Big bug benefits: Alberta scientist releases guide identifying cow dung insects
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
Alberta entomologist Kevin Floate is ready to start spreading the news that he has compiled a comprehensive guide into insects that live in cow dung in Canada. Floate — a scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada at the Lethbridge Research and Development Centre in southern Alberta — said he started studying insects in cattle dung about 30 years ago.At the time, he realized he needed one source of information to help get him started.“It didn’t exist. So, here we are 30 years later, and I’ve written that guide and it’s intended for ranchers and farmers and students and naturalists,” said Floate, who has a doctorate in entomology and penned “Cow Patty Critters: A New Guide on Canada’s Faecal Friends.” “Anyone who’s ever asked the question ‘What’s in dung?’ This is the guide that I’ve written for you.”The humble cow turd, sometimes known as a cow patty, cow pie or cow chip, has a soft text...Cashier charged in scheme to steal $3M lottery jackpot from unsuspecting customer
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
LAKEVILLE, Mass. (WPRI) — A woman and her boyfriend are facing charges after the couple stole a winning $3 million lottery ticket and attempted to cash it in earlier this year, according to officials in Massachusetts.Carly Nunes, 23, of Lakeville, is accused of holding onto a customer's lottery tickets back in January, while working as a cashier at a liquor store. U.S. District Attorney Timothy Cruz said the man who purchased the tickets had accidentally left the store without them, forgetting them in the lottery terminal tray.Surveillance footage from inside the store captured the moment when another customer alerted Nunes to the tickets, which she took and placed behind the counter, according to Cruz.Cruz said the man searched for his ticket to confirm, but gave up when he couldn't find it. That night, the numbers on one of the man's Mass Millions tickets were selected for the $3 million prize. The lottery: Which states’ residents spend the most on tickets and scratch-offs? The ...All birds are shrinking — but small birds are shrinking fastest
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
(The Hill) - The forest of Amazonia and the urban canyons of Chicago are dramatically different environments.But in both, bird life has displayed the same mysterious pattern: While all birds are shrinking, small birds are getting smaller, faster, than larger ones, a new study has found.At the same time, in a surprising twist, their wings are getting longer — as though all birds were becoming a bit more every year like tree swallows — and scientists have no idea why.The findings published Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) begin with a large and macabre body of evidence. These US bird species face a ‘tipping point’ as populations decline sharply, new report finds Since 1978, scientists at Chicago’s Field Museum have collected the corpses of unlucky birds.These are a diverse bunch, owing to Chicago’s lethal — if scientifically fortunate — position as a giant city, full of deadly glass windows on a major migratory route for...DPS temporarily halts partnership in Austin
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) will temporarily cease its partnership with the Austin Police Department (APD) so that troopers can focus their attention on border cities in the wake of the expiration of Title 42, according to law enforcement sources. The initiative, called the Austin Violent Crimes Task Force (AVCTF), began on March 30 as a way to assist APD as the department faces a staffing shortage. APD currently has about 300 vacancies. According to law enforcement sources, DPS' last day will be Saturday, and troopers will likely not return to their Austin patrols for several weeks. Where DPS is patrolling in Austin and why Since the program began, there have been “significant decreases in violent crime, response times, and calls for service,” according to the APD. The department used a data-driven approach to identify crime "hot-spots" as well as high-travel roads most common for crashes - and deployed troopers to those locations.In the crime hot ...Soucheray: St. Paul has broken under the weight of lenient policies on crime
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
Two days after Michael Brasel, 44, was killed in front of his own house in the St. Anthony Park neighborhood, taking three shots to the chest, the police sirens wailed, again, in St. Paul, this time in the Mac-Groveland and Highland Park neighborhoods.Officers were called to an address on the 1200 block of Juliet Avenue about 3:15 p.m. Monday. Multiple suspects in a stolen Audi tried to break into a vehicle. They were wearing masks. The owner of the car yelled and they scampered back to the Audi and took off.Maybe the car’s owner hadn’t heard about Brasel, for that owner was taking his life in his hands by daring to shout. He could have been killed as remorselessly as Brasel.That’s all Brasel presumably did, give out a shout as somebody was trying to take his wife’s car. He died. Executed is more like it, executed. The shooter has been caught. He is 17. The Pioneer Press learned that the alleged killer was charged in April 2022 with robbing a student in a bathroom at Harding High Sc...Working Strategies: To work or not to work? For the disabled, that’s the nuanced question
