Archive for July, 2013

Businessman who molested 14-year-old girl commits suicide after verdict read

July 8, 2013

http://www.14news.com/story/22737920/businessman-who-molested-14-year-old-girl-commits-suicide-in-courtroom

A businessman convicted in a Nodaway County courtroom of molesting a 14-year-old girl committed suicide moments after hearing the verdict.

Steve Parsons, 48, was found guilty on two counts of sodomy. The gallery and court officials were horrified when minutes after the verdict was read he was convulsing in the courtroom after apparently swallowing a cyanide pill.

Parsons was pronounced dead at Heartland Regional Medical Center in St. Joseph.

Jesse Murphy from the Maryville Daily Forum newspaper told KCTV5 that authorities believe Parsons had the pill in his mouth when he entered the courtroom last Thursday. The pill went undetected by courthouse security.

Parsons, the owner of Parsons Tire and Battery in St. Joseph, was arrested in July 2011 in Gentry County where he was charged with two felony counts of having sexual intercourse with a 14-year-old girl. His trial was moved to Nodaway County on a change of venue.

According to Nodaway County Sheriff Darren White, Parsons took a drink from a cup he was allowed to bring into the courtroom during jury deliberations, Murphy said. White says a preliminary report from the medical examiner indicates Parsons’ death was a case of cyanide poisoning, adding that a search of Parsons’ home and car revealed he had ordered cyanide to be shipped to his home.

A final report from the medical examiner’s office is expected later this week.

Police search for St. Louis teenager missing in Florida

July 8, 2013

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/07/07/police-search-for-st-louis-teenager-missing-in-florida/

Florida investigators are searching for a St. Louis teenager suffering from ADHD and bipolar disorder who disappeared Saturday while at the beach with her older sister, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

Nicole Crowder, 17, was last seen in the Daytona Beach area with a 30-something black man, described as bald with a medium build and wearing gold teeth, according to the newspaper. He seemed to have another teenager with him, the Sentinel reported.

Crowder, who reportedly has the mental bearing of a 9-year-old and suffers from bipolar disorder as well as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, is 5 feet, 3 inches tall, 185 pounds with brown eyes and black hair.

The Sentinel reports that she is not in possession of her medications.

Crowder was last seen around 5:30 p.m. Saturday, wearing pink sunglasses and a black-and-white one-piece bathing suit. Crowder was reported missing around 8:45 p.m. Saturday night. She had reportedly spent the day at the beach with her older, adult sister, and was visiting Windermere, Fla., to see her mother.

A check of local hospitals, hotels and businesses produced no sign of Crowder.

Anyone with information regarding Crowder’s whereabouts is asked to call (386) 248-1777.

Deadly poison threat to tigers

July 8, 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21618346

Poison is emerging as the latest and most dangerous threat to the survival of the last remaining wild tigers in Thailand.

Poachers targeting tigers for their valuable skins and body parts are turning to insecticide as an easy way to kill the iconic animals.

In what’s regarded as Thailand’s most important tiger sanctuary, wildlife rangers report mounting evidence of gangs setting traps with fresh meat, laced with poison, as bait.

In one particularly shocking incident, two tiger cubs were found close to death after eating the bait. By the time they had been discovered, it was too late to save them.

Rangers described the frustration of finding the cubs and seeing them in extreme pain but too far gone to be revived.

The two tiny animals had crawled into the bush to die so the poachers had failed to notice them. But they had evidently located the cubs’ mother and made off with her body because no trace was seen of her.

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If we relax our patrols even a little bit, we would lose many tigers to poachers”

Anak Pattanavibool Wildlife Conservation Society in Thailand

The poachers had shot and butchered an elephant to create a supply of fresh meat for their trap. Before the tigers found it, some of the bait had been eaten by wild dogs, civet cats and even a monitor lizard – and all had died.

For the rangers, it was a painful loss. As the superintendent of the sanctuary, Sompoch Maneerat, put it: “any time we see even one tiger killed, I feel a pain in my heart”.

