigenous gold prospectors, only to be implicated in the modern-day murder of one of his own friends.

the askThe Revelator spoke with Graham — an avid outdoorsman and former journalist — about why he thinks America’s national parks are so special, why it’s important to set his novels in these iconic areas, what they can tell us about environmental and social-justice issues, and what we’d risk by losing them and other protected spaces around the country.

So Scott, what inspired you to set your novels in America’s national parks?

Scott Graham rafting the Colorado River through Grand Canyon National Park. Courtesy of the author.

For a number of years, my wife and I thoroughly enjoyed exploring new-to-us national parks across the West with our two sons — until we decided, one fateful spring break, to visit Big Bend National Park in far southern Texas. We set off as we always did, with a camper full of food and the plan to pull off the road to explore public lands as we passed through them along the way.

But we didn’t know our American history well enough.

As an enticement to lure Texas into statehood, public lands in the Republic of Texas were turned over to state ownership upon the creation of the Lone Star State in 1845. The Texas state government promptly sold off more than 216 million acres of those newly acquired lands to ranchers and speculators. As a result, despite its massive size, Texas today has one of the lowest percentages of public lands of any state in the nation.

Modern-day rural Texas is a seeming paradise of vast and beautiful expanses, yet the thousand-mile drive south through the state was far from paradisiacal for me and my family. Magnificent mountain ranges and windswept plains were fenced off from us, side roads gated and locked, rural highways lined with No Trespassing signs. All the way to Big Bend and back, we spent our nights in crowded, edge-of-town commercial campgrounds, boxed in by behemoth recreational vehicles.

The frustration of our Texas fence-out led my wife and me to an even greater appreciation of the public lands of the United States, showcased especially by America’s open-to-all-comers national parks. When I turned to writing fiction, I resolved to dedicate my new murder mystery series to celebrating “America’s best idea” — its publicly owned national parks.

Aside from being great locations for murders, what do you feel more people need to understand about these fabulous sites?

yosemite fallEach book in my National Park Mystery Series is set in a specific park and seeks to capture and share with readers that park’s unique sense of place, beginning with that most iconic of America’s preserved landscapes, the Grand Canyon, and continuing, so far, with Rocky Mountain, Yellowstone and Yosemite national parks.

In addition, woven into the plot of each of my books is the story of an environmental or social justice issue specific to that book’s park and regional setting, including the desecration of burial grounds in Canyon Sacrifice, climate-related forest decline in Mountain Rampage, and species eradication in Yellowstone Standoff.

The latest book in the series, Yosemite Fall, addresses the modern-day repercussions associated with the 1850s genocide of indigenous peoples in post-Gold Rush California through a murder mystery set in legendary Camp 4, in the heart on Yosemite Valley.

Speaking of murders, now that some politicians are seeking to effectively “kill off” some of America’s public lands, have these books gained any additional meaning to you?

My publisher, Torrey House Press, is a respected nonprofit environmental publisher specializing in activist-oriented nonfiction. As one example, the Torrey House-published Red Rock Stories chapbook was critical to the 2016 decision by the Obama administration to establish Bears Ears National Monument, protecting 2.1 million acres of sacred Native American homelands in southeastern Utah. Torrey House is now at the forefront of the fight to preserve Bears Ears National Monument in the face of the effort by the Trump administration to reduce the size of the monument, and the sacred Native American lands it protects, by 90 percent.

While the bulk of Torrey House’s releases preach to the environmentalist choir, my mysteries, in contrast, aim to introduce newcomers to environmental and social justice issues through the mystery genre. My books are, first and foremost, entertaining. But in the face of concerted efforts such as those currently underway by the Trump administration to take public lands from the public and, essentially, auction them off to the highest bidders, the environmental and social justice aspects of my books absolutely have gained additional meaning to me, and make me proud of what I’m working to accomplish through the power of storytelling.

