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Critically endangered leopard dies at age 21 in California zoo

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com December 2, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

Beloved Amur Leopard Zoya Passes at 21

The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens in Palm Desert is mourning the loss of Zoya, a beloved Amur leopard who captivated visitors for over a decade. Zoya, a remarkable 21 years old, peacefully passed away last Tuesday from natural causes related to old age.

"As we celebrate Zoya’s life, we encourage you to enjoy the little things in life — as she did," the zoo said in a statement. "Spend some time observing your natural surroundings. Be playful. Appreciate those special, tranquil moments throughout the day."

Her passing marks the end of an extraordinary life for a species facing immense challenges in the wild. Amur leopards, native to the Russian Far East and northern China, are critically endangered, with an estimated population of just 100 individuals remaining. This makes Zoya’s long life, exceeding both the average lifespan of her species in the wild (10-15 years) and in captivity (15-20 years), even more remarkable. She was one of the oldest leopards under human care in the United States.

Beyond her impressive longevity, Zoya was known for her spirited personality. Even in her later years, with decreasing kidney function, she remained "spry and athletic,” according to zoo officials. She loved her high vantage points, enjoying a bird’s eye view of the warthogs and zoo guests. Her mornings were often spent basking on her rock, overlooking the serene pond.

Zoya’s story highlights the plight of Amur leopards, who face threats from habitat loss, poaching, and dwindling prey populations. Organizations like the World Wildlife Fund are working tirelessly to protect these magnificent creatures through anti-poaching efforts, habitat conservation, and initiatives to increase the populations of their natural prey, such as deer and wild boar.

Zoos across the United States, including the San Diego Zoo, the Santa Barbara Zoo, and the Minnesota Zoo, are playing a vital role in the conservation efforts of Amur leopards. Last year, the San Diego Zoo welcomed two healthy leopard cubs, marking its third successful litter. Zoya’s legacy serves as a poignant reminder of the importance of these conservation programs and the critical need to protect this extraordinary species for generations to come.

December 2, 2024 0 comments
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News

California lawmakers to begin special session to ‘Trump-proof’ state laws

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com December 2, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

California Braces for a Second Trump Presidency, Setting the Stage for Legal Confrontation

California is gearing up for a potential showdown with a returning Donald Trump administration, signaling its intention to fiercely defend its progressive policies. Governor Gavin Newsom, a vocal critic of Trump, has called the California Legislature into a special session to approve emergency funding for legal battles against the anticipated conservative agenda.

Newsom’s move comes just days before Trump’s inauguration, marking the beginning of what could be a contentious four years. The Democratic governor, backed by his party’s supermajorities in both chambers of the legislature, is seeking $25 million to bolster the Attorney General’s office, preparing for a rapid response against federal challenges to California’s progressive stance.

"While we always hope to collaborate with our federal partners, California will be

ready to vigorously defend our interests and values from any unlawful action by the incoming Trump Administration," stated Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, who introduced the funding legislation.

This isn’t the first time California and the Trump administration have clashed. During Trump’s first term, California sued the federal government over 120 times on issues ranging from immigration and civil rights to climate change and abortion access. While California saw varying degrees of success in these legal battles, the state contends its commitment to these issues hasn’t wavered.

"We’re not going to be caught flat-footed," Newsom said during a recent press conference, emphasizing California’s preparedness for the upcoming challenges.

The tension between Trump and California is palpable. Trump has repeatedly depicted California as a political adversary, labeling it a blueprint for everything wrong with America. He has publicly disparaged Newsom, calling him "New-scum" during a campaign rally in Southern California. Trump has also criticized California’s large immigrant population, its homelessness crisis, and its environmental regulations, vowing to retaliate against what he sees as progressive overreach.

As the special session commences, California lawmakers face a multitude of pressing issues. Besides preparing for potential legal battles, they must also address the state budget deficit, projected to reach $2 billion in the coming year. Assemblymember Gabriel, who chairs the budget committee and led lawsuits against the previous Trump administration regarding immigration enforcement and the census citizenship question, defended the need for legally preparing for confrontation, stating: “This is a wise investment.”

