White-nose syndrome

Avangrid Foundation Provides More Than $2.8 Million in Grants in 2023

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, January 16, 2024

The Avangrid Foundation, the philanthropic arm of leading sustainable energy company Avangrid, Inc. (NYSE: AGR), has announced it provided more than $2.8 million in grants to 97 different organizations during 2023 to help create a more sustainable and equitable future.

Key Points: 
  • The Avangrid Foundation, the philanthropic arm of leading sustainable energy company Avangrid, Inc. (NYSE: AGR), has announced it provided more than $2.8 million in grants to 97 different organizations during 2023 to help create a more sustainable and equitable future.
  • This brings the Avangrid Foundation and its predecessors’ total investments to more than $38.9 million in partnerships since its founding in 2001.
  • “We invest our resources in organizations and programs that will impact the communities we serve,” said Pablo Colón, director of corporate citizenship and executive director, Avangrid Foundation.
  • Through this initiative, the Avangrid Foundation will donate $15 per employee volunteer hour to qualifying organizations, up to 100 hours per employee.

Avangrid Foundation Awards $100,000 to Bats for the Future Fund to Combat White-Nose Syndrome

Retrieved on: 
Monday, December 18, 2023

This is the sixth consecutive year that the Avangrid Foundation has helped fund this initiative.

Key Points: 
  • This is the sixth consecutive year that the Avangrid Foundation has helped fund this initiative.
  • This year’s awards from the fund will have a total conservation impact of more than $1.4 million.
  • “As our climate continues to change rapidly, these types of research programs are more important than ever,” said Pedro Azagra, Avangrid CEO.
  • “We’re very proud to have been a key contributor to the Bats for the Future Fund since 2018.

Australia’s least wanted – 8 alien species and diseases we must keep out of our island home

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Costs have at least quadrupled every decade since 1970 and that trend is set to continue.

Key Points: 
  • Costs have at least quadrupled every decade since 1970 and that trend is set to continue.
  • Stopping pests and diseases arriving and establishing in Australia is not only better for the environment, it’s much cheaper too.
  • Read more:
    The true damage of invasive alien species was just revealed in a landmark report.

One of the biggest threats to biodiversity

    • Invasive alien species include weeds, feral animals, exotic pests and diseases.
    • Invasive species are pushing most (82%) of Australia’s 1,914 nationally listed threatened species closer to extinction.
    • Read more:
      1.7 million foxes, 300 million native animals killed every year: now we know the damage foxes wreak

1. Giant African land snail


    Giant African snails have a ferocious appetite. They feed on more than 500 species of plants including agricultural crops and eucalyptus trees. The shells of these giants can be 20cm long and females typically lay 1,200 eggs a year. Adult snails could sneak into shipping containers or machinery and their eggs could be transported in soil or goods. They are now present on Christmas Island.

2. Avian influenza

    • Avian influenza or bird-flu is a viral disease found in birds.
    • Some strains can kill farmed poultry and susceptible wild birds.
    • Read more:
      Migrating birds could bring lethal avian flu to Australia's vulnerable birds

3. New tramp ants

    • We’re already battling some species of tramp ants, but there’s more where that came from - there are at least 16 different species.
    • On Christmas Island, another tramp ant species (yellow crazy ants) formed “super colonies”, killing every animal in their path, including tens of millions of the island’s iconic red and robber crabs.

4. Bat white nose syndrome


    White nose syndrome is a bat disease caused by a fungus. In less than 20 years it has killed more than five million bats across North America, causing local extinctions and reducing the beneficial services performed by bats such as eating harmful insects. The fungus could be introduced to Australian caves on the shoes, clothing and equipment of people who had previously visited caves in Europe or North America.

5. Crayfish plague


    A highly infectious fungal disease, crayfish plague is the main cause of crayfish declines across Europe. It has the potential to devastate Australian freshwater crayfish populations. North American crayfish can be carriers of the disease and the illegal trade of crayfish, such as the dwarf Cajun crayfish for aquariums, also threatens to introduce the disease.

6. New myrtle rust strains

    • When a strain of myrtle rust arrived in Australia in 2010, it spread quickly along the east coast, infecting 358 different native plant species including eucalypts, bottle brushes and lilly pillies.
    • Other exotic myrtle rust strains occur outside Australia.