Fragile stronghold

Tigers are vulnerable because their numbers are already desperately low. In the Huai Kha Khang sanctuary, only 38 have been definitively identified, with statistical models suggesting that the actual total might be 53-65.

In the country as a whole, the best estimate is that no more than 200 tigers remain in the wild – a massive decline in the space of a few decades.

Huai Kha Khang is seen as the most viable tiger stronghold but even here their survival is highly fragile.

With prices soaring for the tigers’ skins, genitals, bones and teeth, poaching gangs have become increasingly aggressive and well-organised, even mounting intelligence-gathering operations against the rangers to understand their patrol patterns.

While the poachers are always armed with modern weapons – and have been known to use them on tigers – the technique of lacing bait is far less arduous and carries fewer risks.

Dr Anak Pattanavibool, director of the Wildlife Conservation Society in Thailand, says that if the intensity of patrolling slackens even briefly, large numbers of tigers could be poisoned very rapidly.

“If we relax our patrols even a little bit, we would lose many tigers to poachers,” he said.

“If we relax just for three months that means we cannot stop poacher gangs coming in for those three months and in that time only one poacher gang could poison twenty tigers – a third of the population here.”

Dr Pattanavibool, himself a former ranger, has been working with the sanctuary authorities to introduce a system of “smart patrolling” to keep ahead of the poachers.

No remorse

Every trace of the presence of tigers – from camera-trap photographs to paw prints – is recorded and mapped along with any evidence of poachers such as spent cartridges or camp fires.

The aim is to build up an accurate and up to date picture of where both the tigers and the poachers are likely to be so that the patrols can be targeted in the most effective locations.

The system has been running since 2005 and can be judged a success in that tiger numbers, though still worryingly low, have been inching slightly higher.

Two poachers who were caught and convicted had even photographed themselves, AK-47s in hand, straddling a tiger that they had just killed. But the fact that they are now in jail has not deterred others.

The sanctuary has about 200 rangers to guard its almost 3,000 sq km – a far lower number compared to an equivalent tiger reserve in India.

The superintendent, Mr Maneerat, describes the campaign to save the tigers in military terms.

He says he is short of men and weapons. The rangers each get a gun on patrol but the unit overall does not have enough guns for each man to be issued one personally. At one training session, I watched many of the rangers practising rifle drill with sticks.

“I have to say the poachers, especially the professionals who are acting to orders, have more modern weapons with better quality than we do,” he said.

“So we have to train our staff to be more efficient, to mount better patrols, we have to do our best.”

Tiger - camera trap

Each loss of a tiger is seen as a failure and has often led to recriminations and even sackings, even though the rangers face an almost impossible task.

One ranger, Somtawin Kanya, who has worked here for 16 years, described being in several gun battles with poachers.

He was also at the scene when the two tiger cubs were found poisoned.

“They had lived for less than a day after eating it,” he said, “and they died within 200m of the poisoned bait.”

Poison had first been used in the sanctuary back in the 1980s and led to the extinction of red-headed vultures – the last 25 birds were killed by it.

Then it re-emerged as a threat in 2010 when poisoned bait was found in about 10 separate locations along the boundary between the sanctuary and a neighbouring reserve.

I asked Dr Pattanavibool for his view of the future.

“It’s hard to say we are winning. We might be winning at the moment but we have to keep on doing this and trying to do better because the poachers never stop – they will try to find a way in all the time.”

Asian tigers at risk from domestic dog distemper virus

July 8, 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22812914

Some of the world’s rarest big cat species are facing a potentially deadly threat from a virus carried by domestic dogs, a wildlife expert has warned.

 

John Lewis, director of Wildlife Vets International, said there was evidence that Indonesian tigers were at risk.

 

Canine distemper virus has evolved in recent decades from infecting only dogs to affecting other animal groups.