California’s legal victories against the Trump administration have proven fruitful, reclaiming millions of dollars previously withheld due to immigration enforcement conditions on federal grants. With a newly appointed conservative judiciary refining the federal legal landscape, California faces a more complex legal battle ahead.

Yet, California appears undeterred. As Assemblymember Gabriel declared: "We are positioned, if necessary, to be the tip of the spear of the resistance and to push back against any unlawful or unconstitutional actions by the Trump administration.”

As Trump prepares to return to the White House, the stage is set for a renewed clash between the nation’s most populous state and its new president. The coming months will likely be marked by protracted legal battles as California strives to defend its progressive policies against the potential rollback of federal protections.

December 2, 2024 0 comments
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World

Tropical Storm Milton could become a hurricane and threatens Florida

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com October 6, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

MIAMI (AP) — Authorities warned Florida residents Sunday that Tropical Storm Milton, currently hovering off the coast of Mexico, could become a dangerous hurricane and hit the Gulf Coast.

The eye of Tropical Storm Milton was about 860 miles (1,385 kilometers) west-southwest of Tampa, Florida, on Sunday morning, turning east at 5 miles per hour (7 kilometers per hour) and with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph (95 kph), the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

“Milton is moving slowly but is set to strengthen quickly,” the center said. “There is a belief that a powerful hurricane that could threaten human lives will affect parts of the western coast of Florida by the middle of this week.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Sunday that while it is not known where Milton will hit, it is clear that Florida will be affected.

“I don’t think there is any scenario in which we do not have a significant impact, at this time,” declared the governor.

He added: “They have time to prepare: all day today, all day Monday, probably all day Tuesday, to make sure their hurricane preparedness plans are ready. Find out your evacuation zone. “There will be voluntary and non-voluntary evacuations.”

DeSantis said up to 4,000 National Guard troops are helping the Florida Division of Emergency Management and the Florida Department of Transportation clear debris, and he declared a state of emergency in 35 counties as a precaution. He said residents of the state should prepare for more power outages and other disruptions.

“All available state resources … are being used to help clear debris,” the governor said. “We will work 24 hours a day… it is a task for the entire team.”

The administrator of the Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Deanne Criswell, defended her agency’s actions after Hurricane Helene, in the face of falsehoods propagated by Republicans and amplified by former President Donald Trump, which created a wave of misinformation in the devastated communities.

“This kind of rhetoric doesn’t help people and it’s unfortunate that there are people who are putting politics above helping the community,” Criswell told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. The falsehoods have created fear and mistrust among residents toward the thousands of FEMA employees and volunteers throughout the Southeast, he said.

Despite this, Criswell said, the agency is already preparing for Milton, even though it is not known where the meteor will hit this week on the Florida peninsula.

“We are working with the state there to find out what their needs are, so we can meet them before the storm hits,” Criswell said.

The weather center said Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, the Florida Peninsula, the Florida Keys and the northwestern Bahamas should monitor the storm. Heavy rain is expected Sunday before the storm arrives, and that rain will likely combine with rain from Milton to flood bodies of water and streets in Florida, where forecasters predicted up to 1 foot (30 centimeters) of rain in some areas. from now until Wednesday.

“There is an increasing risk of high water and strong winds for parts of Florida’s west coast starting Tuesday or Wednesday. Residents in these areas should ensure that they have their hurricane plan ready, should follow the instructions of local authorities and should be alert for forecast updates,” the center said.

The Atlantic hurricane season has intensified as rescue teams continue searching for people missing in the southeastern United States after Hurricane Helene, which left a trail of death and destruction from Florida to the Appalachian Mountains .

Hurricane Kirk, meanwhile, was downgraded to a Category 2 hurricane in the Atlantic, packing maximum sustained winds of 165 kph (105 mph) and causing storm surge and dangerous conditions from Bermuda to the U.S. and Canadian coasts, the center said. . Hurricane Leslie was also moving northwest across the Atlantic, with maximum sustained winds of 140 kph (85 mph) but not threatening land.

