Oppose The Proposed Amendments To The Mining Act

From Ontario Nature:

Under the guise of improving efficiency and reducing administrative burden, the Government of Ontario is proposing alarming amendments to the Mining Act that would significantly weaken existing environmental protection and rehabilitation requirements (ERO# 019-6715).

Please join Ontario Nature in opposing the proposed amendments to the Mining Act and ask that they be withdrawn.

Visit the Ontario Nature for more information and to sign the Action Alert.

Results Of The 2023 Great Backyard Bird Count

The Cornell Lab of Orinthology has released the numbers from the 2023 Great Backyard Bird Count. Half a million bird enthusiasts shared sightings from almost every corner of the world.

The Great Backyard Bird Count in a Snapshot

  • 7,538 species of birds identified
  • 202 participating countries
  • 390,652 eBird checklists
  • 372,905 Merlin Bird IDs
  • 151,479 photos added to Macaulay Library
  • 555,291 estimated global participants

The full report can be found here.

Next year’s Great Backyard Bird Count is scheduled for February 16-19, 2024.

The Southern Ontario Seed Strategy

From Carolinian Canada Coalition:

The Southern Ontario Seed Strategy (SOSS) is full steam ahead! The SOSS collective is actively strategizing ways that we can help preserve native plants and seeds and establish a native seed supply to support restoration and retail markets in southern Ontario. Through knowledge sharing, discussion, and working groups, a draft strategy will be formed.

Read more at https://caroliniancanada.ca/seed

Meet Rudolph The Red-Nosed… Caribou?

From Ontario Nature:

What’s the difference between Caribou or Reindeer? Trick question—they’re actually the same species! Rangifer tarandus, also known as “Reindeer” in Russia and Scandinavia or when domesticated, and Caribou in North America, are the same leggy herbivores we know and love (especially if we’ve made the ‘Nice List’).

Despite their wide range, these majestic mammals are a threatened species. Their populations are dropping dramatically due to climate change and development which negatively affect their habitat and food security. Of the 51 Caribou herds living in Canada, not a single one is growing and at least 20 are declining.

Read more at https://naturecanada.ca/news/blog/meet-rudolph/