 

Dr Lewis plans to work with Indonesian vets to develop a strategy to protect the nation’s tigers from the virus.

 

A close relative of measles, Canine distemper virus (CDV) was first described at the beginning of the 20th Century and has been cited as contributing to the demise of the thylacine (commonly known as the Tasmanian tiger as a result of the black stripes on its back).

 

“If you wind the clock back about 30 or 40 years, it was a dog disease – it was a canine virus and only affected dogs,” Dr Lewis explained.

 

“But in the intervening years, the virus has evolved and has changed its pattern of animals it can infect to include marine mammals (such as seals) and big cats.”

 

Reservoir dogs

 

He told BBC News that CDV needed a reservoir, like a population of dogs, to remain effective as a pathogen.

 

Sumatran tiger (Image: Phil Mumby) Anecdotal evidence suggests CDV is already affecting critically endangered Sumatran tigers

 

These conditions were present when the first case of the disease affecting wild big cats was documented, he recalled.

 

“In the mid-1990s, in the Serengeti, Africa, about 30% of the lions died from CDV, which came from dogs in surrounding villages.

 

“It has also been recognised in the Asian big cat populations,” he added.

 

“Since 2000, in the Russian Far East, there have been a few cats reported as behaving strangely and coming into villages, apparently not showing much fear towards people.

 

“In the past few years, tissue from at least a couple of those cats have now been confirmed as showing the presence of CDV infection.

 

“There have not been too many cases at the moment, we think about three or four, but we think there could have been more that have gone undiagnosed.”

 

While some tigers appear as if they are able to build up a reasonable immunity response, most of the animals do succumb to the disease if they are exposed to the virus.

 

Dr Lewis explained that symptoms manifested themselves in a number of ways:

“The big threats facing tigers is habitat loss and degradation and poaching, but I think the third big threat now is likely to be disease”

Dr John Lewis Wildlife Vets International

 

“Some will die as a result of respiratory problems, such as pneumonia for example.

 

“Some will have neurological problems, such as losing the fear of people or having seizures.”

 

But, he added: “We do not have enough information on CDV in tigers to know what percentage go on to die; we just have a little bit of data from zoos and a little bit of data from the wild.

 

“There are a lot of cases of distemper in the region and tigers are partial to eating dogs.

 

“For a tiger to take a dog on the periphery of a village is not usual at all, so you do have the circumstances that would bring tigers into contact with CDV.”

 

Although it was assumed the cause of CDV infection in tigers was a result of coming into contact with dogs carrying the virus, Dr Lewis said that a research project was under way to look at the source of CDV in Amur tigers (also known as Siberian tigers) in the Russian Far East.

 

Worrying signs

 

The behaviour change in tigers was particularly worrying, Dr Lewis observed.

 

“This puts them at big risk because they lose their fear of poachers or they bring themselves in situations of conflict, such as playing with traffic.”

 

On a recent visit to the Indonesian island of Sumatra, he said conversations with local wildlife vets seemed to indicate that CDV could already be present in the population of the critically endangered Sumatran tiger.

 

They told him that they had seen strange behaviour displays by tigers, such as the big cats coming into villages and losing their fear of people.

 

“To me, that suggests that distemper is already beginning to have an impact on tigers in Sumatra,” he warned.

 

“But before you say ‘yes, that is definitely the result of CDV’, you need diagnostic testing of brain tissue.

 

“The big threats facing tigers are habitat loss and degradation and poaching, but I think the third big threat now is likely to be disease, particularly one like CDV.”

 

The Sumatran tiger is only found on the island and population estimates suggest that there are fewer than 700 left in the wild, of which only 40% are viable mature individuals.

 

Dr Lewis is returning to Sumatra in September to bring together all the vets from all the different areas that come into contact with tigers.

 

“The goal is to thrash out a very simple way of deciding what samples need to be taken from all tigers that are handled by humans throughout Sumatra, in order to help us with diagnostics,” he explained.

 

“We also need to thrash out what samples need to be taken from domestic dog populations.