October 6, 2024 0 comments
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Business

Tropical Storm Francine forms off the coast of Mexico; expected to hit Texas with rain | National

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com September 9, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

MIAMI (AP) — Tropical Storm Francine formed off the coast of Mexico on Monday and was expected to lash the Texas coast with up to a foot of rain before hitting Louisiana at hurricane force late Wednesday.

“On Wednesday, conditions will be very dangerous for parts of the north-central Gulf Coast, particularly along the Louisiana coast, where storm surge and hurricane-force winds could cause flooding,” said Michael Brennan, director of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami.

Francine points to a stretch of coastline that has yet to fully recover since Hurricanes Laura and Delta decimated Lake Charles, Louisiana, four years ago.

Francine was located about 245 miles (395 kilometers) southeast of the mouth of the Rio Grande and about 480 miles (770 kilometers) south-southeast of Cameron, Louisiana, the NHC said. Its maximum winds were about 50 mph (85 kph) Monday morning. A tropical storm is defined by sustained winds between 39 and 73 mph (62 and 117 kph).

Francine is expected to reach hurricane strength as it approaches the northwestern Gulf Coast on Wednesday, bringing a storm surge of up to 10 feet (3 meters), forecasters said.

“Francine is expected to bring heavy rainfall and a risk for significant flash flooding along the coast of extreme northeastern Mexico, portions of the southernmost Texas coast, the upper Texas coast, southern Louisiana, and southern Mississippi through Thursday morning. Flash and urban flooding is a risk for portions of the mid-South region Wednesday through Friday morning,” the NHC warned.

September 9, 2024 0 comments
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World

Heat dome moves into Texas, record highs expected

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com August 21, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A heat dome that has brought nearly 90 straight days of high temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius) to Phoenix moved into Texas on Wednesday, and the high temperatures are not expected to subside until the weekend, the National Weather Service said.

A heat warning has been declared for Texas as the National Weather Service has described the coming heat wave as “extreme” and “rare and/or long-lasting with little to no overnight relief.” An extreme heat warning has been issued for eastern New Mexico.

A heat dome is a slow-moving, high-pressure system with stable air and a deep layer of high temperatures, meteorologist Bryan Jackson explained.

“It’s usually sunny, the sun is scorching, it’s hot and the air is contained inside (the dome),” Jackson said. “There are a dozen places that are hitting peak temperatures on a daily basis … mostly in Texas.”

Record-high temperatures were expected in cities including Corpus Christi, San Antonio and Amarillo. In Phoenix, monsoon rains have cooled slightly since Sunday, though daytime highs are still above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 degrees Celsius).

The dome is forecast to move toward western Oklahoma and eastern New Mexico beginning Saturday, then into the central Mississippi Valley, where it will weaken slightly, Jackson said.

About 14.7 million people are in the heat warning zone, where temperatures of 110°F (43.3°C) and above are forecast. Another 10 million people have been issued a heat advisory.

According to MedStar Ambulance Service in Fort Worth, Texas, hundreds of people have already had to rely on emergency services. The service responded to 286 heat-related calls during the first 20 days of August, about 14 a day, compared to about 11 a day in August 2023, according to MedStar social communicator Desiree Partain.

August 21, 2024 0 comments
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Dubai flooding: Experts don’t think cloud seeding played a role in the rains
World

Dubai flooding: Experts don’t think cloud seeding played a role in the rains

by Chief editor of world-today-news.com April 17, 2024
written by Chief editor of world-today-news.com

With cloud seeding, it may rain, but it doesn’t really pour or flood — at least nothing like what drenched the United Arab Emirates and paralyzed Dubai, meteorologists said.

Cloud seeding, although decades old, is still controversial in the weather community, mostly because it has been hard to prove that it does very much. No one reports the type of flooding that on Tuesday doused the UAE, which often deploys the technology in an attempt to squeeze every drop of moisture from a sky that usually gives less than 4 or 5 inches (10 to 13 centimeters) of rain a year.

