
James Cook
Articles
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Nov 4, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | James Cook |Environment Tasmania |Biosecurity Tasmania
The concept of One Health has gained significant attention in recent years as a holistic approach to address the interconnections among human, animal, and environmental health (OHHLEP et al. 2022). The World Health Organization defines One Health as a unifying approach designed to sustainably balance and enhance the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems (WHO 2022).
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Nov 3, 2024 |
earthsky.org | Paul Nelson |James Cook
Earth The 2025 EarthSky Lunar Calendar presale is here! First 100 purchases signed by the legendary Deborah Byrd as a thank you. Get yours today!Carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in the atmosphere have approximately doubled since the start of the Industrial Revolution. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that warms Earth. Crushed rock can remove CO2 from the atmosphere.
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Oct 29, 2024 |
beefcentral.com | Paul Nelson |James Cook
CARBON dioxide (CO₂) is naturally removed from the air when it reacts with certain types of rock. We can accelerate this process by crushing suitable rocks and spreading them over agricultural fields. This simple method, known as “enhanced rock weathering”, could vastly increase the rate of CO₂ removal from the atmosphere. Modelling studies suggest billions of tonnes of CO₂ might be removed annually if crushed rocks were applied to croplands globally.
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Aug 11, 2024 |
link.springer.com | James Cook
AbstractCommunity acceptance is an important criterion to assess in community trials, particularly for new tools that require high coverage and use by a target population. Installed on exterior walls of household structures, the attractive targeted sugar bait (ATSB) is a new vector control tool designed to attract and kill mosquitoes. ATSBs were evaluated in Western Zambia during a two-year cluster randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of ATSBs in reducing malaria transmission.
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Jul 29, 2024 |
link.springer.com | James Cook
AbstractAs complementary terrestrial and aquatic habitats are pulled apart by environmental change, animals will have to adjust their behaviours to successfully track their fundamental niches. We introduce a novel example of how climate change impacts can drive separation between complementary foraging and breeding habitats in seabirds.
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