 

“We need to work out where we can send these samples for laboratory testing. We need to work out how we are going to store and move these samples.

 

“Once we have got that nailed down then we start work and try to design some sort of mitigation strategy, and that won’t be easy.”

Indonesians trapped up tree by Sumatran tigers

July 8, 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-23217460

Several tigers have trapped five Indonesian men up a tree in a national park on Sumatra island, after mauling a sixth person to death, police say.

 

The group was attacked on Thursday after they accidentally killed a tiger cub. One man died while the others managed to flee up some branches.

 

The survivors alerted nearby villagers using mobile phones.

 

It could take rescue crews up to three days before they find the men in the Gunung Leuser jungle, officials said.

 

The national park covers nearly 7,930 sq km (3,060 sq miles) along the border of North Sumatra and Aceh provinces.

 

A 30-member search team entered the jungle on Saturday, police chief Dicky Sondani said.

 

“It might need two or three days to walk on foot to the depths of the jungle,” he said

Failed rescue attempt

Villagers had tried to rescue the men on Thursday but retreated when they saw at least four large Sumatran tigers circling around the base of the tree.

 

“If the tigers remain under the tree, we may have to shoot or sedate them to rescue the five people,” Mr Sodani added.

 

The six men, all from Simpang Kiri village in Aceh Tamiang district, had ventured into the national park in search of rare incense wood.

 

“People keep entering the jungle to look for the wood because it’s very expensive,” the police chief said.

 

“But that’s the risk: there are many tigers and elephants in Gunung Leuser jungle.”

 

The group set up deer traps for food, but accidentally caught a tiger cub.

 

The injured animal drew nearby tigers who then pounced on the men and killed a 28-year-old only identified as David.

 

The smallest of all tigers, Sumatran tigers are a critically endangered species only found on the Indonesian island.

 

As few as 350 remain in the wild, of which the largest population lives in the Gunung Leuser national park.

Herbal stimulant khat to be banned

July 6, 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23163017

The herbal stimulant khat is to be banned by the government, against the advice of its own Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs.

In January the ACMD said khat should remain a legal substance, saying there was “insufficient evidence” it caused health problems.

But Home Secretary Theresa May has decided to ban it, saying the risks posed could have been underestimated.

Khat will be treated as a class C drug, like anabolic steroids and ketamine.

The Home Office said the ban was intended to “protect vulnerable members of our communities” and would be brought in at the “earliest possible opportunity”.

Khat is already banned in most of Europe and in a number of other countries, including the US and Canada.

The UK’s decision to follow suit is based on security and international considerations, in particular concerns the UK could be used as a transit route for khat to other European countries.

“Failure to take decisive action and change the UK’s legislative position on khat would place the UK at a serious risk of becoming a single, regional hub for the illegal onward trafficking,” Mrs May said in a statement.

But campaigners said they were “disappointed and concerned” at the government’s decision to reject the advisory council’s advice.

“A more proportionate alternative to banning khat and criminalising its use would have been an import ban or making it a supply offence only as applies, for example, to controlled anabolic steroids,” said Martin Barnes from charity Drugscope.

‘Significant social problem’

Khat is traditionally used by members of the Somali, Yemeni and Ethiopian communities.

The Home Office commissioned a review by the ACMD and, reporting its results in January, it said chewing khat produced a “mild stimulant effect much less potent than stimulant drugs, such as amphetamine”.

The ACMD found “no evidence” khat, made from leaves and shoots of a shrub cultivated in the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, and containing the stimulant cathinone, was directly linked with serious or organised crime.

But the government said on Wednesday that it was concerned that a lack of evidence could have led the ACMD to underestimate the risk to communities posed by the drug.

Somali groups in the UK had told the ACMD that use of khat was a “significant social problem” and said it caused medical issues and family breakdowns.

The ACMD said withdrawal symptoms such as tiredness and depression were associated with khat, and recommended that the NHS should educate the public about these where necessary.