What, to you, has been the hardest thing about national parks to convey in writing — or the most satisfying?

As self-professed national park groupies, my parents piled my three siblings and me into our Ford Galaxy 500 station wagon and set off to explore a new batch of Western parks each summer. Through them, I came to cherish America’s national parks. In the five years I’ve been writing my series, I’ve found great satisfaction in conveying to readers my love of and appreciation for national parks and all of America’s public lands.

As we move beyond the 100th anniversary year, in 2016, of the National Park Service, it’s worth noting that tens of millions of visitors will enjoy America’s publicly owned national parks and monuments across the West this year and in the years ahead, while untold millions more will hunt, fish, hike, backpack, camp and laze about on national forest and BLM lands. It gives me great satisfaction to know that I’m doing what I can, through my writing and my books, to help ensure those lands will remain forever available and accessible to those millions of visitors and their children and grandchildren.

Do you know what national park you’ll be visiting next — either in person or in your writing?

Arches Enemy, book five in my National Park Mystery Series, is set for release in June 2019. In it, archaeologist Chuck Bender and his family are staying in Devil’s Garden Campground, deep in Arches National Park, when a natural sandstone arch collapses, taking a person atop it to her death. While questions surrounding the death mount, Chuck and his family find their lives in peril as the intertwined issues of monkey wrenching and development on public lands come to the fore.

Augh! Cliffhanger!

For more on Scott Graham’s books, visit his website.

Bat-Killing Fungus Spreads to Two New Species and Two New States

The fungus that causes white-nose syndrome continues its deadly spread west — but a meeting of bat researchers reveals cause for hope.

Bad news, it’s said, often comes in threes.

For North America’s imperiled bats, that definitely proved true this past month.

On May 29, the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism announced that the fungus that has killed millions of bats over the past 12 years has been found on a new species, the cave myotis bat (Myotis velifer). Biologists collected dead and dying bats in three Kansas counties and confirmed that they were suffering from white-nose syndrome, the disease caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd).

The next day, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the fungus had been found in South Dakota for the first time. There, the fungus was detected on a western small-footed bat (M. ciliolabrum) — another species newly affected by Pd — and four big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) at Badlands National Park. None of the bats in South Dakota had yet contracted white-nose syndrome.

Finally, on June 1, the Service announced that the fungus had reached another new state, this time Wyoming. Again, this was an early detection and the fungus does not yet appear to have sickened any bats in the state. This makes 32 states and seven Canadian provinces where white-nose syndrome has affected bats, plus an additional four states in which the fungus has been detected.

The string of multiple bad announcements over a three-day period appeared to weigh heavily on the 150 bat researchers and other experts who gathered in Tacoma, Wash., last week for the White-Nose Syndrome Annual Meeting.

“It’s tough,” says Ann Froschauer, Pacific region white-nose syndrome coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “I think we all knew that this was coming. You always hope there’ll be something that’s different, something that slows it down or changes the way that it’s moving. But you get these new detections and it’s like, ‘Oh man, there goes another one.’”

Catherine Hibbard, the Service’s white-nose syndrome national communications coordinator, echoed that sentiment, saying the three recent announcements loomed over the meeting. “It underlies the importance of having this meeting in the west because white-nose syndrome and the fungus are spreading in new directions,” she says. “There are still a lot of states that have not detected the fungus, and we expect more news to come, unfortunately.”

At the same time, the meeting offered multiple signs of hope. Dozens of presenters shared the latest news and research about conservation efforts, white-nose syndrome treatment and mitigation techniques, bat physiology and behavior, and other topics.

One promising area of research discussed at the meeting was the discovery, published earlier this year, that the fungus is incredibly sensitive to ultraviolet light. In fact, exposure to UV actually kills the fungus.