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
Amy LindgrenSecond Sunday Series – Editor’s Note: This is the ninth of 12 columns on work and disability that are appearing over 12 months — one on each second Sunday of the month, from September through August. Previous columns discussed the subminimum wage, promotions for workers with disabilities, higher education decisions, self-advocating, career tips for family caretakers, testing limits as a worker with disabilities, the dilemma of revealing disabilities during job search, and overall concepts of disability in the workplace.We’re often told, “work isn’t everything,” or, “No one ever died regretting what they didn’t do at work.”Those are the messages, but do we believe them? As a culture, America is work-crazy. We have high rates of labor force participation and low empathy for those who aren’t “productive.” We call ourselves lazy for leaving work on time and, until the recent lessons of the pandemic, we prided ourselves on going to work sick.What...Police search for missing Bennington man
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
BENNINGTON, Vt. (NEWS10) — Gary Monroe, 72, of Bennington is missing and was last seen leaving the area of 882 Murphy Hill Road on foot at around 4:45 p.m. on Friday. Police say he suffers from dementia, but is in otherwise good health. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! He was last seen wearing a dark green T-shirt, blue jeans, black sneakers, and a dark hat. He stands 5-feet, 9-inches tall and weights 150 pounds, with long brown hair and a salt-and-pepper beard.Emergency responders from the region are conducting a search. They want locals to check outbuildings, sheds, garages, barns, and surveillance footage to look out.Police said Monroe has no access to a vehicle or phone, but does have outdoor experience. If you've seen Monroe or have information about his whereabouts, contact Bennington police at (802) 442-1030.Man fatally shot at community pool in Agoura Hills
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
A man is dead after he was shot at an Agoura Hills community pool early Saturday morning.Multiple gunshots were reported at around 12:30 a.m. on Strawberry Hill Drive near Windsong Lane, and the unidentified victim sustained at least one gunshot wound to the stomach, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.He was pronounced dead at the scene.Investigators are working to determine if the victim lived in the neighborhood and how many people may have been involved.No arrests have been made.Man dies after being shot by own gun during traffic stop in South Los Angeles: LAPD
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
A man is dead after he was struck by fire from his own gun during a struggle with police in a traffic stop in the Florence-Firestone neighborhood of South Los Angeles Friday night, officials said.The unidentified man was pulled over by the Los Angeles Police Department near East 74th Street and South Central Avenue at about 10:30 p.m., according to Officer Jader Chavez.During the traffic stop, officers spotted a gun in the vehicle, Chavez said.When officers tried to prevent the gun from being fired, it discharged, striking the man, Chavez added.He was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead.No officers were injured during the incident. Sofia Pop Perez contributed to this report.Here's what it looks like at the U.S.-Mexico border after Title 42 expired
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:37:48 GMT
From the Rio Grande Valley in Texas to San Diego and Tijuana, many migrants gathered along sections of the U.S.-Mexico border questioned when or whether they would cross into the United States to seek asylum once pandemic-related restrictions known as Title 42 ended.Some migrants who had traveled from Venezuela, Ecuador, Colombia, Peru and Central America feared it could be harder for them to stay on U.S. soil with the restrictions lifted.Here are some of the stories from along the 1,950-mile (3,140-kilometer) international boundary:___Ludin, a Honduran man who asked that his last name not be used out of fear for his safety and that of his family, arrived Friday at Tijuana’s El Chaparral port of entry with his pregnant wife and 5-year-old son.He stood just feet from U.S. soil, conflicted over how to proceed.“Do you think we can cross and ask for asylum?” he asked.He said he had been trying to use an app that border officials created for people to request asylum in the U.S. — CBP One...Latest news
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