A government spokesman said ministers wanted to allow police officers to use their discretion when dealing with low-level possession offences, much in the same way they approach those carrying cannabis for personal use.

But repeat and serious offenders would face criminal sanctions, the spokesman added.

Chief Constable Andy Bliss, speaking for the Association of Chief Police Officers, said “there could be a case” for treating khat possession in this way.

“A first offence by an adult generally attracts a warning and a second the issuing of a penalty notice, before escalating to arrest and prosecution,” he said.

“We will explore this possibility with the Home Office and with the College of Policing over forthcoming weeks.”

Girl continues spreading peace after lemonade stand draws harassment from Westboro Church

July 6, 2013

http://www.14news.com/story/22762506/girl-whose-lemonade-stand-got-her-harassed-by-westboro-baptist-church-visits-lenexa

Many know about the little Kansas City metro girl, who caught the world’s attention for setting up a lemonade stand for peace.

The stand was set up across the street from the highly controversial Westboro Baptist Church headquarters in Topeka, KS, on the lawn of the Equality Home.

Members of the church harassed her, calling her names in an attempt to push her off the property. But the community showed up in droves to buy her lemonade, which raises money to go toward anti-bullying programs.

KCTV5’s Erika Tallan up with little Jayden Sink, as she was selling her pink lemonade on a Lenexa, KS, street corner during the Fourth of July parade.

It was the first lemonade she’s sold since her run in with the Westboro Baptist Church, and this batch was a little sweeter.

“I wanted to show her that it’s not all that bad out there, and there are a lot of nice people spreading love and peace,” Jayden’s father, Jon Sink, said.

Sink’s 5-year-old daughter experienced the hate with her first lemonade stand. A few weeks ago she set up in the front lawn of the Equality Home to raise money for the non-profit that owns it, Planting Peace. It promotes anti-bullying.

“When she saw a picture of the Equality House and painted rainbow colors, she thought it was beautiful,” Sink said.

But the home is directly across the street from the controversial Westboro Baptist Church, known for lashing out against homosexuals and picketing soldiers’ funerals.

Jayden’s fundraiser quickly turned sour but, as word spread about the group harassing Jayden and her cause, people began donating online.

“Love, compassion and peace conquers the hate, and evil that the people across the street represent,” Sink said.

So far Jayden has raised $22,000 and counting.

“I’m just very grateful and I want to thank everyone who’s donated and supported us,” her dad said.

Jayden is moving forward, pouring peace into the communities she visits, one cold cup at a time.

“Anything with love tastes a little sweeter,” customer Jeremy Brooks said.

The money they are raising is going toward developing anti-bullying software that could be used in schools across the country to raise awareness, teach coping skills and support.

Click here for more on Jayden’s pink lemonade stand for peace

Marriage in the Military

July 6, 2013

http://www.14news.com/story/22763824/14-news-special-report-marriage-in-the-military?app

The health of the marriages in our military has serious implications for our national security with a direct effect on performance and retention.
 
The services are making heavy investments of time and money into counseling, programs and couples retreats. An effort, in part, to turn around a divorce rate that’s been gradually climbing for years.
 
Combat and carnage, long deployments abroad and long hours on base. The stress, many spouses say, is why so many military marriages are casualties of military life.
 
“You don’t realize it until you’re in the midst of it,” says a wife to a Marine. “They’re sick of doing it by themselves.”
 
But evidence that the demands of a military career, drive up divorce is actually sparse 10 years of data from every person in the armed services points to the opposite. For instance, the longer the deployment, the greater the benefit to the marriage.
 
Instead, the Rand Report, published in 2007 and commissioned by the Department of Defense, suggests that a potential source of weaker wedlocks comes from recruiting within higher risk populations in terms of factors like age and then inadvertently incentivizing saying their ‘I do’s.’
 
“You buy a mustang, you get married, you have a kid and you rent an apartment,” says Lauren Szymczak. “Then you go to another duty station, get divorced and do it again.”
 
