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Posts Tagged ‘protect an acre’

On Father’s Day, Protect an Acre for Dad

Written by Chris Coletta | June 18th, 2010 | Add a comment
Don't panic! Father's Day is soon, but you can protect an acre of forest to give Dad a great last-minute present.

Attention, Team Earth: If you haven’t gotten your Dad a Father’s Day gift yet, do not fear. We have a solution to your procrastination.

It’s called Protect an Acre. It’s a campaign from our parent organization, Conservation International.

The idea is simple. Keeping forests alive and intact prevents tons of carbon from polluting the atmosphere. (That’s why, at Team Earth, we encourage people to take action to protect forests, such as using less paper or planting trees.)

By protecting an acre of forest in Pops’ name, you can give him an awesome, meaningful gift – and make a difference for the environment. You can also send Dad an awesome eCard to let him know what you’ve done – we’ll make sure it gets there Sunday, and not before or after.

Protecting one acre is just $15, which ain’t too shabby when you think about what you’d end up spending on dinner, or a golf shirt, or a necktie. (Personally, I think a fella can never have too many ties, but maybe I’m in the minority there.)

Plus, this gift is way hipper and good for the environment.

Take action today — protect an acre of forest for your dad!

Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/brighton/ | via Creative Commons

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Preserving Biodiversity Is Easier Than Getting Through to Lady Gaga’s Cell

Written by Chris Coletta | May 10th, 2010 | Add a comment

Not to bum you out on a Monday, but for people who care about biodiversity – the incredible array of life that exists on the planet – the last few weeks have brought several reasons for concern.

First, there was a report in the journal “Science” that said world governments have yet to meet targets for preserving biodiversity around the world. More recently, a United Nations report suggested that this  dwindling diversity of life will start to hurt the world’s economies.

It’s pretty simple. Nature, as you can read in everything from the Bible to modern-day environmental science, gives humans a lot of benefits. That includes the sort of beauty the Romantics wrote about, but it also includes more science-y stuff. As the BBC notes in its article:

[Ecosystem] services include purifying water and air, protecting coasts from storms and maintaining wildlife for ecotourism.

Since we’re focused on climate change here at Team Earth, we’ll also mention that our tropical forests are some of our best allies in that fight.

The thing is, when species disappear, all those ecosystem services start to disappear, too. Replacing them subsequently falls to government coffers.

In other words, wave goodbye to your friend Mr. Benjamin.

We don’t want to say that nature isn’t inherently worth protecting. But it’s also vital to recognize that without nature, man will struggle.

It would be easy to feel overwhelmed by all of this. Take heart. You might never be able to get Lady Gaga to pick up her telephone, but you can definitely take action in the fight against biodiversity loss.

One of the best ways to protect biodiversity is to preserve the world’s tropical forests. They lead the fight against climate change, as we’ve already seen, and they also contain an estimated 50 percent of the world’s species.

As it just so happens, we make it easy for you to fight both climate change and biodiversity loss with one fell swoop. Take action today to protect an acre of tropical forest.

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Behold the Ninja Slug

Written by Chris Coletta | May 3rd, 2010 | Add a comment

It sounds like one of those things your college buddy said after he’d been up for three nights straight studying for exams: “What if there was a slug … but the slug was also a ninja?”

Except the ninja slug isn’t a figment of someone’s sleep-deprived imagination. It exists. Scientists from the World Wildlife Fund recently discovered the animal at high elevations in a tropical forest on the island of Borneo (pictured above), north of Australia.

Why “ninja slug”? The creature, less than 2 inches long, apparently uses stealth “love darts” – sort of like ninja stars – to inject a hormone into mates. The hormone gives the slug a better chance of reproduction.

The animal is just one of many cool species that scientists have discovered recently in the dense, remote Borneo rainforest. All in all, the WWF says, scientists have identified 123 new species since the three countries that make up Borneo – Brunei, Malaysia and Indonesia – decided to conserve 85,000 square miles of forest in February 2007.

That’s just one sliver of forest, mind you, in one sliver of the world, and scientists are finding three new species a month.

As Team Earth members know, tropical forests aren’t just good for finding creatures of the wild – species that help regulate nature, contribute to human well-being, and make us say “whoa.” The forests also are pivotal in the fight against climate change.

Want to help preserve species like the ninja slug and help the planet? You can. Take action today.

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