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MSNBC - Environment News

Seafood poisoning on the rise (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 03:00:47
Scientists say the risks of seafood poisoning are getting worse, because of damage that pollution and global warming are inflicting on the coral reefs where many fish species feed.

Climate report: ?Highway to extinction? (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 03:00:47

** FILE ** A polar bear plays on the tundra near Churchill, Manitoba, Canada, in this Friday, Nov. 3, 2006 file photo.  Animal and plant species have begun dying off or changing sooner than predicted because of global warming, a review of hundreds of research studies contends. The study's author, biologist Camille Parmesan of the University of Texas, said she worries most about the cold-adapted species, such as emperor penguins that have dropped from 300 breeding pairs to just nine in the western Antarctic Peninsula, or polar bears, which are dropping in numbers and weight in the Arctic.(AP Photo/CP, Jonathan Hayward)A key element of the second major report on climate change being released Friday in Belgium is a chart that maps out the effects of global warming with every degree of temperature rise, forecasting that the number of species going extinct will rise with the heat, according to the draft report obtained by The Associated Press



Seafood poisoning on the rise (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 06:00:42
Scientists say the risks of seafood poisoning are getting worse, because of damage that pollution and global warming are inflicting on the coral reefs where many fish species feed.

Rebuke for administration on emissions (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 12:01:01
In a defeat for the Bush administration, the Supreme Court ruled on Monday that a U.S. government agency has the power under the clean air law to regulate greenhouse gas emissions that spur global warming.

Seafood poisoning on the rise (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 12:01:01
Scientists say the risks of seafood poisoning are getting worse, because of damage that pollution and global warming are inflicting on the coral reefs where many fish species feed.

Rebuke for administration on emissions (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 03:00:48

**FILE**Traffic moves down Wiliston Road in Burlington, Vt., in this March 14, 2007 file photo. The Supreme Court ordered the federal government on Monday, April 2, 2007 to take a fresh look at regulating carbon dioxide emissions from cars, a rebuke to Bush administration policy on global warming. In a 5-4 decision, the court said the Clean Air Act gives the Environmental Protection Agency the authority to regulate the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from cars. (AP Photo/Alden Pellett)The Supreme Court ordered the federal government on Monday to take a fresh look at regulating carbon dioxide emissions from cars, a rebuke to Bush administration policy on global warming.



Ruling squeezes Bush from both sides (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 09:00:56

April 2: The Supreme Court ruled Monday that the Environmental Protection Agency can regulate greenhouse gas emissions from cars. NBC's Pete Williams reports. (Nightly News)The Supreme Court ordered the EPA Monday to explain why it has refused to regulate greenhouse emissions from cars, putting the Bush administration under pressure from both environmental groups and automakers to move quickly on global warming.



Seafood poisoning on the rise (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 04-02-2007 at 09:00:56

** ADVANCE FOR MONDAY, APRIL 2** The Roa family led by Anacleto Roa, center, eat lunch together in their home in Iloilo city in central Philippines in this Feb. 26, 2007 file photo. Six members of the Roa family, including son-in-law Noli Maranon, left, and his daughter Norlyn, 5, and David Roa, right, fell ill last August 2006 after eating a reef fish known as Barracuda in what was diagnosed as Ciguatera poisoning.  (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)Scientists say the risks of seafood poisoning are getting worse, because of damage that pollution and global warming are inflicting on the coral reefs where many fish species feed.



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