The Department of Defense has no comment on the reports conclusion, stating that they only track divorce numbers, no reasons.
 
Marrying age is a known factor in civilian divorces in the services. The military wives we spoke with tell us the norm for a first marriage is late teens, early 20’s.
 
The research agrees. Service members tend to marry younger and have children sooner than their civilian counterparts.
 
But why the rush? Some marry for love, others, wives say, to have someone waiting after a long deployment or because of a now or never military mindset.
 
“They’re very fast driven, you get something in front of them and they just shoot for it,” says the wife of a Marine.
 
But a big reason families tell us are the benefits.
 
“If they were to say it wasn’t about the money they’d be lying,” says the Marine’s wife.
 
And the incentives that the research also identified.
 
“It’s a huge role,” says Szymczak. “Massive. I would say about 8-% of the people who get married young get married to get out of the barracks.”
 
Single-life barracks, spouses say, is dramatically different than life in married housing. Wed service members are allowed to move off base and receive a range of about $1,000 to $4,000 per month in housing allowance depending on pay grade, dependents and local cost-of-living. Plus subsidized meals and health care for their spouse.
 
“With out military service members, they’ve got a paycheck coming in and they’re not necessarily financially connected to anyone else,” says Melissa Slater. “They have a little more freedom to make that decision on their own.”
 
So while incentives may encourage some service members to marry faster, spouses say they can also be the motive behind military marriages designed to be temporary as a business deal for benefits.
 
“They know they’re not marrying for love,” says Szymczak. “They say, ‘Hey you want to get married? Let’s just split the money!'”
 
Casually called a contract marriage, you can find dozens of postings online. Ads soliciting for a spouse to live with or not till divorce do you part.
 
The Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps all say they take contract marriage cases seriously. Defrauding the federal government this way ranges in punishment from a letter of reprimand to trial in a military court. Yet military family members claim contract marriages and multiple contract marriages are all too common.
 
“They put it online because they know nothing will happen to them and that’s for a fact,” says Szymczak.
 
Marriage support programs are the military’s battle plan for healthier homes and better decision-making.
 
From financial planning, to classes like ‘How to Avoid Marrying a Jerk.”
 
“Just because they may be high-risk to begin with doesn’t mean you can’t provide them with the tools and resources to overcome that and make it a positive marriage,” says Rhonda Tomlinson.
 
Family Readiness Officers and Military Chaplains say the challenge is getting service members and their spouses in the chairs.
 
“When you enlisted, you stood up and raised your right hand and you promised to serve your country,” says Chaplain Mark Brooks. “When you get married you stand up and you promised to be committed to one another. We uphold one, the other one deserves to be upheld also.”
 
The Air Force has had seven trials over contract marriage fraud in the past five years, but the other branches tell us they do not track the number of marriage fraud cases.
 
Between 2011 and 2012, the military divorce rate did dip slightly, but officials say they’re hoping it’s a sign that the benefits on their marriage programs are starting to take effect.

US Marshals searching for alleged heroin distributor

July 6, 2013

No charges for missing drugs

July 6, 2013

http://www.foxprovidence.com/dpps/news/local_news/metro_02/no-charges-for-missing-drugs_6355975

After year long investigation of Attleboro PD

ATTLEBORO, Mass. (AP) — A yearlong independent probe into missing drugs from the Attleboro Police Department’s evidence locker has been completed without any charges.

The investigator, however, blasted the department for poor security and record keeping and went so far as to call it “negligent” and the thefts “inexcusable.”

The theft of drugs including marijuana, cocaine, heroin and oxycodone took place between 2006 and 2011. The missing drugs had been marked for destruction and were not part of court proceedings.

The Sun Chronicle reports that despite numerous interviews, lie-detector tests, as well as information from a “confidential source,” the investigator determined there was “insufficient evidence” to name a suspect.

