Always cool seeing predation events on #cameratraps: The ferocious EPBC listed Butler's dunnart devouring a sizeable cricket on Bathurst Island
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Always cool seeing predation events on #cameratraps: The ferocious EPBC listed Butler's dunnart devouring a sizeable cricket on Bathurst Island
#maconka #epbc #fishing&hunting #tv (helyszín: Maconkai-víztározó és tórendszere) https://www.instagram.com/p/B2VsfhpBpzf/?igshid=1nm0de8kmt3vs
#fishing&huntingtv #epbc #sony #fs5 (helyszín: Maconkai-víztározó és tórendszere)
A decade into America's oil and gas boom, and scientists still know very little about how hydraulic fracturing (fracking) and shale development affect wildlife, according to a recent scientific study. The knowledge gap is particularly glaring when it comes to the ecosystem impacts of fracking fluid and wastewater spills.
In Australia, the use of fracking has been listed as a Matter of National Environmental Significance under the national Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (EPBC Act). Third year Deakin Environmental Science students have just completed an assignment which demonstrated how this Act works to protect wildlife listed as Matters of National Environmental Significance. This paper from America is thus of great interest!