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Bestseller sætter tal på klimamål: Kræver trecifret millioninvestering frem mod 2030

Bestseller sætter tal på klimamål: Kræver trecifret millioninvestering frem mod 2030
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Lawmakers update voters on legislative progress

Lawmakers who have worked year after year in the Vermont Legislature to craft budgets in the face of perennial revenue shortfalls have a new dilemma: what to do with a surplus of money that has to be spent this session in order to fight the many effects of the coronavirus pandemic? How to wisely spend a windfall and not go into the hole next year is the lens Lamoille County legislators are looking through, as some of them shared during a legislative question-and-answer virtual forum put on by the Lamoille Chamber of Commerce Monday morning. Lamoille County Sen. Rich Westman, R-Cambridge, sits on the Senate Appropriations Committee, which is normally tasked with taking testimony on the state budget. This year, he said, the Legislature is moving quickly on dispersing Vermont’s portion of the federal stimulus funds. That includes about $200 million to help Vermonters with rent and utility payments, Westman said.

Hormone metabolites found in poop give researchers new insight into whale stress

Poop samples are an effective, non-invasive tool for monitoring gray whale reproduction, stress and other physiological responses, a new study from Oregon State University shows. Researchers from OSU’s Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Laboratory collected 158 fecal, commonly known as poop, samples from Eastern North Pacific gray whales off the coast of Oregon between 2016 and 2018 and used the samples to assess endocrine levels and establish hormone baselines for stress and reproduction in the animals. The study is believed to be the first to use fecal samples as an endocrine assessment tool in Eastern North Pacific gray whales. Fecal samples can provide a wide range of important information about whale health in a noninvasive way, said Leigh Torres, an associate professor in OSU’s Marine Mammal Institute and director of the GEMM Lab.

Hormone metabolites found in poop give researchers new insight into whale stress

 E-Mail IMAGE: Oregon State University researchers are studying gray whales along the Oregon Coast. Images and data collected under NOAA/NMFS permit #21678. view more  Credit: Oregon State University Marine Mammal Institute NEWPORT, Ore. - Poop samples are an effective, non-invasive tool for monitoring gray whale reproduction, stress and other physiological responses, a new study from Oregon State University shows. Researchers from OSU s Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Laboratory collected 158 fecal, commonly known as poop, samples from Eastern North Pacific gray whales off the coast of Oregon between 2016 and 2018 and used the samples to assess endocrine levels and establish hormone baselines for stress and reproduction in the animals.

Lydia Ko slips away, as masked A Lim Kim mounts record-equalling US Open comeback win

Jamie Squire/Getty Images A Lim Kim of Korea celebrates with her caddie, Daihoun An, after making a birdie on the 18th green. Kiwi Lydia Ko faded in the final round of the US Open on Tuesday with a five-over 76 seeing her finish 13th, eight shots off winner A Lim Kim of Korea. Lim Kim birdied the final three holes to secure a record-tying comeback to win U.S. Women’s Open in her debut. She finished one shot ahead of compatriot Jin Young Ko and American Amy Olsen, on three-under. Lim Kim had started the final round five shots off the lead in ninth place.

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