Chief Kyle Heagney says he’s disappointed no one is being charged but is confident the thief no longer works for the department.

Blind, starving cheetahs: the new symbol of climate change?

July 6, 2013

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/nature-up/2013/jun/21/blind-starving-cheetahs-climate-change

Thorny plants have begun to smother grasslands, transforming rangeland into impenetrable thicket – bad news for the big cats

Cheetah, blind in one eye, Namibia

Cheetah, blind in one eye after colliding with woody vegetation, Namibia. Photo: The AfriCat Foundation

The world’s fastest land animal is in trouble. The cheetah, formerly found across much of Africa, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent, has been extirpated from at least 27 countries and is now on the Red List of threatened species.

Namibia holds by far the largest remaining population of the speedy cat. Between 3,500 and 5,000 cheetahs roam national parks, communal rangelands and private commercial ranches of this vast, arid country in south-western Africa, where they face threats like gun-toting livestock farmers and woody plants.

Yes, woody plants. Namibia is under invasion by multiplying armies of thorny trees and bushes, which are spreading across its landscape and smothering its grasslands.

So-called bush encroachment has transformed millions of hectares of Namibia’s open rangeland into nearly impenetrable thicket and hammered its cattle industry. Beef output is down between 50 and 70% compared with the 1950s, causing losses of up to $170m a year to the country’s small economy.

Bush encroachment can also be bad news for cheetahs, which evolved to use bursts of extreme speed to run down prey in open areas. Low-slung thorns and the locked-open eyes of predators in “kill mode” are a nasty combination. Conservationists have found starving cheetahs that lost their sight after streaking through bush encroached habitats in pursuit of fleet footed food.

Farmers and researchers recognised bush encroachment as a serious problem in many parts of southern Africa by the 1980s, and it has long been thought to be caused by poor land management, including overgrazing. But, as I recently reported in Yale e360, an emerging body of science indicates that rapidly increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide may be boosting the onrushing waves of woody vegetation.

Savanna ecosystems, such as those that cover much of Africa, can be seen as battlegrounds between trees and grasses, each trying to take territory from the other. The outcomes of these battles are determined by many factors including periodic fire, an integral part of African savannas.

In simple terms, fire kills small trees and therefore helps fire-resilient grasses occupy territory. Trees have to have a long-enough break from fire to grow to
a sufficient size — about four metres high — to be fireproof and establish themselves in the landscape. The faster trees grow, the more likely they are to reach four metres before the next fire.

Lab research shows that many savanna trees grow significantly faster as atmospheric CO2 rises, and a new analysis of satellite images indicates that so-called ‘CO2 fertilisation’ has caused a large increase in plant growth in warm, arid areas worldwide.

Although poor land management is undoubtedly partly to blame for bush encroachment, increased atmospheric CO2 seems to be upsetting many savanna ecosystems’ vegetal balance of power in favour of trees and shrubs.

If increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide is causing climate change and also driving bush encroachment that results in blind cheetahs, should blind, starving cheetahs be a new symbol of climate change, to join polar bears whose Arctic sea ice hunting grounds are melting?

Conservationists have noted cheetahs with severe eye injuries since the 1990s, but, as specialist eye vet Dr. Gary Bauer told me, no research has been done to figure out how common these injuries are in the wild population or to confirm the assumption that cheetahs living in bush-encroached areas suffer more eye injuries than cheetahs in open habitats. There’s no hard proof that eye injuries are an immediate threat to the species’ survival, or if they’re any worse in bush-encroached areas.

Research has confirmed that cheetah prey species change as a landscape becomes more thickly wooded. Plains game animals like wildebeest, springbok and red hartebeest are squeezed out and replaced by bush-tolerant species like kudu. This changeover in game species is by itself not a disaster for cheetahs, which can hunt even in fairly wooded habitat as long as they have enough space to exploit their extraordinary acceleration, speed and agility. But if bush becomes so dense that it’s difficult for cheetahs to move through (as happens in severe cases of encroachment) then cheetahs will disappear.