“It’s essentially like a vampire fungus,” says Daniel Lindner, a plant pathologist with the USDA Forest Service’s Northern Research Station and one of the authors of the study that revealed the UV sensitivity. “This fungus has evolved in the dark for so long that it truly is a creature of the dark. It’s gone so far down that evolutionary road that it’s lost the ability to repair DNA damage from light.”

He laughs at the irony of a vampire attacking bats. “The tables have turned,” he says.

Lindner and a team of researchers are now expanding on their UV discovery to see if they can kill the fungus without damaging its hosts. One idea they’re working on, which Lindner presented at the meeting, is trying to coax infected bats to fly through a ring emitting pulses of UV light, potentially destroying the fungus in the process. A lot of questions remain about that, he says. “Are the bats going to fly through these rings, or is their behavior going to change and they’ll avoid them?”

Despite these and other open questions about the fungus, many of the experts I spoke with at the meeting said they felt strengthened by the act of coming together to discuss the white-nose syndrome problem.

“You know, I think the thing that is most promising when we get together is just having the ability to tap into so much expertise from across the country,” says Froschauer. “Those of us here in the Pacific Northwest, where we’re just starting to deal with this disease, have this brain trust of scientists and land managers from all over the U.S. and Canada — researchers that are doing this critical research — right at our fingertips. It’s a really great opportunity to quickly learn the latest and greatest so we don’t have to reinvent the wheel. I think it helps people feel like there’s a little more hope than if they were just approaching it blindly.”

Hibbard says this is an important time for experts to gather and compare progress in their various fields. “It’s a big unknown about how a lot of these western species are going to respond to white-nose syndrome,” she says. “By gathering here, everyone is sharing notes about how they’re going to prepare when it comes to their state. It’s great for everybody to be talking to each other about these things.”

After the first day of the conference, many of the researchers gathered at a nearby conservation area to watch Washington state’s largest known bat colony emerge from its daytime slumber. As the twilight sky darkened, the thousands of uninfected bats that flew over us served as a breathtaking reminder of the importance of the efforts to preserve these disappearing species.

“We’re all concerned here about the survival of bats,” says Hibbard. “That’s why we’re doing what we’re doing.”


The Pd fungus and white-nose syndrome do not appear to affect humans or any species other than bats, but people can unwittingly spread it — and they can help bat populations as well. The official white-nose syndrome website offers a full page of tips on how people can help local conservation efforts, including how to decontaminate clothing and other equipment they use in caves where the fungus may be present.

Previously in The Revelator:

The Fungus Killing America’s Bats: “Sometimes You’ll See Piles of Dead Bats”

Farmed Fish Threaten British Columbia’s Wild Salmon Population

Atlantic salmon from Norway carry a dangerous disease that puts native Canadian fish at risk — and maybe those in the United States, too.

Something fishy is going on in the coastal waters of Canada’s British Columbia, and it may prove to be the final nail in the coffin of the already endangered wild salmon in this part of the world.

Over the past few years, the salmon in British Columbia have become infected with a particularly nasty infection called the piscine reovirus. The virus, which has plagued commercial salmon fisheries in Norway since 1999, causes inflammation in fish heart and skeletal muscles, making it difficult for salmon hearts to pump blood. Marine Harvest, the Norwegian company that grows one-fifth of the world’s farm-raised salmon, listed this inflammation as the second largest cause of death of its fish in a 2012 Annual General Report.

Now Norway’s problem has come to British Columbia — except that in North America, the situation is even worse. The virus isn’t just infecting farmed Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). It’s also spreading to wild populations of Pacific salmon, including the Fraser River sockeye (Oncorhynchus nerka) that was recommended for listing under Canada’s Species at Risk Act this past December, as well as Coho (O. kisutch), and Chinook (O. tshawytscha) salmon — both of which are also under consideration for listing.

A 2017 study led by marine biologist Alexandra Morton revealed that the virus strain found in Pacific salmon appears to have originated in Norwegian Atlantic salmon, and it also showed a likely connection between infection and an impaired ability of wild salmon to complete their spawning migrations. There are a variety of ways the virus is able to jump from farmed to wild populations, including the effluent from salmon processing plants and the escape of farmed Atlantic salmon after the collapse of net pens.

