put out another fire. forced to walk back military intervention. this is amateur hour at 1600 pennsylvania. inside out, foul. the baseball landed in a beer cup and he just the whole beer with the ball in the cup. georgia then it would all make sense. all eyes are on georgia, texas. minnesota. where else can we look? alabama. brian: arkansas. ainsley: texas. brian: not a lot. but i think a lot of people looking at georgia. ainsley: sarah huckabee sanders she will probably win. brian: that was it. we are out of that shot now. just the three of us for the rest of the three hours. have some commercials. ainsley: we will highlight all of the primaries for you today. it s another midterm primary day in america. brian: it s a big one. ainsley: voters getting set to hit the polls in five more states today. will: you heard us rattle off some georgia and texas spotlight taking center stage with big endorsement. brian: we also have a bush in this race.
Four months into my current position as a project officer on the WWF-US Oceans team, I found myself in the middle of a cleared mangrove stand. I could see cut trunks, about a foot or two across, scattered throughout the field as my WWF Madagascar colleagues and members of the Siranana-Ankoera Fokontany village explained what had happened prior to 2015: people from outside of this community had cut these mangroves to be used for charcoal production.
Interspersed among these cut trunks, however, were small mangrove propagules planted by members of the Siranana Community Based Organization, the Siranana-Ankoera Fokontany, and WWF Madagascar around 9 months prior. These propagules were one of the reasons why my WWF-US colleagues and I were here, to support work under the Mangroves for Community and Climate project
Communities and Working with Nature the Key to Mitigating Climate Change in Africa sapeople.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sapeople.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.