“It’s cheaper to buy a hectare than to clean and repair a hectare” of bush-encroached land, said Donna Hanssen of the AfriCat Foundation, a big cat conservation group based in Namibia, underscoring the challenge faced by landowners wanting to rid themselves of the thorny scourge, but, she reminded me, “the biggest killer of cheetah in this country is man. Farmers.”

Farmers shoot and trap large numbers of cheetahs, which they blame for killing cattle, sheep and goats. As Namibia’s population expands, more cattle are being herded deeper into natural areas, bringing men with guns and poison into previously safe wildernesses.

Organisations like AfriCat and the Cheetah Conservation Fund are working hard — with some apparent success — to educate farmers about cheetahs and help them live with big cats instead of killing them. They’re also pioneering methods of dealing with bush encroachment like turning invading trees into biomass fuel blocks, although it remains to be seen if these methods can be economically scaled up to deal with the literally millions of hectares of expanding encroacher bush.

In summary: Are thorn-inflicted eye injuries currently a threat to the cheetah’s survival as a species? Probably not.

Is increasing atmospheric CO2 driving bush encroachment in African savannas? Probably, although savannas are complex ecosystems, influenced by many drivers, and the scientific understanding of CO2 fertilisation in these systems is incomplete.

Is uncontrolled bush encroachment severely impacting plains game and could it ultimately drive cheetahs out? Is it a real conservation problem? Almost certainly.

Are blind, starving cheetahs useful symbols of climate change? You decide.

Gov’t losing billions on ‘inefficient’ tax subsidies that don’t curb climate change

July 6, 2013

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/06/21/study-govt-losing-billions-on-inefficient-tax-subsidies-that-dont-curb-climate/

As America’s debt rises to unsustainable levels, the U.S. government is losing billions every year on energy tax subsidies that do little to combat climate change. 

That’s according to a tough report released this week by the National Research Council. The non-partisan academic report concluded that current tax policies are a “poor tool” for addressing climate change — and a costly one. 

It found energy subsidies in 2011 and 2012 cost $48 billion, with limited results. 

“Very little if any GHG (greenhouse gas) reductions are achieved at substantial cost with these provisions,” the report concluded. 

The report coincided with a renewed call for action from President Obama on climate change. During a wide-ranging speech in Berlin on Wednesday, the president called climate change the “global threat of our time” and demanded “bold action” to address it. 

It’s unclear whether the findings will spur Congress to find more effective tax policies, or to simply move away from using the tax code as an anti-climate change tool. 

The latest report acknowledged that tax policy can be an effective way to address climate change. It suggested the “most efficient way” to tackle the issue would be to charge for emissions, an option many Republicans oppose on the grounds it would be costly to businesses. 

But the National Research Council said the existing hodgepodge of tax rules isn’t really working. 

“The committee has found that several existing provisions have perverse effects, while others yield little reduction in GHG emissions per dollar of revenue loss,” the report said, while acknowledging that many of the policies it reviewed were not designed with emissions reduction as the primary objective. 

Some of the policies, though, are aimed in large part at curbing energy use, to limited effect. The study looked at tax credits for renewable electricity, and found the impact was “small” — translating to about a .3 percent emissions reduction. 

The study said this credit was among “the most costly.” 

It also looked at energy-efficiency credits for home improvements, and determined they are “unlikely to produce major savings” in emissions. 

Further, the council looked at biofuels credits and found they had a “counterintuitive” effect. Though it might seem “obvious” that subsidizing biofuels would reduce emissions since they rely on renewable resources, the study said, other findings showed the credits “encouraged the consumption of motor fuels” by lowering prices. 

The National Research Council is part of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. The study was completed at the request of Congress. 

The study did not look at all tax policies and their effect on emissions. But it looked at energy-sector provisions and said the most comprehensive study shows their “combined impact is less than 1 percent of total U.S. emissions.”