“Salmon farming sounded like a good idea,” Morton tells me over email, “but as we are learning it is never a good idea to allow pathogens to move freely between feedlot-type environments and wild populations — whether it’s avian flu, or piscine reovirus.”

The issue is not confined to Canadian waters. In August 2017 the collapse of a Cooke Aquaculture fish-farm pen in Washington’s Puget Sound, and the subsequent release of hundreds of thousands of non-native Atlantic salmon, prompted Governor Jay Inslee to immediately put a halt to new net-pen leases, pending an investigation by the state’s Department of Natural Resources. The department returned with damning results. In mid-March Inslee ended three decades of Atlantic salmon farming in Washington’s waters and even blocked lawmakers from reconsidering the ban at a later date.

According to Washington governor’s office communication specialist Simon Vila, the threat of piscine reovirus spreading from farmed fish to wild populations was a major concern. “The risks of net pens to wild salmon in Puget Sound may be low,” he says, “but our tolerance for that risk is even lower.”

More recently, Washington took another biologically significant step and prohibited transfer of 800,000 infected juvenile salmon from a hatchery to a farm in Puget Sound.

And yet, so far, the response by Canada’s Department of Fisheries and Oceans has been minimal — even after a 2017 video produced by underwater videographer and naturalist Tavish Campbell showed effluent from Brown’s Bay Packing Company’s Atlantic salmon-processing plant gushing into wild salmon spawning habitat.

Blood Water: B.C.’s Dirty Salmon Farming Secret from Tavish Campbell on Vimeo.

The video spurred the department to launch an investigation into whether or not that blood was infected with the virus, something testing done by Morton had actually already proved. Morton, who is in her fifth year of legal action to stop the Minister of Fisheries from permitting the transfer of infected farm salmon into marine pens in British Columbia and more recently the ’Namgis First Nation, also sued the Minister to stop infected farmed salmon from entering their territory. Marine Harvest’s Canadian subsidiary plans an open-net salmon pen at Swanson Island, near the ’Namgis territory. These lawsuits will be heard in September.

It’s not just the salmon at risk here; it’s also First Nations’ culture. Frustrated with the government’s lack of action, some members of the ’Namgis and Musgamagw First Nations have taken matters into their own hands, protesting the industry they perceive as damaging to wild salmon populations by occupying Marine Harvest property near the Swanson Island farm and elsewhere off the northeast coast of Vancouver Island. Their protest has continued for more than for 290 days.


Their occupation has been reminiscent of Standing Rock, with one notable difference: a lack of press. It’s hard to find any coverage of the protest in American news outlets.

British Columbia’s Supreme Court responded to the protests by ordering protesters to cease their occupation of Swanson Farm, and any other Marine Harvest property, effective immediately. This decision came just one month before a landmark decision for the future of the province’s salmon, as five-year provincial tenures on 20 farms in the area by Marine Harvest and another company, Cermaq, are set to expire June 20.

The protesters have complied with the court order but continue their resistance from tents nearby.

Meanwhile the risks of the virus continue to emerge. A new study published in May 2018 found Chinook salmon exposed to the virus experience catastrophic necrotic liver and kidney lesions following rupture of their red blood cells.

Morton says the time for a decision has come. “The industry admits 80 percent of British Columbia’s farmed salmon are infected, making the decision critical to both wild and farmed salmon.” She says she hopes the authorities take the right action before it is too late. “It comes down to the global issue of how governments respond to the science that warns us that essential living systems are being disabled to the point of collapse.”


To learn more about piscine reovirus in British Columbia’s fisheries, check out this film released by Morton.

Racing a Virus – Short Film from Alexandra Morton on Vimeo.

Article © 2018 Chris Kalman. All rights reserved.