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   KEYWORDS : BIODIVERSITY
News Resources Bibliography
Earth's orbit linked to extinctions -- Heidi Ledford  -- Nature  -- October 11, 2006

New research suggests that regular orbital oscillations known as the Milankovitch Cycles, can affect the climate on Earth so drastically as to cause entire species to go extinct.


Wave of Marine Species Extinctions Feared -- Juliet Eilperin  -- Washington Post  -- August 24, 2005

For years, many scientists and regulators believed the oceans were so vast there was little risk of marine species dying out. Now, some suspect the world is on the cusp of what Ellen K. Pikitch, executive director of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science, calls "a gathering wave of ocean extinctions." Dozens of biologists believe the seas have reached a tipping point, with scores of species of ocean-dwelling fish, birds and mammals edging toward extinction.


A Species in a Second: Promise of DNA 'Bar Codes' -- Nicholas Wade  -- New York Times  -- December 14, 2004

Researchers have proposed a new system of DNA analysis that would allow field biologists to quickly scan a specimen and compare it against a global database of identified species. The system of DNA 'bar codes' could assist in the urgent task of cataloging unknown species before their ranks are decimated by extinction.

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From black box to blue box -- Staff  -- Economist  -- February 19, 2004

Advances in underwater surveillance and satellite technology are revolutionizing marine biology by making it possible for biologists to tag and release animals and recieve daily emails on their location and health.

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Study Says Global Warming May Spark Mass Extinction -- Staff  -- New York Times  -- January 07, 2004

A new analysis by scientists from 14 labs around the globe found that more than one-third of 1,103 native species they studied could vanish over the next 50 years due to global warming.


Extinction nears for whales and dolphins -- Alex Kirby  -- BBC News  -- May 14, 2003

Some whales, dolphins and porpoises are now so endangered they could vanish within a decade, scientists say.


Fast Tracking -- Laurent Belsie  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- April 03, 2003

Sophisticated software and hardware are giving wildlife trackers an almost instant overview of plant and animal patterns. Ultimately, this will offer scientists a more profound understanding of how nature interacts.

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Internet helps write the book of life -- Alex Kirby  -- BBC News  -- January 09, 2003

A hugely ambitious project to find and name every species on Earth within the next 25 years has been launched by scientists. The internet and the development of DNA sequencing technology make the goal achievable, they say.

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Playing Adam online: Project to name all life-forms -- A.S. Berman  -- USA Today  -- November 01, 2001

An online project seeks to name and categorize every plant, animal and microbe on Earth — all in just 25 years. Founded last year, San Francisco's non-profit ALL Species Foundation plans to make a record of all life-forms, a number it estimates to be between 7 million and 100 million, in a single generation.

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Things That Matter: Eco-logic -- Michael Hawley  -- Technology Review  -- September 01, 2001

Short, meandering column about the consciousness-raising impact of wiring ecosystems into the global network via sensors and cameras: "(w)hether it's a happy plant on the office window ledge, or a deeper understanding of how the last few members of a species are clinging to life, directing new capillary sensor networks into ecosystems can bring us real insight into problems that matter."

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