Connecticut Audbon Society

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Lyme Disease: It’s Not the Deer’s Fault

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

If you think deer play an important role in the spread of Lyme disease, think again. New studies, reported in the Times, indicate that small mammals like white-footed mice are crucial to the prevalence of Lyme, and “birds are also major carriers of Lyme disease bacteria and might be even more significant carriers than rodents […]

A New Open Space Law

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

Connecticut residents who are concerned about conservation have reason to be optimistic this week. Governor Malloy signed a new law on Friday — Public Act No. 12-152, An Act Concerning the State’s Open Space Plan — that requires Connecticut to devise a formal strategy for protecting open space, and to update it every five years. […]

We Live at the Wildland-Urban Interface

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

We passed over one of the more interesting observations in the Council on Environmental Quality’s annual report when we wrote about it last week (that blog post is here), namely that a higher percentage of Connecticut residents live closer to natural areas than in any other state. The CEQ report borrows from another study to […]

Deer Poaching on Our Sanctuary Leads to a New Law With Bigger Fines

Thursday, June 7th, 2012

A couple of winters ago, Andy Rzeznikiewicz, who manages the 702-acre sanctuary at our Center at Pomfret, found the remains of several deer that had been shot and killed. We don’t permit hunting on our sanctuaries, of course, and in any case deer season was over. That portion of the sanctuary was near a neighboring […]

The CEQ Report and Notes On a Conservation Agenda

Monday, June 11th, 2012

The Connecticut Council on Environmental Quality’s annual report came out on Friday, filled with interesting observations, insights and information. It can easily be the basis of an agenda for Connecticut’s conservationists. The Council correctly sees land use as the factor that has the biggest effect on the state’s environmental quality; it also recognizes that improved […]

The Purpose of Mosquitoes and Other Philosophical Questions

Monday, June 4th, 2012

I was in the garden the other evening weeding the bush beans when my son, who is 14 and who was in the woods nearby, asked me with evident annoyance, “What’s the purpose of mosquitoes?” Given the amount of rain we’d had recently, and the hour of the day, the question wasn’t far from my […]

Scott’s Company Pleads Guilty to Putting Pesticides in Bird Seed

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

We think pesticide use is too common and we’re concerned with the damage pesticides can do to birds, which is why we opposed a bill in Hartford this year that would have rolled back regulations prohibiting the use of cosmetic pesticides on school grounds. But generally when pesticides kill birds, it’s inadvertent. Not always though. […]

Planting 96 Trees at Stratford Point

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

May 2012 – Connecticut Audubon Society, in collaboration with Sacred Heart University, has completed the next important phase of the one-of-a-kind coastal habitat restoration project at Stratford Point, planting 96 native trees and shrubs to increase foraging, roosting and nesting opportunities for migratory and breeding birds and other wildlife. Using a tractor and an array […]

A Successful Year on the Conservation Front in Hartford

Friday, May 11th, 2012

May 2012 – The session of the Connecticut General Assembly that ended in Hartford this week resulted in a number of achievements that we think are good for conservation and for the state’s environment in general. The Senate and the House passed one bill with big implications for land conservation, and another with smaller but […]

Open Space Bill Passes Both Houses in Hartford!

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

The Connecticut General Assembly passed a major piece of legislation that will lead to better land conservation throughout the state. Here’s our statement about it: May 10, 2012 – The passage this week by the Connecticut General Assembly of a new open space bill will vastly improve the way the state goes about prioritizing, tracking […]

 

 

 

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