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Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 12:01:55

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 03:01:11

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 06:00:41

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 09:00:53

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 12:00:44

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



Experts: Warming to change travel patterns (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 12:00:44

** FILE ** Several tourists enjoy Rockley beach, in the resort town of Rockley, in the parish Church Christ, Barbados, Sept. 13, 2001. The March 11-April 28 Cricket World Cup 2007, to be held in the Caribbean, is expected to attract 100,000 visitors to see 16 teams play matches in Jamaica, Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Kitts, Antigua, Grenada, Trinidad, St. Vincent and Guyana.  (AP Photo/Chris Brandis)Global warming will produce stay-at-home tourists over the next few decades, radically altering travel patterns and threatening jobs and businesses in tourism-dependent countries, according to a stark assessment by U.N. experts.



New bid to wipe out Alaska's Rat Island rats (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 03:00:42

Biologist Jeff Williams from the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge sets a rodent trap on Kiska Island January 5, 2005. Kiska Island, like many other treeless, volcanic islands in the 1,000-mile (1,609-km) long Aleutian chain, is infested with rats that have proved devastating to wild birds that build nests in the earth or in rocky cliffs. REUTERS/Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge/HandoutTwo centuries after rats first landed on a remote Aleutian island from a shipwreck, wildlife managers in Alaska are plotting how to evict the non-native rodent from the island that bears their name.



Sushi passion threatens Mediterranean tuna (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 03:00:42

Men defrost carcasses of frozen tuna before an auction at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo in this December 12, 2006, file photo. Japanese demand for its fatty flesh to make sushi has sparked a fishing frenzy for the Atlantic bluefin tuna - a torpedo-shaped brute weighing up to half a tonne that can accelerate faster than a Porsche 911.   To match feature SPAIN-TUNA/        REUTERS/Kiyoshi Ota/Files (JAPAN)Fishermen like Diego Crespo have trapped the giant tuna swarming into the warm Mediterranean for over 3,000 years, but he says this year may be one of his last.



New bid to wipe out Alaska's Rat Island rats (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 06:00:43

Biologist Jeff Williams from the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge sets a rodent trap on Kiska Island January 5, 2005. Kiska Island, like many other treeless, volcanic islands in the 1,000-mile (1,609-km) long Aleutian chain, is infested with rats that have proved devastating to wild birds that build nests in the earth or in rocky cliffs. REUTERS/Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge/HandoutTwo centuries after rats first landed on a remote Aleutian island from a shipwreck, wildlife managers in Alaska are plotting how to evict the non-native rodent from the island that bears their name.



British judge OKs Gore film in schools (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 06:00:43

** FILE ** In this file photo originally provided by Paramount Pictures Classics, Al Gore is shown in a scene from his documentary "An Inconvenient Truth." Al Gore's film on the perils of global warming, scored two Oscar nominations Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2007,for best documentary feature and best original song.  While he is not technically a nominee  -- the film's director, Davis Guggenheim, won the nod, as did singer Melissa Etheridge for the song "I Need to Wake Up" --  the former vice president said he was "thrilled" that his movie was honored.  (AP Photo/Paramount Classics,Eric Lee)Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore's Oscar-winning climate change documentary can be shown in English schools, a judge said Tuesday, even though he believes it promotes partisan political views.



New bid to wipe out Alaska's Rat Island rats (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 09:00:44

Biologist Jeff Williams from the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge sets a rodent trap on Kiska Island January 5, 2005. Kiska Island, like many other treeless, volcanic islands in the 1,000-mile (1,609-km) long Aleutian chain, is infested with rats that have proved devastating to wild birds that build nests in the earth or in rocky cliffs. REUTERS/Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge/HandoutTwo centuries after rats first landed on a remote Aleutian island from a shipwreck, wildlife managers in Alaska are plotting how to evict the non-native rodent from the island that bears their name.



EPA: Climate bills dependent on global effort (View Original Story)
Source: Posted: 10-02-2007 at 09:00:44
Three competing Senate proposals calling for limits on greenhouse gases would have roughly identical success in curbing global warming, but only if other nations also significantly cut heat-trapping emissions, a government analysis says.

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