“It’s most certainly not cloud seeding,” said private meteorologist Ryan Maue, former chief scientist at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “If that occurred with cloud seeding, they’d have water all the time. You can’t create rain out of thin air per se and get 6 inches of water. That’s akin to perpetual motion technology.”

Meteorologists and climate scientists said the extreme rainfall is akin to what the world expects with human-caused climate change, and one way to know for certain that it was not caused by tinkering with clouds is that it was forecast days in advance. Atmospheric science researcher Tomer Burg pointed to computer models that six days earlier forecast several inches of rain — the typical amount for an entire year in the UAE.

Three low-pressure systems formed a train of storms slowly moving along the jet stream — the river of air that moves weather systems — toward the Persian Gulf, said University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann. Blaming cloud seeding ignores the forecasts and the cause, he said.

Many of the people pointing to cloud seeding are also climate change deniers who are trying to divert attention from what’s really happening, Mann and other scientists said.

“When we talk about heavy rainfall, we need to talk about climate change. Focusing on cloud seeding is misleading,” said Imperial College of London climate scientist Friederike Otto, who heads a team that does rapid attribution of weather extremes to see if they were caused by global warming or not. “Rainfall is becoming much heavier around the world as the climate warms because a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture.”

WHAT IS CLOUD SEEDING?

The desert nation of the United Arab Emirates attempted to dry out Wednesday from the heaviest rain ever recorded there after a deluge flooded out Dubai International Airport, disrupting flights through the world’s busiest airfield for international travel.

HOW EFFECTIVE IS IT?

A recent study of aerial seeding found a clear precipitation pattern on a radar that mirrored the seeding and offers evidence the method works. But exactly how effective it is remains unclear, scientists say.

The physics makes sense, but the results have been so small that scientists just can’t agree on whether it is fair to say it really works, said Maue and Mann.

Atmospheric forces are so huge and so chaotic that technically cloud seeding “is way too small a scale to create what happened,” Maue said. Extra rainfall from cloud seeding would have been minimal, both said.

WHO USES IT?

Despite not knowing its efficacy, governments in drought-stricken regions like the U.S. West and the UAE are often willing to invest in technology like seeding in the hopes of getting even a small amount of water.

Utah estimates cloud seeding helped increase its water supply by 12% in 2018, according to an analysis by the state’s Division of Water Resources. The analysis used estimates provided to them by the contractors paid to do the seeding.

Dozens of countries in Asia and the Middle East also use cloud seeding.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation spent $2.4 million last year on cloud seeding along the overtapped Colorado River. Utah recently increased its seeding budget by tenfold.

SO WHAT CAUSED THE DELUGE?

That part of the Middle East doesn’t get many storms, but when it does, they are whoppers that dwarf what people in the United States are used to, Maue said.

Huge tropical storms like this “are not rare events for the Middle East,” said University of Reading meteorology professor Suzanne Gray. She cited a recent study analyzing nearly 100 such events over the southern Arabian Peninsula from 2000 to 2020, with most in March and April, including a March 2016 storm that dropped 9.4 inches (almost 24 centimeters) on Dubai in just a few hours.

The 2021 study said “a statistically significant increase in the (whopper storms) duration over southeast Arabian Peninsula has been found, suggesting that such extreme events may be even more impactful in a warming world.”

While cloud seeding can work around the margins, it doesn’t do big things, scientists say.

“It’s maybe a little bit of a human conceit that, yeah, we can control the weather in like a Star Trek sense,” Maue, who was appointed to NOAA by then-President Donald Trump, said. “Maybe on long time scales, climate time scales, we’re affecting the atmosphere on long time scales. But when it comes to controlling individual rain storms, we are not anywhere close to that. And if we were capable of doing that, I think we would be capable of solving many more difficult problems than creating a rain shower over Dubai.”

___

Borenstein reported from Washington, Peterson from Boulder, Colorado.

___

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit

April 17, 2024 0 comments
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