7. Savannah cats

    • Savannah cats are two to three times the size of domestic cats.
    • In 2008 the federal government banned the importation of savannah cats.

8. Black spined toad

    • The black spined toad is potentially more damaging than the cane toad because it could survive across a bigger region including in the colder parts of Australia.
    • It would prey on native frogs and other small animals, be toxic to larger animals, and probably carry exotic parasites or disease.

Prioritising nature

    • Historically, the environment has also been the poor cousin of agriculture at the biosecurity table.
    • Preparedness and responses for environmental threats remain chronically underfunded, especially when compared to those developed for industry.
    • She previously worked for the now ended Threatened Species Recovery Hub of the Australian Government's National Environmental Science Program.

Morris Animal Foundation selects 10 fellowship studies for funding

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, May 30, 2023

DENVER, May 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Morris Animal Foundation announced it is funding 10 new fellowship studies, with two of the studies funded by longtime donor Sally R. McIntosh.

Key Points: 
  • DENVER, May 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Morris Animal Foundation announced it is funding 10 new fellowship studies, with two of the studies funded by longtime donor Sally R. McIntosh.
  • The studies will focus on a variety of topics, including deadly infections in dogs, immune response disorders in horses and amphibian conservation.
  • "Our Fellowship Training program is one of the most impactful investments we can make for animal health research," said Dr. Kathy Tietje, Chief Program Officer at Morris Animal Foundation.
  • McIntosh made her first gift to Morris Animal Foundation to advance greyhound health research in 2009 and since then, has expanded her support into other areas of animal health research, including wildlife health.

The Government of Canada to invest over $2.1 million in wildlife disease surveillance across the country

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 9, 2023

The projects are being led by the national office of the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative, based at the University of Saskatchewan.

Key Points: 
  • The projects are being led by the national office of the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative, based at the University of Saskatchewan.
  • These projects include the development of new tools to track wildlife health and the risks of emerging infectious diseases.
  • Work is also planned for identifying and predicting the impacts of climate change on wildlife health and will include avenues for action.
  • The Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative brings together internationally recognized wildlife health researchers and diagnosticians, population health experts, and experienced educators.

LP Building Solutions Wins SFI President's Award for Its Commitment to Forest-Focused Collaborations

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, June 15, 2022

NASHVILLE, Tenn., June 15, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) announced today that LP Building Solutions (LP) is the recipient of the SFI President's Award for 2022.

Key Points: 
  • NASHVILLE, Tenn., June 15, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) announced today that LP Building Solutions (LP) is the recipient of the SFI President's Award for 2022.
  • "LP exemplifies SFI's mission as an organization committed to forest-focused collaborations," said SFI President & CEO Kathy Abusow.
  • As a leader in high-performance building solutions, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation (LP Building Solutions, NYSE: LPX) manufactures engineered wood building products that meet the demands of builders, remodelers and homeowners worldwide.
  • LP's extensive offerings include innovative and dependable building products and accessories, such as siding solutions (LP SmartSide Trim & Siding, LP SmartSide ExpertFinish Trim & Siding, LP BuilderSeries Lap Siding, and LP Outdoor Building Solutions), LP Structural Solutions (LP TechShield Radiant Barrier, LP WeatherLogic Air & Water Barrier, LP Legacy Premium Sub-Flooring, and LP FlameBlock Fire-Rated Sheathing, LP NovaCore Thermal Insulated Sheathing, and more), LP TopNotch Sub-Flooring, and oriented strand board (OSB).

Trutech Wildlife Service reminds homeowners fall is the ideal time to humanely protect your home from bats

Retrieved on: 
Monday, August 16, 2021

ORLANDO, Fla., Aug. 16, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Trutech Wildlife Service, the leading wildlife removal company, stresses to Florida homeowners that humane bat removal began Aug. 15, 2021.

Key Points: 
  • ORLANDO, Fla., Aug. 16, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Trutech Wildlife Service, the leading wildlife removal company, stresses to Florida homeowners that humane bat removal began Aug. 15, 2021.
  • The federal mandates and additional maternity protections are due to declining populations and the benefits that bats provide .
  • After Aug. 15, exclusion devices can be installed to remove bats from inside residential and commercial structures.
  • If you notice these signs but cannot find bats present, make sure to protect your home by sealing all potential entry points.